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- From: twcaps@tennyson.lbl.gov (Terry Chan)
- Subject: More on TV Legends
-
- First, pearl@sw.stratus.com (Dan Pearl) writes:
- +
- +>> The "little bastards" comment was made by a radio personality by the name
- +>> of "Uncle Don" (in the 40's?). After his sign-off jingle "sing this
- +>> song with your Uncle Don", he thought he was off the air when he uttered
- +>> his famous line.
-
- then, system@codewks.nacjack.gen.nz (Wayne McDougall) writes:
-
- +>I heard this was a UK announcer, who after Children's Hour (Sundays at 7pm?)
- +>having read the story the announcer said "well that should keep the little
- +>bastards happy for another week". I was told this was about the same era -
-
- followed by lorange@spot.Colorado.EDU (Hans L'Orange) who writes:
- +
- +A friend claims (you have to love it) to have seen the following during a
- +local kiddies TV show in the late '60s:
- +
- + The host ( a clown in more ways than one ) was trying to get a little
- + hippie kid (the 60s remember) to play some game with the other kids.
- + There was no way he was going to roll the egg with his nose or
- + whatever it was but the clown kept trying to 'nicely' badger him in
- + to it. They finally cut to commercial when the kid yelled out ...
- + "CRAM IT, CLOWN !!!"
-
- Ah, this is great. Several variations on similar themes. In
- _The Mexican Pet_, JHB mentions several of these legends and
- records the following:
-
- In version A of "Bozo the Clown's Blooper," a fellow named John
- Witkowski wrote a letter to JHB in November 1984 on the legend
- recounted by Hans. "Bozo the Clown" aired in the late 1950s and
- early 1960s. There is a group of children who are playing a game
- where they try to carry an egg in a spoon across the room. One
- kid drops the egg halfway and swears. Bozo "gently reprimands"
- the kid and the kid tells him "shove it or worse." John had
- at least a half-dozen friends who claimed to have seen the
- episode but were always vague as to approximate date shown and
- exact language used.
-
- There is another version where Bozo is interviewing the kids in
- the audience and asking them routine questions such as what do
- they want to be when they grow up. One kid then says "Ram it,
- clown!" The show is cut to a commercial and when it returns,
- the kid is gone and "order is restored." The fellow Douglas
- Kaplan recalls that this happened on the Baltimore version of
- the Bozo the Clown show when it was done live. When he moved
- to New Orleans, he heard his boss say that line. His boss
- then said that he got it from the New Orleans version of that
- show.
-
- In true UL fashion, the line mentioned by Dan and Wayne (or one
- very close to it) has been attributed to virtually every children's
- local TV host in the US. "Despite a complete lack of supporting
- evidence--no one telling the story had ever seen the episode
- themselves--the myth was widely believed. Many who heard it as
- children still consider the myth fact." [This last part JHB
- attributes, heh, heh, to Morgan and Tucker's _Rumor!_, p. 92).
-
- JHB himself says he thought that the host of one of his favorite
- kids _radio_ shows "Happy Hank" which he thought he heard in
- Lansing, Michigan in the 1940s had said those words (about the
- bastards). He also was pretty sure that some kid had sassed
- "Uncle Howdy" on radio as well. But that's the way it goes.
-