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WAHOO GAZETTE LATE SHOW staffer Mike McIntee gives you a daily show summary and the behind-the-scenes lowdown with his daily Wahoo Gazette. So much juicy inside information that you'll say "Wahoo!"
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).
Martha Stewart; Gretchen Wilson; and Sitting In with the
Band, Buckwheat Sidecar. PLUS: The LATE
SHOW Bear; CBS promo for the LATE SHOW; Afghanistan Election;
and Biff Hangs with the American Chopper Guys.
Sitting in with the band tonight, on the accordion,
Buckwheat Zydeco. His CD is entitled,
"Jackpot." Buckwheat will be one of the many
performing at the Pay-Per-View benefit concert at the Madison
Square Garden Tuesday night, "From the Big Apple to the Big
Easy." I settle into my seat looking forward to some
good, fun music tonight.
Also on the show,
Martha Stewart. Dave is good friends with Martha
and knows stuff about her that is not common knowledge to the
rest of us. She has overcome a lot to attain her level of
success. For instance, she was once married to a thug; actually
a thug, rat bastard. Then she killed a guy and had to do time.
Paul jumps to her defense, advising Dave that's not exactly how
it went. Martha then left the thug and for 7 years she lived
in a hollow tree. Working with nothing but acorns and twigs,
she built this incredible empire she calls "Martha."
It's time to put away the LATE SHOW Bear.
We got to do it. City regulations, or something like that.
It's been on the book for years now, dating all the way back to
the Van Wyck Administration.
Performing tonight's
ritual is our production assistant, Amy Hideirotis.
She's ready to put up a fight with the bear, but where's the
bear? I thought perhaps the bear was still in L.A. for the
Emmys, but no. There is no bear, but there is the bear's
lawyer. The lawyer enters and speaks to the camera:
Lawyer: "The Late Show
Bear can't be here tonight due to ongoing contract negotiations.
The bear maintains his position and is willing to hold out
indefinitely for a piece of the foreign distribution rights and
percentage of DVD sales. This is an unfortunate situation we
hope will be rectified soon.
Last
night were the Emmy Awards out in L.A. We used
to win Emmy Awards, mostly because there was no competition. It
was just Dave's show and nothing else. The show would be
nominated 5 times in one category simply because there was no
one else out there. Then a drought. We went for years without
winning anything. Then Dave had his heart attack and the show
won 4 - 5 years in a row. Now, once again, a drought. Which
means one thing . . . . Dave clutches his chest.
"Ooooh, my heart again . . ." Maybe that'll work.
Dave then thanks Jon Stewart for the nice words he said during
the telecast.
Even though the show hadn't won last
night, CBS has stuck with the show and continues to show strong
support. They were running this Late Show promo all day.
The usual CBS/Late Show promo
Announcer: "Congratulations to the Late Show
on coming home empty-handed from the Emmy Awards! Way to go,
losers! Then catch Craig!"
William Shatner won another Emmy Award last night.
Dave heard something odd just after his name was announced. We
see a clip of Shatner being announced for winning Outstanding
Supporting Actor in a Drama for his work on Boston
Legal.
Announcer:
"This is William Shatner's first Emmy win. This was his
third nomination and the second nomination for his
hairpiece."
For the Emmy
Awards, Dave discovered his dressing room was between
Donald Trump's and William Shatner's.
The always suspicious Dave reasoned this must be the Bad Hair
Corner. The Emmy officials didn't want to frighten the other
presenters so they hid Dave, The Baboon, and Captain Kirk away.
Afghanistan held its first democratic
election in 35 years on Sunday. By late last night, Al
Jazeera was already projecting some winners. Dave read
directly from the blue card. Instead of reading
"projecting" some winners, we first said
"protecting" some winners. I kicked the copy
machine, worried that I had mistakenly typed
"protecting" and now "projecting." I had
to sit through the whole show before checking the blue card.
After the show I checked the show file and discovered I typed .
. . . . . . "projecting." I had it right.
Phew!
Announcer: "This
is an Al Jazeera election update. With two-thirds of precincts
reporting, Al Jazeera can now call the hotly contested Kabul
provincial council seat for . . . Gary! (graphic shows Mullah
Wahid: 12%; Gary the Goat: 88%.) We now return you to our
regularly scheduled program already in progress."
We say hello to our friend Biff
Henderson. He recently spent an afternoon with our
friends upstate in Orange County, The Teutels, from
American Chopper. And we brought along a camera
crew. It's something we call, "BIFF HANGS WITH THE
'AMERICAN CHOPPER' GUYS." It was a very funny 5
minutes as we see Biff hanging with Paul Teutel, Sr.; Paul
Teutel, Jr.; and Mikey Teutel.
American Chopper on the Discovery Channel,
Mondays at 10:00 PM. Dave calls it the best show on TV.
Back from commercial, Dave says he learned something over
the weekend while in Los Angeles. You know the "Hi, Bob.
Hi, Stan. How's the go going?" Well, Dave heard it right
from the source, Tom Thomerson. It's not "Hi, Bob. Hi,
Stan. How's the go going?" It's "Hi, Bob. "Hi,
Phil. Hi, Stan. How's the go going?" Dave's been
leaving out Phil all these years. And I think I got the name
right, "Tom Thomerson."
MARTHA
STEWART: Hey! Looks like prison agreed with Martha.
She looks great. Dave admits he made quite a few jokes about
Marthas incarceration and apologizes, explaining
its just business and its what he does.
Martha fully understands, and lets Dave know there
were televisions in prison. She saw the jokes. So what
exactly was Martha convicted of, Dave asks. Martha says,
I dont know. The audience
applauds because they dont know either. Martha says
she doesnt have a long memory for bad things. Dave
asks about the appeal she is going through to overturn the
conviction, not understanding why she would do this if she had
already done the time. She would just like the matter cleaned
up. But why do the time? She could have appealed and put off
doing the time. Martha says she wanted to get it behind her.
If time were still a possibility and it was
still sitting in front of her, she wouldnt have her
new daytime program Martha or her NBC
project, The Apprentice: Martha Stewart. She
wanted the possibility of time over and behind her so she could
move forward and get on with her life. Was she convicted of
insider trading? No, she was convicted of obstruction of
justice and she says she will not talk any more about it until
after the appeal.
Discussing with Martha her ordeal,
Dave mentions there are precipice moments in one's life that
shapes everything else. I smiled when Dave said the word
"precipice." I'm still "reading"
Frankenstein, (I have about an hour of reading left
. . . . I'm getting there) and Mary Shelley uses
the word "precipice" throughout the book. It's a
word I never use. And then I heard Dave using it a while back.
And now reading Frankenstein, it's in there all the
time. I think I'm now ready to start using it in my
vocabulary. "Precipice."
The verdict:
When she stood before the court awaiting the verdict, she and
her team were optimistic. When the verdict came down, she
thought it was all a dream. She was dazed. Her daughter
fainting behind her and hitting the floor shocked her back into
reality. Dave admits to having a very low threshold for
withstanding any sort of embarrassment, and wonders if the
guilty verdict embarrassed her. Martha says she was more
horrified than embarrassed. Get depressed? Martha
wouldnt allow it. She says she was not so much
concerned about what was in store for her but what about those
around her, those who worked for her, those that made their
living from her television projects and magazines and other
ventures. What would happen to them? After 5 months in
prison, Marthas empire seems greater than ever. Was
there ever any doubt? What did she learn in prison? She
believes that contrary to what we may be led to believe, our
penal system is not geared towards rehabilitation.
Rehabilitation is non-existent. Uh oh. You mean Martha may
once again do what she didnt do the first time again?
Dave ends by asking how she thinks he would do in prison.
Martha says, I think it might do you some
good.
ACT 5: Music from
Buckwheat Zydeco.
GRETCHEN WILSON: From
her soon-to-be released CD, All Jacked Up, Gretchen
rocked it with "All Jacked Up."
And that was
our show for Monday September 19, 2005.Wahoo
EXTRA! What was once my
most hated part of the Emmy Awards is now my favorite. It's
the banter between the presenters before they announce the
winner.
Rachel Bilson, to Chris
O'Donnell: (paraphrasing) "When I was a
little girl, I had the biggest crush on you." O'Donnell: "That makes me feel good . . . .
and very old."
It is just so so bad. There has
to be a better way to get into the presentation of the Award.
It is NEVER funny, this banter. And do the presenters actually
rehearse their lines? I think not, or else these professionals
wouldnt be so stiff.
I just thought of
something. I may have first thought of it back during the
Academy Awards. My idea is for a new Emmy category. The
category: Outstanding Acceptance Speech at an Awards Show.
Maybe if those honored knew they could get another trophy, they
would put some work into making their acceptance speech more
entertaining.
Emmy Trivia: From the Emmy
Website
Naming the Award:
Academy founder Syd Cassyd suggested Ike,
the nickname for the television iconoscope tube. But with a
national war hero named Dwight D. Ike
Eisenhower, Academy members thought they needed a less
well-known name. Harry Lubcke, a pioneer television engineer and
the third Academy president, suggested Immy,
a term commonly used for the early image orthicon camera. The
name stuck and was later modified to Emmy, which members thought
was more appropriate for a female symbol.
More Emmy trivia from the Emmy website:
Each year, The R.S. Owens
company in Chicago casts the approximately two hundred
statuettes ordered for the prime-time awards show and the three
hundred for the regional awards. Although the numbers of
categories rarely change, the possibility of multiple winners
prompts the Academy to order extra statuettes. Surplus awards
are stored for the following year's ceremony.
The
statuettes weigh four and three-quarter pounds and are made of
copper, nickel, silver, and gold. Each one takes five and
one-half hours to make and is handled with white gloves so as to
leave no fingerprints.
My
9-year-old Danielle takes up the violin today.
First day. We picked up the rental Saturday morning.
Shes been wanting to adjust the knobs at the top of
the violin so theyre all pointing the same way.
Shes blaming this on her unable to play the violin
correctly. I told her not to touch the knobs. I was there
when the renter said, Dont touch these knobs
up here. The violin is tuned. Dont touch these
knobs. He said it directly to Danielle. But
still, she HAD to adjust one particular knob. I finally
relented. I told her I know youre dying to
adjust the knob even though you were told not to. Go ahead.
Go ahead and adjust the knob. She adjusted the
knob. I hear a scream. I broke the string! I broke
the string! she cries. She didnt actually
break the string. She loosened it way too much and only
appeared to be broken. Now it is out of tune. Today is
Danielles first day of violin lessons at school.
This is going to be a lot of fun.
What is Zydeco
music? What is Cajun music? From a Buckwheat Zydeco
interview I found on the Wire Website:
- Your name is Buckwheat Zydeco, not Buckwheat Cajun,
yet people still confuse the two styles. What makes Cajun
music Cajun, and Zydeco music Zydeco? -
Buckwheat Zydeco: Cajun is white, and we blacks in
Southwest Louisiana call ourselves Creole. Zydeco is more
based on R&B, Cajun is based more on country.
Martha Stewart; Gretchen Wilson; and Sitting In with the
Band, Buckwheat Sidecar. PLUS: The LATE
SHOW Bear; CBS promo for the LATE SHOW; Afghanistan Election;
and Biff Hangs with the American Chopper Guys.
Sitting in with the band tonight, on the accordion,
Buckwheat Zydeco. His CD is entitled,
"Jackpot." Buckwheat will be one of the many
performing at the Pay-Per-View benefit concert at the Madison
Square Garden Tuesday night, "From the Big Apple to the Big
Easy." I settle into my seat looking forward to some
good, fun music tonight.
Also on the show,
Martha Stewart. Dave is good friends with Martha
and knows stuff about her that is not common knowledge to the
rest of us. She has overcome a lot to attain her level of
success. For instance, she was once married to a thug; actually
a thug, rat bastard. Then she killed a guy and had to do time.
Paul jumps to her defense, advising Dave that's not exactly how
it went. Martha then left the thug and for 7 years she lived
in a hollow tree. Working with nothing but acorns and twigs,
she built this incredible empire she calls "Martha."
It's time to put away the LATE SHOW Bear.
We got to do it. City regulations, or something like that.
It's been on the book for years now, dating all the way back to
the Van Wyck Administration.
Performing tonight's
ritual is our production assistant, Amy Hideirotis.
She's ready to put up a fight with the bear, but where's the
bear? I thought perhaps the bear was still in L.A. for the
Emmys, but no. There is no bear, but there is the bear's
lawyer. The lawyer enters and speaks to the camera:
Lawyer: "The Late Show
Bear can't be here tonight due to ongoing contract negotiations.
The bear maintains his position and is willing to hold out
indefinitely for a piece of the foreign distribution rights and
percentage of DVD sales. This is an unfortunate situation we
hope will be rectified soon.
Last
night were the Emmy Awards out in L.A. We used
to win Emmy Awards, mostly because there was no competition. It
was just Dave's show and nothing else. The show would be
nominated 5 times in one category simply because there was no
one else out there. Then a drought. We went for years without
winning anything. Then Dave had his heart attack and the show
won 4 - 5 years in a row. Now, once again, a drought. Which
means one thing . . . . Dave clutches his chest.
"Ooooh, my heart again . . ." Maybe that'll work.
Dave then thanks Jon Stewart for the nice words he said during
the telecast.
Even though the show hadn't won last
night, CBS has stuck with the show and continues to show strong
support. They were running this Late Show promo all day.
The usual CBS/Late Show promo
Announcer: "Congratulations to the Late Show
on coming home empty-handed from the Emmy Awards! Way to go,
losers! Then catch Craig!"
William Shatner won another Emmy Award last night.
Dave heard something odd just after his name was announced. We
see a clip of Shatner being announced for winning Outstanding
Supporting Actor in a Drama for his work on Boston
Legal.
Announcer:
"This is William Shatner's first Emmy win. This was his
third nomination and the second nomination for his
hairpiece."
For the Emmy
Awards, Dave discovered his dressing room was between
Donald Trump's and William Shatner's.
The always suspicious Dave reasoned this must be the Bad Hair
Corner. The Emmy officials didn't want to frighten the other
presenters so they hid Dave, The Baboon, and Captain Kirk away.
Afghanistan held its first democratic
election in 35 years on Sunday. By late last night, Al
Jazeera was already projecting some winners. Dave read
directly from the blue card. Instead of reading
"projecting" some winners, we first said
"protecting" some winners. I kicked the copy
machine, worried that I had mistakenly typed
"protecting" and now "projecting." I had
to sit through the whole show before checking the blue card.
After the show I checked the show file and discovered I typed .
. . . . . . "projecting." I had it right.
Phew!
Announcer: "This
is an Al Jazeera election update. With two-thirds of precincts
reporting, Al Jazeera can now call the hotly contested Kabul
provincial council seat for . . . Gary! (graphic shows Mullah
Wahid: 12%; Gary the Goat: 88%.) We now return you to our
regularly scheduled program already in progress."
We say hello to our friend Biff
Henderson. He recently spent an afternoon with our
friends upstate in Orange County, The Teutels, from
American Chopper. And we brought along a camera
crew. It's something we call, "BIFF HANGS WITH THE
'AMERICAN CHOPPER' GUYS." It was a very funny 5
minutes as we see Biff hanging with Paul Teutel, Sr.; Paul
Teutel, Jr.; and Mikey Teutel.
American Chopper on the Discovery Channel,
Mondays at 10:00 PM. Dave calls it the best show on TV.
Back from commercial, Dave says he learned something over
the weekend while in Los Angeles. You know the "Hi, Bob.
Hi, Stan. How's the go going?" Well, Dave heard it right
from the source, Tom Thomerson. It's not "Hi, Bob. Hi,
Stan. How's the go going?" It's "Hi, Bob. "Hi,
Phil. Hi, Stan. How's the go going?" Dave's been
leaving out Phil all these years. And I think I got the name
right, "Tom Thomerson."
MARTHA
STEWART: Hey! Looks like prison agreed with Martha.
She looks great. Dave admits he made quite a few jokes about
Marthas incarceration and apologizes, explaining
its just business and its what he does.
Martha fully understands, and lets Dave know there
were televisions in prison. She saw the jokes. So what
exactly was Martha convicted of, Dave asks. Martha says,
I dont know. The audience
applauds because they dont know either. Martha says
she doesnt have a long memory for bad things. Dave
asks about the appeal she is going through to overturn the
conviction, not understanding why she would do this if she had
already done the time. She would just like the matter cleaned
up. But why do the time? She could have appealed and put off
doing the time. Martha says she wanted to get it behind her.
If time were still a possibility and it was
still sitting in front of her, she wouldnt have her
new daytime program Martha or her NBC
project, The Apprentice: Martha Stewart. She
wanted the possibility of time over and behind her so she could
move forward and get on with her life. Was she convicted of
insider trading? No, she was convicted of obstruction of
justice and she says she will not talk any more about it until
after the appeal.
Discussing with Martha her ordeal,
Dave mentions there are precipice moments in one's life that
shapes everything else. I smiled when Dave said the word
"precipice." I'm still "reading"
Frankenstein, (I have about an hour of reading left
. . . . I'm getting there) and Mary Shelley uses
the word "precipice" throughout the book. It's a
word I never use. And then I heard Dave using it a while back.
And now reading Frankenstein, it's in there all the
time. I think I'm now ready to start using it in my
vocabulary. "Precipice."
The verdict:
When she stood before the court awaiting the verdict, she and
her team were optimistic. When the verdict came down, she
thought it was all a dream. She was dazed. Her daughter
fainting behind her and hitting the floor shocked her back into
reality. Dave admits to having a very low threshold for
withstanding any sort of embarrassment, and wonders if the
guilty verdict embarrassed her. Martha says she was more
horrified than embarrassed. Get depressed? Martha
wouldnt allow it. She says she was not so much
concerned about what was in store for her but what about those
around her, those who worked for her, those that made their
living from her television projects and magazines and other
ventures. What would happen to them? After 5 months in
prison, Marthas empire seems greater than ever. Was
there ever any doubt? What did she learn in prison? She
believes that contrary to what we may be led to believe, our
penal system is not geared towards rehabilitation.
Rehabilitation is non-existent. Uh oh. You mean Martha may
once again do what she didnt do the first time again?
Dave ends by asking how she thinks he would do in prison.
Martha says, I think it might do you some
good.
ACT 5: Music from
Buckwheat Zydeco.
GRETCHEN WILSON: From
her soon-to-be released CD, All Jacked Up, Gretchen
rocked it with "All Jacked Up."
And that was
our show for Monday September 19, 2005.Wahoo
EXTRA! What was once my
most hated part of the Emmy Awards is now my favorite. It's
the banter between the presenters before they announce the
winner.
Rachel Bilson, to Chris
O'Donnell: (paraphrasing) "When I was a
little girl, I had the biggest crush on you." O'Donnell: "That makes me feel good . . . .
and very old."
It is just so so bad. There has
to be a better way to get into the presentation of the Award.
It is NEVER funny, this banter. And do the presenters actually
rehearse their lines? I think not, or else these professionals
wouldnt be so stiff.
I just thought of
something. I may have first thought of it back during the
Academy Awards. My idea is for a new Emmy category. The
category: Outstanding Acceptance Speech at an Awards Show.
Maybe if those honored knew they could get another trophy, they
would put some work into making their acceptance speech more
entertaining.
Emmy Trivia: From the Emmy
Website
Naming the Award:
Academy founder Syd Cassyd suggested Ike,
the nickname for the television iconoscope tube. But with a
national war hero named Dwight D. Ike
Eisenhower, Academy members thought they needed a less
well-known name. Harry Lubcke, a pioneer television engineer and
the third Academy president, suggested Immy,
a term commonly used for the early image orthicon camera. The
name stuck and was later modified to Emmy, which members thought
was more appropriate for a female symbol.
More Emmy trivia from the Emmy website:
Each year, The R.S. Owens
company in Chicago casts the approximately two hundred
statuettes ordered for the prime-time awards show and the three
hundred for the regional awards. Although the numbers of
categories rarely change, the possibility of multiple winners
prompts the Academy to order extra statuettes. Surplus awards
are stored for the following year's ceremony.
The
statuettes weigh four and three-quarter pounds and are made of
copper, nickel, silver, and gold. Each one takes five and
one-half hours to make and is handled with white gloves so as to
leave no fingerprints.
My
9-year-old Danielle takes up the violin today.
First day. We picked up the rental Saturday morning.
Shes been wanting to adjust the knobs at the top of
the violin so theyre all pointing the same way.
Shes blaming this on her unable to play the violin
correctly. I told her not to touch the knobs. I was there
when the renter said, Dont touch these knobs
up here. The violin is tuned. Dont touch these
knobs. He said it directly to Danielle. But
still, she HAD to adjust one particular knob. I finally
relented. I told her I know youre dying to
adjust the knob even though you were told not to. Go ahead.
Go ahead and adjust the knob. She adjusted the
knob. I hear a scream. I broke the string! I broke
the string! she cries. She didnt actually
break the string. She loosened it way too much and only
appeared to be broken. Now it is out of tune. Today is
Danielles first day of violin lessons at school.
This is going to be a lot of fun.
What is Zydeco
music? What is Cajun music? From a Buckwheat Zydeco
interview I found on the Wire Website:
- Your name is Buckwheat Zydeco, not Buckwheat Cajun,
yet people still confuse the two styles. What makes Cajun
music Cajun, and Zydeco music Zydeco? -
Buckwheat Zydeco: Cajun is white, and we blacks in
Southwest Louisiana call ourselves Creole. Zydeco is more
based on R&B, Cajun is based more on country.