"("Little Ras cals" theme music plays)" "(audience applauding)" "Boy, it been a nong time since them days." "H i, I'm Buh-weet." "U h-member me?" "(applaus e)" "And I hav e compiled for you and your nistening peasure, some of my pavorite songs." "It's all here on this un pe ctacular offer..." "Take a wisten." "(piano plays softly)" "U nce... tice..." "Don Pardo:" "Yes, the y're all here." "Wookin' pa nub in all the wong places..." "Pardo:" "Once Buckwheat sings a song, it's eternally his." "H e dot deddy diba den on ne dide" "H e dot Menny Dabid Ize." "Yes, Buckwheat, the man who sold more re cords than Elvis or the Beatles... in Kenya." "And if you order now, you'll get Buckwheat's tribute to Alfalfa." "(operatic fanfare)" "I'm the Barbah ob Da-bill" "Bee-garo!" "Bee-ga-ro!" "Order today!" "Send 49.95 for the full volume to..." "(applaus e)" "Take it from "Ow Dang." Your dang'll nub it." "Buy my we cord." "O-tay!" "(applaus e continues)" "(theme music plays)" "Don Pardo:" "It's Saturday N ight Liv e..." "(cheering, applaus e)" "Thank you." "Thank you." "(loud cheers)" "Oh, thank you." "This is bizarre, 'caus e I grew up on this show." "It's bizarre to host it." "I feel strange, and I'm v ery nervous..." "I hav en't done this in a y ear and a half, so bear with me." "I said last y ear, when I left this show," "I swore that I would ne v er do "Saturday N ight Liv e" again, 'caus e I said the show was terrible." "Really." "And I did "48 Hours" and "Trading Places,"" "and I felt like I was an actor now." "I was like..." ""Saturday N ight Liv e"?" "!" "Ha!" "Really, that was my vibe last y ear." "After I did "48 Hours" and "Trading Places,"" "all thes e s cripts started coming from e v erywhere and I picked up a s cript called "Best Defens e."" "There's a movie that sucked real bad." "At first I wasn't going to do it 'caus e I read the s cript and felt like I was an actor." "But the mone y the y gav e me, y'all would hav e did "Best Defens e" too." "I read the s cript and the s cript was terrible." "I was like..." ""What?" "!" "How dare you giv e me a s cript like this!" "Oh, that much mone y?" "Let's go."" "So I read the s cript, I went out and did "Best Defens e"... turned out to be the worst movie e v er done in history of anything." "All of a sudden I wasn't that hot no more." "So I called up the producer of "Saturday N ight Liv e" and I go," ""U m, you still got my dressing room?"" "H e said, "Why don't you come back and host the Christmas show?"" "So I said, "Bet." I signed the contracts to host the show." "While I was waiting for Christmas to come, sitting in my hous e by mys elf, somebody brought a s cript for a movie called "Be v erly H ills Cop."" "(audience cheers)" "I did "Be v erly H ills Cop." "Be v erly H ills Cop" is a hit." "All of a sudden I'm an actor again." "But it's too late to pull out, so I had to host the show." "But I'm back, and oddly enough, I'v e been having a good time." "The new people are fun, and it's bizarre to stand here but it's good to be back this week." "Before we get into the laugh stuff" "I want you to know you're gonna laugh, hav e a good time... we'll hav e a good time and you're gonna laugh... not e v erything on the show is hysterical." "Lots of times the y tell you, "We're gonna hav e a great show,"" "the y come out..." "and the y lie to you, you sit there and you s ee some things that suck." "Tonight is the same..." "most of the show is good, but there'll be two or three things that you'll go, "That's not funny."" "And I want you to be prepared for that, okay?" "Before we get on to the funny stuff," "I want you to s ee something I take v ery s eriously." "I want you to watch something." "Watch this." "You know, a lot of people talk about racial prejudice." "And some people hav e gone so far as to say that there are actually two Americas, one black and one white." "But talk is cheap." "So I de cided to look at the problem mys elf." "Firsthand." "To go underground, and actually experience America... as a white man." "Eddie's voice:" "I hired the best make-up people in the business." "To pass as a white man, e v erything had to be perfe ct." "Make-up man:" "I think that's a little light." "Okay, let's try this." "That's..." " I look kind of "Harry Reems-ish."" " I like it." "Eddie's voice:" "I studied for my role v ery carefully." "I watched lots of "Dynasty."" "See?" "See how the y walk?" "Their butts are real tight when the y walk." "The y'v e got to keep their butts tight." "I'v e got to keep my butt real tight when I walk." "Eddie:" "And I read a whole bunch of Hallmark cards." "(throaty voiced) "For my lov ely wife... you'll always mean lots more to me than you could e v er guess, for you hav e done so much to fill my life with happiness."" "Finally, I was ready." "Ahem... (humming)" "What are you doing?" "I'm buying this newspaper." "That's all right, there's nobody around." "Go ahead, take it." "Take it." "Go ahead, take it." "Yeah, take it." "Clerk:" "Take it." "Eddie:" "Slowly I began to realize that when white people are alone, the y giv e things to each other for free." "There was only one other black man on the bus." "(stop signal rings)" "H e got off on 45th Street." "(instrumental v ersion of "Cabaret" plays)" "The problem was much more s erious than I'd e v er imagined." "Let me get this straight, Mister..." "Mr. White." "You'd like to borrow $50,000 from our bank." "But you hav e no collateral, you hav e no credit, you don't e v en hav e any I D. Is that corre ct?" "That's right." "Mr. White, I'm sorry, this is not a charity." "This is a business..." "Harry, why don't you take your break now." "I'll take care of Mr. White." "Okay." "Thanks, Bob." "(Bob chuckles)" " That was a clos e one, wasn't it?" " It certainly was." "We don't hav e to bother with thes e formalities." "Do we, Mr White?" "What a silly N egro." "Just take what you want, Mr. White." "Pay us back anytime..." "or don't, we don't care." "(laughter)" "Tell me, do you know of any other banks like this in this area?" "So what did I learn from all of this?" "I learned we still hav e a v ery long way to go in this country before all men are truly equal." "But I'll tell you something..." "I'v e got a lot of friends." "And we'v e got a lot of make-up." "So the next time you're hugging up with some really super-groovy white guy, or you met a great super-keen white chick, don't be too sure." "The y might be black." "Announcer:" "It's "James Brown's Celebrity Hot Tub Party."" "And now, here he is," ""The Godfather of Soul," and "Hot Tub Man #1"..." "James Brown!" "(uptempo RB music plays)" "Sometimes it make me break out in a cold sweat!" "One, two, three, four!" "(dance music plays)" "Hot tub!" "Hah!" "Full of water" "I said, hot tub!" "Hah!" "I said, v ery, v ery, v ery hot" "Said, hot tub!" "Gonna get ya hot-a!" "Gonna make ya sweat!" "Said, hot tub!" "Rub-a-dub in the hot tub!" "Rub-a-dub with me!" " Should I get in the hot tub?" " Yeah!" " Will it make me sweat?" " Yeah!" " Should I get in the hot tub?" " Yeah!" " Will it make me wet?" " Yeah!" "Well, well, well... (music resumes)" "Hot tub!" "Looky here!" "Gonna get in the water!" "Gonna make me sweat-ah..." "H ere I go in the hot tub..." "Ahhh!" "Too hot in the hot tub!" "Burn mys elf..." "make it cooler!" "Good God!" "I'm gonna get in the hot tub" "I'm gonna get in the hot tub..." "look here" "And then... gonna make me sweat-ah" "Gonna make me sweat" "Gonna make me sweat-ah..." "gonna get me in the hot tub" "I can't stand it." "H ere I go..." "I can't stand it" "H ere I go in the hot tub..." "gonna get in the hot tub" "Gonna get it wet-ah..." "good God!" "Aaahh!" "Hot!" "Good God!" "Rub-a-dub in the hot tub" "Rub-a-dub with me!" "Good God!" "Rub-a-dub in the hot tub." "Gonna s et me free." "Don't go away, we'll be right back with more "Celebrity Hot Tub."" "Announcer:" "Coming up next, Dr. Joy ce Brothers joins James Brown on "Celebrity Hot Tub Party."" "H ello." "Are you a female high s chool dropout between the ages of 16 and 25?" "Are you tired of doors being slammed in your face when you apply for a job?" "Are you tired of lying around in bed all day with nothing to do?" "Well, you ne v er need get up again." "Be caus e in six short weeks," "I can train you to be a high-paying ho." "That's right." "It's a known fact that a good ho can make up to $ 1,500 a week." "Just think, $ 1,500 a week without e v en leaving the comforts of your own bedroom." "Sounds too good to be true?" "Just s end for my new book entitled," ""I Wanna Be A Ho."" "And if in six short weeks, you're not confident that you can make big mone y as a ho working for me, just s end the book back for a full refund." "It's as simple as that." "Well, you get to meet new people, trav el, wear nice clothes, make mone y and hav e lots and lots of s ex!" "What more could a woman ask for?" "Don Pardo:" "Rush 19.95 to..." "Be somebody." "Be a ho." "We're all s et to re cord as soon as he gets here, Mr. Sinatra." "Good, good, good." "Son, come here." "How does the album sound so far?" " It's excellent, Mr. Sinatra." " Thank you, that's v ery nice." "I wanna do some tunes that the young people will enjoy." "That's why I'm calling this album, "Frank Sings Tunes" "The Young People Will Enjoy."" "Excus e me." "Mr. Sinatra, sir?" "H e's here." " Show him in." " Yes, sir." "Ste vie Wonder, Ste vie Wonder..." "you are aptly named." "Like I said many times, you are truly a wonder." "Thanks a lot, Frank." "Let me ask you something, do you do your own hair?" " No, I don't." " Then you got no excus e." "A little joke, Ste vie." "It looks great." "Come on ov er here to the piano." "It's right in front of you, my friend." "You all right there?" "There you go." "Fine." "You know, Frank," "I feel it is a tremendous honor to be re cording with you." "Thank you, Ste vie." "I feel..." "I feel the same." "I'm v ery much into that tune you do with the Beatle kid." "What's his name?" "The one that looks like a broad?" " H is name's Paul McCartne y." " Yeah, y eah." "That's the dude." "Would you be so kind as to run down that song for me, Ste vie?" "(plays piano introduction)" "Ebony and Ivory" "Liv e together in perfe ct harmony" " Side by side..." " Ste vie, Ste vie..." "Hold it, Ste vie." "Something tells me that this is more than a song about playing the piano." "Frank... it's about racial equality and unity of all people." "Well..." "I don't understand, when I think of "Ebony,"" "I think of a magazine that most people do not buy." "And when I think of "Ivory," I think of a soap that floats." "Ebony and ivory are the black and white ke ys on the piano, Frank." "Ste vie, I know that, you know that." "But it's too arts y for the public, capice?" "I talked to the master, Sammy Kahn." "Sammy is a marv elous songwriter..." "no offens e, Ste v e." "And Sammy thinks we should go with something like..." ""Chocolate and Vanilla." Or how about this..." ""Life is an Eskimo Pie, Why Don't We Take A Bite?"" "I'm afraid that might be offensiv e to some people." "Who cares what the Eskimos think?" "The y don't buy re cords, huh?" "Okay, Ste v e, let's s ee." ""Ebony and Ivory," huh?" ""Ebony and Ivory." "Ebony..."" "H e y, Ste vie, what the hell we beating around the bush for?" "This is 1982." "Let's get right to the point, huh?" "Take it from the top." "Swing it, Ste vie." "With a bounce, baby." "(plays piano uptempo)" "You are black, I am white" "Life's an Eskimo Pie, let's take a bite" "That was groovy thinkin', Lincoln, when you s et them free" "We all know, cats are the same Maine to Mexico" "Good, bad, guys and chicks" "I am dark and you are light" "You are blind as a bat and I hav e sight" "Side by side you are my amigo, N egro, let's not fight" " Ebony and ivory..." " That's good." "Just living in perfe ct harmony..." "We're talking salt and pepper, Sammy and Dean" "Ste vie and me are peachy keen" " You are white" " You are black" "And who cares?" "Who cares, baby?" "(woman laughs)" "I don't s ee what's so funny." "H ello, my name is Professor Shabazz K. Morton." "In 1895, at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, a black man named George Washington Carv er de v eloped a new method of soul... soil... improv ement through crop rotation... so I mess ed up." "Shut up!" "(laughter, applaus e)" "Stop clapping before y'all make me smile!" " To end the South's agricultural dependence on cotton alone." "As a result, Carv er came up with hundreds of industrial us es for the peanut." "Sure industrial us es." "Meanwhile, one night, he's having a few friends ov er to his hous e for dinner." "And one of them leans ov er and says to Dr. Carv er," ""Excus e me, George." "What's that you're putting on your bread?"" "And Carv er says, "That's a butter substitute that I made from peanuts." "I can't digest all that animal fat, you know."" "So the other fellow tasted it, and he says, " H mm... this pastes pretty... this tastes..."" " (laughter)" " Yeah... keep on smiling." ""This tastes pretty good, man." "Mind if we peek at the re cipe?"" "And Dr. Carv er says, "Take a peek?" "You can hav e it." "Who's gonna eat butter made out of peanuts?" "No, I'm working on a method to compress peanuts into phonograph needles."" "So, Dr. Carv er's two dinner guests, Edward "Skippy" Williamson and Frederick "Jif" Armstrong..." "two white men, stole George Washington Carv er's re cipe for peanut butter, copyrighted it, and reaped untold fortunes from it." "While Dr. Carv er died penniless and insane, still trying to play a phonograph re cord with a peanut." "This has been "Black H istory Minute."" "I'm Shabazz K. Morton." "Good night." "It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood" "A beautiful day for a neighbor" "Would you be mine?" "Could you be mine?" "I always wanted to liv e in a hous e like yours, my friend" "Maybe when there's nobody home, I'll break in" "So, I married this woman said she was rich," "Spent all of her mone y, walked out on the bitch" "Would you be my..." "won't you be my" "Won't you be my neighbor?" "H ello, boys and girls!" "You're probably wondering why Mr. Robinson is putting on his glitter shoes." "Well, thes e are rock-and-roll shoes, boys and girls." "Do you know why?" "Let's look at our word for the day." "You can't read it, boys and girls, be caus e it's the "Soul Train Scramble Board"!" "(applaus e)" "That's our word for the day!" "See what thes e are, boys and girls?" "The y're drums." "That's a musical instrument, you know." "Do you know where drums come from?" "From Africa!" "You know where thes e drums come from?" "Smoke y Robinson was at the Apollo Theater, and left his v an open in the back of the place." "I ripped him off!" "I wonder how Smoke y is gonna sound with no percussion?" "Do you know what drums sound like, boys and girls?" "Listen." "(plays rock-and-roll rhythm)" "(telephone rings)" "That's the telephone, boys and girls!" "Let's s ee who it can be." "(aggressiv e shout) Who is it!" "What?" "!" "Oh, that ain't loud..." "this is loud!" "(blows shrilly)" "Now, where were we, boys and girls?" "Man:" "Mr. Robinson!" "Robinson!" "I know you're in there!" "Stop beating them drums!" "You hear me?" "(banging on door)" "That's my new neighbor." "But don't be s cared, boys and girls," "I just installed a new lock." "H e'll ne v er get in here." "(cheering, applaus e)" "H ello, boys and girls." "The new word for today is "pain."" "Sing the song!" "(strained) A v ery happy tomorrow to you." "Good night, boys and girls." "(jazz saxophone music plays)" "Don Pardo:" "Time once again for "Black Talk."" "I said, " H e y, what's going on?" "I paid my bill."" "She says, "If you paid your bill, you'd hav e no problem."" "So I say, " H e y, yo, bitch, I paid my bill and the lights is out." "What's happenin'?" "Ain't no lights in my apartment and I paid the damn bill, you know?"" "She said, "Look, I understand." I said, "I'll come back tomorrow," "If my lights ain't on, I'm gonna kick some butt down at Con Edison." " That's what the y need." " Know what happened y esterday?" "CJ came by my hous e, right?" "You know what happened...?" "Don Pardo:" "Be sure to tune in next week, for more of..." "It's "The Little Richard Simmons Show."" "(audience cheers)" "Thank you, thank you!" "How are you today?" "How are you?" "That's good that we feel good!" "I feel great!" "Oh, let's s ee what we're wearing here." "Oh, you look nice." "Hone y, ne v er wear "Battleship Gray."" "2,000 sailors'll try to board you." "H ere we go." "Okay, let's shape up... oh!" "Oh my G..." "David, can you get me a shot of this ov er here?" "David, pleas e." "This is disgusting!" "Oh!" "Oh, you girls hav e let yours elv es go!" "It's time to shape up or ship out!" "We're gonna do some exercis e." "E v eryone ready?" "Come on, e v erybody up ov er here." "E v erybody up." "E v erybody, let's do it!" "E v erybody, up there too, come on!" "E v eryone stand up, come on." "Stand up, before I smack someone!" "H ere we go!" "All right, here we go." "It's v ery eas y..." "like this!" "And one, and two, and three, and four... are you ready?" " Are you ready?" " (fanfare plays)" " Do you know what day it is?" " Woman:" "No." "Girls, do you know what day it is?" "What day is it?" "Protein day!" "That's right!" "I'v e been getting my protein." " Hav e you, girls?" " (audience laughs)" "Anyway, let's go." "One, and two, and three... are you ready?" "Let me hear it!" "Audience:" "Yes!" "Ready, s et, go fat, go!" "I know a girl whos e butt hangs low" "She's flabby..." "flabby, flabby, flabby" "She's flabby..." "flabby, flabby, flabby" "She's flabby..." "flabby, flabby, flabby" "If she stepped on your foot, she'd mash your toe!" "Good golly, Miss Molly, you look like a hog" "Good golly, Miss Molly, you look like a hog" "Whoo!" "You better start a-running, be caus e it's much too late to jog" "From the early, early morning to the early, early night" "You're nothing but a fat disgusting ball of cellulite" "Good golly, Miss Molly!" "You look like a hog" "Well, you better start running, 'caus e it's much too late to jog" "Come on, e v erybody, go!" "One, two, three, four... (plays solo)" "Oh, play that saxophone!" "Play that saxophone!" "So nice" "E v erybody, come on!" "You're not clapping up there!" "Let's go, e v erybody." "One, two, three, reach..." "four, fiv e, six, s e v en, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12..." "Wop bom-a-loo-mop, a-wop bam-boom!" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Wop bom-a-loo-mop, a-wop bam-boom!" "I know a gal named Dais y" "The girl is fat and lazy" "I know a gal named Dais y" "The girl is fat and lazy" "She got blubber to the east, blubber to the west" "The bitch got long and flabby breasts" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Tutti frutti, all rooty" "Wop bom-a-loo-mop, a-wop bam-boom!" "Good night." "Watch the show!" " Thank you!" " (audience cheers)" "Good night!" "I lov e you!" "Goodby e!" "Narrator:" "Robbins, Sheldon, Krantz, Mazel... all popular fiction writers." "All of them sprang from the prestigious educational institutions that hav e been the backbone of American literature." "Where are tomorrow's H emingways and Faulkners coming from?" " Prisons." " (rattling)" "I think that most of today's writers are coming from the straining, compacted bowels of that beast we call the American penal s ystem." "Thes e men hav e liv ed..." "the y'v e suffered, the y'v e maimed, the y'v e killed." "The y'v e written some stunning books." "Yeah." "Without a doub t, anything by a prisoner is an automatic bests eller." "I tell aspiring writers, "If you commit a crime, we'll talk."" "Narrator:" "Rockland Prison." "Warden Carl Hoddegger." "Hoddegger:" "You can talk Leav enworth, you can talk Attica... you can e v en talk Fulsom... but none of them has the sterling literary tradition we hav e here at Rockland." "Narrator:" "Bobby Glov er is s erving up to 20 y ears for cutting up his fiancée with a linoleum knife." "I'm into haiku." "The narrow restrictions of the form hav e led me to an imagistic freedom heretofore... (inmates shouting)" "Narrator:" "Our cameras are there when one prisoner is caught in an act of plagiarism." "Inmate:" "Why don't you s ee what you can steal out of that!" "H ere, the prisoners keep in touch with the outside world." "No way!" "I won't s ettle for less than 18% of the paperback..." "People who watch "Merv Griffin" don't buy books." "Any agent in the business... (bangs)" "Narrator:" "Each y ear, Rockland sponsors a poetry festiv al." "Tyrone Green is this y ear's winner." ""Images," by Tyrone Green." ""Dark and lonely on the summer night..." "Kill my landlord, kill my landlord" "The watchdog barking..." "do he bite?" "Kill my landlord, kill my landlord" "Slip in his window, break his ne ck" "Then his hous e I start to wre ck" "Got no reason..." "what the he ck!" "Kill my landlord, kill my landlord" "C-l-L-L... my landlord." "Death."" "Dostoy e v sky said, "The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons."" "As someone els e said, "If Shakespeare were aliv e today, he'd be doing time."" "Buckwheat and the Dupreemes!" "(music starts playing)" "I need nub, nub, to eeh mah mine" "I need duh bine, bine tummun to tall mine... my mama ded..." "Tant huwwy nub No, noo dust ab to malt" "Ee day Nub don come eeday" "Id uh dame ob dib an take..." "H enno, nadees an dennalmen, I'm Buh-weet, and dees aw de Dupeemes!" "(audience cheers)" "Let's tay a mock down "Menneny Nane."" "De y ea wah nineteen diksty-bibe." "Dop, in duh naym ob nub" "Bebore you bake my art" "Dank it oh-oh-ber" "Mere ma noo wen oo purs e erd is?" "Ow purs e doe ekerd." "Oooh, oooh" "Abie nub, able nub" "I need duh, oh ow I need uh nub" "E eded ub baiting ub" "Id dodda pitta nu maitin ub" "Don doh ow nub amay" "Abie, able" "Abie, able nub." "(applaus e)" "Noo no, nadees an dennalmen... na murld a be a mush bettah pace eb be all dust nern de nub munnadudder." "En dus tyna..." "Ebbybody..." "Ting with me." "Mee ch out and dutch" "Dumbodys 'and" "Mait dis murl a bettah pace" "Ip doo tan..." "O-tay!" "Mee ch out and dutch" "Dumbodys 'and" "Mait dis murl a bettah pace" "Ip doo tan." "(cheering)" "Eddie:" "We all know that y ears of wind and weather can turn a beautiful home like yours into an ugly e y esore." "But what if you could prote ct your home?" "What if you could keep it beautiful fore v er with a giant s ee-through plastic bubble?" "Well, you can't!" "The y don't make no damn plastic bubble, you stupid idiots!" "E v en if the y did, how you gonna find one big enough to fit ov er your hous e?" "What you gonna do?" "How you gonna get it home?" "On top of your damn station wagon?" "Let's say you could get one." "You're sitting around, this big stupid plastic bubble ov er your hous e, right?" "Now you got it made, right?" "You didn't stop to think... what happens when you get hungry?" "How the y gonna bring food inside?" "The y can't deliv er sandwiches with a plastic bubble ov er your hous e." "What the y gonna do then?" "The best part about it..." "I was thinking, what happens when you run out of air, right?" "You're inside this place for fiv e days, you run out of air... don't you feel real stupid sitting in that bubble dead, huh?" "You feel real dumb, right?" "Let me tell you something, if you feel that you got to hav e this plastic bubble, and you'v e got to spend your mone y on it, here's Mel to tell you how to do it." "Plastic bubble!" " Y'all some stupid people..." " Announcer:" "Thanks, Eddie." "Send che ck or mone y order to..." "Do it today!" "This is Buzzy Free, welcome to "Rock and Roll and Then Some."" "Our guest today is here be caus e this is the 20th anniv ersary of the Beatles' inv asion in America." "H is name is Clarence Walker, and he claims that he conceiv ed the group's image and wrote most of the music, and was, in fact, the fifth Beatle and head singer before being kicked out of the group in 1963." " H ello, Clarence." "Welcome." " H ello, man." "So, you inv ented the Beatles?" "Yeah, man." "I was ripped off by the whole group." "The whole group got a behind-kicking coming to 'em when I s ee them." "I'v e been looking for them boys since 1963." "That's why the y got around-the-clock-s e curity and gates around their hous e, 'caus e the y know that when Clarence Walker finds them, he's gonna take a chunk out their behind." "Clarence, can you prov e you were the fifth Beatle?" "Yes, I can prov e it, man." "And I suggest you take that sarcasm out of your voice, 'caus e I'm s erious." "I'm sorry, Clarence, the whole thing s eems so absurd..." "Then say it s eems absurd, man." "Don't patronize me." "I'll kick your behind right here on national tele vision." "I was the fifth Beatle, I hav e proof." "All right." "What is that proof, Clarence?" "H ere's a photograph of us back in 1962, before the y kicked me out of the group." "Clarence:" "That's John, that's Ringo, that's me in the middle, that's me, Clarence, that's George and that's Paul." "I ne v er heard any saxophone, I s ee you're holding a saxophone." "I ne v er heard any sax on any early Beatle music." "Are you crazy?" "Most of them early songs were mostly sax, man." "But the y stole it from me." "The y took my voice out, the y took the saxophone out, It was gone, all right?" "I did most of the lead vocals too." "Let me tell you something, when I s ee them boys, I'm gonna put my foot so deep in them, their breath gonna smell like shoe polish." "Can you giv e us an example of what you'v e wrote and what the y changed?" "Yes, I can. "She Lov es You," was originally titled" ""She Lov es You, Man."" "And "H elp" was originally titled, "H elp Me, Man."" ""She's Got a Ticket To Ride" was originally," ""She's Got a Ticket to Ride and the Bitch Don't Care, Man."" "What about their clothing and the way the y wore their hair?" "All that is my idea." "I molded thos e boys." "I was the most dominant one." "That's the way we were des cribed." "John was the wis e guy, Paul was the cute one," "George was the quiet one, Ringo was the shy one," "Clarence was the most dominant one." "I molded the boys." "In the beginning the y us ed to do e v erything that I did." "In fact, here's a picture of us back in '61, when the y was called "The Clarences." Can you get that?" "See, that's me right there, and that's George, that's John, that's Ringo and that's Paul." "I taught them how to pick their afros and e v erything out, man." "Paul still us es "Afro-sheen" be caus e of me." "This is astonishing." "I wonder if you hav e" " any of your early jam s essions." " Yes, I do, I do." "I brought some of the early music, and I hav e it in a medle y form so you can listen to it." "You can hear us in our original jam s ession." "This is the original Beatles." "I can play this thing backwards." "You can hear them talking about it." "You'll hear John Lennon." "I'll play it in re v ers e." "Listen v ery clos ely." "John's voice: " H e y, Paul, let's get rid of Clarence and steal all his good ideas."" "Paul: "Yeah."" "Well, I'll tell you, Clarence, you convinced me." "I hope you get e v erything that you des erv e." "Thanks a lot, man." "I don't want much, I'm v ery modest." "All I want is to get my rent straight, get my head together, all I need is $ 7,000-7,200 to get straight, that's all I want." " I ain't greedy." " Se v en grand?" " Se v en grand is all I need." " That's it, thank you, Clarence." "But the y'v e got behind-kickings coming." " This is Buzzy Free, good night." " I want a chunk out of each... (rock music drowns dialogue)" "You're all s et to go on the air, you two miniature thespians." "You're both so cute." "Look at y'all, you're so cute." "The y'v e got the cutest little butts." " I wonder how big..." " Dion..." "You know, Blair, I simply cannot belie v e we are here." "We are official "Saturday N ight Liv e" hairdress ers." "Look out, world, here I come." "I'm at the apex of my hairstyling powers." "What am I, "The Quiche Time Forgot"?" "Don't be silly, Blair, you're my pre cious assistant." ""Saturday N ight Liv e" today." "Look at us on "Saturday N ight Liv e."" "Maybe the y'll dis cov er me on the show..." "I can say" ""I'm Dion Dion, and you're not."" "Think of all the stars we're going to meet." "That's nothing, look at this." "Take a gander at who's hosting tonight's show..." " "Mr. N ewman"?" " Paul N ewman?" "!" "Ahh!" "I lov e him!" "I e v en us e his salad dressing." "It has a uniquely piquant tang." "And now I'm gonna do his hair on national tele vision." "Oh sweet Jesus, I walked into the v alle y of the Lord, and I'll walk out with Butch Cassidy." "Listen, "Sundance," plug in your hair dry er, it's going to be a bus y night." "Fellas, this is Mr. N ewman." "H e has to be ready in fiv e minutes." "(audience applauds)" "My God, what happened to you since "The Verdict"?" "I'd say it was definitely not in his favor." "Poor Joanne Woodward." "No wonder she took up needlepoint." "Gentlemen, you'v e been misinformed." "I'm Edwin N ewman the newsman." "I'm not Paul N ewman the actor, although I enjoy his salad dressing, which has an unusually piquant tang." "Edwin N ewman!" "Of cours e." "I knew it all along." "Dion, you ignoramus, don't you e v er watch the news?" "I don't watch the news, Blair, I read it e v ery week in "The National Enquirer."" "Good e v ening, ladies and gentlemen, I'm Jess e Jackson." "(audience cheers)" "And I was re cently quoted in "The Washington Post"" "as referring to a certain group of people as "H ymies."" "The y also said that I called N ew York, "H ymietown."" "I realize that kind of talk isn't kosher, but let me s ee if I can explain it to you all in song." "(RB music plays)" "As I said, I'm Jess e Jackson, and I'm running for President of the U nited States." "I'm a Libra, and this is a v ery spe cial message to all you chos en people out there." " Don't let me down" " Jess e:" "No, no" " Don't let me down" " No, no, no, no" "Don't let me down..." "H ymietown" "Hymietown, well, well Hymietown..." "I was your one and only until I read the news" "Well, now I'm sad and lonely since I put down the Jews" "Well..." "We hav e so much in common" "'Caus e we'v e both been so oppress ed" "Singer:" "All right" "We both hav e big nos es" "And gold chains on our chests" "I wanna say pleas e now" " Don't let me down" " I'm begging you, pleas e" " Don't let me down" " I'm down on my knees, well" " Don't let me down" " H ymietown" "Hymietown, well, well..." "Hymietown..." "I want to form a new coalition, of soul people and bagel people." "From the Chitlin' District, to the Diamond District." "From catfish to gefilte fish." "We all need to liv e as one." "I want to look out ov er the crowd and s ee both leather hats and yarmulkes side by side." "So come on, you brothers and sisters... all you hymies and hymettes..." " Let's get it together." " Yeah!" "Let's bring it all down, well, well, well" "I wanna talk about lov e for one another" "H ymietown..." "Want to form a soul and kosher coalition" "I lov e thos e black suits you wear" "And them little tiny curls that hang down in your hair" "You know we all need one another" "I want to stay right here in H ymietown, well, well" "With all my hymie brothers and sisters" "Sometimes I feel a little hymie mys elf" "Baruch ata adonai" "H ymietown." "(applaus e)" "Good e v ening, I'm Alfred Jenkins, and welcome to "Milestones,"" "the show that re cognizes greatness." "Tonight we hav e two guests who hav e achie v ed greatness in their respe ctiv e fields." "To my left is a man who's been des cribed as the unifying leader in the fight against South African apartheid, and a champion of basic human rights throughout the world." "Winner of the 1984 Nobel Prize..." "To my right, H eisman Trophy winner, Doug Flutie of Boston College." "Welcome, gentlemen." "Bishop Tutu, first of all," "I wanted to say how shocked and distress ed I was that e v en as you were being pres ented this v enerable s ymbol of peace, a bomb threat was taking place." "In my estimation, the bomb threat repres ents the sheer desperation of thos e oppos ed to basic human principles of freedom and justice." "So, Doug, speaking of bombs, that pass against Miami... if there was e v er a doub t in anyone's mind that you des erv e this trophy..." "hav e you s een this, Bishop?" "Yes, I was admiring it." "It is v ery nice, ." "Very impressiv e indeed, I like this." "What was going through your mind when you floated that pass?" "Well, basically, Alfred, we call it "The Hail-Mary Pass."" "You just clos e your e y es and say, " Hail Mary, pleas e, let this ball land in the wide re ceiv er's hands." "Pleas e, your humble s erv ant, Doug Flutie..." "Amen."" "And... that was it, basically." "A little bit of good timing" " and a little bit of luck." " H uh?" "Luck?" "Why don't we watch the play on the monitor ov er here?" "Why don't you just turn your chair and tell us what we're going to s ee, okay?" "This is the "split-right-3" or "Ke yhole" formation." ""Ke yhole," y eah." " What's the matter with you?" " The thing just dropped down." " What did you drop it for?" " It's a mistake!" " I didn't mean to drop it." " Don't make that mistake anymore." "...really let the thing fly." "And luckily, the wide re ceiv er..." "How are you gonna fix it?" "Me don't know how to fix the thing." "I'm a bishop, not a welder." "Tell him, " Doug Flutie, the thing broke."" "H ere... stick this on." "Stick the gum on?" "Put it under there." " Stick it on and fix it." " Put it on there." "H ere it is again." "What I wanted to do was to go back and really let loos e with one..." " Right." "I can s ee why." "...many times before..." "Right." "What a play." "And need I remind the viewers that this cemented your hold on... on the H eisman Trophy." "Doug, why don't we watch that again?" "Let's s ee that again in slow motion." "Whip around here." "Doug:" "I think I clearly indicated before, it was a "split-right-3," what we call a "flood tip" formation." " What are you doing?" " Me tried to fix the thing." " It break off!" " Do it quickly, okay?" "Me try the best I can." "It don't want to stick back on!" " You're not doing it fast enough." " What am I suppos ed to do?" "Fix it." "That's all I'm asking you." "You're not suppos ed to break it." "I didn't break it on purpos e!" "What about the stuff in your hair?" "What is that?" "That's a "Carefree Curl." That's not gonna make it stick on." " It would just make it curlier." " Just fix it, all right?" " I'm just back and I'm gonna..." " (medal clangs)" " I'm gonna unleash the thing..." " Right." "That's it, basically." "Well... that's a spe ctacular pie ce of strategy, and fully des erving of this... the H eisman Trophy." "What's this?" "It is an armband." "A unifying s ymbol of our commitment to fighting racism all ov er the world." "Right." "Well, that's real nice, Tutu, but I really don't think that I can take your only ribbon." "Tutu, did you notice this?" "How his name is engrav ed on there?" " Oh!" " Isn't that nice?" "Isn't that something els e?" "Speaking of something els e, the pass that you threw... talk about... why don't we look at that again, be caus e it's such an amazing play." "No!" "We're not going to look at the play again." "I'v e been on 200 talk shows, now, and I'v e had to talk to this play for 200." "I'm sick of it, frankly." "It was a lucky play, that's all." "Had nothing to do with... my e y es were clos ed, you know?" "It was a fluke." "(buzzing)" "Put the thing there." "Hold it ov er." "Doug:" "For the rest of my life, what's gonna happen?" " That was my moment in the sun." " H urry, now!" "Doug:" "My moment in the sun was not e v en my moment." "The thing not taking, now!" "Who's gonna hire me?" "I'm 5'9"." "Who's gonna draft me?" "If I'm lucky, I'll get a beer commercial out of this... an off-brand or something." "No... my entire life," "I'll be sitting around in a trailer park somewhere." "People will say, "Come on, Dougie, let's s ee the film again!" "Show it again, Dougie!"" "Can't you s ee how one play has ruined my entire life?" "Well... one play, that's guaranteed this, the H eis H eisman Trophy." "Thanks for being here." "Thanks for coming." "Tutu, if you win anything els e, come back, okay?" " Doug:" "What is this?" " Thanks for watching "Milestones."" "It's the..." "I don't know what you call this." "(applaus e)" "Miss, I know you'v e been sworn." "I'v e read your complaint." "Would you pleas e tell us what happened?" "I was laying around my hotel room at the Hotel Earl." "I was watching "The Joe Franklin Show,"" "and I s ee this greas eball ov er here holding up a book that says it's gonna change my life." "Do you hav e a copy of the book in question?" "Yes, My Honor." ""I Wanna be a Ho."" "Are you a woman between the ages 18 and 34?" "If you are you can make up to $ 1500 a week." "Yeah, my backside, Your Honor." "I didn't s ee buck one!" "Mr. Jones, is there anything you'd like to say in your defens e?" "Yes, My Honor." "As you v ery well know, not e v eryone can be a ho." "You s ee," "I think I can clear this up in just three words..." ""the bitch ugly." I rest my cas e." "Wait a minute, here!" "Come on!" "Come on!" "Announcer:" "We interrupt our programming to bring you the following Spe cial Report." "Good e v ening, I'm Ted Koppel." "We hav e just re ceiv ed word that Buckwheat has been shot." "Apparently, it happened moments ago as the legendary performer was leaving 30 Rockefeller Plaza in N ew York." "H e had finished an appearance on "Saturday N ight Liv e,"" "and as he was leaving the building, he was shot by an unknown assailant, or assailants... details are sketchy at this point." "Now, I understand that we now hav e a videotape of the shooting." "Let's take a look." "Woman fan:" "Oh, Mr. Buckwheat, I so lov e your singing," " could I hav e your autograph?" " Tank you berry much." "No autographs, peas e, peas e." "No, no." "Open the door." "I nub noo!" "I nub noo!" "I nub noo." "Oh, beautiful." " Man:" "H e y, Mr. Wheat!" " Yes?" "(gunshots cracking)" "(women s creaming)" "That was the s cene just moments ago." "To repeat:" "Buckwheat has been shot." "We understand that he has been rushed to a nearby hospital, his condition unknown." "We'll bring you more details as this shocking tragedy de v elops." "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you by..." "For the benefit of thos e of you who hav e just joined us," "Buckwheat has been shot." "Let's take a look." "Buckwheat:" "I nub noo." "I nub noo." "H ere he is, coming out of what appears to be 30 Rockefeller Plaza..." "there he is." "Now, the shots come right about here." " Man:" "H e y, Mr. Wheat!" " Yes?" " (gunshots)" " Ted Koppel:" "H ere the y are." "(women s creaming)" "Now, I hav e just been told that Buckwheat has arriv ed at St. Vincent's Hospital." "Let's go there, liv e." "All right." "As you can s ee, s e v eral of Buckwheat's friends are already there." "I can't belie v e it!" "I can't belie v e the y shot him." "It's just terrible!" "Alfalfa, hav e you had a chance to s ee the actual footage" " of Buckwheat being shot?" " No, I hav en't." "Koppel:" "Then, let's take a look." " Man:" "H e y, Mr. Wheat!" " Yes?" "(gunshots)" "Koppel:" "Alfalfa, what are your feelings as you watch that?" "Oh, I'm hurt and confus ed and I don't know what to say." "No comment!" "Koppel:" "Alfalfa apparently stunned by this tragic turn of e v ents." "All right, we're going inside now." "Buckwheat, as you can s ee, going under the knife." "Doctor, excus e me, this is Ted Koppel." "Hav e you had a chance to s ee the actual footage of Buckwheat" " as he was shot?" " Doctor:" "No." "I hav en't." "Koppel:" "Well, then, let's take a look." "There he is, about to get into his limousine at 30 Rock... and, well, the picture speaks for its elf." "Buckwheat being shot." "To repeat, Buckwheat has been shot." "H e's now in emergency surgery, and all we Americans can do is wait and worry." "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you by..." "We hav e just... we hav e just re ceiv ed some tragic news." "Buckwheat is dead." "(gunshots popping)" "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you by..." "For thos e of you just joining us, Buckwheat is dead." "How did he die?" "Let's take a look at the videotape." "Buckwheat:" "Oh beautiful." "Koppel:" "All right now, as you can s ee, there it is." "It s eems that the shots came from Buckwheat's left side there are the s e curity men going right after the assailant, or assailants..." "we're not quite sure as y et." "Who killed Buckwheat, and why?" "Good questions." "We intend to be here tomorrow night, and e v ery night, until thos e questions are answered." "U ntil then, we pay a final tribute to a great performer." "("Little Ras cals" theme music plays)" "Buckwheat dead." "This is Ted Koppel reporting." "We now return you to our regular programming." "Good night." "Announcer:" "Mayberry." "A town in the grips of the hardest criminals e v er to stain a street." "But in 1982, the s cum who run Mayberry had better watch out, be caus e..." "Freeze!" "(announcer speaks)" "Opie Taylor..." "once he was a small-town wimp who got beaten up for his lunch mone y." "But then he left home and grew up fast in Vietnam, teaching the Viet Cong a lesson in small-town American v alues with a flame thrower." "And now he's back, ready to clean up Mayberry with a loaded.357." "Drop that gun, lady." "Why, I re cognize that voice." "It belongs to that obnoxious runt nephew of mine." " Aunt Bee!" " Opie!" "Floyd:" "Opie Taylor..." "What the hell are you doing here?" "We heard you bought it in 'Nam." "Oh, no, that wasn't me, Aunt Bee." "That was "The Beav er."" "No, I spent three y ears in a rat cage in Quang Tri." "Three y ears, dreaming of orange pop, fishing and apple pie." "What happened to this town, Aunt Bee?" "Well, times change, "runt."" "Your damned father didn't leav e much for me to liv e on, so I'v e rounded up Thelma Lou and a couple of the girls, and I started a local business." "Turns out people were tired of having to driv e up to Mount Pilot e v ery time the y wanted to get some "tail."" "Aunt Bee, that's disgusting." "And Floyd..." "Floyd, what's happened to you?" "You're..." " You're..." " I'm black, "genius."" "Always been black, Opie." "Oh, for y ears I was black." "For 10 y ears, your pa us ed to know about it." "H e us ed to make me walk around Mayberry wearing whiteface." "Your pa knew about it." "You know, you should liv e up to it... getting your hair cut by a N egro, boy." "If I had my way, I would cut your throat." "I would hav e." "Yes." "Don Pardo:" "And now, "Speaking Freely,"" "with your host, Edwin N ewman." "H ello, I'm Edwin N ewman." ""Speaking Freely" tonight is a man who's been referred to as the " Hardest Working Man in Show Business,"" "and "The Godfather of Soul."" "I'm speaking, of cours e, of James Brown." "(audience applaus e)" "Thank you for being with us tonight, Mr. Brown." "I say, hunh..." "look hear!" "Hah!" "Mr. Brown, your career has spanned almost three de cades, and y et your style has remained intact and constant." "That's be caus e... hah..." "I'm a man!" "Spell "man"..."m-a-n." Oww-ww!" "And y et in the '70s... or maybe it was the late '60s... you abruptly be came political and you openly endors ed candidates such as H ubert H umphre y." "Now, why did you do that?" "'Caus e Papa's got a brand new bag." "Ha-ha!" "I gotta-gotta gotta... hah!" "Will you now retire?" "Pleas e, pleas e, pleas e..." "I want so bad... giv e it up, or turn it loos e... y ee-ow!" "I think our time is up." "James Brown has been "Speaking Freely."" "Edwin N ewman, N BC N ews." "(holiday music plays)" "Announcer:" ""Hallmark" proudly pres ents... a Gumby Christmas." "Ladies and gentlemen, Gumby!" "(cheers, applaus e)" "Merry Christmas, dammit!" "I am Gumby, and I want to say before I get started, it's about time the swines at the network gav e me my own spe cial." "I'v e been sitting in my living room watching spe cials with nobodies like Frosty the Snowman and Rudolph the Red-nos ed Reindeer for y ears." "H e y, Rudy!" "Drop dead, baby!" "This is my spe cial!" "We know why the nos e is red, Rudy." "(mimics gulping)" "You know, this is the part of the spe cial when I was going to de corate the Christmas tree with my v ery good friend, Sammy Davis, Jr." "But unfortunately, Sammy could not be here tonight, but he did s end us this lov ely ornament to de corate the tree with." "(audience laughs, groans)" "Shut up!" "H ere's looking at you, Sammy." "Merry Christmas, dammit." "(light xylophone melody plays)" "It's... one hell of a day in my neighborhood" "A hell of a day for a neighbor" "Would you be mine?" "Could you be mine?" "I hope I get to mov e in your neighborhood some day" "The problem is, is when I mov e in..." "Y'all mov e away" "So come along for some coke or some smoke" "You bring the stash, 'caus e Robinson's broke" "Will you be my... won't you be my..." "won't you be my neighbor?" "H ello, boys and girls." "We're all alone again today." "You know why?" "My wife walked out on me." "Isn't that nice?" "I'm so glad the bitch is gone." "(door signal buzzes)" "Who could that be?" "Let's s ee." "This is how you answer a door in my neighborhood... (aggressiv e shout) Who is it?" "!" "Man:" "H e y, Robinson, open the door." "I heard you in there." "I heard you singing." "Open up!" "Come on!" "Come on!" "It's Mr. Landlord." "H ello, Mr. Landlord." "(coughs)" "What the...?" "Cut the bull, will ya?" "Your rent's six months ov erdue!" "It's a summons." "Oh, look... an e viction notice." "Brought by Mr. Landlord." "Can you say, "s cumbucket"?" "That's our spe cial word for today, boys and girls." "Do you know any s cumbuckets?" "I'll bet you do." "You know, I did hav e the mone y to pay this rent, and then, all of a sudden, it mysteriously disappeared." "Then my wife showed up with a new dress on." "Want to s ee that dress now, boys and girls?" "See the footprints on it?" "I didn't take it off her to do that, neither." "You know what we're gonna do?" "Visit the President and find out why I'm so poor." "Who wants to go to the magical "Land of Make-Belie v e"?" "Would you like that?" "We'll go visit the President." "Who wants to visit the President?" "We would like to talk with the President!" "We would like to speak with the President." "Where is he?" "The President's always late." "H e ain't ne v er on time!" "H ere I am." "My ne ck is hurting, though." "How are you doing, I'm the President." "What's the problem?" "Say, Mr. President, how come you cut off my relief mone y and I got e victed from my hous e?" "And how come I sound like "Geraldine"?" "I can't do anything to help you with that, my friend." "Mr. President, Mr. President, I hav e a question." "How come you don't s ell one of them planes so I could hav e s chool lunch?" "I'm sorry." "I can't answer that question neither." "But Mr. President, I think I speak for all black people!" "Mr. President..." "We don't hav e no more time for no more questions." "Sorry." "Well..." "I hav e to go now, boys and girls, so by e-by e." "A v ery happy tomorrow to you." "Good e v ening." "Welcome to "Career Corner."" "I'm your host, Bert Weiderme y er." "My guest tonight is a man who has touched all our liv es." "Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Tooth Fairy." "(applaus e)" "You'v e been around as long as I can remember, Mr. Fairy." "How long hav e you held your pres ent job?" "U h... fore v er I'v e been doing this, basically." "Fore v er." "And now you're about to change careers." "Why?" "See, for e v ery tooth I pick up..." "I got to leav e a dime under the pillow, okay?" "Then I got to take the tooth up to God, and he giv e me 12 ¢." "Now when you sub tract the dime I put out of my pocket already, that leav es me clearing 2 ¢." "I don't know where you come from." "2 ¢ ain't a lot in my neighborhood." "No, no it's not." "But sometimes, too, I be getting ripped off by little kids." "The y be putting like, "Tic Tacs" under their pillows, right?" "In the dark you can't tell the difference." "You think the y're teeth, right?" "So I take it up to God, right?" "You know how it feels to giv e God a bag full of "Tic Tacs"?" "I almost got fired once." "H e thought I was trying to tell him his breath stinks." "Actually, that's a re v elation." "I ne v er thought of your job as being dangerous." "Dangerous?" "Most people..." "normal people... panic when the y walk in their kids' room and s ee a big black guy standing there in a tutu, all right?" "With a big bag of dimes ov er his shoulder." "I hav e been shot six times," "I got bit by 37 Doberman pins chers and I had my behind kicked so many times," "I don't e v en want to talk about it no more." "Come on, Mr. Fairy." "You must get some gratification from your work?" "No." "Come on, e v erybody lov es the Tooth Fairy." "No, the y don't, man." "I don't get no letters, no "thank-yous," no nothing, all right?" "And I'm a fairy, damn it." "I hav e feelings, too." "Okay?" "What if you had your own spe cial day?" "What do you mean?" "You know, a day s et aside just for you, like your own holiday." "Oh, you mean, like, "Tooth Day"?" " Yeah." " Wow." "Tooth Day!" "E v erybody can wrap their teeth up in little cellophane paper, and put it under a tree, right?" "I could come down the chimne y and the y leav e me milk and cookies and e v erything..." "That sounds an awful lot like Christmas." "We could hav e two Christmas es, then." " I don't think so." " Why not?" " One for me, and one for him." " No, no... it's..." "I'm sorry." "I do a better job than Santa Claus, man." " I'm afraid our time is up." " It's be caus e he's white, right?" "Good night, e v eryone." "It's not be caus e he's white." "I can get some reindeer, too." "How much do reindeer cost?" " Forget the reindeer." " Y'all better do something quick." "Santa Claus is old and fat..." "probably hav e a heart attack soon." " That's terrible." "Stop that." " That's not terrible, man." "I'm telling you..." "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you by..." "Good e v ening, I'm Ted Koppel." "Surely e v eryone knows by now that Buckwheat is dead." "But for thos e of you who hav e not s een the videotape of Buckwheat being shot, let's take a look." "I nub noo." "I nub noo." "I nub noo." " Man:" "H e y, Mr. Wheat!" " Yes?" "Koppel:" "Buckwheat was buried today, and the entire world mourned." "World leaders gathered to offer a final tribute." "("Little Ras cals" theme plays in march tempo)" "We now join millions of mourners around the world in obs erving a moment of silence." "Announcer:" "This moment of silence is brought to you by..." "Police hav e now identified Buckwheat's assailant." "H e is this man..." "27-y ear-old John David Stutts... des cribed by thos e who know him as a loner." "We understand that Stutts is now being taken to criminal court for arraignment." "Let's go there liv e." " It's good to s ee you all." " All right, folks, keep back." "H i, I killed Buckwheat." "I hav e a question for the American public." "When you dream, do you dream in color, or black and white?" "Be caus e I dream in black and white." "Last e v ening I had a dream about lime jello." "I didn't know what flavor it was be caus e it was gray." "Then I tasted it and I realized it was lime." " Definitely lime." " Reporter:" "Mr. Stutts..." " did you kill Buckwheat?" " Sure." "Do you realize you face the death penalty?" " I don't care, sir." " Why did you kill him, Mr. Stutts?" "I had to kill him." "My dog told me he was the Antichrist." "What's the name of your dog, Mr. Stutts?" "H is name is Pete y." "H e's a Dalmatian." "Reporter:" "A Dalmatian?" "I named him after a dog on the "Our Gang Follies."" "H is name is Pete y." "In just a moment, John David Stutts will face arraignment on charges of murder." "Why did Stutts do it?" "We'v e asked noted criminal ps y chiatrist, Dr. Irwin Fletcher for his expert opinion." "Welcome, Doctor." "What makes a man like John David Stutts commit such a crime?" "Publicity." "In the deranged mind of the killer, he truly belie v es that if he kills someone famous, he'll be come famous hims elf." "And, unfortunately, certain irresponsible members of the media are only too eager to turn thes e assassins into instant celebrities." "Thank you, Doctor." "Let's take a look at the man who killed Buckwheat, John David Stutts." "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you by..." "Koppel:" "John David Stutts spent his childhood here, in this modest home in Lima, Ohio." "E v eryone who knew him called him a "loner, a quiet young man."" "Stutts attended Sunday School at the Mercy Seat Baptist Church." "H e was a loner..." "a quiet young man." "He attended church..." "Sunday School," "I remember he was always v ery polite." "Koppel:" "Do you belie v e he killed Buckwheat?" "Oh, y es." "Definitely." "That's all he talked about." "John David Stutts graduated from U nionville H igh School." "H is classmates called him, "The Loner."" "Stutts was a member of the "Ke y Club,"" "the "Audio-Visual Squad"... and president of the "Future Assassins of America."" "It's no wonder that his classmates chos e him" ""Most Likely to Kill Buckwheat."" "Sure, I remember Stutts." "H e was a loner, but a real hard worker." "I mean, he pumped the gas, he che cked the oil, he washed the windows." "N ice kid." "Koppel:" "Do you belie v e he killed Buckwheat?" "Oh, y es." "Definitely." "That's all he talked about." "I remember one day, I says, "Stutts, why are you working so hard?"" "H e says, "I'm saving up to buy a gun so I can kill Buckwheat."" "John was a quiet boy..." "a kind of a loner... but real polite." "H e always stood still when I hemmed his cuffs." "N ice kid." "Koppel:" "Do you belie v e he killed Buckwheat?" "Oh, y es." "Definitely." "That's all he e v er talked about." "Just the other day, he comes in and he says," ""Sol, make me a new suit." "I'm gonna kill Buckwheat and I want to look good on tele vision."" "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you by..." "We hav e just learned that John David Stutts has been arraigned and is being returned to his jail cell." "Let's go there right now, liv e." "Stutts:" "The reporters are back." "H ello." "It's good to s ee e v eryone came back." "H ello." "Good to s ee you all." " H ello." " Man:" "Stutts!" "(gunshots popping, s creams)" "Stutts:" "Ouch!" "I'm shot!" "There you hav e it..." "John David Stutts, accus ed assassin of Buckwheat, has been shot right here before your e y es." "(announcer speaks) ...brought to you liv e by..." "For thos e of you who miss ed it, John David Stutts, accus ed killer of Buckwheat, has been shot, liv e on this program." "Now, let's take another look." "It's good to s ee e v eryone came back." "H ello." "It's good to s ee you all." "Koppel:" "Coming through..." "the shots come up..." " (gunshots popping) ...there the y are, right there..." "Stutts:" "Ouch!" "I'm shot!" "I'v e just been told that John David Stutts is dead." "(announcer speaks) ...has been brought to you liv e by..." "John David Stutts lies dead." "How did he die?" "Let's take a look." " Stutts:" "H ello." " Man:" "Stutts!" " (gunshots popping)" " Koppel:" "There's the shots." "Stutts:" "I'm shot!" "And so, two famous men lie dead..." "Buckwheat, and John David Stutts." "We'll be here tomorrow night and e v ery night for as long as this s ens eless killing continues." "This is Ted Koppel." "Good night." "Velv et Jones:" "Who among us has not dreamed of faraway places and intertwined lov ers?" "H i." "I'm Velv et Jones." "(loud cheering, applaus e)" "And if you lov e lov e as I do," "I know you will want to buy my latest" ""Velv et Jones' Harlequin Romance" book." "There are many exquisite titles to choos e from, such as..." ""Velv et Lov e." Listen..." ""When she touched her lips to the glass," "LaWanda's heart beat inside her." "I knew from that v ery first moment that the $3 I had spent on wine would not go to waste."" "Wasn't that romantic?" "But wait... there's more." "Allow me to read from one of my personal favorites." ""I saw her standing at the gates of the Lincoln Tunnel."" "Dare I approach her?" "My heart pounded inside my chest." "I felt a burning in my loins I had ne v er felt before." "Thus, I realized I had been..." "'Kicked in the Butt by Lov e."'" "Yes." "Endless e v enings of romance can all be yours... if you order now." "(announcer speaks)" ""Who wrote the book of lov e?" Velv et." "It's as simple as that." "(playing gospel-blues melody)" "H e y, Pudge!" "H e y, Pudge!" "Somebody's gonna pay for this mess!" "Somebody's paying for this!" "Look at me!" "Look at all this mess on me!" "Somebody's paying for this!" " What are you talking about?" " Somebody tried to run me down!" "Somebody gonna run me down out there!" " What do you got on your suit?" " There's mud all ov er my clothes!" " Aw, man..." " Look at this mess all ov er me!" "You look pretty funny, man." "(laughs)" "That's v ery funny..." ""Ha, ha, I'm laughing."" " What are you wearing a suit for?" " This is my spe cial birthday suit." "Ah, y eah..." "I walk in, and somebody gonna splash mud all ov er me." "I got $20 in my pocket." "I was going to find me a woman." "You had one birthday too many, man." "You got the equipment, but your battery is dead." " What you say?" " Your battery's dead." "My battery's dead?" "How would you like to jump-start it?" "H ear what I said?" ""Jump-start my battery."" "Just don't call me on a cold morning, man." "Don't call you on a cold morning to jump-start my battery?" "Man, I'll tell you..." "I'v e been doing it e v er since I was 12." " 12 y ears old?" " No, 12 inches." "H ear what I said?" "I'm a crazy nut, man." "Yeah, you crazy if you think I belie v e that." "You crazy, man." "You know what you is?" "A nut-brain." "H e y, play me a little birthday song." " "Li'I bird-day song."" " Play me a little birthday song." "(plays boogie-woogie riff) There you go." "Happy Birthday..." "That ain't no birthday..." "that's the same old mess you play e v ery time I come inside here." "That's fake." "Pardon me, I'm looking... for an old man." "H e's not a Caucasian man." "H e's an old man, and..." "Can I help you, Miss?" "I am looking for an old colored gentleman." "There, it's out." "You'v e come to the right place." "H ear what I said, Bobby?" " Yeah." " Crazy..." "That suit..." "I'm so sorry, it's all cov ered with mud." "I'm walking down the street fiv e minutes ago, and some fool gonna driv e by... splashing water all ov er e v erybody in sight!" "Crazy fool." "Well, I assure you, it was inadv ertent." "I do not go around splashing people." "You the one what splashed me with the mud?" " I stand guilty..." " What's wrong with you?" "It's a 30-mile zone, and you're doing 35 miles an hour." "I assure you, I was not speeding." "I am a law-abiding citizen, and I must tell you, if you'll just hear me out, I'm here to make restitution." "Well, it's down the hallway and to the right." "H ear what I said? "Restitution's" down the hallway, make a right."" "I assure you, I can take a joke as well as anyone." "I'd like to pay for my mistake." "What is your name, Mister...?" "My name is Solomon, but look here..." "This is my friend, Pudgie." "This is Pudge." "This is Miss Lady." "How do you do...?" "This is Pudge." "H e's full of "restitution."" " H ear what I said?" " Yes, I did." "H e's a "restitution-brain."" "How do you do?" "How do you do, "Poodge"?" "And Mr. Solomon, how much would it cost to clean your suit?" "The pants are gonna cost extra 'caus e he's got 12 inches." "H e y, shut up, man." "You can't be telling that woman that, man." "That's my personal business." "Fool-face..." "You're driving a v ery hard bargain, but I'll pay for the entire suit." "What could it possibly cost?" "$30 or $40, I suppos e?" "Look, Miss, you don't hav e enough mone y to pay for this." "This is my spe cial suit." "This is my "Happy Birthday" suit." "That's Solomon's birthday suit, lady." " It's your birthday?" " Yeah." " Then you must take some mone y." " No, I do not "must" take nothing." "Well, v ery well." "Very well, then." "Let me buy you a cocktail..." "for your birthday." "Well... go on, buy me a "cocktail for my birthday."" "Well, grand." "We'd like to order drinks." "I'm going to hav e a white wine spritzer." "And whate v er thes e gentlemen are having." "No beer, giv e us a "white wine spritzer" also." "Allow me to fetch the drinks." ""White wine spritzer"?" "That woman is a "gerbil-mind."" "H ear what I said?" ""Gerbil-mind."" " She's crazy, right?" " She's crazy, man." "All right." "A little birthday music." "Oh, I think that's absolutely in order." "A birthday song." "I'd like to sing one that my father sang for me on my birthdays when I was a child." "Mr. Poodge, it's in the ke y of "C."" "(strikes note)" "And I'd like to dedicate this to you, Mr. Solomon." "Froggy went a-courtin' and he did ride..." "I think you're going to enjoy this..." "it is in a N egro spiritual v ein." "One, two, three..." "Froggy went a-courtin' and he did ride" "U m-hmm, um-hmm" "Froggy went a-courtin' and he did ride" "U m-hmm, um-hmm" "Froggy went a-courtin' and he did ride" "H e took Miss Mousie for his bride" "U m-hmm, um-hmm, um-hmm." "I don't know what kind of v eins them N egroes had." "H it it, Pudge." "In the ke y of "C."" "Froggy went a-courtin' and he did ride" "U m-hmm, um-hmm" "Froggy went a-courtin' and he did ride" "U m-hmm, um-hmm..." "H ere's another one." "Ahem..." "(tunelessly)" "A boy is born in hard-time Mississippi" "Surrounded by four walls that ain't so pretty" "H is parents giv e him lov e and affe ction" "Keeping him strong... moving just enough for the city!" "Yeah, y eah y eah." "That's the worst Ste vie Wonder impression I'v e e v er s een." "(nerdishly) What's the matter with it?" "I can funk." "(audience laughter, cheering)" "I can funk." "I can funk." "But what you're doing is ridiculous." "I know Ste vie Wonder, man." "You hav e to mellow out when you do Ste vie." "You're too tens e, Loos en up." "The s e cret to doing Ste vie Wonder... (audience cheers)" "You gotta smile a lot, like this." "You s ee?" "You gotta smile." "You mean, like this?" "Like this?" "That's almost it." "You ain't really got it y et." "You got to mov e your ne ck around." "Ste vie mov es his ne ck." "Mov e your ne ck like somebody's choking you." "Like that, s ee?" "If you don't like my show, I'm gonna choke you." "Is this how he does it, like this?" "Kinda." "Not really." "Then you gotta loos en up," "You gotta mov e your hands, you gotta go like..." " listen to me." "Watch this." " Okay." "My cherie amour, lov ely as a summer day... (harshly) My cherie..." " Try that." " My cherie amour..." "No, no, no." "Better, with more feeling." "Oh..." " My cherie amour..." " You don't e v en know the words." "Lov ely as a sum-mer-rr day-yy..." "Listen to me." "Listen..." "My cherie amour" "Distant as the Milky Way..." "Try that." "(audience cheering)" "Okay." "My cherie amour" "Pretty little one that I adore" "You're the only girl my heart beats for" "How I wish that you were mine!" "(loud cheering, applaus e)" "Whoo!" "It still sucks, man." "No, no!" "Richie, that was Ste vie Wonder!" "I was standing here." "H e be came Ste vie Wonder!" "But I'm not married to this guy." "I got another fella... you would swear..." "he is Smoke y Robinson."