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Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.kei.com!ddsw1!not-for-mail
From: barnhart@mcs.net (Aaron Barnhart)
Newsgroups: alt.fan.letterman,alt.answers,news.answers
Subject: alt.fan.letterman FAQ list: changes since last posting
Followup-To: alt.fan.letterman
Date: 20 Mar 1994 21:47:18 -0600
Organization: Net.Cop on the Edge, Ltd.
Lines: 553
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Message-ID: <2mj5c6$8ij@Mercury.mcs.com>
Reply-To: letterman@mcs.net
NNTP-Posting-Host: mercury.mcs.com
Summary: This posting contains a list of changes made to the
alt.fan.letterman Frequently Asked Questions list.
Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.fan.letterman:18392 alt.answers:2152 news.answers:16622
Archive-name: letterman/diff
Last-modified: Sun Mar 20 21:46:06 CST 1994
14,15c14,15
< Last-modified: Sat Feb 19 13:16:58 CST 1994
< Version: 9.03
---
> Last-modified: Sun Mar 20 21:37:14 CST 1994
> Version: 9.04
21c21
< From New York: Home of the core dump ...
---
> From New York: Articles held over 30 days will be resold ...
39c39
< that nutball whose anti-chihuahua diatribes have rec.pets in a tizzy ...
---
> the FAQkeeper for "Get a Life" ...
42a43
>
56c57,60
< accommodated."
---
> accommodated." Within a few weeks you will receive a reply
> postcard informing you that tickets should be mailed to you
> within three months. As of March 1994, the actual wait for
> tickets was four and a half months from receipt of postcard.
68,84c72,89
< 8. Would somebody please type in the entire Playboy interview with
< Dave? I don't read those kinds of magazines. Thanks.
< --> OH NO! WE'RE GONNA GET SUED!
<
< 7. Hey, I'll bet you didn't know that "Super" "Dave" Osborne's
< brother is ALBERT BROOKS!
< --> Mel's kid?
<
< 6. I went to go see "Cabin Boy" and Dave Letterman had a cameo
< in the movie! But in the credits they announced that "Earl
< Hofert" played the part played by Dave. Who's Earl Hofert?
< --> Possibly an uncle on his mom's side. Or maybe the former
< Secretary of Agriculture under Jimmy Carter.
<
< 5. Is there any specific reason why audience members have to be
< 16 or older?
< --> Each evening an audience member is chosen to drive Dave home.
---
> 8. I sent mail to letterman@cbs.com and Dave didn't write me back!
> --> Maybe that's because cbs.com is a medical supplier based in
> Bismarck, North Dakota. At present there is no Internet
> address for the _Late Show_ or even CBS Television.
>
> 7. I understand that woman posing as "Dave's Mom" was really an
> actress named Sylvia Henderson.
> --> Write back when you've taken Psychology 101. As Freud
> himself said, "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar."
>
> 6. Boy, the show isn't what it used to be back when they had
> Louis Nye and Don Knotts and Tom Poston on.
> --> You don't get out much, do you?
>
> 5. No, really, I mean it. That guy in TIME Magazine had it right
> when he said the new Dave is "boring" and "defanged."
> --> Oh, baloney. I suppose you missed the show last week when
> the car fell through the floor of the Ed Sullivan Theatre.
88,96c93,101
< --> Well, we are told by unimpeachable source and _MacUser_
< columnist Andy Ihnatko that Worldwide Pants staff swear
< Dave has called computers "tools of Satan." However,
< at least two staffers have network accounts. Rick
< "Schecky" Scheckman, who has worked for Dave since March
< 1982 and is the Late Show's video coordinator, has an
< account on CompuServe, but no access (so far) to Usenet
< newsgroups like the A. F. of L. And audio consultant
< Michael Delugg has been spotted posting to the group.
---
> --> Richard "Shecky" Sheckman, who's been with the show since
> 1982 and is its video coordinator, has been setting up some
> of the staff with Net accounts. Audio consultant Michael
> Delugg and talent booker Christine Schomer have been spotted
> posting to the group. There is talk that the Late Show will
> have an electronic address, but it won't be announced until
> they're sure they can maintain it properly. >>> Not long
> ago, the CBS affiliate in Minneapolis profiled the A. F. of
> L. (without, of course, our permission).
99,100c104,105
< --> He's no G. E. Smith, that's for sure. (By the way: what
< a great name for an NBC personality.)
---
> --> It would be nice if he opened every number with a drum solo,
> just like the Max Weinberg 7.
108c113
< alt.fan.letterman.faq.txt.gz
---
> alt.fan.letterman.faq.txt
120,128c125,127
< 1. I understand there was a really wierd episode featuring
< Crispin Glover.
< --> You mean *Danny* Glover. He came out and kicked Andy
< Kaufman right in the balls. Ouch. No, actually,
< something pretty entertaining happened between Dave
< and Crispin. But we've talked it all to death. So
< if you want a transcript of the event, you'll have to
< go to the archives, described below under the section
< "About this FAQ List and the A. F. of L. Archive."
---
> 1. Is there an archive site for Lettermania?
> --> Yes there is. See "About this FAQ List and the A. F.
> of L. Archive," below.
134,135c133,143
< Q. What's Dave's mom's name?
< A. Dorothy.
---
> Q. When was Dave born?
> A. April 1947, to Joe and Dorothy Letterman. Dave's dad was a
> florist and had what Dave calls a "big personality. He was
> loud and liked to goof off and say funny things and do things to
> provoke you and get under your skin." By contrast, Dave's mom,
> as we have all witnessed, "is the least demonstrative person in
> the world." When Joe died 20 years ago, Dave said it was "the
> worst time in my life." Dave's mom was church secretary for many
> years at Second Presbyterian Church in Broad Ripple, Indiana,
> then a suburb of Indianapolis, which is where the Lettermans
> (including Dave's two sisters) grew up.
137,139d144
< Q. What about his father?
< A. Dave's father, Joseph, who was a florist, died 20 years ago.
<
142c147
< A. Recently the CBS affiliate in Boston did a three-part series
---
> A. In February, the CBS affiliate in Boston did a three-part series
145,149c150,155
< over 30 years ago, and showed a photo of him standing next to
< an enormous side of beef. According to Chris Eliot Haroian,
< Dave looked "like a 16-year-old serial killer." In his own
< defense, Dave has recently said, "I think there's something
< wrong if high school is the greatest experience of your life."
---
> over 30 years ago, and showed a photo (also reproduced in
> Caroline Latham's _The David Letterman Story_) of him standing
> next to an enormous side of beef. It is fair to say that Dave
> looked "like a 16-year-old serial killer." In his own defense,
> Dave has said, "I think there's something wrong if high school
> is the greatest experience of your life."
158c164,166
< at Ball State.
---
> at Ball State. In 1985 he endowed the David Letterman Scholarship
> there, an annual gift to a telecommunications major based solely
> on his or her creativity, *not* grades.
161c169
< A. Dave was married to a college sweetheart, Michelle Snow, but
---
> A. Dave was married to a college sweetheart, Michelle Cook, but
167,170c175,176
< manager with Saturday Night Live. They met when she was an
< equipment manager for the New York Rangers. Marv Albert in-
< troduced them. She is keeping separate residence in Greenwich
< Village, Dave says, for privacy reasons.
---
> manager with Saturday Night Live. She is keeping separate
> residence in Greenwich Village, Dave says, for privacy reasons.
175,177c181,191
< according to Dave in a recent interview. He says he has tried
< to get her some psychiatric help, because the state has let her
< case "fall through the cracks." But for now, she's on the lam.
---
> according to Dave in his January 1994 _Playboy_ interview. He
> says he has tried to get her some psychiatric help, because the
> state has let her case "fall through the cracks." But for now,
> she's on the lam.
>
> Q. Should I break into Dave's home?
> A. Oh, why not. Just be out of there by 10 p.m. when he comes
> home. Also, our friend Jen from North Dakota recently cruised
> by Dave's home and says that at the end of Dave's driveway
> on this big tree there is a sign nailed into that says...
> "These premises protected by Security Attack Cats."
180,196c194,219
< A. In 1973-75. Lewis Coury adds: "I used to live in Cincinnati,
< Ohio, and there was a popular story at the time that Letterman
< was fired from his job as the weatherman on one of the
< Indianapolis t.v. stations for making fun of the veteran's
< memorial in downtown Indy. The memorial is a tall column in
< the center of the downtown area, and supposedly Dave referred
< to it as a giant asparagus, 'the state tree of Indiana.'"
< Before that, the same station used him as the host for a
< Saturday morning kids' show and the late-night movie and he
< briefly served as news anchor. Another source says Dave
< once reported that the city was being pelted with hail
< "the size of canned hams" and enthusiastically congratulated
< a tropical storm when it was upgraded to hurricane status.
< Oh, and once the satellite weather map omitted the
< superimposed boundary line between Indiana and a neighboring
< state (Ohio, I think). Dave noted it and dryly added, "I,
< for one, do not approve."
---
> A. From 1969 to 1974, as an intern and later a full-timer, Dave
> worked for his hometown Channel 13, as weatherman, host of a
> Saturday morning kids' show and of the late-late movie, and
> as bench announcer. We understand Dave once reported that the
> city was being pelted with hail "the size of canned hams" and
> enthusiastically congratulated a tropical storm when it was
> upgraded to hurricane status.
>
> Q. Didn't he have a radio show, too?
> A. For about a year following his t.v. job. It was at WNTS, back
> when it was all-talk. This gig did not go so well for him.
> "I was miscast because you have to have somebody who is fairly
> knowledgeable, fairly glib, possessing a natural interest in a
> number of topics," he later told an interviewer. "That
> certainly is not me. I don't care about politics. ... The
> Nixon-Watergate nonsense was the perfect example of something
> about which I knew nothing and couldn't have cared less." So
> Dave got bored and started making stuff up. According to
> Caroline Latham, one time "he told his listeners that their
> beloved 230-foot-tall Soldier's Monument ... had been sold to
> the island of Guam, whose government planned to paint it green
> in honor of their national vegetable, the asparagus." >>> It
> has been rumored that Dave got fired for his on-air remarks at
> Channel 13 or WNTS. In fact, the only place he ever got yanked
> from was Ball State's pathetic ten-watt all-classic campus
> radio station.
199,208c222,243
< A. In 1979, Dave played a Werner Erhard-alike in an episode of
< _Mork and Mindy._ His other acting credits include _Open All
< Night_ (a t.v. show which lasted the season between the morning
< and late-night shows, where Dave made several guest appearances),
< _The Building_ (a 1993 show which starred Bonnie Hunt, was
< co-produced by Dave, and featured Dave in a one-episode cameo),
< another t.v. cameo on _The Larry Sanders Show_ (was picking his
< 12:30 successor), and a movie cameo in _Cabin Boy_ (1994), which
< starred Chris Elliott and, as Dave keenly observed, "has
< BLOCKBUSTER written all over it."
---
> A. As you may know, when Dave arrived in Hollywood in 1975 he
> found work as a comedy writer for Jimmie Walker, Paul Lynde,
> and as a player on Mary Tyler Moore's short-lived variety show.
> Because of his friendship with Allen Ludden (I am not kidding),
> Dave landed a guest-star spot on Dick Clark's _$10,000 Pyramid,_
> where, quite frankly, he was thoroughly outclassed by the
> effervescent JoAnne Worley. In 1979, Dave played a Werner
> Erhard-alike in an episode of _Mork and Mindy._ His other
> acting credits include _Open All Night_ (a t.v. show which
> lasted the season between the morning and late-night shows,
> where Dave made several guest appearances), a murder mystery
> called _Fast Friends_ starring Dick Shawn as a talk show host
> who drops dead and is replaced by Dave, _The Building_ (yet
> another short-lived t.v. show, which aired in 1993, starred
> Bonnie Hunt, was co-produced by Dave, and featured Dave in a
> one-episode cameo), played himself on _The Larry Sanders Show_
> (he "leaked" to Larry that the 12:35 show on CBS would be given
> to Tom Snyder), and a movie cameo in _Cabin Boy_ (1994), which
> starred Chris Elliott and which, had it been released just two
> months later, would have easily stolen the box office from
> _Ace Ventura: Pet Detective._ He also hosted that hilarious
> Emmy Award presentation on Fox a few years back.
212,213c247,248
< has since gotten removed from it. Basically Michael Eisner,
< the chairman of the Walt Disney Company, signed Letterman to
---
> has since gotten removed from it. What happened was Michael
> Eisner, the chairman of Walt Disney Company, signed Letterman to
229c264,265
< and Disney's money more or less cheerfully refunded.
---
> and Disney's money more or less cheerfully refunded. >> The name
> of Dave's movie production company? Cardboard Shoe.
241,249c277,314
< Indianapolis on Route 465 at 95 mph with his lights off. Later
< in the book tour, Carter told NBC's Bob Costas that Snyder was
< the name most frequently mentioned as the Worldwide Pants pick
< for the as-yet-unannounced 12:35 show to follow Dave's on CBS.
< However, Scott Green suggests this is all a scam, since Dave
< told "Larry Sanders" on his HBO show that Tom Snyder would be
< in the 12:35 slot. (Then there was the _Variety_ rumour that
< *Regis Philbin* would be doing the after-Dave show, etc. etc.)
<
---
> Indianapolis on Route 465 at 95 mph with his lights off. Rumors,
> allegedly emanating from Snyder's people, are that Tom will be
> tapped to host the 12:35 show on CBS following Late Show. But
> Snyder denied any such negotiations are going on.
>
> Q. Dave seems to have become a huge celebrity overnight.
> A. Well, that'll happen when you make the covers of _Time_ and
> _Newsweek_ in one summer. It's worth bearing in mind that all
> those years at NBC only brought Dave an average audience rating
> of 3 (of all t.v.'s in the U.S.). On a bad night, the _Late
> Show_ attracts at least twice that. So he's more visible, and
> he's one of the biggest showbiz stories right now. Also, as
> Bill Carter pointed out, late-night programming has improved
> substantially in quality in recent years. As a result, more
> viewers overall are staying up late. Hence, anyone connected with
> a late-night show becomes a bigger story than, say, 10 years ago.
> Which is the only reason why _Washington Post_ t.v. critic Tom
> Shales would waste so many valuable column inches calling for the
> head of Dave's promising but very un-baby-boomerish successor
> Conan O'Brien.
>
> It also explains why Dave's fabled driving habits would land him
> rather unpleasantly on _Inside Edition._ Keith Rice reports
> that the tabloid t.v. show spent one morning tracking him on his
> way to work on the Merritt Parkway. They clocked him at 65-70
> mph and showed Dave's hot rod darting in and out of traffic,
> with him nervously checking the rear view mirror to see if these
> creeps would go away. After he arrived in New York, the _Inside
> Edition_ reporter confronted him, Geraldo Rivera-style, asking
> him how if he knew fast he was going. Dave told him to check
> his files, so zip! out came a notebook from which the reporter
> began *reading* to Dave the vital statistics of each traffic
> ticket he had received in his adult life. This prompted Our
> Racing Pal to crack, "Is this a part time job for you?", to
> which the reporter replied, "No, it isn't, it's full time."
> Dave strode off in a perfectly understandable huff. Should you
> be allowed to file a story on a comedian when you yourself have
> no sense of humor?
274c339
< of clothes. In winter, the lobby is well-heated but the
---
> of clothes in winter. The lobby is well-heated but the
289a355,358
> Q. Is there any specific reason why audience members have to be
> 16 or older?
> A. Each evening an audience member is chosen to drive Dave home.
>
297a367,383
> Q. What is the address for Stupid Pet/Human Tricks?
> A. The address is:
> Susan Hall Sheehan
> Late Show with David Letterman
> Ed Sullivan Theatre
> 1697 Broadway
> New York, NY 10019
>
> Q. What is the address for Calvert DeForest?
> A. The address is:
> Calvert DeForest
> Late Show with David Letterman
> Ed Sullivan Theatre
> 1697 Broadway
> New York, NY 10019
> Are you starting to detect a pattern here? Good.
>
304,306c390
< A. On good nights the Letterman show can pull a rating as high as
< 7.5 (as a percentage of all t.v. sets, whether in use or not).
< John Carman in the 2/2/94 edition of the San Francisco Chronicle
---
> A. John Carman in the 2/2/94 edition of the San Francisco Chronicle
309,330c393,408
< on the Tonight Show. On a night when Rush Limbaugh was on with
< Dave and Howard Stern with Jay, the Late Show won handily. Dave
< is averaging a 5.6 rating, Leno 4.4 (down slightly from Carson's
< 4.9, but ironically with an aging and less-sought-after audience,
< which was the knock against Johnny). And this is with 25% of CBS
< affiliates *still* not carrying the show at the appointed time of
< 11:35 ET/PT (10:35 MT/CT). >>> Ted Koppel's "Nightline" remains
< strong at around a 5 rating. Some weeks it actually beats Dave's
< show, but doesn't actually "steal" viewers from him. Dave has
< essentially *created* his audience, ex nihilo, from his comic
< genius, top-tier guests, and the show's instant reputation.
< >>> During the Winter Olympics, all CBS affiliates were obliged
< to carry the Late Show at the correct time. Ratings were expected
< to average in the 7 to 8 range. That is comparable to Fox's 1992
< ratings for *all* of its programming. >>> _Playboy_ reports CBS
< execs confiding they would have made money if Dave had averaged
< merely a 3.5 rating. >>> The Feb. 14 show, which was the first
< weeknight of the Olympics and featured the debut of Dave's mom as
< a correspondent from Norway, pulled in the show's highest rating
< to date, an 8.8. That same night, Jay's show attracted a 4.0
< rating. (A rating is the percentage of t.v. households, as
< opposed to a share, which is percentage of t.v.'s in use.)
---
> on the Tonight Show. One night in December, when Rush Limbaugh
> was on with Dave and Howard Stern with Jay, the Late Show won
> handily. Dave is averaging in the low 6's, Jay in the low 4's,
> and _Nightline_ high in the 5's. Ironically, Jay is stuck with
> an aging and less-sought-after audience, which was the knock
> against Johnny. >>> Ted Koppel's "Nightline" remains strong,
> and some weeks actually beats Dave's show, but doesn't actually
> "steal" viewers from him. Dave has essentially *created* his
> audience, ex nihilo, from his comic genius, top-tier guests, and
> his snappy Armani suits. >>> During the Winter Olympics, all
> CBS affiliates were obliged to carry the Late Show at the correct
> time. As a result, ratings averaged a blistering 8.8 for the
> two-week period, and the night of the Kerrigan-Harding skateoff
> Dave attracted nearly as large an audience as his opening night
> last August 30. >>> _Playboy_ reports CBS execs confiding they
> would have made money if Dave had averaged merely a 3.5 rating.
369,376c447,453
< However, viewers can now catch Dave on KELO-TV out of Vermillion,
< South Dakota (which used to delay him one-half hour). >>> Meanwhile,
< Sioux City's denizens are divided between embarrassment -- city
< officials are lobbying KMEG to carry the show -- and pride over the
< town's status. Every business in town wants to actually be the
< home office. The city has decided the old City Hall building will
< be the home office and a big sign has been erected identifying it
< as such.
---
> However, viewers can now catch Dave on the Sioux Falls, South Dakota
> station. >>> Meanwhile, Sioux City's denizens are divided between
> embarrassment -- city officials are lobbying KMEG to carry the show
> -- and pride over the town's status. Every business in town wants
> to actually be the home office. The city has decided the old City
> Hall building will be the home office and a big sign has been
> erected identifying it as such.
453c530
< o "Today" show coffee mugs
---
> o _Today_ show coffee mugs
457c534
< A. o "With My Own Eyes", by David Letterman
---
> A. o "With My Own Eyes," by David Letterman
485a563
> o Suit of Teabags (no, wait, that was Steve Allen)
529a608,613
> Q. I went to go see "Cabin Boy" and Dave Letterman had a cameo
> in the movie, but in the credits they announced that "Earl
> Hofert" played the part played by Dave. Who's Earl Hofert?
> A. Possibly an uncle on his mom's side. Every now and then
> you'll hear him use "Hofert" on the show.
>
587,596c671,681
< A. Well, it's true. On the night of October 1st, comedian Hicks
< delivered a routine that, in post-production, was deemed
< inappropriate for airtime. Although initially executive producer
< Robert Morton claimed CBS standards and practices had ordered the
< cut, CBS later countered that *Worldwide Pants* had cut Hicks --
< the truth is probably that both offices agreed on the cut. In a
< subsequent piece in _The New Yorker,_ Hicks complained that
< Letterman's staff cut the routine because of attacks on pro-lifers
< that did not appeal to the show's "mainstream" audience, which
< Hicks clearly believes is a fiction.
---
> A. Well, it's true. On the night of October 1, 1993, comedian
> Hicks (who has since passed away) delivered a routine that, in
> post-production, was deemed inappropriate for airtime. Although
> initially executive producer Robert Morton claimed CBS standards
> and practices had ordered the cut, CBS later countered that
> *Worldwide Pants* had cut Hicks -- the truth is probably that
> both offices agreed on the cut. In a subsequent piece in _The
> New Yorker,_ Hicks complained that Letterman's staff cut the
> routine because of attacks on pro-lifers that did not appeal to
> the show's "mainstream" audience, which Hicks clearly believed
> was a fiction.
626a712
> o Steven Khan, guitar
629c715,717
< o Allan Schwartzberg ... not sure what he played
---
> o Allan Schwartzberg, drums
> o Charlie Drayton, drums
> o Leon Pendarvis, keyboards (would sub for Paul)
683c771
< o "Sheboobie," from _The Music Man_ for "Top Ten Ways To
---
> o "Shipoopi," from _The Music Man_ for "Top Ten Ways To
689a778
> o "I Touch Myself" by the DaVinyls for Sandra Bernhard
695c784
< Dave Calam, and Roy Eassa.
---
> Dave Calam, Roy Eassa, and Lon Huber.
705c794
< before Jude ... Barry Sand (lately of Arsenio)
---
> before Jude ... Barry Sand (also produced _SCTV_)
707c796
< Grunwald?)
---
> Gertner?)
778c867
< week's issue of LETTERMAN NEWS (see the end of this FAQ).
---
> week's issue of LATE SHOW NEWS (see the end of this FAQ).
790c879
< About this FAQ List, the A. F. of L. Archive, and LETTERMAN NEWS.
---
> About this FAQ List, the A. F. of L. Archive, and LATE SHOW NEWS.
821a911,914
> Q. Would somebody please type in the entire Playboy interview with
> Dave? I don't read those kinds of magazines. Thanks.
> A. OH NO! WE'RE GONNA GET SUED!
>
826c919
< new electronic sheet, LETTERMAN NEWS, with up-to-the-moment
---
> new electronic sheet, LATE SHOW NEWS, with up-to-the-moment
828,829c921,925
< Dave's show. It will be posted to alt.fan.letterman and alt.
< tv.talkshows.late every Tuesday.
---
> Dave's show. It will be posted to alt.fan.letterman, rec.arts.
> tv, alt.zines, and alt.tv.talkshows.late every Tuesday. You
> also may subscribe to the LATE-SHOW-NEWS mailing list to get
> each issue mailed directly to you. Write letterman@mcs.net
> to join.
842,843c938,939
< Bier, John Bonacci, Crist Clark, John Clear, Marc Conte, Todd
< Cooper, Lewis Coury, Richard Dawson, Matt Dittrich, Jef Dodd,
---
> Bier, John Bonacci, Crist Clark, John Clear, Brian Conn, Marc
> Conte, Todd Cooper, Richard Dawson, Matt Dittrich, Jef Dodd,
845,863c941,954
< Fritzius, bj gleason, Mark Goldberg, Norm Gregory, Chris
< Eliot Haroian, Mathew A. Hennessy, Rachel Hill, John Hritz,
< Ben Jackson, Bill Jones, Doug Krause, Ed Krauss, Lana Krotenko,
< Bob Kupiec, James Langdell, James LaPlaine, Don Leaman, Jason
< Lindquist, Gord Locke, Robert Lopez, Lon Lowen, Ian McCuaig,
< Ken McGlothlen, Bill McGonigle, Alan "Mr. Tucks" McKendree,
< Leigh Meydrech, Shamim Zvonko Mohamed, Ken Mohnker, "Noel" at
< microsoft.com, John Oram, Brian Peek, Marshal Perlman, Alan
< Perry, Tad Perry, Dave Platt, Michael Regoli, Tony Rice, Tom
< Sakoda, Steve Shauger, Bill Sherman, Jeff Shimbo, Jason Snell,
< Greg Sroka, Jeff Stephan, Ben Sterling, Christopher Taylor,
< David C. Tuttle, Wendy Tyrol, Rich Urena, Tim Veatch, Jeff
< Wilder, Mike Wittman, Eric "Beermaker" Witmayer, Eric Wood,
< and of course, my first wife, Susan Fanelli.
<
< A. F. of L. would also like to welcome to the group Herbert W.
< Klumpe III of former home office Oneonta, New York, the audience
< member responsible for bumping Cindy Crawford from the show last
< June; and audio consultant Michael Delugg of the Big Shoo.
---
> Fritzius, bj gleason, Mark Goldberg, Norm Gregory, Mathew A.
> Hennessy, Rachel Hill, John Hritz, Ben Jackson, Bill Jones,
> Doug Krause, Ed Krauss, Lana Krotenko, Bob Kupiec, James
> Langdell, James LaPlaine, Don Leaman, Jason Lindquist, Gord
> Locke, Robert Lopez, Lon Lowen, Ian McCuaig, Ken McGlothlen,
> Bill McGonigle, Alan "Mr. Tucks" McKendree, Leigh Meydrech,
> Shamim Zvonko Mohamed, Ken Mohnker, "Noel" at microsoft.com,
> John Oram, Brian Peek, Marshal Perlman, Alan Perry, Tad Perry,
> Dave Platt, Michael Regoli, Tony Rice, Tom Sakoda, Steve
> Shauger, Bill Sherman, Jeff Shimbo, Jason Snell, Greg Sroka,
> Jeff Stephan, Ben Sterling, Christopher Taylor, David C.
> Tuttle, Wendy Tyrol, Rich Urena, Tim Veatch, Jeff Wilder, Mike
> Wittman, Eric "Beermaker" Witmayer, Eric Wood, and of course,
> my first wife, Susan Fanelli.
865c956
< --> Primary print sources
---
> --> Primary Print Sources.
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> _The David Letterman Story_ by Caroline Latham, 1987.
> "Stay Up Late" by James Kaplan, _The New Yorker,_ 1/16/89.
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< * Newsgroup/archive/LETTERMAN NEWS questions.
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> * Newsgroup/archive/LATE SHOW NEWS questions.
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< version is available in the archives. Next update March 20.
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> version is available in the archives. Next update June 20.