DAVETV If you could look at only one thing on the Internet, DaveTV would be the obvious choice. What other so-called "website" lets you watch LATE SHOW Highlights, Comedy Clips, Slideshows, Stupid Trick clips and The Tony Mendez Show?
TOP TEN LIST You know it, you love it, you can't live without it: the revolutionary comedy bit that won Dave the Nobel Peace Prize. Check out the latest Top Ten List here.
TOP TEN ARCHIVES Old Top Ten Lists never die, they just get archived. The Top Ten Archives is searchable by date and keyword. Also, please note that the word "archives" contains the word "chives."
TOP TEN CONTEST So you think you're as funny as Dave's writers? Or maybe you just enjoy wasting time at work? See if you've got the chops to win a great prize in our weekly Top Ten Contest.
TOP TEN SEARCH Search Results.
TOP TEN SEARCH Search Results.
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).
Jon Stewart; and David Gray. PLUS:
Something from Howard Dean; Pat Farmer's 'Kids Are Coached
To Say The Darndest Things"; and Audience Show and
Tell.
AUDIENCE SHOW AND TELL A&S#1: Colleen Heck of Sacramento, California.
She says Governor Arnold has made Sacramento an interesting
place to be these day. She's an attorney involved with toxic
waste clean-up. Well, she certainly came to the right place.
What does Colleen have to Show and/or Tell? Back in 1969,
Colleen was named the City of Sacramento Jump Rope Champion.
And she has a newspaper to prove it. We see a newspaper photo
of a young Colleen winning the championship. And, surprise
surprise, Colleen has a jump rope with her tonight to show her
stuff! When did she last jump rope? Colleen answers,
"This morning." Colleen does a couple quick jumps
with a few cross-overs thrown in to prove her merit. Nice
job. I can do that, too. Unfortunately, when I was showing
the neighborhood kids my prowess with the jump rope, I twisted
my ankle. I didn't let on, but I had to stand there with them
for a half-hour without moving. When they finally went on to
do something else, I limped back to the house.
A&S#2: Shaun Rosemann of Salt Lake City,
Utah. Ah, Utah. What's happening in Salt Lake City now
that the Olympics left town? Not much. Anything exciting in
Salt Lake City? Shaun says the Utah Jazz are not so good
anymore. Ah yes, the Utah Jazz, the great oxymoron nickname
of all team sports. Shaun is a student at Brigham Young
University, studying Exercise Science. I played the Dave and
said, "Exercise Science . . . is that what they're calling
'Gym' these days?" Dave didn't say it. I lost at
"Play the Dave." What does Shaun have for us?
He spent two years in Mongolia and learned how to Mongolian
Throat Sing. Is Shaun any good at it? He admits to being
"about a C+." Dave says, "A C+. Well you came
to the right place." Who taught him? Shaun credits a
friend he met there named "Gombott." Gombott? Is
that a common name in Mongolia? Shaun says it is. And does
Gombott have a last name? Shaun says, "Yes.
Olsen." Shaun performs his throat singing. It's
a low note that comes from deep down in your throat.
Vicki comes down to deliver the goods to Mr. Rosemann.
She then stops to discuss the rap music the kids so enjoy today.
She exits with the claim, "Tatts are for rats!"
A&S#3: David Berlin of Nissequogue, New
York. David is a Tai Chi instructor. What is Tai Chi?
Berlin explains it is concentrating your internal energy and
directing it outward. Dave and David perform a simple form of
Tai Chi; standing motionless looking like Dolly Parton. Dave
wonders how this would subdue punks? Berlin explains that
isn't what Tai Chi is all about; subduing punks. I may be
wrong but I think I see people sometimes practicing Tai Chi
along the banks of the Hudson River on my way to work. I
always called it "Slow motion Jiu Jitsu." What
does David Berlin have for us? He can balance a penny on the
tip of a wire hanger. But hold it! There's more. He will
then swing the hanger around and around, keeping the penny on
the hanger tip. Dave invites Berlin up on stage to
perform his trick. The penny is finally balanced and we're
ready to go. He swings it around and around and then brings it
to a stop. Oops. The penny went flying off. Good enough
for today, though, because we have a show to put on and times
becoming short. Stick around for the ACT 5. David Berlin
will do it then. Hey, before you try this at home, and I
know you will, you need to find a wheat penny, one of those old
pennies from the early 60s and before. You don't want to use
one of those "new" pennies with the building on the
back. I'm guessing there is a "sweet spot" on the
"tails" side of the wheat penny which makes this
easier to do. Good luck.
Did you see
Regis this morning? The hours must be getting to
the poor guy. Very odd this morning. Dave has a clip. We
see a stagehand from "Live! With Regis and Kelly"
bring out a life-size cut-out of Dave Letterman. Regis looks
at the cut-out and mushes, "I love you. Do you love
me?" Dave thinks the man may be going over the deep end.
Here's something new. It's "Pat Farmer's 'Kids
Are Coached To Say The Darndest Things.'"
Announce: "It's time for 'Pat Farmer's 'Kids Are Coached To
Say the Darndest Things.'" We cut to a scene of Pat
sitting in a chair. Next to him, also seated, is a lad of about
8 years old. Pat: "So, Jeff, who's your second
grade teacher?" Jeff: "Mrs.
Harris." Pat: "Do you like her?"
(Pause) (Pat leans over and whispers something into
little Jeffrey's ear) Jeff: "Yeah, but somebody
should tell her to lay off the doughnuts." (funny
sound effects; slide whistle; boing) Announcer:
"This has been 'Pat Farmer's 'Kids Are Coached to Say the
Darndest Things.'"
A MESSAGE FROM
DEMOCRATIC CHAIRMAN HOWARD DEAN from
"Hardball" with Chris Matthews. Howard Dean:
"Well, certainly the President can claim executive
privilege. But in this case, I think with a lifetime
appointment to the Supreme Court, you can't play, you know, hide
the salami, or whatever it's called."
HUH?
"Hide the salami"? We can't play "Hide the
salami"? Dave thought we COULD play "hide the
salami." Shucks. No "Hide the salami" for
you.
JON STEWART: From the very popular
"The Daily Show with Jon Stewart"; Monday through
Thursday on 11:00 PM on Comedy Central. It's Emmy
Award-winning! Did Jon go out to the Emmy parties after the
big win for both Comedy/Music/Variety show and for writing?
Jon says he doesn't go out anymore, describing himself as
"old and asthmatic." Does he get together with
people from other shows during Emmy weekend? Jon explains,
"We're on Comedy Central, so. . . . no." One
positive about winning an Emmy Award it weighs 20
pounds and has 2 very sharp points coming out the top, yet
you're allowed to bring it on the plane! Jon likes to walk up
and down the aisle waving the Emmy trophy in people's face and
say, "Couldn't bring your nail clippers on the flight,
could you! HA!" New dads Jon and Dave talk a
bit about raising children and the difference between teaching
the facts of life to boys and girls. Jon explains that with
boys, it's easy. Simply tell them, "Repress it."
Done. With girls, you have to first have tea with her and her
little panda. Jon wonders when do children, these little
bundles of absolute joy, turn bad. When they are young, they
are all happy and full of joy; the world is exhilarating. When
we get old, we're crushed. The joy is zapped out of us.
When does that happen? When does cynicism enter our lives?
From personal experience, it happens before ten years old. The
other day I was explaining to my daughter Danielle, 10 in a few
weeks, the dangers of running across the street without looking.
She was barely paying attention to me. When I was finished, she
says without looking up, and with a bit of disgust in her voice,
"And your point is . . .?" I laughed at her pointed
disinterest and wondered where she picked up this acid retort.
I was sure she was repeating something she heard and was not
fully aware of what she was saying. It didn't take long before
I realized that she knew exactly what she was talking about.
She really was disinterested. She really didn't care what I had
to say. She really thought I didn't know what I was talking
about. "And your point is . . . ?" And I sit
here wondering how my father would have reacted if I said that
to him back in the 60's. I have a feeling I would have gotten
his point in no time. How did the President respond to
Hurricane Katrina? Jon says the President's reaction was to
have "a day of prayer." He expands, "I was
under the impression that a hurricane is an act of God. God
has already let his feelings known." For some
reason, I rarely watch "The Daily Show." I don't
know why. I probably skip The Daily Show and watch the news
instead. But now that I get a local news show on Channel 12
that runs throughout the day, I can get my news whenever I want.
This frees up my 11:00 PM news viewing. So this week I've been
looking for "The Daily Show" and am happy to report
that it is quite funny. Good laughs throughout. It's on my
list. I recommend you put it on yours.
ACT
5: It's David Berlin performing his Audience Show and
Tell trick
DAVID GRAY: From his CD,
"Life In Slow Motion," David Gray performed "The
One I Love." I like David Gray. I like his drummer.
The first time David Gray was on the show, I went out and bought
his CD the next day, "White Ladder." I've only done
that a handful of times in ten years.
And that was our
show for Thursday, October 6, 2005. Wahoo
EXTRA! I was watching a bit
of the Oprah a week ago. A guy was on who
received a kidney transplant but then his body rejected it.
This got me to thinking: Let's say I donate a kidney. The
recipient rejects it a week later. Could I get my kidney
transplanted back into me? Any doctors out there?
Hey! Don't miss Friday's show. I'm in it. Catch me if
you can.
From Wednesday's show:
2. We here at the Late Show are always fighting
with the CBS censors to get things on the air. We want to say
certain things; the CBS censors don't want us to say things.
This fall, we've reached a compromise: From now on, swearing and
obscenities only in Finnish. A Finnish woman then enters and
berates Dave and the show in her native tongue.
And now the Finnish translation of what she said:
"You stupid, no-good pantywaist, half-wit
moron. Look at you with that nauseating horse face. What a
twit. Sitting there on your stupid lazy ass, phoning it in,
wasting everybody's damn time. You make me sick. What a
worthless piece of garbage. Go to hell, jackass."
But hold it! There are no swear words in the above.
The CBS censors wouldn't touch it even if it were in English, so
why did we have it said in Finnish? According to my source,
if we said a swear word in Finnish, we would have had to bleep
it, too. The whole thing doesn't make sense, so don't try to
analyze it. Let it go. Let it go.
The other day I
asked about Dick Tracy's cartoon sign-off: "6-2-and even,
over and out." What does it mean? From Ken
McD of Baltimore, Maryland, who found a few Google
references: Starting from a betting phrase:
http://www.online-literature.com/ring-lardner/big-town/5
"They don't expect her [the horse] to win," says
Daley, "but she's six, two, and even, and I'm going to play
her place and show."
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4154/is_20041020/ai_n12404833
"Foley's N.Y. Pub may be the perfect Manhattan location for
a Red Sox fan to quaff a pint of Guinness. The establishment,
which is located across the street from the Empire State
Building at 18 W. 33rd Street, has deep Sox ties, starting with
it's Joe Morgan [the ballplayer]- inspired slogan: 'Where
everything is six-two and even.'"
http://www.filmsite.org/malt3.html Maltese Falcon
(1941) Cairo whispers into Gutman's ear - lending his
final judgment to Spade's suggestion to give up Wilmer. Spade
announces the stakes: (To Wilmer) "Six, two and
even, they're selling you out, sonny." (To Gutman)
"I hope you're not letting yourself be influenced by the
guns these pocket-edition desperados are waving around,
because I've practiced taking guns away from these boys before
so we'll have no trouble there."
Thank you, Ken
McD. But does it answer the question as to what it means?
From the first betting phrase, I'm guessing it means the odds
are 6-to-1 the horse will win; 2-to-1 the horse will come in
first or second; and even money the horse will finish at least
third. 6-2-and-even. Still, I'll investigate more.
Thanks for getting it started.
And one more thing. I
hope sports broadcasters are reading this. In baseball after a
close play at first base, during the replay one announcer should
say "NOW" when the runner's foot touches first base
and the other announcer say "NOW" when the first
baseman catches the ball. Who ever says "NOW" first
would determine if the ump made the right call. It's hard for
one announcer to look at both the first baseman's glove and the
runner at the same time and make the right call. Use your
partner, work together, and you'll have a better chance of
making the right call.
It's been reported that
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are
expecting a baby. Congratulations! That's gotta be happy news
to Reverend Moon and the rest of the Scientologists!
Jon Stewart; and David Gray. PLUS:
Something from Howard Dean; Pat Farmer's 'Kids Are Coached
To Say The Darndest Things"; and Audience Show and
Tell.
AUDIENCE SHOW AND TELL A&S#1: Colleen Heck of Sacramento, California.
She says Governor Arnold has made Sacramento an interesting
place to be these day. She's an attorney involved with toxic
waste clean-up. Well, she certainly came to the right place.
What does Colleen have to Show and/or Tell? Back in 1969,
Colleen was named the City of Sacramento Jump Rope Champion.
And she has a newspaper to prove it. We see a newspaper photo
of a young Colleen winning the championship. And, surprise
surprise, Colleen has a jump rope with her tonight to show her
stuff! When did she last jump rope? Colleen answers,
"This morning." Colleen does a couple quick jumps
with a few cross-overs thrown in to prove her merit. Nice
job. I can do that, too. Unfortunately, when I was showing
the neighborhood kids my prowess with the jump rope, I twisted
my ankle. I didn't let on, but I had to stand there with them
for a half-hour without moving. When they finally went on to
do something else, I limped back to the house.
A&S#2: Shaun Rosemann of Salt Lake City,
Utah. Ah, Utah. What's happening in Salt Lake City now
that the Olympics left town? Not much. Anything exciting in
Salt Lake City? Shaun says the Utah Jazz are not so good
anymore. Ah yes, the Utah Jazz, the great oxymoron nickname
of all team sports. Shaun is a student at Brigham Young
University, studying Exercise Science. I played the Dave and
said, "Exercise Science . . . is that what they're calling
'Gym' these days?" Dave didn't say it. I lost at
"Play the Dave." What does Shaun have for us?
He spent two years in Mongolia and learned how to Mongolian
Throat Sing. Is Shaun any good at it? He admits to being
"about a C+." Dave says, "A C+. Well you came
to the right place." Who taught him? Shaun credits a
friend he met there named "Gombott." Gombott? Is
that a common name in Mongolia? Shaun says it is. And does
Gombott have a last name? Shaun says, "Yes.
Olsen." Shaun performs his throat singing. It's
a low note that comes from deep down in your throat.
Vicki comes down to deliver the goods to Mr. Rosemann.
She then stops to discuss the rap music the kids so enjoy today.
She exits with the claim, "Tatts are for rats!"
A&S#3: David Berlin of Nissequogue, New
York. David is a Tai Chi instructor. What is Tai Chi?
Berlin explains it is concentrating your internal energy and
directing it outward. Dave and David perform a simple form of
Tai Chi; standing motionless looking like Dolly Parton. Dave
wonders how this would subdue punks? Berlin explains that
isn't what Tai Chi is all about; subduing punks. I may be
wrong but I think I see people sometimes practicing Tai Chi
along the banks of the Hudson River on my way to work. I
always called it "Slow motion Jiu Jitsu." What
does David Berlin have for us? He can balance a penny on the
tip of a wire hanger. But hold it! There's more. He will
then swing the hanger around and around, keeping the penny on
the hanger tip. Dave invites Berlin up on stage to
perform his trick. The penny is finally balanced and we're
ready to go. He swings it around and around and then brings it
to a stop. Oops. The penny went flying off. Good enough
for today, though, because we have a show to put on and times
becoming short. Stick around for the ACT 5. David Berlin
will do it then. Hey, before you try this at home, and I
know you will, you need to find a wheat penny, one of those old
pennies from the early 60s and before. You don't want to use
one of those "new" pennies with the building on the
back. I'm guessing there is a "sweet spot" on the
"tails" side of the wheat penny which makes this
easier to do. Good luck.
Did you see
Regis this morning? The hours must be getting to
the poor guy. Very odd this morning. Dave has a clip. We
see a stagehand from "Live! With Regis and Kelly"
bring out a life-size cut-out of Dave Letterman. Regis looks
at the cut-out and mushes, "I love you. Do you love
me?" Dave thinks the man may be going over the deep end.
Here's something new. It's "Pat Farmer's 'Kids
Are Coached To Say The Darndest Things.'"
Announce: "It's time for 'Pat Farmer's 'Kids Are Coached To
Say the Darndest Things.'" We cut to a scene of Pat
sitting in a chair. Next to him, also seated, is a lad of about
8 years old. Pat: "So, Jeff, who's your second
grade teacher?" Jeff: "Mrs.
Harris." Pat: "Do you like her?"
(Pause) (Pat leans over and whispers something into
little Jeffrey's ear) Jeff: "Yeah, but somebody
should tell her to lay off the doughnuts." (funny
sound effects; slide whistle; boing) Announcer:
"This has been 'Pat Farmer's 'Kids Are Coached to Say the
Darndest Things.'"
A MESSAGE FROM
DEMOCRATIC CHAIRMAN HOWARD DEAN from
"Hardball" with Chris Matthews. Howard Dean:
"Well, certainly the President can claim executive
privilege. But in this case, I think with a lifetime
appointment to the Supreme Court, you can't play, you know, hide
the salami, or whatever it's called."
HUH?
"Hide the salami"? We can't play "Hide the
salami"? Dave thought we COULD play "hide the
salami." Shucks. No "Hide the salami" for
you.
JON STEWART: From the very popular
"The Daily Show with Jon Stewart"; Monday through
Thursday on 11:00 PM on Comedy Central. It's Emmy
Award-winning! Did Jon go out to the Emmy parties after the
big win for both Comedy/Music/Variety show and for writing?
Jon says he doesn't go out anymore, describing himself as
"old and asthmatic." Does he get together with
people from other shows during Emmy weekend? Jon explains,
"We're on Comedy Central, so. . . . no." One
positive about winning an Emmy Award it weighs 20
pounds and has 2 very sharp points coming out the top, yet
you're allowed to bring it on the plane! Jon likes to walk up
and down the aisle waving the Emmy trophy in people's face and
say, "Couldn't bring your nail clippers on the flight,
could you! HA!" New dads Jon and Dave talk a
bit about raising children and the difference between teaching
the facts of life to boys and girls. Jon explains that with
boys, it's easy. Simply tell them, "Repress it."
Done. With girls, you have to first have tea with her and her
little panda. Jon wonders when do children, these little
bundles of absolute joy, turn bad. When they are young, they
are all happy and full of joy; the world is exhilarating. When
we get old, we're crushed. The joy is zapped out of us.
When does that happen? When does cynicism enter our lives?
From personal experience, it happens before ten years old. The
other day I was explaining to my daughter Danielle, 10 in a few
weeks, the dangers of running across the street without looking.
She was barely paying attention to me. When I was finished, she
says without looking up, and with a bit of disgust in her voice,
"And your point is . . .?" I laughed at her pointed
disinterest and wondered where she picked up this acid retort.
I was sure she was repeating something she heard and was not
fully aware of what she was saying. It didn't take long before
I realized that she knew exactly what she was talking about.
She really was disinterested. She really didn't care what I had
to say. She really thought I didn't know what I was talking
about. "And your point is . . . ?" And I sit
here wondering how my father would have reacted if I said that
to him back in the 60's. I have a feeling I would have gotten
his point in no time. How did the President respond to
Hurricane Katrina? Jon says the President's reaction was to
have "a day of prayer." He expands, "I was
under the impression that a hurricane is an act of God. God
has already let his feelings known." For some
reason, I rarely watch "The Daily Show." I don't
know why. I probably skip The Daily Show and watch the news
instead. But now that I get a local news show on Channel 12
that runs throughout the day, I can get my news whenever I want.
This frees up my 11:00 PM news viewing. So this week I've been
looking for "The Daily Show" and am happy to report
that it is quite funny. Good laughs throughout. It's on my
list. I recommend you put it on yours.
ACT
5: It's David Berlin performing his Audience Show and
Tell trick
DAVID GRAY: From his CD,
"Life In Slow Motion," David Gray performed "The
One I Love." I like David Gray. I like his drummer.
The first time David Gray was on the show, I went out and bought
his CD the next day, "White Ladder." I've only done
that a handful of times in ten years.
And that was our
show for Thursday, October 6, 2005. Wahoo
EXTRA! I was watching a bit
of the Oprah a week ago. A guy was on who
received a kidney transplant but then his body rejected it.
This got me to thinking: Let's say I donate a kidney. The
recipient rejects it a week later. Could I get my kidney
transplanted back into me? Any doctors out there?
Hey! Don't miss Friday's show. I'm in it. Catch me if
you can.
From Wednesday's show:
2. We here at the Late Show are always fighting
with the CBS censors to get things on the air. We want to say
certain things; the CBS censors don't want us to say things.
This fall, we've reached a compromise: From now on, swearing and
obscenities only in Finnish. A Finnish woman then enters and
berates Dave and the show in her native tongue.
And now the Finnish translation of what she said:
"You stupid, no-good pantywaist, half-wit
moron. Look at you with that nauseating horse face. What a
twit. Sitting there on your stupid lazy ass, phoning it in,
wasting everybody's damn time. You make me sick. What a
worthless piece of garbage. Go to hell, jackass."
But hold it! There are no swear words in the above.
The CBS censors wouldn't touch it even if it were in English, so
why did we have it said in Finnish? According to my source,
if we said a swear word in Finnish, we would have had to bleep
it, too. The whole thing doesn't make sense, so don't try to
analyze it. Let it go. Let it go.
The other day I
asked about Dick Tracy's cartoon sign-off: "6-2-and even,
over and out." What does it mean? From Ken
McD of Baltimore, Maryland, who found a few Google
references: Starting from a betting phrase:
http://www.online-literature.com/ring-lardner/big-town/5
"They don't expect her [the horse] to win," says
Daley, "but she's six, two, and even, and I'm going to play
her place and show."
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4154/is_20041020/ai_n12404833
"Foley's N.Y. Pub may be the perfect Manhattan location for
a Red Sox fan to quaff a pint of Guinness. The establishment,
which is located across the street from the Empire State
Building at 18 W. 33rd Street, has deep Sox ties, starting with
it's Joe Morgan [the ballplayer]- inspired slogan: 'Where
everything is six-two and even.'"
http://www.filmsite.org/malt3.html Maltese Falcon
(1941) Cairo whispers into Gutman's ear - lending his
final judgment to Spade's suggestion to give up Wilmer. Spade
announces the stakes: (To Wilmer) "Six, two and
even, they're selling you out, sonny." (To Gutman)
"I hope you're not letting yourself be influenced by the
guns these pocket-edition desperados are waving around,
because I've practiced taking guns away from these boys before
so we'll have no trouble there."
Thank you, Ken
McD. But does it answer the question as to what it means?
From the first betting phrase, I'm guessing it means the odds
are 6-to-1 the horse will win; 2-to-1 the horse will come in
first or second; and even money the horse will finish at least
third. 6-2-and-even. Still, I'll investigate more.
Thanks for getting it started.
And one more thing. I
hope sports broadcasters are reading this. In baseball after a
close play at first base, during the replay one announcer should
say "NOW" when the runner's foot touches first base
and the other announcer say "NOW" when the first
baseman catches the ball. Who ever says "NOW" first
would determine if the ump made the right call. It's hard for
one announcer to look at both the first baseman's glove and the
runner at the same time and make the right call. Use your
partner, work together, and you'll have a better chance of
making the right call.
It's been reported that
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are
expecting a baby. Congratulations! That's gotta be happy news
to Reverend Moon and the rest of the Scientologists!