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THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
Bill Murray; and Kaki King. PLUS:
Happy news in the Stangel household; Paul's rendition of
Cher's "O' Holy Night"; TV Guide: Greatest Moments
2004; Dave's end of the year checklist; Lara vs. Laura; and we
find out where Dave used to buy his pants.
Happy
news at the Late Show. Head writer Justin
Stangel and his wife gave birth to a baby girl,
Emily. Born Saturday morning at 1:07 A.M.,
Emily weighed in at the very lucky 7 pounds, 11 ounces. Emily
is their first child. Congratulations to Justin and Lara.
Off camera we hear Tony yell out,
"Lara." Dave looks over and says,
"Lara. What did I say?" Tony says Justin's wife's
name is Lara." I'm not sure but I think we were having a
simple difference in accent. Dave's 'Lara' may have leaned a
little towards "Laura." Tony brought it back over to
a more flat 'A' sound, saying "Lara" like
"Larry." Dave doesn't seem pleased with Tony's
correction and gives him a bit of the evil eye. He asks,
"And how do we pronounce your name? 'Adios'?"
On the show tonight, Bill Murray from the movie "The
Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou." Also tonight, guitarist
Kaki King. Paul is enthused about the guitarist, raving over
her ability and agility with the guitar. Dave mentions,
"Coincidentally, when I was a kid, that's where I bought my
pants." Paul, without missing a beat, asks "Where's
that?" Dave: "Kaki King."
During this,
Dave received a note explaining that Kaki King would not be
singing, only performing an instrumental with her acoustic
guitar, or as the note was written, "acoustic cigar."
Dave takes a moment to ask Paul for a Late
Show/Late Night holiday tradition. Dave
asks Paul if he could do his rendition of Cher
singing "O' Holy Night" from one of her
holiday specials some years back. Paul sets the scene.
It was Cher, with guest William Conrad, star of
"Cannon." William sang "God Bless Ye Merry
Gentlemen." That was his contribution. Cher then, with
great feeling, and with the lights lowered, her hands in a muff,
sang a strangled "O' Holy Night." Paul sings two and
a half lines. It gets better every year. It certainly left a
lasting impression on Paul.
Earlier tonight on ABC they
aired "TV Guide's: Greatest Moments
2004." Dave has a clip which reveals the
top three moments in 2004. "The #3 moment on TV
this year was 'Friends' going off the air. The #2 moment
was Tom Brokaw's final newscast. And the #1 moment on
TV this year was when Dave Letterman was fired. ABC -
still the one."
END OF THE YEAR
CHECKLIST -Prepare year end checklist -
ding -Marry my true love Star Jones - ding
-Receive erotic late night phone calls from Bill O'Reilly -
ding -Stop taking steroids - buzz
Dave takes a
moment to compare his before and after photos of his taking
steroids. It's obvious the effect these growth hormones had on
Dave.
-In case I get sick, always have a guy that kinda
looks like me standing by backstage (cut to guy who sort of
looks like Dave backstage) - ding -Ask Mel Gibson to
direct my biography, "The Passion of the Dave." -
ding -Get in drunken brawl with an Indiana Pacer -
ding -Star in steamy sex tape with Paris Hilton -
buzz -Rent steamy sex tape starring Paris Hilton -
ding -Botox - ding -Brow lift - ding
-More convincing hairpiece - ding -Convince Michael
Moore to join Weight Watchers - buzz -Give the sound
effects guy a Christmas bonus - buzz -Give Martha a
year-end conjugal - ding.
And that's been Dave's year.
Back from commercial, Dave is still upset with our cue
card guy, Tony Mendez, for messing up an otherwise
nice moment of Dave welcoming into the world little Emily
Stangel. Dave says, "I'm ticked that the cue card
kids is pushing me around like that. This doesn't happen on
Oprah!" Paul agrees, then points out that our cue
card kid is 60 years old.
BILL MURRAY:
enters and before sitting down, says to Dave, "I've been
enjoying your show." Dave says Bill looks tremendous.
Bill suggests Dave to take another look. "Look at me.
Look at me real hard," urges Bill. He continues, "I
just realized . . . I've . . . . I've been
poisoned." Bill calls for a photo from one of his
past appearances, asking for the guy who is in charge in the
control room. Director Jerry Foley answers that he is here.
Bill asks for the shot from some time back and we see a younger
more youthful Bill Murray. Bill can only shake his head.
"See the difference between then and now?" How
did this happen? When did this happen? Bill can only laugh a
weak laugh. "Ah, Dave. That's what makes them so
clever." You can't pinpoint the exact time you were
poisoned. Bill suspects it happened a long time ago when he
cut off a cab driver, or perhaps the cab driver cut off him, and
the cabbie chased him to the edge of the island of Manhattan.
Bill distinctly remembers being yelled at in Russian. Could
this Russian, or perhaps Ukrainian, been responsible for the
poisoning? No one will ever know.
On a lighter side,
how is Bill's holiday shopping going? Bill has been hard at
work making and promoting movies that he hasn't had time to do
much at all for the holidays. He asks Dave if he could take a
moment to finally get around to taking the family Christmas card
photo. He hands Biff a camera and calls out a family he
rented. A woman, two kids, and a dog run out on stage to be
with Bill. Bill takes off his jacket and we see they are each
wearing a red sweater over a white turtle neck, even the dog.
Dave eyes the pretty wife and asks Bill, "Ever rent her
before?" I chuckled at the question. I expected a bigger
response from the audience. I laughed again when Bill
suggested they pose in totem pole style. In front was the dog
and the son. Bill was next. Then the daughter, then mom, then
Dave. All lined up in a row, top to bottom. It was silly and
funny, and a pose I've seen before. I'm still chuckling that
this pose is referred to as the totem pole.
Any
Christmas memories? Bill once bought his family each a nice
individually wrapped bag of cashews. He put the bags under the
tree a few days before Christmas. Being such a fan of the
cashew, Bill couldn't help himself from invading the already
wrapped cashews. By Christmas, less then what you would expect
in an airplane bag of cashews remained. Dave saw an
article in Cigar Aficionado about Bill. Dave learned that
while working on "What About Bob," Bill rented a bus
and took much of the crew on a bus ride. The film was shot in
West Virginia and everyone in West Virginia has their own still
for making moonshine. Bill and the 55 went on a road trip to
see an MC Hammer concert, swilling and swigging
from the moonshine all the way. Was the moonshine tasty?
"No, but it was effective." Being an actor with time
always at a premium, you need your drug-of-choice to be quick
acting. West Virginia moonshine fit the bill. During the MC
Hammer concert, Bill was spotted and invited up to dance the
"Can't Touch This" song. Bill is proud to say he knew
all the moves necessary to dance to "Can't Touch This"
and did so for MC Hammer. Bill ending up splitting his pants,
which were quickly pinned shut by his seamstress wife.
Bill is appearing in "The Life Aquatic with Steve
Zissou." It opens nationwide on Christmas day.
Dave described it as being "wacky, funny, enjoyable and
silly, about 15% off reality."
ACT 5:
Late Show Announcement:
"This message is for those people
who were Late Show audience members. The following
items have been left behind at recent tapings. Do any of them
look familiar?" See photo of a hat. A scarf. A
.357 magnum handgun. "If so, come on down to the
Ed Sullivan Theater ticket office and claim your item. This has
been a Late Show announcement. We'll be right
back."
KAKI KING:
Guitar player extraordinaire. Playing a guitar without a hole
in the middle, Kaki King performed a song from her CD,
"Legs to Make Us Longer." She produced the sound of
3. Very nice. Very interesting.
And that was our
show for Monday, December 20, 2004.
Wahoo
EXTRA! Now it's being
reported that Bernie Kerik goes swimming
immediately after eating.
So I bit the bullet and went
to the mall on Sunday to do some Christmas
shopping. I went to the old mall, thinking everyone
would be at the new mall. I had a few things specifically in
mind. I tried to buy a case for our digital camera -- a
quantity gift, not really a quality gift. I was third in line
at the camera section in Boscov's. Unfortunately,
the guy first in line had a lot of questions about cameras.
The cashier guy doubled as the salesman and the guy working the
register. This was not good. I had my item and I had cash in
hand. I couldn't make my purchase because the guy in front
wasn't ready to buy. He only had questions. And the guy
manning the cash register was now playing the part of
"salesman." I saw this as a problem. This may have
been conducive to making a "future" sale but it
certainly wasn't conducive to making an immediate sale. I
didn't blame the guy with the questions; I blamed Boscov's for
poor staffing. But I waited. I was going to try to keep my
happy and spiritual Christmas holiday joy as long as I could. I
little wait on line wasn't going to ruin it for me. I was
quite proud of myself for keeping calm for the 10 minutes of
questions and answers ahead of me. Finally, the customer had
learned enough about the product and decided against making the
purchase of the digital camera at this time. He customer left
and the lady in front of me was now ready to make her purchase.
Or so I thought. She too had questions. She was not ready to
buy. I stood for 5 more minutes of questions. Now I was
debating whether to leave or stay. I really wanted to leave
but I had already invested 15 minutes into my wait. Should I
just throw away my time like that after investing a quarter of
an hour? After another minute, my Christmas patience finally
hit the limit. I left the camera case on the counter in front
of the guy 'working' the register and left. I fumed the rest
of the way to the car. I decided to try my luck at the new
mall.
The new mall is about 5 miles away and is
advertised to be the 2nd biggest in the country, after the Mall
of America in Minnesota. It was now about 10:30 AM and I was
quite surprised at the number of parking spaces that were
available. I went directly to Best Buy. I
picked up a camera case and some other stuff that I won't
mention here because Denise will probably read this
before Christmas. I went to pay for the stuff. There didn't
seem to be much of a line at any of the 7 cashiers. I walked
up to one register but a security guard pointed me to the line.
There was one line for the 7 cashiers. When one register opened
up, the cashier would yell "Next!" and the next person
on line would go to that register. Made sense. I thought this
was a pretty good system. I walked to the back of the line.
The line was longer than I thought. It stretched around toward
the back of the car stereo section. I followed the line and it
continued to the DVD's, past the TV's, past the CD's, and up to
the office furniture. The line was ridiculously long. I
threw the camera case down on the nearest shelf and left. I
wanted to spend money but I couldn't. What amazed me most
about this was the number of people WILLING to wait on that line
to spend their hard-earned money. The wait had to be over half
an hour! None of this made sense to me and the rest of the day
I wondered why people don't value their time the way I do.
I then walked over to the attached Target's
and made my purchase of the digital camera case. I complain
how I hate wasting time but if I only waited 5 more minutes I
could have saved two extra trips to different stores.
On my way out of the mall, three cars followed me. It
was now 1:30 and there wasn't a parking spot available at the
new mall. Incoming shoppers had no where to go. Cars were
stopped at the doors of the mall and they would follow departing
shoppers. The idiots who built the mall made it so big they
left no room for parking. The inside was roomy . . . . but the
outside had no more parking.
Saturday night I went
to the Turning Point in Piermont, New York. It's a
small club that features some pretty good shows. Saturday
night was the return of my favorite local band of the early
1980's, Finn & the Sharks. Back in the day,
friends and I would venture to The Office every Friday night and
kick it up to Finn. It was all good times and for one night we
relived the fun. What a blast. Great music, great sound,
loud, exciting, fun and good friends! During the show, one of
my pals slipped me a note. It read, "Right now we're 20
years old. When we walk out through those doors, we're going to
be 45 again." I laughed. I say that every year when
our group goes to the Yankee game. A guy rents out a bus and
30 of us go to the first Yankee Saturday home game each year.
The day starts at 8:30 in the morning and ends somewhere around
midnight. Some years back when I lived 10 miles from Yankee
Stadium, I would drive 25 miles further away just for the bus
ride back to Yankee Stadium. It's a yearly highlight. It's
all guys. No kids. No wives. No girlfriends. I usually
end up a mess by night's end and stay at a friend's house till
morning. It was on the ride back on the bus from one such
Yankee trip that I slurred, "We're 20 years old right now.
The second we get off the bus, we're going to be 40 again.
Drink up!" It's a quote that is now oft repeated to me.
When you can find those times that make you feel 20, it's
golden. What is yours?
Finn & the Sharks just
pressed a new CD. I got mine. If you want to find out what
Mikemack listened to from '78 to '83, check it out at http://www.turningpointcafe.com/finn.html
Bill Murray; and Kaki King. PLUS:
Happy news in the Stangel household; Paul's rendition of
Cher's "O' Holy Night"; TV Guide: Greatest Moments
2004; Dave's end of the year checklist; Lara vs. Laura; and we
find out where Dave used to buy his pants.
Happy
news at the Late Show. Head writer Justin
Stangel and his wife gave birth to a baby girl,
Emily. Born Saturday morning at 1:07 A.M.,
Emily weighed in at the very lucky 7 pounds, 11 ounces. Emily
is their first child. Congratulations to Justin and Lara.
Off camera we hear Tony yell out,
"Lara." Dave looks over and says,
"Lara. What did I say?" Tony says Justin's wife's
name is Lara." I'm not sure but I think we were having a
simple difference in accent. Dave's 'Lara' may have leaned a
little towards "Laura." Tony brought it back over to
a more flat 'A' sound, saying "Lara" like
"Larry." Dave doesn't seem pleased with Tony's
correction and gives him a bit of the evil eye. He asks,
"And how do we pronounce your name? 'Adios'?"
On the show tonight, Bill Murray from the movie "The
Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou." Also tonight, guitarist
Kaki King. Paul is enthused about the guitarist, raving over
her ability and agility with the guitar. Dave mentions,
"Coincidentally, when I was a kid, that's where I bought my
pants." Paul, without missing a beat, asks "Where's
that?" Dave: "Kaki King."
During this,
Dave received a note explaining that Kaki King would not be
singing, only performing an instrumental with her acoustic
guitar, or as the note was written, "acoustic cigar."
Dave takes a moment to ask Paul for a Late
Show/Late Night holiday tradition. Dave
asks Paul if he could do his rendition of Cher
singing "O' Holy Night" from one of her
holiday specials some years back. Paul sets the scene.
It was Cher, with guest William Conrad, star of
"Cannon." William sang "God Bless Ye Merry
Gentlemen." That was his contribution. Cher then, with
great feeling, and with the lights lowered, her hands in a muff,
sang a strangled "O' Holy Night." Paul sings two and
a half lines. It gets better every year. It certainly left a
lasting impression on Paul.
Earlier tonight on ABC they
aired "TV Guide's: Greatest Moments
2004." Dave has a clip which reveals the
top three moments in 2004. "The #3 moment on TV
this year was 'Friends' going off the air. The #2 moment
was Tom Brokaw's final newscast. And the #1 moment on
TV this year was when Dave Letterman was fired. ABC -
still the one."
END OF THE YEAR
CHECKLIST -Prepare year end checklist -
ding -Marry my true love Star Jones - ding
-Receive erotic late night phone calls from Bill O'Reilly -
ding -Stop taking steroids - buzz
Dave takes a
moment to compare his before and after photos of his taking
steroids. It's obvious the effect these growth hormones had on
Dave.
-In case I get sick, always have a guy that kinda
looks like me standing by backstage (cut to guy who sort of
looks like Dave backstage) - ding -Ask Mel Gibson to
direct my biography, "The Passion of the Dave." -
ding -Get in drunken brawl with an Indiana Pacer -
ding -Star in steamy sex tape with Paris Hilton -
buzz -Rent steamy sex tape starring Paris Hilton -
ding -Botox - ding -Brow lift - ding
-More convincing hairpiece - ding -Convince Michael
Moore to join Weight Watchers - buzz -Give the sound
effects guy a Christmas bonus - buzz -Give Martha a
year-end conjugal - ding.
And that's been Dave's year.
Back from commercial, Dave is still upset with our cue
card guy, Tony Mendez, for messing up an otherwise
nice moment of Dave welcoming into the world little Emily
Stangel. Dave says, "I'm ticked that the cue card
kids is pushing me around like that. This doesn't happen on
Oprah!" Paul agrees, then points out that our cue
card kid is 60 years old.
BILL MURRAY:
enters and before sitting down, says to Dave, "I've been
enjoying your show." Dave says Bill looks tremendous.
Bill suggests Dave to take another look. "Look at me.
Look at me real hard," urges Bill. He continues, "I
just realized . . . I've . . . . I've been
poisoned." Bill calls for a photo from one of his
past appearances, asking for the guy who is in charge in the
control room. Director Jerry Foley answers that he is here.
Bill asks for the shot from some time back and we see a younger
more youthful Bill Murray. Bill can only shake his head.
"See the difference between then and now?" How
did this happen? When did this happen? Bill can only laugh a
weak laugh. "Ah, Dave. That's what makes them so
clever." You can't pinpoint the exact time you were
poisoned. Bill suspects it happened a long time ago when he
cut off a cab driver, or perhaps the cab driver cut off him, and
the cabbie chased him to the edge of the island of Manhattan.
Bill distinctly remembers being yelled at in Russian. Could
this Russian, or perhaps Ukrainian, been responsible for the
poisoning? No one will ever know.
On a lighter side,
how is Bill's holiday shopping going? Bill has been hard at
work making and promoting movies that he hasn't had time to do
much at all for the holidays. He asks Dave if he could take a
moment to finally get around to taking the family Christmas card
photo. He hands Biff a camera and calls out a family he
rented. A woman, two kids, and a dog run out on stage to be
with Bill. Bill takes off his jacket and we see they are each
wearing a red sweater over a white turtle neck, even the dog.
Dave eyes the pretty wife and asks Bill, "Ever rent her
before?" I chuckled at the question. I expected a bigger
response from the audience. I laughed again when Bill
suggested they pose in totem pole style. In front was the dog
and the son. Bill was next. Then the daughter, then mom, then
Dave. All lined up in a row, top to bottom. It was silly and
funny, and a pose I've seen before. I'm still chuckling that
this pose is referred to as the totem pole.
Any
Christmas memories? Bill once bought his family each a nice
individually wrapped bag of cashews. He put the bags under the
tree a few days before Christmas. Being such a fan of the
cashew, Bill couldn't help himself from invading the already
wrapped cashews. By Christmas, less then what you would expect
in an airplane bag of cashews remained. Dave saw an
article in Cigar Aficionado about Bill. Dave learned that
while working on "What About Bob," Bill rented a bus
and took much of the crew on a bus ride. The film was shot in
West Virginia and everyone in West Virginia has their own still
for making moonshine. Bill and the 55 went on a road trip to
see an MC Hammer concert, swilling and swigging
from the moonshine all the way. Was the moonshine tasty?
"No, but it was effective." Being an actor with time
always at a premium, you need your drug-of-choice to be quick
acting. West Virginia moonshine fit the bill. During the MC
Hammer concert, Bill was spotted and invited up to dance the
"Can't Touch This" song. Bill is proud to say he knew
all the moves necessary to dance to "Can't Touch This"
and did so for MC Hammer. Bill ending up splitting his pants,
which were quickly pinned shut by his seamstress wife.
Bill is appearing in "The Life Aquatic with Steve
Zissou." It opens nationwide on Christmas day.
Dave described it as being "wacky, funny, enjoyable and
silly, about 15% off reality."
ACT 5:
Late Show Announcement:
"This message is for those people
who were Late Show audience members. The following
items have been left behind at recent tapings. Do any of them
look familiar?" See photo of a hat. A scarf. A
.357 magnum handgun. "If so, come on down to the
Ed Sullivan Theater ticket office and claim your item. This has
been a Late Show announcement. We'll be right
back."
KAKI KING:
Guitar player extraordinaire. Playing a guitar without a hole
in the middle, Kaki King performed a song from her CD,
"Legs to Make Us Longer." She produced the sound of
3. Very nice. Very interesting.
And that was our
show for Monday, December 20, 2004.
Wahoo
EXTRA! Now it's being
reported that Bernie Kerik goes swimming
immediately after eating.
So I bit the bullet and went
to the mall on Sunday to do some Christmas
shopping. I went to the old mall, thinking everyone
would be at the new mall. I had a few things specifically in
mind. I tried to buy a case for our digital camera -- a
quantity gift, not really a quality gift. I was third in line
at the camera section in Boscov's. Unfortunately,
the guy first in line had a lot of questions about cameras.
The cashier guy doubled as the salesman and the guy working the
register. This was not good. I had my item and I had cash in
hand. I couldn't make my purchase because the guy in front
wasn't ready to buy. He only had questions. And the guy
manning the cash register was now playing the part of
"salesman." I saw this as a problem. This may have
been conducive to making a "future" sale but it
certainly wasn't conducive to making an immediate sale. I
didn't blame the guy with the questions; I blamed Boscov's for
poor staffing. But I waited. I was going to try to keep my
happy and spiritual Christmas holiday joy as long as I could. I
little wait on line wasn't going to ruin it for me. I was
quite proud of myself for keeping calm for the 10 minutes of
questions and answers ahead of me. Finally, the customer had
learned enough about the product and decided against making the
purchase of the digital camera at this time. He customer left
and the lady in front of me was now ready to make her purchase.
Or so I thought. She too had questions. She was not ready to
buy. I stood for 5 more minutes of questions. Now I was
debating whether to leave or stay. I really wanted to leave
but I had already invested 15 minutes into my wait. Should I
just throw away my time like that after investing a quarter of
an hour? After another minute, my Christmas patience finally
hit the limit. I left the camera case on the counter in front
of the guy 'working' the register and left. I fumed the rest
of the way to the car. I decided to try my luck at the new
mall.
The new mall is about 5 miles away and is
advertised to be the 2nd biggest in the country, after the Mall
of America in Minnesota. It was now about 10:30 AM and I was
quite surprised at the number of parking spaces that were
available. I went directly to Best Buy. I
picked up a camera case and some other stuff that I won't
mention here because Denise will probably read this
before Christmas. I went to pay for the stuff. There didn't
seem to be much of a line at any of the 7 cashiers. I walked
up to one register but a security guard pointed me to the line.
There was one line for the 7 cashiers. When one register opened
up, the cashier would yell "Next!" and the next person
on line would go to that register. Made sense. I thought this
was a pretty good system. I walked to the back of the line.
The line was longer than I thought. It stretched around toward
the back of the car stereo section. I followed the line and it
continued to the DVD's, past the TV's, past the CD's, and up to
the office furniture. The line was ridiculously long. I
threw the camera case down on the nearest shelf and left. I
wanted to spend money but I couldn't. What amazed me most
about this was the number of people WILLING to wait on that line
to spend their hard-earned money. The wait had to be over half
an hour! None of this made sense to me and the rest of the day
I wondered why people don't value their time the way I do.
I then walked over to the attached Target's
and made my purchase of the digital camera case. I complain
how I hate wasting time but if I only waited 5 more minutes I
could have saved two extra trips to different stores.
On my way out of the mall, three cars followed me. It
was now 1:30 and there wasn't a parking spot available at the
new mall. Incoming shoppers had no where to go. Cars were
stopped at the doors of the mall and they would follow departing
shoppers. The idiots who built the mall made it so big they
left no room for parking. The inside was roomy . . . . but the
outside had no more parking.
Saturday night I went
to the Turning Point in Piermont, New York. It's a
small club that features some pretty good shows. Saturday
night was the return of my favorite local band of the early
1980's, Finn & the Sharks. Back in the day,
friends and I would venture to The Office every Friday night and
kick it up to Finn. It was all good times and for one night we
relived the fun. What a blast. Great music, great sound,
loud, exciting, fun and good friends! During the show, one of
my pals slipped me a note. It read, "Right now we're 20
years old. When we walk out through those doors, we're going to
be 45 again." I laughed. I say that every year when
our group goes to the Yankee game. A guy rents out a bus and
30 of us go to the first Yankee Saturday home game each year.
The day starts at 8:30 in the morning and ends somewhere around
midnight. Some years back when I lived 10 miles from Yankee
Stadium, I would drive 25 miles further away just for the bus
ride back to Yankee Stadium. It's a yearly highlight. It's
all guys. No kids. No wives. No girlfriends. I usually
end up a mess by night's end and stay at a friend's house till
morning. It was on the ride back on the bus from one such
Yankee trip that I slurred, "We're 20 years old right now.
The second we get off the bus, we're going to be 40 again.
Drink up!" It's a quote that is now oft repeated to me.
When you can find those times that make you feel 20, it's
golden. What is yours?
Finn & the Sharks just
pressed a new CD. I got mine. If you want to find out what
Mikemack listened to from '78 to '83, check it out at http://www.turningpointcafe.com/finn.html