home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!news-peer.gsl.net!news.gsl.net!mr.net!newsfeeds.sol.net!news.webspan.net!ix.netcom.com!howland.erols.net!gatech!ncar!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!not-for-mail
- From: ritter@earthlink.net (Niles D. Ritter)
- Newsgroups: alt.comedy.firesgn-thtre,alt.fan.firesign-theatre,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Firesign Theatre: Lexicon, Part 4/4
- Supersedes: <fs_lex4_840579768@tazboy.jpl.nasa.gov>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 19 Feb 1997 09:29:32 -0800
- Organization: Sometimes A Good Idea
- Lines: 495
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 4 Apr 1997 17:19:38 GMT
- Message-ID: <fs_lex4_856372778@tazboy.jpl.nasa.gov>
- References: <fs_lex3_856372778@tazboy.jpl.nasa.gov>
- Reply-To: ritter@earthlink.net
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 137.78.120.2
- Summary: This posting contains a lexicon of terms and concepts
- which appear in Firesign Theatre plays and productions.
- Keywords: firesign,comedy,faq,lexicon,bozo
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.comedy.firesgn-thtre:10940 alt.fan.firesign-theatre:1105 alt.answers:24129 news.answers:95121
-
- Archive-name: firesign-theatre/lexicon/part4
- Last-modified: 1994/8/30
- Version: 2.0
-
- Side 4) The Firesign Theatre: Lexicon and Concordance File(4/4)
- ===============================================================
-
- [P]
- ---
-
- PAPOON: An FT character who ran for {PRESIDENT}. He's {NOT INSANE}!
-
- PARK: "Park and Lock it! Not Responsible" A common yell in FT plays.
- {PICO} and {ALVARADO} yell it a lot. According to the {BBOP} book,
- when Peter {BERGMAN} was young, he and a kid named Bruce Berger
- opened up a parking lot one night in an empty lot across from an
- Emporium show in the Midwest. As Peter put it, "We made $50 wearing
- Cleveland Indians baseball caps, yelling, "*Park and Lock It! Not
- Responsible!"
-
- PHENOMENA: Look's like you've got your phenomena scrambled. See
- {EGG}s.
-
- PICO: {ALVARADO}'s friend, as in "It's Pico and Alvarado". Another
- street in Los Angeles.They are also historical references: Pico and
- Alvarado were the last two Mexican governors of Alta California.
- There really is an intersection at Pico Blvd, and Alvarado, which used
- to boast, among other things, a decent Salvadoran restaurant. Much of
- the area was burned to the ground during the recent Disturbances...
- (let's just call them, the {PHENOMENA} :-)
-
- PICKLES: Lots of pickles in FT. {ROCKY ROCOCO} is always carrying
- some around in a brown paper bag, and often wears Pickle on a Rope
- perfume. "Pickles down the rat-hole!", says {HEMLOCK STONES}. On
- the old "Dear Friends" shows they used to have a squeeky pickle that
- you could hear every so often.
-
- PIG NITE: A fraternity party tradition: The idea
- is that you have a party and that each fraternity brother is supposed
- bring the ugliest girl he can find. The one with the ugliest girl
- gets some sort of prize. That is Pig Nite. Attended by {NICK DANGER}.
-
-
- PIZZA: Nick's Swell Pizza has a phone number very similar to
- {NICK DANGER}'s, when George {TIREBITER} tried to order one. On
- {TWO PLACES} we also hear:
-
- SCHNIFTER: Das ist immer alles Aulung und ist rauch mit and potzen
- Volkswagen und niemann stint und "Swell Pizza!!"
-
- Nick also fools {ROCOCO} in {YOLKS} by pretending to be a pizza
- delivery boy.
-
-
- PLAYER: Another {EVERYMAN}, in the record "Eat or Be Eaten", who, like
- {BABE}, has his adventures in a car.
-
- POOH: Winnie the Pooh has influenced a number of FT lines. For example,
- Tom Teslacle says "It goes in and out like anything," which is a
- misquote of Eeyore (see {TESLACLE'S DEVIANT}) In addition, the FT
- would sometimes read directly from the Books of Pooh for each
- other's birthdays.
-
- POOH STICKS: How the FT guys referred to the yarrow stalks used
- to throw the {I CHING}. Gary Fritz writes of the origin of this
- term from {POOH}:
-
- Pooh Bear tripped while carrying a fir cone over a bridge, and noticed
- that it eventually came out the other side. Then, being ever the
- scientist, he dropped two, to see if one came out before the other --
- and one did! This was then developed into a game where Pooh, Piglet,
- Christopher Robin, and the rest of the crew would drop sticks in the
- water and see whose came out first. And they called the game
- "Poohsticks."
-
-
- POOP: A character in many FT plays, who gives speeches with numerous
- spoonerisms and Freudian slips, eg. "In the words of the Foundry, er..
- Founder, Ukaipa Heep,". Appears as Principal Poop in {DWARF}.
-
- PORRIDGE BIRD: A (mythical?) bird which lays its {EGG}s in the air.
- Why? See {WDTPBLHEITA}.
-
- PORGIE: Porgie {TIREBITER}. One of George Leroy {TIREBITER}'s many
- personas. Apparently motivated by Archie & Jughead, and by the old
- "Henry Aldrich" radio shows. The old radio show always started out:
-
- MOTHER: Henry! Henry Aldrich!
- HENRY: Coming, Mother!
-
- PRESIDENT: A popular ride in the {FUTURE FAIR}. You get to ask a
- question of the computer-operated President, and get a free simulfax
- copy of your question, together with his answer. {CLEM} broke the
- President by asking him about {PORRIDGE BIRD}s.
-
- ...{PAPOON} also ran for President!
-
- PROCTOR: Philip Proctor, one of the FT members. Plays the {POOP},
- among many.
-
-
-
- [Q]
- ---
- QUID MALMBORG IN PLANO: A mysterious phrase which recurs in {BOZOS}.
- It was first exclaimed by the discoverer of {FUDD'S LAW}. No
- one (yet) seems to know its true origin, although it is said to have
- been written on a cigarette lighter that Phil {PROCTOR} used to have,
- and belonged to a person named Malmborg, who lived in Plano, Texas.
-
- This has since been confirmed by Peter {BERGMAN}.
-
- Another listener is convinced that he saw this pseudo-latin phrase
- inscribed in a drawing by Albrecht Duerer.
-
- The phrase seems to be a mixture of latin and middle-english: "Quid"
- may be translated from the latin root meaning "this/something/that",
- and "plano" simply means "flat/horizontal/smooth".
-
- The nearest translation of "malmborg" we are willing to conjecture is
- based on the Middle-English word "malm" which the OED tells us is a
- type of man-made chalky clay, which is often worked into "malm-bricks",
- so perhaps this phrase refers to the conversion of this(quid) clay
- into flat (plano) bricks, as consternation turns to lucidation.
-
- The mixture of ME and latin, together with the brick reference, may
- indicate a Freemason influence, but this is wild conjecture on the
- part of the editor.
-
- Many other theories abound. For example:
-
- malborg sounds suspiciously like 'malbolg' (malbolgia?). Malbolgia,
- as read-ers of Dante may remember, are the "bad pockets" of Hell,
- where the corrupt and treacherous souls simmer. Here one finds
- thieves, hypocrites, whores and panderers. Schismatics are ripped
- to pieces and reconstituted in an assembly-line manner, liars are
- steeped in a sea of shit. It is lower than that part of
- the Inferno where the sensual and brutal are found, and just above the
- lowest part, where Judas and a coterie of betrayers sit. Dante puts
- several nasty folks in Malbolgia, including a few popes. Nixon probably
- has (had) a reservation.
-
- [R]
- ---
-
- RALPH SPOILSPORT: A used-car salesman, based on Ralph William's ads
- in Los Angeles. Also refers to a kind of mantra, which when recited
- sounds like a used-car ad: "Hiya friend, Ralph Spoilsport, Ralph
- Spoilsport motors, the largest new-used and used-new dealership...". He
- appears in {TWO PLACES}. See {BABE} for a comparison between Ralph and
- Hermes, messenger of the gods.
-
- RANCHO MALARIO: A set of Clowndominiums build at a former indian
- reservation. Includes the famous "Trail of Tears" golf course. Mentioned
- in {TWO PLACES}, and also {EYKIW}, when Bob Hind was interviewing Buz
- and Bunny Krumhunger about their visit with the aliens.
-
-
- RAT: Rats are featured prominently in FT plays, notably, in
- {HEMLOCK STONES} "Tale of the Giant Rat of Sumatra", in the song
- "Rat in a Box" (in the {NICK DANGER} video, {YOLKS}), and in their
- play "The Year of the Rat".
-
- "The Giant Rat of Sumatra" is "a tale for which the world is not yet
- ready", which is a line attributed the the "real" Dr. Watson in "The
- Adventure of the Sussex Vampire" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
-
-
- REGNAD KCIN: See {NICK DANGER}, the other way around (on the other
- side of the record/door!). See also {ANCHOVIES}, {TWO PLACES}.
-
- RESPONSIBLE: See {PARK}.
-
- ROACH: See {DWARF}.
-
- ROCOCO: See {ROCKY ROCOCO}.
-
- ROCKY ROCOCO: {NICK DANGER}'s nemesis. Rococo is an extended
- impression
- of Peter Lorre playing Joel Cairo in the film "The Maltese Falcon. His
- name is an apparent play on the Beatle's "Rocky Racoon".
-
- Rocky Rococo is known to be a {DWARF}, wear terrible perfumes, like
- "pyramid patchuli", and "pickle on a rope". He is also thought to be
- responsible for everything bad that happens in {OXNARD}. His main
- offensive tactic appears to be to put people on installment plans, and
- then pressure them when they can't keep up the payments.
-
- His Japanese counterpart may be Rocky Rocomoto, whose TV series,
- "Million-Dollar Monster Crasic" (on the {NOT INSANE} album), featured
- the Shake-a-speare play "Anythinge you want to", in addition to
- {YOUNG GUY}, Motor Detective.
-
- In Minneapolis and maybe nationwide, there is a pizzeria chain called
- "Rocky Rococco", with a Middle-Eastern looking guy in a white suit on
- the logo.
- [S]
- ---
-
- SAME OLD PLACE: The Old Same Place, in Santa Barbara, where {NANCY}
- and Catherwood, her butler/husband lived. See also {NICK DANGER}.
-
- SEPULVEEDA: A mis-pronounced street in Los Angeles in {NICK DANGER}.
- The actual street is Sepulveda. See also {PICO}, {ALVARADO},
- {TAJUNGA}, {LOS ANGELES}.
-
- SEEKER: There's a seeker born every minute! See {EYKIW}!
-
- SFX: A standard radio term for "Sound Effects" man. Also known
- as "foley" in the entertainment/movie biz. {ROCKY ROCOCO} had to split
- his "half-a-key" with the SFX man. The tools used in
- SFX are often mixed up in FT plays with the real things they're
- supposed to imitate: see, eg, {CELLOPHANE}, {CORNSTARCH}.
-
- There are often SFX-reference jokes in FT, For example:
-
- NICK: [MUFFLED VOICE] Rocky Rococo, that sleazy weazle, how did
- he get in here? And... How do I make my voice do this?
-
- or:
-
- NANCY: [SLAPPING NOISE] Oh Nicky, Nick, Nick, Nick! Are you all
- right?
- NICK: [Coming To] Uhhh..Yes.
- NANCY: Then stop slapping me!
-
-
- SHAKESPEARE: What you can do from Louise Wong's {BALCONY}.
-
- SCHICKELGRUBER: One of Hitler's father's family names. This is from a
- document pulled off of gopher:
-
- B. Hitler's childhood contacts with Jews are almost
- entirely unknown
-
- 1. However, at some time before he left home, he
- heard a story that may have great relevance
- for his later beliefs
-
- 2. And that story was that he had a Jewish grand-
- father
-
- 3. His father's mother, Anna Maria Schicklgruber,
- had worked as a servant in the house of a
- Jewish family, the "Frankenburgers" in Graz
-
-
- SHOES: Shoes are ubiquitous in FT plays. "Shoes for industry!" "Don't
- take off your shoes!" (Porgie {TIREBITER} did), or if you're a {BOZO}
- you can inflate them. In the liner notes for the Bozo CD, Philip
- {AUSTIN} says,
-
- "By now, any serious Firesign Theatre listener knows that 'taking
- off your shoes' serves us as an an anology for childhood itself and
- its attendant dreams of freedom."
-
- From the back page of the Variety Section of the Minneapolis Tribune,
- Oct. 28, 1993. An article written by Mike Harden, Scripps Howard News
- Service.
- Headline:
-
- FOR DECADES, SHE'S HELPED SUPPLY SHOES FOR DEAD
-
- It's about Alyce Maddox who's worked over forty years for Practical
- Burial Footwear, a company that makes special shoes for mortuaries
- to bury people in. Bottom of third column:
-
- "Shoes for the dead? Why bother?"
-
- Holy mudhead, mackerel! Life immitates art.
-
-
-
- SUGAR: A popular phrase in FT is "More Sugar!". We hear a voice yelling
- "More Sugar!" during Pastor Flashes' Hour of Reckoning, in the {DWARF}
- play, and mention is made of the "More Sugar Foundation" in the
- "Not Insane" album.
-
- From THE LAST BATTLE by C.S. Lewis, (c) 1956
- Book 7 in the Chronicles of Narnia
- page 10 of the 1970 Collier edition:
-
- "But isn't everything right already?" said Puzzle.
- "What!" cried Shift. "Everything right? -- when there are no oranges
- or bananas?"
- "Well, you know," said Puzzle, "there aren't many people -- in fact,
- I don't think there's anyone but yourself -- who wants those sort of
- things."
- "There's sugar too," said Shift.
- "H'm, yes," said the Ass. "It would be nice if there was
- more sugar."
-
-
- SWELL: Swell {CHEESE}, which is put on Nick's Swell {PIZZA}.
-
- [T]
- ---
-
- TAJUNGA: Yet another mis-pronounced LA street name in {NICK DANGER}.
- Tujunga canyon is a bit north of Pasadena, and the FT used to perform
- there.
-
- TESLACLE'S DEVIANT: "Who goes in, must come out". This is a corollary
- to {FUDD'S LAW}, and is referred to in the {BOZO} play,and also in
- {HEMLOCK STONES}, Giant {RAT} of Sumatra play, where Stones chases the
- {ELECTRICIAN} into the bathroom, and continues to search, claiming,
- "what goes in must come out! Fudd's Law!" First enunciated by
- Tom Teslacle ( a reference to Nikolai Tesla) to Dick {BEDDOES}. See
- also {NANCY}.
-
- TIREBITER: The last name of George Leroy Tirebiter, another
- incarnation of P, the {EVERYMAN} in the FT's play {DWARF}. Also the
- name of the {YOLK}'S neighbors in the {NICK DANGER} video. The original
- George Tirebiter was a dog. In the liner notes for the Dwarf CD,
- Phil Austin writes:
-
- The dog, the immortal George Tirebiter, was the doughty unofficial
- mascot of USC (Univ. South. Calif.) athletic teams in earlier
- times, renowned for his devotion to attacking the spinning wheels
- of large American automobiles....
-
- The five ages of George Leroy Tirebiter are these:
-
- -Tirebiter the Child, called Porge or Porgie.
- [###Porgie and Mudhead is verbal play on "Archie and Jughead"].
-
- -Tirebiter the College Student, called
- George Tirebiter Camden N200-R. [###that's his last name]
-
- -Tirebiter the Soldier, called Lt. Tirebiter.
-
- -Tirebiter the Actor, Called Dave Casman. [###play on {OSSMAN}]
-
- -Tirebiter the Old Man, called George Leroy Tirebiter.
-
- It should also be mentioned that a sixth incarnation of Tirebiter,
- named George Matetsky, actually encounters his alter-ego {NICK DANGER},
- an Early Bird Theatre presentation of a movie whose title starts with
- "Luck". George Matetsky was the real name of "The Mad Bomber" -- a real-
- life enraged weirdo in the 50's who used to blow things up and send
- ranting messages about his dislike for Pres. Eisenhower.
-
- David Ossman remarked in a interview once that George Tirebiter,
- the dog, used to walk past his house every day when he lived near
- USC, that he much later met the fellow who named the dog, and was able
- to explain how that dog's name had become a good part of his career...
-
- This is quoted from the LA Times, "Only in L.A" column, at the bottom of
- page B2, Wed Nov 10, 1993:
-
-
- "...True, USC did boast an unofficial mascot named George Tirebiter
- for a few glorious years in the 1940s and 1950s..
- Tirebiter, a scraggly mutt who wandered onto campus after his owner
- died, grew to be beloved for his nasty temper, which often manifested
- itself in chases after automobiles.
- So treasured was Tirebiter that miscreants from a rival school once
- captured him and shaved the letters "UCLA" into his coat. Alas, the
- hound tried to chew on one too many Firestones [tires] and was run over
- in 1950.
- The school newspaper eulogized: `Gone to heaven, where he will have
- cushion rides for breakfast, white sidewalls for lunch, and cold rubber
- recaps for dinner.'
-
-
- TORTURING: "Not to be Torturing Me!" Said by HIDEO {GUMP}, Jr., who
- played {YOUNG GUY}, Motor Detective. He was being tortured because
- "decision-making factor absent from brain", following a terrible brain-
- washing session in radio prison, at the hands of {BRADSHAW} !
-
- TWO PLACES: "How Can You Be in Two Places At Once, when you're not
- Anywhere At All?" The record album containg the {EVERYMAN} story of
- {BABE}, and also the {NICK DANGER} episode, "Cut Em Off at the Past!"
-
- [U]
- ---
-
- UNDERHILL: Susan Underhill -- Another of {NANCY}'s last names.
-
- [V]
- ---
-
- VIOLET DUDLEY: An American ingenue in {HEMLOCK STONES}.
-
- [W]
- ---
-
- WALL OF SCIENCE: Another ride in the {FUTURE FAIR}, describing the
- evolution of the universe. "Man, woman, child, ALL are up against the
- WALL OF SCIENCE".
-
- Joes Hanes writes:
-
- ..an incisive parody of the 60's high school science films. The
- recounting of the history of life makes many allusions to real
- paleontology, e.g,
-
- "... sand dollar, which shrank to almost nothing at the bottom of the
- pool" refers to the fossil ancestors of all present day sand dollars,
- which apparently escaped a mass extinction by virtue of their extremely
- small size.
-
- " ... in the late Devouring period, fish became obnoxious" In the real
- late Devonian, fish became ubiquitous.
-
-
- WDTPBLHEITA: Why Does The Porridge Bird Lay His {EGGS}s In The Air?
- This question was asked by the character P in {ITWABOTB}, first directly
- to the {PRESIDENT}, who broke, and then to {DOCTOR MEMORY},who became
- confused, and shut down the whole {FUTURE FAIR}. Dr. Memory kept
- getting the question wrong, for example:
-
- "White dust 'n' perished birds leaves its hex in the air?" Nooo.
- "Wise doves 'n' parish bards lazy leg in the Eire?" Nooo.
- "Wise-ass the poor-rich Barney laser's edge in the fair?"
-
- This question was posed to {EVERYMAN} by the Leprechauns, although
- {BOB BUNNY} reported that he found it written on the Great Wall of Mars.
- {BOB BUNNY} asked this question of {HIDEO GUMP}, Jr, during a segment
- of {YOUNG GUY}, Motor Detective. Young Guy promised to answer the
- question tomorrow!
-
- Reports also indicate that in the record "Eat or Be Eaten", Laura asks
- {PLAYER} the question at the end of the record, to which Player
- replies, "Aw, that's the old Leprechaun scam... that's EASY!"
-
- An FT fan writes:
-
- This is definitely a classical reference, which I've been racking my
- brains for, but can't remember. It seems to me that some Greek or
- Roman historian (Herodotus?) describes a bird which does indeed lay its
- eggs in the air, with the obvious unfortunate result...
-
- WHIZ: See {BEAR WHIZ BEER}
-
- WORDSWORTH: William Wordsworth, the poet. One of his poems is
- referenced in {DWARF} "Intimations Ode" (also known as the
- "Immortality Ode"), from stanza V, where he writes:
-
- Not in entire forgetfulness,
- And not in utter nakedness,
- *But trailing clouds of glory do we come*
- From God, who is our home . . .
-
- Let's Eat!
-
- [X]
- ---
-
- [Y]
- ---
-
- YOLK: The poorest people in the country, depicted in {NICK DANGER} and
- the "Case of the Missing Yolks" video. They lived in {OXNARD}, and
- "Didn't have half of what the have-nots had!".
-
- YOUNG GUY: Another FT private detective. "Young Guy, Motor Detective",
- played by {HIDEO GUMP}, Jr.
-
- YUCAIPA HEAP: A play on the So. Cal town of Yucaipa, and Uriah Heep,
- a character from one of Charles Dickens' novels. See also {LOS ANGELES},
- {POOP}.
-
- [Z]
- ---
-
- ZEPELLIN TUBE: A source of immense power, possessed by the Sumatran
- {RAT}s in an adventure of {HEMLOCK STONES}.
-
- ZENO'S PARADOX: A paradox devised by the Greek philosopher Zeno,
- which seems to prove that motion as such is impossible; Reason:
- Consider an arrow flying towards a target. Before it gets to the
- target it must first get halfway there, but before it gets to that
- point it must first get 1/4 the way there, but before that (etc..)
- Since an infinite number of things must be done first, the arrow
- could never get *anywhere*; ergo, motion is impossible.
-
- This paradox is referred to indirectly in the {TWO PLACES} album,
- where {BABE} falls asleep in his car, while the talking freeway
- signs read off:
-
- "Antelope Freeway, one mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one half mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one quarter mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one eighth mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one sixteenth mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one thirtysecondth mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one sixty-fourth mile"
- "Antelope Freeway, one one-hundred-and-twenty-eighth mile"
- ...
-
- ZIPS: As in "I'm hip like a zip, let's take a trip". One of the
- {FIVE LIFESTYLES OF MAN} according to the FT. {BOZO} is an acronym for
- "The Brotherhood Of Zips and Others".
-
-