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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).
Dr. Phil; and Roger Federer. PLUS:
Martha's new show; Bush helping out; Late
Show bear; Who Said It?; a top ten list; and an Emmy
Award for the Late Show and the Technical
Crew.
During the Preshow Q&A, a guy in the
audience asked if he could get a photo with Dave.
Surprisingly, Dave invited him up after the monologue.
Unfortunately, the guy didn't have his camera set up to go, plus
he hammed it up a bit too much. I'm not sure but I wouldn't be
surprised if all that "magically disappeared" after
the show's taping.
Good news! Last night at the
Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, the Late Show won
an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Technical
Direction, Camerawork, and Video For A Series."
Congratulations to our technical crew!
Late Show With David Letterman - #2269 - CBS
Worldwide Pants Inc. Timothy Kennedy,
Technical Director William White, Senior
Video Control Dan Campbell, Video
Control Al Cialino, Camera Operator David Dorsett, Camera Operator Karin-Lucie Grzella, Camera Operator Jack Young, Camera Operator John
Hannel, Camera Operator John Curtin,
Camera Operator George Rothweiler, Camera
Operator Dan Flaherty, Camera
Operator Fred Shimizu, Camera
Operator Steve Kaufman, Camera
Operator Joe Debonis, Camera
Operator Claus Stuhlweissenburg, Camera
Operator John Pry, Camera
Show
#2269 was the Bandaloop show.
Dave says the technical
aspect of the show has never been a problem. It's everything
else. Paul adds with a laugh under his breath, "Like
content."
Safety first. Tonight, putting away the
Late Show Bear is Emmy Award-winning
technical director Tim Kennedy. Tim fights off
the beast with his Emmy trophy. The Late Show
Bear is backed into his den and Kennedy slams the door shut
tight. We are safe. Sponsoring the Late
Show Bear tonight: Corona Extra.
"Corona: Miles Away from the Ordinary."
Did
you read about this controversy at a restaurant in China? They
claimed to serve Tiger meat. Turns out, it wasn't
tiger meat. We take a look at what Dave's talking about.
Announcer:
"Authorities have learned a
restaurant in China that was claiming to serve tiger meat was
actually serving donkey meat . . .soaked in tiger urine.
Remember, if you want real tiger meat . . . . you gotta go to
Arby's! And for just 89 cents more, we'll throw in a cup of
tiger urine! Arby's, serving tiger meat since
1992!"
Martha
Stewart had her TV show debut this morning. Dave takes a
moment to exclaim how he would love to have Martha on our show.
Executive producer Barbara Gaines informs Dave that she is
booked for next Monday. An elated Dave responds in elation.
He is looking forward to it. Anyway, Martha's new show was on
earlier today and here's what you missed if you missed
it. Announcer:
"Today on
'Martha!', 'Desperate Housewives' star Marcia Cross stops by, a
dinnertime visit to the home of two fans, and Martha is thrown
back in the hole after she violates her parole by handling a
deadly weapon. Don't miss 'Martha!'. . . just as soon as she
returns from a brief sabbatical."
And President Bush is getting down to business
delivering aid to those suffering from Hurricane Katrina. He's
taking it upon himself to do what he can. We take a
look. Announcer:
"President
Bush is serious about the hurricane relief. He is sending 5
million gallons of water, 1,000 tons of food, and 25 pounds of
fat. George W. Bush - Back on
message!"
An odd shot of Dave.
We find him tapping the top of his dome with a pencil. Says
Dave, "Kinda looks like aerial footage of flood
damage."
WHO SAID IT? 1."You tried to take me down, and now I
will may you all pay!" Who said it? Paul
believes that was said by Osama bin Laden. Dave: No,
Martha Stewart.
2."I want to
see the 'Corpse Bride.'" Who said it? Paul:
"A moviegoer?" Dave: "No. Robert
Blake."
3."This is an
utter failure. We need to end it and let these boys go
home." Who said it? Paul: "An opponent
to the war?" Dave: "No. Kansas City Royals
manager Buddy Bell.
Skipping one, Dave goes to the
next.
4."I must put a stop to
these gay marriages." Paul: "Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger, vetoing the gay marriage
bill?" Dave: "No. Liza Minnelli."
Skipping a bunch, Dave decides to end on this one.
5. "You can save by pumping your
own." Paul: "A gas station
attendant?" Dave: "No. The hookers in Times
Square."
Dave is excited about the upcoming
schedule. Next Monday is Martha. And this Thursday is
Ted Turner. Dave takes a closer look at his blue
card and says with a tad of disappointment, "Oh, I'm sorry,
that's Ike Turner."
TOP TEN: Signs Your Kid
is Working with Al-Qaeda - some bratty kid from Orange
County, California has gone to the other side and has joined up
with the Al Qaeda. #7. Keeps mocking you for having only
one wife. #5. You're getting gas for 12 cents a gallon.
DR. PHIL: Dave recaps Dr. Phil's
career. 1. Started doing segments on Oprah.
2. Then started doing it once a week. 3. Then
got his own show.
How many shows does he do a
year? Dr. Phil says "175." Dave? Dave says
without a blink, "We do 240." It's all in the
delivery.
Over the summer, Dr. Phil and the family went
on vacation on a private cruise. Took a yacht on the French
Riviera, went to France, went to Italy. Dr. Phil says,
"You know those little villages that look so quaint from
the boat? When you get up close they're nothing but flea
markets." The family then went to a resort that had a
pool where everyone was naked, smoking dope, snorting cocaine. .
. and having the sex. Dr. Phil felt very out of place, like
the Beverly Hillbillies hanging out by the Cement Pond. Phil's
son defined it, "This is the worst place to go with your
parents."
Dave asks the good doctor if he
ever gave advice, the patient followed it to the letter, but the
results didn't quite work out right. Dr. Phil won't admit to
it, but does say he mostly gets in trouble for people misquoting
him. Many times he will be stopped in the street and someone
will complain that he said something on his show that's has
ruined the guy's life. When Dr. Phil asks what he said, the
guy will totally misquote what was said on the show. I'm
guessing it's like the game of telephone. Often times a person
will be given the advice, "Do everything your husband wants
you to do," but the person will hear, "Do nothing your
husband wants you to do."
Dave has a
situation with his son which he hopes Dr. Phil can shed some
light. Dave's son Harry, soon to be 2, has started hitting
people in the head for no reason. Dave says he doesn't want to
make a big deal out of it, not wanting to reward the child with
attention, but feels he should address the behavior. Dr. Phil
explains quite clearly, "You have to tell him, 'No.'"
Dave takes a pencil and writes down the keen advice. Dr. Phil
also mentions that as the child gets bigger, older, and
stronger, the parent gets smaller, older and weaker. He says
you got to be firm with the child and adds with wisdom, you
"got to get the bluff in when you can." Dave thanks
Dr. Phil for the advice. Dave has something else he
wants to add. Maybe it's significant to the above. Dave
explains that when Harry turned 1, Dave taught him the game,
"Smack Daddy's Head." Could this game have led Harry
to his behavior of hitting others in the head? Dr. Phil says
that there is a good chance that the game did lead to Harry's
hitting in the head behavior. Dr. Phil asks Dave if he tells
his son "No" or if he has his "people" talk
to him. Dave laughs and admits he has his office do the deed.
Dr. Phil then asks, "Have you married your baby's
mother yet?" Phil then offers Dave the opportunity to
get married on his show. Dave isn't so sure about that. Dave
counters with getting married on Oprah and having the reception
on Dr. Phil. Dr. Phil isn't too keen on that. Dave's final
offer: Married on Oprah; Honeymoon on Dr. Phil. Dr. Phil
REALLY isn't keen on that. Be sure to watch Dr. Phil on
Wednesday. He'll have 1,000 women on the show with the same
problem. Dave tries to guess the topic by Dr. Phil ain't
saying. You'll have to watch.
ROGER
FEDERER: the 2005 U.S. Open Men's Champion. He defeated
Andre Agassi in the finals on Sunday, a match that doubled last
year's viewing audience. Dave mentions that, understandably,
Andre was the sentimental favorite in the finals. Roger says
he expected that but was surprised at how much he WAS the
sentimental favorite. What does Roger think of Agassi still
playing at a championship level at the age of 35? Roger isn't
too happy about it, nor or the other players on the tour. They
all have in their minds retirement at age 31. Now with Agassi
still going strong at 35, 36, that means they may have to
continue playing to that age, putting off retirement for another
5 years. Roger is only 24 but has already won 6 Grand
Slam titles. Some are calling him the greatest tennis player
of all time. That's pretty heady stuff, and Roger advises to
put off that title for another 10 years. Then you can look back
and decide. Roger grew up in Switzerland and has
always loved racket sports; tennis; ping pong; squash. He was
always playing against some wall of the house, creating a
constant bang bang bang bang. His mom always got angry, but as
Dave points out, she probably understands now and is more
accepting. At one time, Roger was a real hothead on the
court, known to throw a racket when things didn't go his way.
What changed him? After one match against Marit Safin where
they both were throwing their rackets and tantrumming, Roger saw
a replay of the match. He was embarrassed by his behavior and
decided to rein in his outbursts. It seems to have worked.
We get a look at the very impressive U.S. Open trophy.
We should have had him put away the Late Show bear
with it.
Afterwards, Dave says if Roger Federer keeps
winning, he's going to add another 'er' to his name.
ACT 5: It's time to announce the winner of
this month's 'Late Show My Stain Looks Like A
Celebrity' Contest. This month's winner is Nina Caroles
of Brookline, Massachusetts. Nina wins because her mildew stain
looks exactly like 80's heartthrob Anthony Michael Hall.
Congratulations, Nina. This has been the Late
Show 'My Stain Looks Like A Celebrity" contest.
Keep it real, America.
And that was our show for
Monday, September 12, 2005. Wahoo
EXTRA! Well that didn't
take long. I'm watching some college football the other day,
Pittsburgh vs. Ohio. 30 seconds after I turn the game on, the
Pittsburgh Panther QB throws an interception and the other team
runs it back for a touchdown. The Pitt coach on the sideline is
not too pleased and is filled with anger. The QB is not too
pleased and is downcast. I wonder what their meeting will be
like when the QB gets to the sideline. We see the dejected QB
walking off the field. Then we get a good minute of crowd
reaction. No shot of the QB, just jubilant fans in the stands.
Watching hours of sports in my day, I've learned that one happy,
cheering crowd looks exactly like the next. Why do directors
show us shots of the crowd and not of the story unfolding down
on the field? I've asked myself this hundreds of times and I
think I've finally come up with the answer. Directors view the
game as a spectator. I view the game as a participant. The
Director pictures himself sitting in the stands. I view myself
as the QB. I want to know what the quarterback or running back
is doing. The director wants to know what the spectator is
doing. And if they don't want to know what the spectators are
doing, they want to know what the coach is doing.
And
on Sunday, I was clicking from the Jet game to the Yankee game
to the IRL race. During the race, ABC had side-by-side
commercials for many of the products being promoted. Covering
2/3 of the screen was the product commercial, and the smaller
portion of the screen was dedicated to the race going on LIVE.
What a good idea. But then with about 25 laps left in the
race, IRL and ABC promotes their next televised race . . . on
full-screen. They took us away from the LIVE action. To
promote racing, they took us away from racing. Why would ABC
and the IRL do that? Why not "side-by-side" it like
the other commercials? Odd. I know a lot of you don't
go for the sports talk in the Wahoo, but these are
TV production issues, not sports issues.
I'm watching
the U.S. Open on Friday. A commercial comes on. It's shots of
Paul McCartney with his music underneath. He's
hawking a commercial for Fidelity Investments. Sheesh. Does
he really need the money? And another thing about the
U.S. Open..these women who grunt on every shot...they are
missing out on a surefire way of making some big bucks.
Instead of yelling "UGGGHHH!" on every serve, forehand
and backhand, they should yell "MCDONALDS!" Imagine
hearing "McDonalds" 500 times during a match. How
much do you think McDonald's would pay for that?
SODA VS. POP - Where does soda stop and pop
start? In an exhaustive Wahoo survey, I hope to
shed some light. The responses were plentiful. I wasn't
planning on typing up all of them but once I started, I didn't
think it fair to leave anyone out. Here in the New
York Metro area, it's soda. I was talking to two
Canadians in the elevator the other day who call it
"pop."
Wayne Chow of Toronto,
Ontario:
"It's been 'pop' in Toronto
all my life..."
Helen
Read of Buffalo, New York, and now Vermont:
"I spent my formative years in Western
New York (Niagara Falls / Buffalo area). We drank pop
there. Then I moved to Vermont, where people drink soda. After
20 years, I'm still not completely comfortable calling it soda,
so I often use the generic "soft drink" (which I don't
really like either, but at least people know what you
mean).
Don Smith of
Kingston, Ontario:
"Pop or soft
drink. NEVER soda."
Mark
Brenner of Spanish Springs, Nevada, by way of North
Carolina:
"Back in North Carolina,
where I am originally from, we just called it a Coke or Sprite
or Dr Pepper or whatever the hell we wanted to drink (hopefully
not R.C.). 'Soda' was clear bubbly water that adults mixed
with Scotch. 'Pop' was a euphemism for intercourse as in, 'I
want to pop that chick.' I worked as a 'gofer' one
summer for a local law firm, and every day one attorney, who
had a thick southern drawl, would send me out for lunch with
this order, 'Gofah...go fer my lunch. I wanna cheeburgah, a
pack of Nabs, a Co-cola and two seegars.' Every friggin' day
and no tip."
Karen
Hazel of San Diego:
"When i
was a kid growing up in beautiful down town Burbank, all sodas
were 'Cokes'. It didn't matter what brand or flavor.....we
would even ask the servers, 'what kind of cokes do you have?'
Now my kids call them sodas. I guess they are smarter than we
were."
Lisa Buckelew
of Norman, Oklahoma:
"Here in
Oklahoma I've always heard it said that we are going 'out for a
coke', regardless of whatever the specific soft drink that
actually is consumed. It's like saying 'I need a kleenex'
instead of 'a (generic) tissue.' Also uses the lower case like
catholic (for the community of christian believers) vs. Catholic
(for the members of the Holy Catholic
Church)."
Joe Bunce
of Minneapolis, Minnesota:
"This is
regarding your question about 'What do you call soda?' It's
called 'pop' here in Minneapolis, too. Up until about 20 years
ago I didn't even know that was a regionalism, and since then
I've always believed it was strictly a MINNESOTAN regionalism.
But then I read today's 'Wahoo
Gazette'..."
Rene
Garcia of San Antonio
"Some
call it soda others pop but I noticed that in south Texas and in
my household at least it is referred to as COKE. Even if we do
want a Coca-Cola. We call pepsi coke. It has become a generic
term for all soda-water."
Deb Watson of Des Moines, Iowa:
"It was 'soda' when I lived in the
Chicago area and the St Louis area. I came to Iowa in 1970 to
go to college and it's 'pop' here. I have no idea why. Maybe
Iowa was 'pop'ulated primarily by Canadians. Or vice versa.
The cans used to say 'soda' on them. I pointed that
out to my new Iowa friends back in the early 70s. They didn't
care. The only can I have here at work to check to see
if that's changed is Cream Soda, so that's not going to work.
Although it makes me wonder why they don't call it 'Cream Pop'
here. That would be pretty funny. And would make me feel kind
of sleazy to be drinking it."
Bill Emswiler of Walpole, Massachusetts:
"For some reason, the phrase
"tonic" is used here in
Massachusetts."
George
Lee of Austin, Texas:
I call it
Coke in Austin, TX.
Paul
Pacholski of Chicago:
"Chicago
is Pop Always has been always
will."
Stephanie
Benoist of Paris:
It's POP in
Minnesota (which is correct as far as I'm concerned) but
'soda' in Wisconsin -- and in Paris. Interesting note: a
drinking fountain is called a 'bubbler' in Milwaukee. So much
for the upper midwest!
Brent
Greenroyd of Tuttle, Oklahoma
Here
in Oklahoma (and the majority of the Southwest) we call it coke,
no matter what brand or flavor. Whether you specifically want
Coca-Cola, Sprite, Dr. Pepper, or whatever, it's just coke in
the generic sense.
Jule
Morello of Madison, Wisconsin:
"In northern Wisconsin, it's called
'pop' in southern Wisconsin, it's called 'soda'. We also have
conflicting issues with 'bubblers' and water fountains".
Hope Dawson of Columbus,
Ohio
"Ah, the classic 'soda' vs.
'pop' question. I say 'soda' since I grew up in NJ (near
Philly), but here in OH everyone says 'pop'. I teach
linguistics, and this is always the example to use to illustrate
dialect differences. If you're interested, there's a
cool map for this at:
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
Lisa Cauble of Austin, Texas:
"All 'true' Texans refer to all soda,
soft drinks, pop, etc., as 'coke' regardless of whether it is
cola flavored. 'Do you want to go get a coke?' was a common
question in my high school, even though we all got Dr Pepper
once we were at the Dairy Queen."
Sandar Muse of Murfreesboro, Tennessee:
"In the South, everything is a 'coke'.
'Do you wanna Coke?' 'Okay, what kind? Sprite, Dr. Pepper,
Diet?' If you were to say soda or pop down here, you
instantly be recognized as a
yankee!"
And last but not least,
Ron Hofbauer of Muenster, Texas, now
living in Japan.
"In Japan (where I
live), pop is often called 'juice.'"
So how do you like that? All I was doing was looking for filler
and I ended up learning something. Many refer to soft drinks
as simply "cokes." I never knew that.
And I
just checked out the site recommended by Hope Dawson of
Columbus, Ohio. It tells you just about everything you need to
know about the use of soda, pop, and coke in the United
States.
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
And what's up with Wisconsin? Bubblers? What's that all
about?
Dr. Phil; and Roger Federer. PLUS:
Martha's new show; Bush helping out; Late
Show bear; Who Said It?; a top ten list; and an Emmy
Award for the Late Show and the Technical
Crew.
During the Preshow Q&A, a guy in the
audience asked if he could get a photo with Dave.
Surprisingly, Dave invited him up after the monologue.
Unfortunately, the guy didn't have his camera set up to go, plus
he hammed it up a bit too much. I'm not sure but I wouldn't be
surprised if all that "magically disappeared" after
the show's taping.
Good news! Last night at the
Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, the Late Show won
an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Technical
Direction, Camerawork, and Video For A Series."
Congratulations to our technical crew!
Late Show With David Letterman - #2269 - CBS
Worldwide Pants Inc. Timothy Kennedy,
Technical Director William White, Senior
Video Control Dan Campbell, Video
Control Al Cialino, Camera Operator David Dorsett, Camera Operator Karin-Lucie Grzella, Camera Operator Jack Young, Camera Operator John
Hannel, Camera Operator John Curtin,
Camera Operator George Rothweiler, Camera
Operator Dan Flaherty, Camera
Operator Fred Shimizu, Camera
Operator Steve Kaufman, Camera
Operator Joe Debonis, Camera
Operator Claus Stuhlweissenburg, Camera
Operator John Pry, Camera
Show
#2269 was the Bandaloop show.
Dave says the technical
aspect of the show has never been a problem. It's everything
else. Paul adds with a laugh under his breath, "Like
content."
Safety first. Tonight, putting away the
Late Show Bear is Emmy Award-winning
technical director Tim Kennedy. Tim fights off
the beast with his Emmy trophy. The Late Show
Bear is backed into his den and Kennedy slams the door shut
tight. We are safe. Sponsoring the Late
Show Bear tonight: Corona Extra.
"Corona: Miles Away from the Ordinary."
Did
you read about this controversy at a restaurant in China? They
claimed to serve Tiger meat. Turns out, it wasn't
tiger meat. We take a look at what Dave's talking about.
Announcer:
"Authorities have learned a
restaurant in China that was claiming to serve tiger meat was
actually serving donkey meat . . .soaked in tiger urine.
Remember, if you want real tiger meat . . . . you gotta go to
Arby's! And for just 89 cents more, we'll throw in a cup of
tiger urine! Arby's, serving tiger meat since
1992!"
Martha
Stewart had her TV show debut this morning. Dave takes a
moment to exclaim how he would love to have Martha on our show.
Executive producer Barbara Gaines informs Dave that she is
booked for next Monday. An elated Dave responds in elation.
He is looking forward to it. Anyway, Martha's new show was on
earlier today and here's what you missed if you missed
it. Announcer:
"Today on
'Martha!', 'Desperate Housewives' star Marcia Cross stops by, a
dinnertime visit to the home of two fans, and Martha is thrown
back in the hole after she violates her parole by handling a
deadly weapon. Don't miss 'Martha!'. . . just as soon as she
returns from a brief sabbatical."
And President Bush is getting down to business
delivering aid to those suffering from Hurricane Katrina. He's
taking it upon himself to do what he can. We take a
look. Announcer:
"President
Bush is serious about the hurricane relief. He is sending 5
million gallons of water, 1,000 tons of food, and 25 pounds of
fat. George W. Bush - Back on
message!"
An odd shot of Dave.
We find him tapping the top of his dome with a pencil. Says
Dave, "Kinda looks like aerial footage of flood
damage."
WHO SAID IT? 1."You tried to take me down, and now I
will may you all pay!" Who said it? Paul
believes that was said by Osama bin Laden. Dave: No,
Martha Stewart.
2."I want to
see the 'Corpse Bride.'" Who said it? Paul:
"A moviegoer?" Dave: "No. Robert
Blake."
3."This is an
utter failure. We need to end it and let these boys go
home." Who said it? Paul: "An opponent
to the war?" Dave: "No. Kansas City Royals
manager Buddy Bell.
Skipping one, Dave goes to the
next.
4."I must put a stop to
these gay marriages." Paul: "Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger, vetoing the gay marriage
bill?" Dave: "No. Liza Minnelli."
Skipping a bunch, Dave decides to end on this one.
5. "You can save by pumping your
own." Paul: "A gas station
attendant?" Dave: "No. The hookers in Times
Square."
Dave is excited about the upcoming
schedule. Next Monday is Martha. And this Thursday is
Ted Turner. Dave takes a closer look at his blue
card and says with a tad of disappointment, "Oh, I'm sorry,
that's Ike Turner."
TOP TEN: Signs Your Kid
is Working with Al-Qaeda - some bratty kid from Orange
County, California has gone to the other side and has joined up
with the Al Qaeda. #7. Keeps mocking you for having only
one wife. #5. You're getting gas for 12 cents a gallon.
DR. PHIL: Dave recaps Dr. Phil's
career. 1. Started doing segments on Oprah.
2. Then started doing it once a week. 3. Then
got his own show.
How many shows does he do a
year? Dr. Phil says "175." Dave? Dave says
without a blink, "We do 240." It's all in the
delivery.
Over the summer, Dr. Phil and the family went
on vacation on a private cruise. Took a yacht on the French
Riviera, went to France, went to Italy. Dr. Phil says,
"You know those little villages that look so quaint from
the boat? When you get up close they're nothing but flea
markets." The family then went to a resort that had a
pool where everyone was naked, smoking dope, snorting cocaine. .
. and having the sex. Dr. Phil felt very out of place, like
the Beverly Hillbillies hanging out by the Cement Pond. Phil's
son defined it, "This is the worst place to go with your
parents."
Dave asks the good doctor if he
ever gave advice, the patient followed it to the letter, but the
results didn't quite work out right. Dr. Phil won't admit to
it, but does say he mostly gets in trouble for people misquoting
him. Many times he will be stopped in the street and someone
will complain that he said something on his show that's has
ruined the guy's life. When Dr. Phil asks what he said, the
guy will totally misquote what was said on the show. I'm
guessing it's like the game of telephone. Often times a person
will be given the advice, "Do everything your husband wants
you to do," but the person will hear, "Do nothing your
husband wants you to do."
Dave has a
situation with his son which he hopes Dr. Phil can shed some
light. Dave's son Harry, soon to be 2, has started hitting
people in the head for no reason. Dave says he doesn't want to
make a big deal out of it, not wanting to reward the child with
attention, but feels he should address the behavior. Dr. Phil
explains quite clearly, "You have to tell him, 'No.'"
Dave takes a pencil and writes down the keen advice. Dr. Phil
also mentions that as the child gets bigger, older, and
stronger, the parent gets smaller, older and weaker. He says
you got to be firm with the child and adds with wisdom, you
"got to get the bluff in when you can." Dave thanks
Dr. Phil for the advice. Dave has something else he
wants to add. Maybe it's significant to the above. Dave
explains that when Harry turned 1, Dave taught him the game,
"Smack Daddy's Head." Could this game have led Harry
to his behavior of hitting others in the head? Dr. Phil says
that there is a good chance that the game did lead to Harry's
hitting in the head behavior. Dr. Phil asks Dave if he tells
his son "No" or if he has his "people" talk
to him. Dave laughs and admits he has his office do the deed.
Dr. Phil then asks, "Have you married your baby's
mother yet?" Phil then offers Dave the opportunity to
get married on his show. Dave isn't so sure about that. Dave
counters with getting married on Oprah and having the reception
on Dr. Phil. Dr. Phil isn't too keen on that. Dave's final
offer: Married on Oprah; Honeymoon on Dr. Phil. Dr. Phil
REALLY isn't keen on that. Be sure to watch Dr. Phil on
Wednesday. He'll have 1,000 women on the show with the same
problem. Dave tries to guess the topic by Dr. Phil ain't
saying. You'll have to watch.
ROGER
FEDERER: the 2005 U.S. Open Men's Champion. He defeated
Andre Agassi in the finals on Sunday, a match that doubled last
year's viewing audience. Dave mentions that, understandably,
Andre was the sentimental favorite in the finals. Roger says
he expected that but was surprised at how much he WAS the
sentimental favorite. What does Roger think of Agassi still
playing at a championship level at the age of 35? Roger isn't
too happy about it, nor or the other players on the tour. They
all have in their minds retirement at age 31. Now with Agassi
still going strong at 35, 36, that means they may have to
continue playing to that age, putting off retirement for another
5 years. Roger is only 24 but has already won 6 Grand
Slam titles. Some are calling him the greatest tennis player
of all time. That's pretty heady stuff, and Roger advises to
put off that title for another 10 years. Then you can look back
and decide. Roger grew up in Switzerland and has
always loved racket sports; tennis; ping pong; squash. He was
always playing against some wall of the house, creating a
constant bang bang bang bang. His mom always got angry, but as
Dave points out, she probably understands now and is more
accepting. At one time, Roger was a real hothead on the
court, known to throw a racket when things didn't go his way.
What changed him? After one match against Marit Safin where
they both were throwing their rackets and tantrumming, Roger saw
a replay of the match. He was embarrassed by his behavior and
decided to rein in his outbursts. It seems to have worked.
We get a look at the very impressive U.S. Open trophy.
We should have had him put away the Late Show bear
with it.
Afterwards, Dave says if Roger Federer keeps
winning, he's going to add another 'er' to his name.
ACT 5: It's time to announce the winner of
this month's 'Late Show My Stain Looks Like A
Celebrity' Contest. This month's winner is Nina Caroles
of Brookline, Massachusetts. Nina wins because her mildew stain
looks exactly like 80's heartthrob Anthony Michael Hall.
Congratulations, Nina. This has been the Late
Show 'My Stain Looks Like A Celebrity" contest.
Keep it real, America.
And that was our show for
Monday, September 12, 2005. Wahoo
EXTRA! Well that didn't
take long. I'm watching some college football the other day,
Pittsburgh vs. Ohio. 30 seconds after I turn the game on, the
Pittsburgh Panther QB throws an interception and the other team
runs it back for a touchdown. The Pitt coach on the sideline is
not too pleased and is filled with anger. The QB is not too
pleased and is downcast. I wonder what their meeting will be
like when the QB gets to the sideline. We see the dejected QB
walking off the field. Then we get a good minute of crowd
reaction. No shot of the QB, just jubilant fans in the stands.
Watching hours of sports in my day, I've learned that one happy,
cheering crowd looks exactly like the next. Why do directors
show us shots of the crowd and not of the story unfolding down
on the field? I've asked myself this hundreds of times and I
think I've finally come up with the answer. Directors view the
game as a spectator. I view the game as a participant. The
Director pictures himself sitting in the stands. I view myself
as the QB. I want to know what the quarterback or running back
is doing. The director wants to know what the spectator is
doing. And if they don't want to know what the spectators are
doing, they want to know what the coach is doing.
And
on Sunday, I was clicking from the Jet game to the Yankee game
to the IRL race. During the race, ABC had side-by-side
commercials for many of the products being promoted. Covering
2/3 of the screen was the product commercial, and the smaller
portion of the screen was dedicated to the race going on LIVE.
What a good idea. But then with about 25 laps left in the
race, IRL and ABC promotes their next televised race . . . on
full-screen. They took us away from the LIVE action. To
promote racing, they took us away from racing. Why would ABC
and the IRL do that? Why not "side-by-side" it like
the other commercials? Odd. I know a lot of you don't
go for the sports talk in the Wahoo, but these are
TV production issues, not sports issues.
I'm watching
the U.S. Open on Friday. A commercial comes on. It's shots of
Paul McCartney with his music underneath. He's
hawking a commercial for Fidelity Investments. Sheesh. Does
he really need the money? And another thing about the
U.S. Open..these women who grunt on every shot...they are
missing out on a surefire way of making some big bucks.
Instead of yelling "UGGGHHH!" on every serve, forehand
and backhand, they should yell "MCDONALDS!" Imagine
hearing "McDonalds" 500 times during a match. How
much do you think McDonald's would pay for that?
SODA VS. POP - Where does soda stop and pop
start? In an exhaustive Wahoo survey, I hope to
shed some light. The responses were plentiful. I wasn't
planning on typing up all of them but once I started, I didn't
think it fair to leave anyone out. Here in the New
York Metro area, it's soda. I was talking to two
Canadians in the elevator the other day who call it
"pop."
Wayne Chow of Toronto,
Ontario:
"It's been 'pop' in Toronto
all my life..."
Helen
Read of Buffalo, New York, and now Vermont:
"I spent my formative years in Western
New York (Niagara Falls / Buffalo area). We drank pop
there. Then I moved to Vermont, where people drink soda. After
20 years, I'm still not completely comfortable calling it soda,
so I often use the generic "soft drink" (which I don't
really like either, but at least people know what you
mean).
Don Smith of
Kingston, Ontario:
"Pop or soft
drink. NEVER soda."
Mark
Brenner of Spanish Springs, Nevada, by way of North
Carolina:
"Back in North Carolina,
where I am originally from, we just called it a Coke or Sprite
or Dr Pepper or whatever the hell we wanted to drink (hopefully
not R.C.). 'Soda' was clear bubbly water that adults mixed
with Scotch. 'Pop' was a euphemism for intercourse as in, 'I
want to pop that chick.' I worked as a 'gofer' one
summer for a local law firm, and every day one attorney, who
had a thick southern drawl, would send me out for lunch with
this order, 'Gofah...go fer my lunch. I wanna cheeburgah, a
pack of Nabs, a Co-cola and two seegars.' Every friggin' day
and no tip."
Karen
Hazel of San Diego:
"When i
was a kid growing up in beautiful down town Burbank, all sodas
were 'Cokes'. It didn't matter what brand or flavor.....we
would even ask the servers, 'what kind of cokes do you have?'
Now my kids call them sodas. I guess they are smarter than we
were."
Lisa Buckelew
of Norman, Oklahoma:
"Here in
Oklahoma I've always heard it said that we are going 'out for a
coke', regardless of whatever the specific soft drink that
actually is consumed. It's like saying 'I need a kleenex'
instead of 'a (generic) tissue.' Also uses the lower case like
catholic (for the community of christian believers) vs. Catholic
(for the members of the Holy Catholic
Church)."
Joe Bunce
of Minneapolis, Minnesota:
"This is
regarding your question about 'What do you call soda?' It's
called 'pop' here in Minneapolis, too. Up until about 20 years
ago I didn't even know that was a regionalism, and since then
I've always believed it was strictly a MINNESOTAN regionalism.
But then I read today's 'Wahoo
Gazette'..."
Rene
Garcia of San Antonio
"Some
call it soda others pop but I noticed that in south Texas and in
my household at least it is referred to as COKE. Even if we do
want a Coca-Cola. We call pepsi coke. It has become a generic
term for all soda-water."
Deb Watson of Des Moines, Iowa:
"It was 'soda' when I lived in the
Chicago area and the St Louis area. I came to Iowa in 1970 to
go to college and it's 'pop' here. I have no idea why. Maybe
Iowa was 'pop'ulated primarily by Canadians. Or vice versa.
The cans used to say 'soda' on them. I pointed that
out to my new Iowa friends back in the early 70s. They didn't
care. The only can I have here at work to check to see
if that's changed is Cream Soda, so that's not going to work.
Although it makes me wonder why they don't call it 'Cream Pop'
here. That would be pretty funny. And would make me feel kind
of sleazy to be drinking it."
Bill Emswiler of Walpole, Massachusetts:
"For some reason, the phrase
"tonic" is used here in
Massachusetts."
George
Lee of Austin, Texas:
I call it
Coke in Austin, TX.
Paul
Pacholski of Chicago:
"Chicago
is Pop Always has been always
will."
Stephanie
Benoist of Paris:
It's POP in
Minnesota (which is correct as far as I'm concerned) but
'soda' in Wisconsin -- and in Paris. Interesting note: a
drinking fountain is called a 'bubbler' in Milwaukee. So much
for the upper midwest!
Brent
Greenroyd of Tuttle, Oklahoma
Here
in Oklahoma (and the majority of the Southwest) we call it coke,
no matter what brand or flavor. Whether you specifically want
Coca-Cola, Sprite, Dr. Pepper, or whatever, it's just coke in
the generic sense.
Jule
Morello of Madison, Wisconsin:
"In northern Wisconsin, it's called
'pop' in southern Wisconsin, it's called 'soda'. We also have
conflicting issues with 'bubblers' and water fountains".
Hope Dawson of Columbus,
Ohio
"Ah, the classic 'soda' vs.
'pop' question. I say 'soda' since I grew up in NJ (near
Philly), but here in OH everyone says 'pop'. I teach
linguistics, and this is always the example to use to illustrate
dialect differences. If you're interested, there's a
cool map for this at:
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
Lisa Cauble of Austin, Texas:
"All 'true' Texans refer to all soda,
soft drinks, pop, etc., as 'coke' regardless of whether it is
cola flavored. 'Do you want to go get a coke?' was a common
question in my high school, even though we all got Dr Pepper
once we were at the Dairy Queen."
Sandar Muse of Murfreesboro, Tennessee:
"In the South, everything is a 'coke'.
'Do you wanna Coke?' 'Okay, what kind? Sprite, Dr. Pepper,
Diet?' If you were to say soda or pop down here, you
instantly be recognized as a
yankee!"
And last but not least,
Ron Hofbauer of Muenster, Texas, now
living in Japan.
"In Japan (where I
live), pop is often called 'juice.'"
So how do you like that? All I was doing was looking for filler
and I ended up learning something. Many refer to soft drinks
as simply "cokes." I never knew that.
And I
just checked out the site recommended by Hope Dawson of
Columbus, Ohio. It tells you just about everything you need to
know about the use of soda, pop, and coke in the United
States.
http://www.popvssoda.com/countystats/total-county.html
And what's up with Wisconsin? Bubblers? What's that all
about?