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July 16th 2007 July 16th, 2007 |
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I had neglected to mention some of the other Dreamteam creating the Car Talk animated series- Our Producer,Howard Grossman, was once an apprentice to Orson Welles, our script supervisor Tom Minton is an Emmy and Peabody Award winning writer whose credits include Tinytoons and Mighty Mouse. The stories are being written by Click and Clack with their regular collaborators Doug Berman and Doug Mayer, who also produce the hit NPR show Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me. Our designer Steve Silver created the look of Kim Possible and our board artists include Karl Torge, an award winning director of Warner Bros classic TV animation. The show will feature a number of celebrity cameo voices from the world of PBS and NPR.
It's a great team to work with!
I saw something bizarre on TV tonight. Some NBC cop show ending with rappers Ice-T and Ludakris staring one another down to the music of Enya! The World Turned Upside Down....
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Birthdays: Sir Joshua Reynolds, Ginger Rogers, Pinchas Zukerman, Orville Redenbacher the PopCorn King, Sunny Tufts- the star of 50s sci fi films like the Crawling Eye.- In Rocky and Bullwinkle Boris Badenov is ever lusting after an autographed photo of Sunny Tufts. Reuben Blades, Mary Baker-Eddy the founder of Christian Science, Will Farrell
1769- Fra Junipero Serra founded his first Mission settlement in California- San Diego de Alcala, now present day San Diego. The master plan was to create a string of missions from San Diego to San Francisco one days ride apart- San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, San Gabriel , Los Angeles, etc.
1932- Cecil B. DeMille shot the scene in his film Sign of the Cross where Claudet Colbert took a bath in asses milk. Legend has it that DeMille insisted on real milk in the bath and that by the second day the hot studio lights had curdled it to a smelly cheese. But production notes show the scene was all shot in one day. DeMille always got away with sexy semi-nude scenes by putting them in biblical settings. After all, who would criticize a moral tale from the Good Book? This story of Jesus opens with an orgy scene at Mary Magdalene’s house.
1945-THE FIRST ATOMIC BOMB EXPLODED at Alamagordo New Mexico (site code name was "Trinity'). Called at first the Super Cosmic Bomb, nicknamed "The Gadget". The Manhattan Project scientists weren't sure that once you started the chain reaction detonating particles of light when it would stop, if ever. Physicists Richard Fenyman and Enrico Fermi wagered a case of beer that they would incinerate the state of New Mexico.(funny guys). They were led by General Leslie Groves, a by-the-book army engineer who supervised the construction of the Pentagon, and Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, a brilliant physicist and Berkeley radical who read Sanskrit to relax. When he saw the force of the blast Oppenheimer recalled the Hindu verse: "Now have I become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds..."
1951-J.D. Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" published.
1954- First groundbreaking for the construction of Disneyland.
1964 -Warner Brothers "A False Hare", the last Bugs Bunny theatrical short until the late 1980's.
1969- Passed this day Title 14, Section 1211 of the Code of Federal Regulations, makes it illegal for U.S. citizens to have any contact with extraterrestrials or their spacecraft.
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July 15th, 2007 sun. July 15th, 2007 |
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Todays Birthdays: Rembrandt van Rijn, Inigo Jones, Sir Thomas Bullfinch, St. Mother Cabrini, Clemont Moore, Julian Bream, Linda Rondstadt, Alex Karras, Jan Michael Vincent, The Sultan of Brunei, Lola Davidovich, Forrest Whitaker, Brigette Neilsen, Jesse The Body Ventura
Feast of St. Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain
1938- Popeye cartoon "With the Jeep" introduced Eugene the Jeep. The funny little character later gave it’s name to the army’s new General Purpose Vehicle, the G.P. or Jeep.

1941- President Franklin Roosevelt sent federal mediator Stanley White to try and solve the labor strike between Walt Disney and his cartoonists.
1953- The film Gentlemen Prefer Blondes premiered starring Marylyn Monroe and Jane Russell.
1971- Producer Steve Krantz announced the production of the first X-rated cartoon, Fritz the Cat, to be directed by newcomer Ralph Bakshi.
1982-Coca-Cola intoduces Diet Coke. Mainstay for animation studios everywhere.
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July 14, 2007 sat. July 14th, 2007 |
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A funny little story for Bastille Day:
In the Humphrey Bogart movie Casablanca (1943), there is a memorable sequence in Rick's nightclub where a group of Nazi officers led by Conrad Veight tries to sing a Nazi song. Resistance leader Paul Heinried rallies the club patrons to a rousing rendition of Le Marseillaise that drowns them out. The song the Germans sang was Watch on the Rhine, a First World War song. Director Michael Kurtiz had wanted them to sing the Nazi Deutschland Uber Alles, or the Horst Wessel song, but the Warner legal department stopped them. Apparently the song was copyrighted! We can be at war with the Nazis and drop bombs on them, but we don't want to get sued by them!
Aux Armes, Citoyens!
I'm sorry Rick, but it'll do you no good. Warner Bros still won't greenlight Osmosis Jones II
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Birthdays: Issac Bashevis Singer, Mr. Maytag, inventor of the electronic washing machine-1857, Emiline Pankhurst, Woody Guthrie, Gerald Ford, Ingmar Bergman is 88, Jerry Rubin, Scott Rudin, Rosie Grier, Harry Dean Stanton, Polly Bergen, Gustav Klimt, Terry Thomas, Jimmy Hoffa, Dave Fleischer, Bill Hanna, Walt Stanchfield , Joel Silver producer of the Matrix and Die Hard movies.
1415-Joanna II, Queen of Naples called Joanna la Loca (Crazy Joanie), allows the prostitutes of Avignon to form their own guild. Solidarity Forever.
1756- In the opening moves of the French and Indian War, the French cross Lake Ontario and captured Fort Oswego. The French commander Vaudreuil wrote: The cries and howlings of our Canadians and Indians soon made the defenders decide to surrender."
Gee, howling Canadians scare me too.
1789-BASTILLE DAY-THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. In France the anger of the common people over economic hardship and arrogant indifference of the King and nobility finally exploded in mass violence. While poor people literally starved to death all King Louis XVI could think of was to trim the yearly allowance for the Royal Lapdogs. The focus of the people’s hate was the Bastille, a huge fortress- prison that towered over Paris rooftops, her cannon aimed at the people in the streets. The Parisians got guns from the Invalides and stormed the prison. Ironically the royal prefect was intending to phase out the prison anyway. When the gates were opened only a handful of petty thieves came out including a lunatic who shouted:"I am God!" But the symbolism was what counted. They almost liberated the Marquis De Sade but he had been moved to the fortress of Saumur just two weeks before. If you ever visit Paris don't try and look for the remains of the Bastille, the people demolished the building and paved streets over it. It’s key was given by Lafayette to George Washington and its at Mt. Vernon. Miles away at Versailles Louis XVI had just written in his diary- July 14th 1789-" Nothing" when he heard the commotion he said:" What is that ? A revolt?" The Duke de la Rochfoucauld said:" No Sire, a revolution!"
1849-BLACK SHIP DAY-Commodore Perry sailed into Yedo Bay and convinced the Japanese to open trade by threatening to shell Yokohama. This ends Japan's 300 year old isolation from the outside world. The Shogun's envoys receive the Americans by laying straw mattes under their feet and talking to them in a special pavilion. The Yankees thought this was special treatment but actually after they left the mattes and building were burned so they could say the foreigner's feet never polluted Japanese soil.
1850 - 1st public demonstration of ice made by refrigeration
1853 – In emulation of the London World Exposition at the Crystal Palace the 1st US World's fair opens at the Crystal Palace NY.
1862- Every old sailors worst nightmare came true. This day the US Navy did away with the sailors daily rum ration, in effect outlawing all alcohol on a ship except for medicinal purposes. Spirits were the preferred drink on ships since ancient times because drinking water could give you a myriad of diseases: cholera, dysentery, etc. but no bugs can live in alcohol.
1868-Seward's Folly- Congress authorized the purchase of Alaska from Russia.
1881-BILLY THE KID SHOT- Fort Sumner New Mexico sheriff Pat Garrett hid in a closet in the Kid's hotel room and shot him in the back as he was taking his boots off. Billy's last words were:" Who's there?" Backshooting was how Billy killed most of his victims. He was 21. After firing off his guns Pat Garret panicked and rushed out into the street without waiting to see their effect. Billy had such a lethal reputation that a small crowd stood in fear outside his room for nearly an hour until they were sure the Kid wasn't just playing possum but was really dead. Even though Garret was practically illiterate he wrote several best selling books on the incident, heavily exaggerated by pulp ghostwriter Ned Buntine. Eventually Pat Garret too was backshot, this time in an argument over some goats on his ranch.
1892- Civil War veterans who were wounded in service were awarded a $50 pension by the government. Female nurses of that conflict were awarded a $12 pension. Satirical writer and social critic Ambrose Bierce returned his money with the note"Thank you but this was not part of the original contract when I signed on to become an Assassin for my Country."
1908- The Adventures of Dollie premiered, the first movie of D.W. Griffith.
1921-Sacco & Vancetti convicted. These men were Italian immigrants and socialists who were accused of the murder of a Massachusetts storeowner. The evidence was slight but hey, they were foreigners and espoused lefty politics. Despite protests around the world from folks like Picasso, George Bernard Shaw and Helen Keller they were electrocuted. Folksinger Woody Guthrie wrote a dozen ballads in tribute to Sacco & Vancetti." Let me sing you a ballad of Sacco-Vancetti, pour me some wine and eat some spaghetti..."
1933- "Well Blow Me Down"- Max Fleischer's first "Popeye the Sailor" cartoon debuted. Vaudvillian Red Pepper Sam provided his salty mumbles throughout the post-sync track. When Sam asked for more money than Max Fleischer thought he was worth, he replaced him with assistant animator Jack Mercer, who was the voice ever after.
1946 - Dr Ben Spock's "Common Sense Book of Baby & Child Care" published
1948- The Israeli Army overran Nazareth.
1951 - 1st color telecast of a sporting event (CBS-horse race)
1951 –Triple Crown Winner Citation becomes 1st horse to win $1,000,000 in races.
1955-The Kaarman Ghia debuted. Volkswagen wanted an "image car" to compete with the sleek American designs like the Corvette and Thunderbird. So they subcontracted the Kaarman motorbus company who engaged an Italian design firm named Ghia and the distinctive little coupe was born.
1967 - The new band called the Who began a US tour as the opening act for Herman’s Hermits.
1980- The National Republican Party Presidential Convention nominated former California Governor, actor and SAG president Ronald Reagan. The GOP under Robert Strauss & Lee Atwarer completed restructuring itself after the disaster of Watergate by creating a new-conservative alliance of Sunbelt rightwingers, Christian groups and Southern Dixiecrats.. Old Republican stalwarts who disagreed with the ultra conservative agenda- Nelson Rockefeller, Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon and Lowell Weicker were out in the cold. At 69 Reagan was the oldest man to ever run for the presidency. He said of the convention:" It’s the first time in a long while I saw myself on television in prime time." When the former Warner contract actor first ran for public office in the 1960’s someone asked mogul Jack Warner "what do you think of Ronald Reagan for President?" Warner replied:" Nah, Jimmy Stuart for President. Ronald Reagan for his best friend!"
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July 13, 2007 friday. July 13th, 2007 |
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Birthdays: French Admiral Bailly de Suffren, Harrison Ford, is 64, Cheech Marin- remember him in Oliver and Company?, Father Flannagan, Cameron Crowe, Woye Solenka, Dave Garroway, Patrick Stewart is 66, Jack Kemp, Chef Paul Prudhomme, Michael Spinks, Film special effects artist Jim Danforth, Dr. Erno Rubik inventor of the Rubik’s Cube
HAPPY FRIDAY THE THIRTEENTH-The combination of Friday, the day Jesus was crucified and Adam died with the number thirteen- Judas Iscariot is called the Thirteenth Apostle and the Vikings considered wicked Loki the Thirteenth God. So today is considered an unlucky combination. But you have a Lucky Day!
1798- Poet William Wordsworth visited Tinturn Abbey and was inspired to write his famous elegy on the ruins.
1865- P.T.Banham’s American Museum in New York City burned down in a spectacular fire. Barham rebuilt but after that one burned as well he got the idea of getting into the circus business. In his American Museum , more a sitting menagerie and sideshow than a museum as we know it, Barnum invented the idea of advanced hype and created kiddie matinees.
1898-Giusseppi Marconi patents wireless transmissions, the Radio. Marconi believed that sound never dies, it just grows fainter. In his old age he was trying to invent a machine that could pick up the traces of the voice of Jesus.
1923- Paleontologist George Olsen while digging in the Gobi Desert discovered the first fossilized dinosaur eggs.
1925- Walt and Lillian Disney marry. Lillian and her sister in law Edna were among the first women in cartoons to be cel painters.
1930- Six thousand people in formal evening wear crowded into London’s Albert Hall to hear a special message from Sherlock Holmes author Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle. It was extra special because everyone knew he had died five days ago. Conan-Doyle was a champion of spiritualism and declared he could get a message through from beyond the grave. An empty chair was placed on stage in hopes of his apparition taking a seat. Hymns were sung and a clairvoyant medium claimed she saw Sir Arthur. Others saw nothing and thought it was all a big humbug.
1930 – David Sarnoff the head of the NBC radio network said in the NY Times that " The new invention of Television would be a theater in every home". Sounded crazy back then.
1939- Frank Sinatra recorded his first album, this one with the Harry James Orchestra.
1949- Producer David O. Selznik left his first wife Irene, the daughter of Louis B. Mayer, and married actress Jennifer Jones.
Irene went on to become a producer herself, and produced Tennessee William's A Streetcar Named Desire on stage.
1960- Senator John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts nominated for President by the Democratic Convention in Los Angeles. The day continued with rounds of fierce backroom deals to decide the running mate. Although the Kennedys wanted Stuart Symington of Missouri it finally was decided to go with Lyndon Johnson the powerful Senate leader from Texas, to help with Southern conservatives. Johnson had asked his Texas mentor Cactus Jack Garner if he should accept the job. Cactus Jack was Franklin Roosevelt’s Veep for his first two terms. The 90 year old Garner said:”Lyndon, the Vice Presidency ain’t worth a bucket a warm spit!” Bobby Kennedy considered offering Lyndon the Vice Presidency a token gesture to mollify his anger at losing the nomination and he was surprised when Johnson accepted. Before going to Ciro’s with Frank Sinatra to celebrate Presidential aide Kenny O’Donnell recalled JFK making the best of it:” The Vice Presidency doesn’t mean anything. I’m forty three and I don’t plan to die in office….”
1977- The Great New York City Blackout of '77. For the second time in 20 years the whole darn East Coast power grid system breaks down. Unlike the 1964 Blackout it was much longer, much hotter, and there was no full moon to illuminate the city.
My wife Pat remembers being in the Bronx on the phone to her boyfriend in Hoboken, when her lights went out. She told him and he raced to the Jersey shore just in time to see the Skyline of Manhattan blacking out a section at a time like a huge set of dominoes. The next day posh Eastside clubs had guys drive to Jersey for ice so they could offer a cold cocktail on the sidewalk for $25 each. There was some looting and other civil disturbances and at the same time the lunatic killer the Son of Sam was on the prowl. No wonder they called it Fun City!
1985- Boomtown Rats vocalist Bob Geldorf organized a massive live concert called LIVE AID. Televised and seen by 1.5 billion people, it raised money for African famine relief. Madonna, Santanna, Paul MacCartney, The Beach Boys and reunions of Crosby, Stills and Nash, The Who and Led Zeppelin.
1985- A cancerous growth was removed from President Ronald Reagan’s colon. Stand up comic Paul Rodriguez said:” Reagan is amazing: He got cancer in his nose, he got cancer in his butt, he got shot full of bullets- he’s like the Terminator President..”
2305- According to Star Trek Next Generation Captain Jean Luc Picard was born.
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July 12, 2007 thurs CAR TALK July 12th, 2007 |
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Well, I've had to keep a lid on it until the official press release came out. Now I can say that after Hanna Barbera, Walt Disney, Dreamworks, Warner Bros and Fox, my new employer is

I know, it seems like I just can't hold on to a job, but this one is cool.
I am working with Linda Simensky, Bill Kroyer and a bunch of great people to bring the hit radio show Car Talk to series television. The show is written by Tom & Ray's collaborators, who also created the show Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me!" I am directing all ten episodes of the first season. Here the official press release.
PBS Greenlights 'Car Talk' Television Series
Tom and Ray Magliozzi of CAR TALK come to PBS in summer 2008 in an as-yet- untitled animated sitcom focusing on the adventures of "Click and Clack" and their crew of mechanics and co- workers. Shown: Tom and Ray and their pal ZuZu at Car Talk Plaza. More information at www.pbs.org/pressroom. (PRNewsFoto/PBS)
BEVERLY HILLS, CA UNITED STATES
First-Ever Animated Primetime Series for PBS to Launch in Summer 2008
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., July 11 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Start your engines! PBS is bringing Tom and Ray Magliozzi, of CAR TALK, to TV. Based on the hit NPR radio show, the as-yet-untitled animated sitcom will launch with ten 30-minute episodes targeted for summer 2008. Fans will be invited to submit title suggestions for the television show.
The fast-paced series will take off where the radio series ends,
focusing on the adventures of Click and Clack and their crew of mechanics and co- workers. Based largely in Tom and Ray's fictional garage, the show will focus on the "off-air" escapades of Tom and Ray Magliozzi ("known to their listeners as Click and Clack," the Tappet brothers) as they try to fix cars, fend off disgruntled customers and seek out ways to do less andless work.
"We want to apologize in advance to Jim Lehrer, Bill Moyers, the folks at FRONTLINE, NOVA and AMERICAN EXPERIENCE for the damage we are about to do to your network's reputation," said Tom and Ray Magliozzi, who will provide the voices for their own animated characters. "Oh, and Big Bird,too. Sorry, pal."
"Tom and Ray are larger than life characters, and the only way to keep them larger than life, and not diminish them on TV, is through animation,"said creator and executive producer Howard K. Grossman. "We've brought on a world-class animation team, and I'm confident the series will rank amongthe best anywhere."
"Unlikely!" said Tom.
"We're looking forward to bringing Tom and Ray to television, with new characters and stories that capture the humor of the radio series and takeit even further," said John Boland, PBS chief content officer. "Through animation and fresh content, we anticipate the show will be a hit amongcurrent fans of the radio show and new audiences. PBS has long been aleader in creating animated, educational programming for children, but, with CAR TALK, we will present our first primetime animated series for a general audience."
The animated series takes place at Car Talk Plaza, a fictional building which houses their radio studio and their famed garage in Cambridge,Massachusetts, in Harvard Square.
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I've already been to Boston and New York a few times to work with Tom and Ray, and believe me, they are as much fun as they sound on the radio. I'll be adding some details of my experiences on the show on this blog as the year goes on.
Look for the first show to air in June 2008.
Car Talk's website is http://www.cartalk.com
My dad loved to fix cars, as does my brother. But if I check the oil, it's a miracle. So I'm looking forward to learning a lot more about cars as we hopefully make a fun show. Wish us luck.
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Birthdays: Gaius Julius Caesar is 2,106 years old, Henry David Thoreau, Oscar Hammerstein, Kirsten Flagstad, Andrew Wyeth, Pablo Neruda, George Eastman, Milton Berle, Cheryl Ladd, Van Cliburn, Buckminster Fuller, George Washington Carver, Josiah Wedgewood- of Wedgewood china and pottery, Richard Simmons, Krysty Yamaguchi, Bill Cosby is 70
1824- Birth of Eugene Boudin, French painter who pioneered Impressionism by being one of the first artists to work from nature in the open air.
1870- Celluloid film patented. The inventor had been trying to find a substitute for ivory billiard balls. Inventor George Eastman later perfected the sprocket and hole system of roll film for cameras, replacing the large glass plates.
1876- Gunfighter Wild Bill Hickock arrived in Deadwood South Dakota to prospect for gold, see some old friends like Calamity Jane, and play a little poker.
1928 - 1st televised tennis match.
1979- Disco Demolition Night. Chicago Fans could get into Comisky Park for 98 cents if they each brought a Disco record to burn. Thousands of records were thrown at the players like Frisbees while they were trying to play, so Chicago was forced to forfeit the game. “I love the Nightlife, I love the Nightlife…”
1984- Geraldine Ferrarro named the Vice Presidential running mate of Walter Mondale. They lose in a landslide to Reagan-Bush.
1990- TV series Northern Exposure premiered.
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