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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).
Drew Barrymore; and Charles Barkley.
PLUS: a salute to Dr. Phil; Soap Opera Clip of the Night;
and Biff at Yankee Spring Training; Donald Trump Knows What He
Likes; suspended baseball player; and Lisa Marie Presley on
Oprah.
Dave opens advising that he may not be
here next week. Staffers throughout the building sat up and
leaned in waiting for what was to come, since this is how we
find out most of our news about the show. Why won't Dave be
here? Because he's been called for jury duty.
Always one to perform his civic duty, Dave will answer the call
and sit if necessary. Dave offers, "If I get on a jury .
. . . as far as I'm concerned . . . . everybody is
guilty." Pointing directly to the camera, Dave warns,
"You, my friend, are going down!" Well, that will
save a lot of time.
Congratulations go out to Dr.
Phil who will soon broadcast his 500th show. Dr. Phil's
last name escapes Dave for the moment, so settles on Dr. Phil
Seigel.
SOAP OPERA CLIP OF THE NIGHT -
From NBC's "Passions," we see Precious
the monkey drinking gin. Dave correctly surmises, "If
there is more than one person watching this show, we are very
near the end of civilization."
And they found the
first major league baseball player to have violated the new
policy against the use of performance-enhancing drugs. It's
Tampa Bay Devil Rays outfielder Alex Sanchez.
Commissioner Bud Selig came out with this announcement:
"Baseball is disappointed that Tampa
Bay Devil Ray Alex Sanchez tested positive for steroids. Bud
Selig would like to announce that instead of a 10-game
suspension, Sanchez's punishment will be . . . . . to continue
playing for the Devil Rays. Baseball fever - catch
it!"
DONALD TRUMP KNOWS
WHAT HE LIKES - To be successful in life, you need to
know what you like and what you don't like and be sure of it.
Donald Trump is such a man. We have a clip of just how sure he
is about his likes. We see a scene from "The
Apprentice." Donald Trump says, "I like
meatballs."
Oh, about Charles
Barkley: He's an 11-time All-Star; NBA MVP in 1993; and
one of only 4 NBA players to amass 23,000 points, 12,000
rebounds, and 4,000 assists.
Lisa Marie
Presley was on the Oprah show the other day.
Did you see it? Things got a little hairy during the taping.
We have a clip. We see Oprah asking Lisa Marie about her
marriage to Michael Jackson. Oprah asks, "Was it a
consummated marriage?" Lisa Marie responds,
"Yeah." The audience erupts into shouts of disgust
and disbelief. The screaming and carrying on lasted for
minutes. It was truly gruesome.
And speaking of
baseball, our very own Biff Henderson went to Legends Field in
Tampa, Florida and spent his 8th spring at Yankee Spring
Training.
BIFF AT YANKEE SPRING
TRAINING We see Biff meeting up with his old
friends, including: -a returning Mike Stanton with a
hug. -tourists who are familiar with the Late
Show -Biff re-enacts what Martha Stewart is doing
now. We see him pacing in his hotel room with nothing to do.
Great re-enactment. I thought I was watching E!.
-Conjugals with Martha? -Ooooh, the back door
slider -Where are all the big baseball stars? On TV!
Hey, there's Canseco in DC. -We couldn't get Randy
Johnson, so instead we see footage of him killing a bird. (I
never get tired of seeing that clip) -Biff gets chewed
out by Yankee owner George Steinbrenner -Biff tells
Derek Jeter that George Steinbrenner just chewed him out.
Derek congratulates Biff; "Now you're a true Yankee."
DREW BARRYMORE: Dave tells her that she's
never looked better. I had to agree. She was quite the vision
making her entrance. And she just turned 30. Well, that
explains it! 30 looks good on a woman. While talking
to Dave, Drew uses the word "ensconced." I said,
"HEY! She used that word the last time she was here!"
Then I thought it may have been somebody else. But now I'm
back to thinking it was Drew. If my curiosity gets the better
of me, I'll check the old tapes. I find that if it
involves much effort, curiosity doesn't usually get the best of
me anymore.
Drew and Dave discuss her new movie,
"Fever Pitch," about a devoted baseball fan (Jimmy
Fallon) following his beloved Boston Red Sox. She describes
how the Fallon character is so absolutely in love with the Sawx
and follows them religiously. Dave fully understands that
emotion, sharing that as a youngster he would follow the
Cincinnati Reds much the way as Fallon's character. Dave
would listen to every game, read about it in the newspaper, and
become depressed if they lost, a depression that would last
until the next game. Dave has come to learn that the players
see what they do as a job. They work at playing baseball.
It's just a job; a great job, but still it's a job.
In
"Fever Pitch," Jimmy Fallon finds this out and sadly
learns that the players are not as emotionally involved as the
fans with the team or the game and that the fans loyalty to the
players is not equally reciprocated. I learned this many years
ago. It was a playoff game between the New York football
Giants vs. the San Francisco 49ers. I was a big big Giants
fan. On this Sunday, the 49ers defeated the Giants and I
blamed it all on that hated, no-talent Joe Montana. I hated him
for what he did to my Giants. I was depressed for weeks.
Still despising Montana, I turned on the TV one weekend. There
was a Pro-Am Celebrity Golf Tournament on. Playing
side-by-side, laughing it up and having a swell time, were Joe
Montana and the great Giant linebacker Lawrence Taylor. There
they were, Joe Montana and Lawrence Taylor paling around like
buddies. It was then I asked myself why Lawrence Taylor was
liking Joe Montana and I was hating him? Shouldn't Lawrence
Taylor's hate for Montana be greater than mine? That's when my
blind loyalty to sports teams and figures disappear. I am no
longer emotionally involved in sports, watching for
entertainment only with some rooting interest. Drew has
been spending time in Vegas and has grown to love the town.
She's not much of a gambler but loves to watch the craps.
And now MY CRAPS STORY: Denise and I
were in Atlantic City. We just came from watching a concert by
Chicago. We stopped to watch some craps. Denise likes to
watch the action even though she doesn't know how to play. She
gets a spot right on the table. After a few minutes, I see her
rummaging through her pocketbook. She finds one of those small
tins of Bayer Aspirin. She looks how to open it. Holding the
in front of her, Denise presses down on the two near corners of
the squared tin with her thumbs. I can see what is about to
happen. The rest happens in slow motion. I yell
"NO" and reach to grab the tin of Bayer. I'm too
late. The Bayer Aspirin tin shoots out from her fingers and out
onto the craps table. The tin flies open and the aspirin
tablets spew all across the table. The dice roll by. The
Craps guy screams out, "NO ROLL! NO ROLL! BAD ROLL!"
I grab Denise by the elbow and tell her, "Let's go."
She resists, "But what about my aspirin?!" I pull
harder and repeat, "LET'S GO NOW!" We
left without looking back. We did not stop till we had our
parking validated.
So how was it working with
Jimmy Fallon on "Fever Pitch"? Drew
goes on about how funny and talented Jimmy is and how much fun
it was to work with him. She gave examples and instances and
stories and more. While she was in mid-sentence of another
sentence about Jimmy Fallon, Dave screams in interruption,
"ALL RIGHT! THAT'S ENOUGH ABOUT JIMMY FALLON! How much
longer were you going to go on about Jimmy Fallon?" Dave
continues to rant his ennui over Drew's talk of Fallon. What
Dave said exactly I'm not sure since I was laughing too hard to
hear. Oooh boy, did I get a kick out of that. That clip will
be flagged in my database.
To finish up the segment,
Dave shows a book recently written by Drew. The cover is of
Drew on Dave's desk seconds after flashing the host back on
April 12, 1995. It is titled, "Overcoming Shyness."
What I liked about this book is that it's been sitting in the
shack backstage for at least 6 years. It was prepared for
Dave's Book Collection. For some reason it ended up in the 8X8
shack in the back. I have no idea why.
CHARLES
BARKLEY: Charles can't believe Dave is going to jury
duty. Would Charles go? "No, it would interrupt my golf
game." Dave asks about Indiana Pacer Reggie Miller
who will be retiring at the end of the year. Charles says
Reggie is so old, he can remember when the Knicks were a good
team. Dave is a bit concerned about the NBA game, wondering
who he will have to root for once Reggie leaves. Dave lists
players he liked to watch: Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael
Jordan . . . . Charles mentions Lebron James. Dave's eyes
widen. "Oh, yeah, I can root for him!" Charles
offers, "Dwayne Wade." Dave gives a "who
cares" or a "who's he?" shrug. Kobe Bryant?
Dave says he's a head case. Talk turns to NBA coaches
and Dave wonders why so many get fired. Charles says
"All these teams thing they're better than they are. All
these guys think they're married to a Playboy Bunny but they're
really married to a rabbit." I laughed, enjoying how
Charles can always cut right to the heart of the matter and tell
it like it really is. Often times, coaches are fired because
of the overestimated talent of the team. What about college
basketball? Dave says he used to love watching coach Bobby
Knight pick up and throw a cheerleader across the floor. Now,
by the time a player becomes worth watching he's jumping to the
NBA. Charles hopes the NBA sets an age limit for players
which will force athletes to wait at least two years after high
school before joining the league. Hopefully, this time would be
spent in college. Patrick Ewing? "One of the most
underrated players in NBA history" says Charles.
Charles has written a book entitled, "Who's Afraid of
a Large Black Man?" Charles calls it a positive book on
race. Dave asks, "What can you tell us that White
America doesn't know about Black America?" Charles
says "We're not what you see in the movies or TV. On TV,
we're either a jock a comedian or a rapper. We're more than
that." In the book, among those Charles interviewed were
Tiger Woods, Barak Obama, a Rabbi, and Bill Clinton discussing
race in America.. Leafing through the book, I've put it on my
list as one I'll be reading this summer. Charles Barkley
- one of my favorites to watch on the court and always
entertaining to hear what he has to say.
ACT
5: This is a Late Show Reminder. There are
only 362 days until Daylight Saving Time Begins in 2006. Don't
forget to set your clocks ahead one hour! This has been a
Late Show Reminder. Spread the word.
And
that was our show for Thursday, April 5, 2005.
Wahoo
EXTRA! Speculation has
begun that the next Pope will be named Pope George
Ringo.
Well that didn't take long. My 2nd
favorite Yankee is Hideki Matsui. Quiet,
hard-working, a student of the game. My only problem with him
is I feel he is not very good on fly balls up against the wall.
I've seem him miss a few catchable good plays against the wall.
So what does he do in the 2nd inning on Opening Night? He
reaches over the fence to steal a home run from Boston's Kevin
Millar. My guess is Hideki felt he needed work on catching fly
balls along the fence and spent the off-season working on just
that. And that wouldn't surprise me at all. You see, Matsui
hasn't been Americanized yet.
From Monday's Phil
Mushnick sports/media column in the New York
Post, regarding CBS coverage of the NCAA Final Four:
"Meanwhile, the star of the two-game
Final Four telecast on Saturday was director Bob (Stay On The
Floor) Fishman. Did you miss anything to a crowd shot, a
cheerleader shot, a band shot, a bench shot, a parent shot, a
painted-face shot? Heck, no. The first in-play crowd shot
during Illinois-Louisville came with 46 seconds left; Illinois
had the ball, up 13. It was the first time fancy could logically
trump the game. Fishman gave us both. The camera pulled
back to show the game and, in the background, an entire section
of orange-shirted Illinois fans rocking the house. To quote
Napoleon Dynamite: Sweet."
Now
do you see why Mushnick is my favorite? Some may tire of my
reporting on baseball, football, basketball, etc., but if you
notice, it's more a look at how the games are covered and how it
is broadcast, and not so much on how the game is played. It's
more a commentary on the media rather than a sports commentary.
About my Let's Make a Deal braintwist from
Thursday's Wahoo: Should the final contestant on
Let's Make A Deal switch his/her choice of curtain when offered
by Monty Hall.
From Nelson Shirota of
Torrance, California
"Your, 'Let's
Make A Deal' advice only applies if you were the first person to
pick a curtain. Going first means you have three choices. If
you have to go second, you only have two to pick from so you
actually have a 50/50 chance (assuming the first person didn't
already pick the big prize, in which case you are, 'drawing
dead' as they say in poker.) If the first person gets
zonked, then should you choose the other curtain? As far as
odds go, it makes no difference. My advice would be to listen
very carefully for the sound of a hoofed animal behind a
curtain, then choose the other."
WRONG.
From a Wahoo reader named
Jack:
"I love being
asked questions like the one today on Let's Make a Deal. Should
the second person change their choice? Yes! Why? Because they
have more information now (after seeing what's behind curtain B)
then when they made their original choice. More information
will help improve your odds. Let's go back one minute.
When there were 3 curtains to choose from, person A would have a
1/3 chance of picking the big prize. But after seeing what was
behind one the loser curtains, they still only keep that 1/3
chance of being right if they stick with their choice. Knowing
what's behind alosing curtain has no affect on the odds of their
original choice. However, if they can change their
choice after curtain B is revealed, they are now only choosing
between 2 curtains (A and C). Now the odds are 1/2. Of course
they should change their choice. 1/2 is better
than1/3."
RIGHT, BUT WRONG.
From Jay Gianotti of Munster, Indiana:
"Regarding your bit on the 'Let's Make
a Deal' braintwister - There is a fundamental flaw in your
problem: in the final deal of the day, contestants do NOT have
the chance to change their mind. Once they've picked a door,
they are stuck with it, for better or worse. Now, the scenario
you have described could easily apply for any of the other deals
in the show, and then you would be correct as you have described
it. But, in reality, for the final Big Deal of the Day, your
chances of being right are down to 33% (1 out of 3), because you
only have one chance to pick the door for the big
prize."
WRONG.
From
Jason Carpenter of Bettendorf:
"About your Let's Make a Deal
argument. What you said made no
sense."
Oh, Jason, the sense was
there. You just couldn't see it.
Laugh, ridicule,
doubt all you want. Helen Read says I'm right,
and that's good enough for me! And if you want more
explanation by someone who knows how to explain things like
this, check out this website that's quickly becoming one of my
favorites. http://www.maa.org/devlin/devlin_07_03.html
What is a Tar Heel? When Carolina was
divided in 1710, the southern part was called South Carolina and
the northern, or older settlement, North Carolina. From this
came the nickname the "Old North State." Historians
have recorded that the principal products during the early
history of North Carolina were "tar, pitch, and
turpentine." It was during one of the fiercest battles of
the War Between the States, so the story goes, that the column
supporting the North Carolina troops was driven from the field.
After the battle the North Carolinians, who had successfully
fought it out alone, were greeted from the passing derelict
regiment with the question: "Any more tar down in the Old
North State, boys?" Quick as a flash came the answer:
"No, not a bit, old Jeff's bought it all up." "Is
that so; what is he going to do with it?" was asked.
"He's going to put on you-un's heels to make you stick
better in the next fight." Creecy relates that General Lee,
upon hearing of the incident, said: "God bless the Tar Heel
boys," and from that they took the name.
THIS DATE IN NHL HOCKEY HISTORY April
5, 1987 - Wayne Gretzky wins his 7th consecutive NHL scoring
title.
Drew Barrymore; and Charles Barkley.
PLUS: a salute to Dr. Phil; Soap Opera Clip of the Night;
and Biff at Yankee Spring Training; Donald Trump Knows What He
Likes; suspended baseball player; and Lisa Marie Presley on
Oprah.
Dave opens advising that he may not be
here next week. Staffers throughout the building sat up and
leaned in waiting for what was to come, since this is how we
find out most of our news about the show. Why won't Dave be
here? Because he's been called for jury duty.
Always one to perform his civic duty, Dave will answer the call
and sit if necessary. Dave offers, "If I get on a jury .
. . . as far as I'm concerned . . . . everybody is
guilty." Pointing directly to the camera, Dave warns,
"You, my friend, are going down!" Well, that will
save a lot of time.
Congratulations go out to Dr.
Phil who will soon broadcast his 500th show. Dr. Phil's
last name escapes Dave for the moment, so settles on Dr. Phil
Seigel.
SOAP OPERA CLIP OF THE NIGHT -
From NBC's "Passions," we see Precious
the monkey drinking gin. Dave correctly surmises, "If
there is more than one person watching this show, we are very
near the end of civilization."
And they found the
first major league baseball player to have violated the new
policy against the use of performance-enhancing drugs. It's
Tampa Bay Devil Rays outfielder Alex Sanchez.
Commissioner Bud Selig came out with this announcement:
"Baseball is disappointed that Tampa
Bay Devil Ray Alex Sanchez tested positive for steroids. Bud
Selig would like to announce that instead of a 10-game
suspension, Sanchez's punishment will be . . . . . to continue
playing for the Devil Rays. Baseball fever - catch
it!"
DONALD TRUMP KNOWS
WHAT HE LIKES - To be successful in life, you need to
know what you like and what you don't like and be sure of it.
Donald Trump is such a man. We have a clip of just how sure he
is about his likes. We see a scene from "The
Apprentice." Donald Trump says, "I like
meatballs."
Oh, about Charles
Barkley: He's an 11-time All-Star; NBA MVP in 1993; and
one of only 4 NBA players to amass 23,000 points, 12,000
rebounds, and 4,000 assists.
Lisa Marie
Presley was on the Oprah show the other day.
Did you see it? Things got a little hairy during the taping.
We have a clip. We see Oprah asking Lisa Marie about her
marriage to Michael Jackson. Oprah asks, "Was it a
consummated marriage?" Lisa Marie responds,
"Yeah." The audience erupts into shouts of disgust
and disbelief. The screaming and carrying on lasted for
minutes. It was truly gruesome.
And speaking of
baseball, our very own Biff Henderson went to Legends Field in
Tampa, Florida and spent his 8th spring at Yankee Spring
Training.
BIFF AT YANKEE SPRING
TRAINING We see Biff meeting up with his old
friends, including: -a returning Mike Stanton with a
hug. -tourists who are familiar with the Late
Show -Biff re-enacts what Martha Stewart is doing
now. We see him pacing in his hotel room with nothing to do.
Great re-enactment. I thought I was watching E!.
-Conjugals with Martha? -Ooooh, the back door
slider -Where are all the big baseball stars? On TV!
Hey, there's Canseco in DC. -We couldn't get Randy
Johnson, so instead we see footage of him killing a bird. (I
never get tired of seeing that clip) -Biff gets chewed
out by Yankee owner George Steinbrenner -Biff tells
Derek Jeter that George Steinbrenner just chewed him out.
Derek congratulates Biff; "Now you're a true Yankee."
DREW BARRYMORE: Dave tells her that she's
never looked better. I had to agree. She was quite the vision
making her entrance. And she just turned 30. Well, that
explains it! 30 looks good on a woman. While talking
to Dave, Drew uses the word "ensconced." I said,
"HEY! She used that word the last time she was here!"
Then I thought it may have been somebody else. But now I'm
back to thinking it was Drew. If my curiosity gets the better
of me, I'll check the old tapes. I find that if it
involves much effort, curiosity doesn't usually get the best of
me anymore.
Drew and Dave discuss her new movie,
"Fever Pitch," about a devoted baseball fan (Jimmy
Fallon) following his beloved Boston Red Sox. She describes
how the Fallon character is so absolutely in love with the Sawx
and follows them religiously. Dave fully understands that
emotion, sharing that as a youngster he would follow the
Cincinnati Reds much the way as Fallon's character. Dave
would listen to every game, read about it in the newspaper, and
become depressed if they lost, a depression that would last
until the next game. Dave has come to learn that the players
see what they do as a job. They work at playing baseball.
It's just a job; a great job, but still it's a job.
In
"Fever Pitch," Jimmy Fallon finds this out and sadly
learns that the players are not as emotionally involved as the
fans with the team or the game and that the fans loyalty to the
players is not equally reciprocated. I learned this many years
ago. It was a playoff game between the New York football
Giants vs. the San Francisco 49ers. I was a big big Giants
fan. On this Sunday, the 49ers defeated the Giants and I
blamed it all on that hated, no-talent Joe Montana. I hated him
for what he did to my Giants. I was depressed for weeks.
Still despising Montana, I turned on the TV one weekend. There
was a Pro-Am Celebrity Golf Tournament on. Playing
side-by-side, laughing it up and having a swell time, were Joe
Montana and the great Giant linebacker Lawrence Taylor. There
they were, Joe Montana and Lawrence Taylor paling around like
buddies. It was then I asked myself why Lawrence Taylor was
liking Joe Montana and I was hating him? Shouldn't Lawrence
Taylor's hate for Montana be greater than mine? That's when my
blind loyalty to sports teams and figures disappear. I am no
longer emotionally involved in sports, watching for
entertainment only with some rooting interest. Drew has
been spending time in Vegas and has grown to love the town.
She's not much of a gambler but loves to watch the craps.
And now MY CRAPS STORY: Denise and I
were in Atlantic City. We just came from watching a concert by
Chicago. We stopped to watch some craps. Denise likes to
watch the action even though she doesn't know how to play. She
gets a spot right on the table. After a few minutes, I see her
rummaging through her pocketbook. She finds one of those small
tins of Bayer Aspirin. She looks how to open it. Holding the
in front of her, Denise presses down on the two near corners of
the squared tin with her thumbs. I can see what is about to
happen. The rest happens in slow motion. I yell
"NO" and reach to grab the tin of Bayer. I'm too
late. The Bayer Aspirin tin shoots out from her fingers and out
onto the craps table. The tin flies open and the aspirin
tablets spew all across the table. The dice roll by. The
Craps guy screams out, "NO ROLL! NO ROLL! BAD ROLL!"
I grab Denise by the elbow and tell her, "Let's go."
She resists, "But what about my aspirin?!" I pull
harder and repeat, "LET'S GO NOW!" We
left without looking back. We did not stop till we had our
parking validated.
So how was it working with
Jimmy Fallon on "Fever Pitch"? Drew
goes on about how funny and talented Jimmy is and how much fun
it was to work with him. She gave examples and instances and
stories and more. While she was in mid-sentence of another
sentence about Jimmy Fallon, Dave screams in interruption,
"ALL RIGHT! THAT'S ENOUGH ABOUT JIMMY FALLON! How much
longer were you going to go on about Jimmy Fallon?" Dave
continues to rant his ennui over Drew's talk of Fallon. What
Dave said exactly I'm not sure since I was laughing too hard to
hear. Oooh boy, did I get a kick out of that. That clip will
be flagged in my database.
To finish up the segment,
Dave shows a book recently written by Drew. The cover is of
Drew on Dave's desk seconds after flashing the host back on
April 12, 1995. It is titled, "Overcoming Shyness."
What I liked about this book is that it's been sitting in the
shack backstage for at least 6 years. It was prepared for
Dave's Book Collection. For some reason it ended up in the 8X8
shack in the back. I have no idea why.
CHARLES
BARKLEY: Charles can't believe Dave is going to jury
duty. Would Charles go? "No, it would interrupt my golf
game." Dave asks about Indiana Pacer Reggie Miller
who will be retiring at the end of the year. Charles says
Reggie is so old, he can remember when the Knicks were a good
team. Dave is a bit concerned about the NBA game, wondering
who he will have to root for once Reggie leaves. Dave lists
players he liked to watch: Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael
Jordan . . . . Charles mentions Lebron James. Dave's eyes
widen. "Oh, yeah, I can root for him!" Charles
offers, "Dwayne Wade." Dave gives a "who
cares" or a "who's he?" shrug. Kobe Bryant?
Dave says he's a head case. Talk turns to NBA coaches
and Dave wonders why so many get fired. Charles says
"All these teams thing they're better than they are. All
these guys think they're married to a Playboy Bunny but they're
really married to a rabbit." I laughed, enjoying how
Charles can always cut right to the heart of the matter and tell
it like it really is. Often times, coaches are fired because
of the overestimated talent of the team. What about college
basketball? Dave says he used to love watching coach Bobby
Knight pick up and throw a cheerleader across the floor. Now,
by the time a player becomes worth watching he's jumping to the
NBA. Charles hopes the NBA sets an age limit for players
which will force athletes to wait at least two years after high
school before joining the league. Hopefully, this time would be
spent in college. Patrick Ewing? "One of the most
underrated players in NBA history" says Charles.
Charles has written a book entitled, "Who's Afraid of
a Large Black Man?" Charles calls it a positive book on
race. Dave asks, "What can you tell us that White
America doesn't know about Black America?" Charles
says "We're not what you see in the movies or TV. On TV,
we're either a jock a comedian or a rapper. We're more than
that." In the book, among those Charles interviewed were
Tiger Woods, Barak Obama, a Rabbi, and Bill Clinton discussing
race in America.. Leafing through the book, I've put it on my
list as one I'll be reading this summer. Charles Barkley
- one of my favorites to watch on the court and always
entertaining to hear what he has to say.
ACT
5: This is a Late Show Reminder. There are
only 362 days until Daylight Saving Time Begins in 2006. Don't
forget to set your clocks ahead one hour! This has been a
Late Show Reminder. Spread the word.
And
that was our show for Thursday, April 5, 2005.
Wahoo
EXTRA! Speculation has
begun that the next Pope will be named Pope George
Ringo.
Well that didn't take long. My 2nd
favorite Yankee is Hideki Matsui. Quiet,
hard-working, a student of the game. My only problem with him
is I feel he is not very good on fly balls up against the wall.
I've seem him miss a few catchable good plays against the wall.
So what does he do in the 2nd inning on Opening Night? He
reaches over the fence to steal a home run from Boston's Kevin
Millar. My guess is Hideki felt he needed work on catching fly
balls along the fence and spent the off-season working on just
that. And that wouldn't surprise me at all. You see, Matsui
hasn't been Americanized yet.
From Monday's Phil
Mushnick sports/media column in the New York
Post, regarding CBS coverage of the NCAA Final Four:
"Meanwhile, the star of the two-game
Final Four telecast on Saturday was director Bob (Stay On The
Floor) Fishman. Did you miss anything to a crowd shot, a
cheerleader shot, a band shot, a bench shot, a parent shot, a
painted-face shot? Heck, no. The first in-play crowd shot
during Illinois-Louisville came with 46 seconds left; Illinois
had the ball, up 13. It was the first time fancy could logically
trump the game. Fishman gave us both. The camera pulled
back to show the game and, in the background, an entire section
of orange-shirted Illinois fans rocking the house. To quote
Napoleon Dynamite: Sweet."
Now
do you see why Mushnick is my favorite? Some may tire of my
reporting on baseball, football, basketball, etc., but if you
notice, it's more a look at how the games are covered and how it
is broadcast, and not so much on how the game is played. It's
more a commentary on the media rather than a sports commentary.
About my Let's Make a Deal braintwist from
Thursday's Wahoo: Should the final contestant on
Let's Make A Deal switch his/her choice of curtain when offered
by Monty Hall.
From Nelson Shirota of
Torrance, California
"Your, 'Let's
Make A Deal' advice only applies if you were the first person to
pick a curtain. Going first means you have three choices. If
you have to go second, you only have two to pick from so you
actually have a 50/50 chance (assuming the first person didn't
already pick the big prize, in which case you are, 'drawing
dead' as they say in poker.) If the first person gets
zonked, then should you choose the other curtain? As far as
odds go, it makes no difference. My advice would be to listen
very carefully for the sound of a hoofed animal behind a
curtain, then choose the other."
WRONG.
From a Wahoo reader named
Jack:
"I love being
asked questions like the one today on Let's Make a Deal. Should
the second person change their choice? Yes! Why? Because they
have more information now (after seeing what's behind curtain B)
then when they made their original choice. More information
will help improve your odds. Let's go back one minute.
When there were 3 curtains to choose from, person A would have a
1/3 chance of picking the big prize. But after seeing what was
behind one the loser curtains, they still only keep that 1/3
chance of being right if they stick with their choice. Knowing
what's behind alosing curtain has no affect on the odds of their
original choice. However, if they can change their
choice after curtain B is revealed, they are now only choosing
between 2 curtains (A and C). Now the odds are 1/2. Of course
they should change their choice. 1/2 is better
than1/3."
RIGHT, BUT WRONG.
From Jay Gianotti of Munster, Indiana:
"Regarding your bit on the 'Let's Make
a Deal' braintwister - There is a fundamental flaw in your
problem: in the final deal of the day, contestants do NOT have
the chance to change their mind. Once they've picked a door,
they are stuck with it, for better or worse. Now, the scenario
you have described could easily apply for any of the other deals
in the show, and then you would be correct as you have described
it. But, in reality, for the final Big Deal of the Day, your
chances of being right are down to 33% (1 out of 3), because you
only have one chance to pick the door for the big
prize."
WRONG.
From
Jason Carpenter of Bettendorf:
"About your Let's Make a Deal
argument. What you said made no
sense."
Oh, Jason, the sense was
there. You just couldn't see it.
Laugh, ridicule,
doubt all you want. Helen Read says I'm right,
and that's good enough for me! And if you want more
explanation by someone who knows how to explain things like
this, check out this website that's quickly becoming one of my
favorites. http://www.maa.org/devlin/devlin_07_03.html
What is a Tar Heel? When Carolina was
divided in 1710, the southern part was called South Carolina and
the northern, or older settlement, North Carolina. From this
came the nickname the "Old North State." Historians
have recorded that the principal products during the early
history of North Carolina were "tar, pitch, and
turpentine." It was during one of the fiercest battles of
the War Between the States, so the story goes, that the column
supporting the North Carolina troops was driven from the field.
After the battle the North Carolinians, who had successfully
fought it out alone, were greeted from the passing derelict
regiment with the question: "Any more tar down in the Old
North State, boys?" Quick as a flash came the answer:
"No, not a bit, old Jeff's bought it all up." "Is
that so; what is he going to do with it?" was asked.
"He's going to put on you-un's heels to make you stick
better in the next fight." Creecy relates that General Lee,
upon hearing of the incident, said: "God bless the Tar Heel
boys," and from that they took the name.
THIS DATE IN NHL HOCKEY HISTORY April
5, 1987 - Wayne Gretzky wins his 7th consecutive NHL scoring
title.