Le Show; 1993-06-27
- Transcript
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the beginning of the second half of the year. Isn't that correct? Yes, I believe it is. And so it's time to just wrap up some loose ends before we move on. We must move on. But before we do, just a couple of notes, first of all, about the now concluded NBA playoffs. I had a theory, you see, as to why it was, it was proving so difficult for the Chicago Bulls to dispose, dispense with the Phoenix, the pesky, Phoenix Suns. And it was, it was basically a personnel matter. It had nothing to do with the fact that Horace and Scotty and Scott Williams and Stacy King and Will Purdue and Darryl Walker and can't shoot. It was, it was more inside than that. You see, you may recall, there used to be a gentleman associated with the Chicago broadcast
of this program who earned the sober K Curtis, the butcher for his ability to edit out of the broadcast, the crucial, some would say funny parts, and it came to my attention no two, three weeks ago that Curtis, the butcher, had left WG and Chicago and had taken a job with the Chicago Bulls. And so I immediately assumed that Curtis was editing out about 10 or 12 points out of each game of theirs and so it, but obviously he had game six off. So I would watch out for that if you're concerned about the Bulls' future. Also this, this, this six month ended most recently with the revelation that that Pepsi diet Pepsi scare turned out to be pretty much a total and complete hoax, just like the Pepsi
people said, uh-huh, whoops, I owe them more money than Pat Riley's going to get for three feet, whoops, first of all, you know, just amazing that the Pepsi people were telling the truth, but it turned out that it was in fact a horrible hoax, which became painfully obvious when the Pepsi people received a report from his vacation home somewhere that Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas had bought a Canada diet Pepsi and reported finding a pubic hair inside that really capped it for them. We're going to look back at the first half of what year is this 1993 and also some news, some, some new conversation segments from beauty contests around the country. Yes, it's all here on Hello, welcome to the show. We're going to look back at the first half of what year is this 1993 and we're going to look back at the first half of what year is this 1993 and we're going to look back
at the first half of what year is this 1993 and we're going to look back at the first half of what year is this 1998 and we're going to look back at the first half of what year is this 1993 and we're going to look back at the first half of what year is this need The evil I can't tell you what's really in my heart I wanna tell that I love you, but I don't even know you I can't tell you I lusty so I keep it to myself
I don't wanna be bad, but I can't help it I don't wanna be bad, but I can't think straight I don't wanna be bad, and I'm making it easy I want you so much I'm ashamed of myself I want you so much I'm ashamed of myself There isn't a way that you could kiss me That I haven't already imagined
There isn't a way that you could touch me That you haven't just by looking in my eyes I don't wanna be bad, but I can't help it I don't wanna be bad, but I can't think straight I don't wanna be bad, and I'm making it easy I want you so much I'm ashamed of myself I don't wanna be bad, but I can't help it I don't wanna be bad, but I can't think straight I don't wanna be bad, and I'm making it easy I want you so much I'm ashamed of myself I want you so much I'm ashamed of myself Yeah, I want you so much I'm ashamed of myself I don't want you so much I'm ashamed of myself Life is a merry merry go round
Try to learn the secrets I have found Free and easy and free That's the way it's got to be I saw the morning covered with care Suddenly my mind said, no despair Free and easy and free That's the way it's got to be Once I was so inclined to take life so seriously But I'm glad to find there's a brand new feeling Throw on your fears and doubts down the drain Not to see a sky where there's no rain
Free and easy and free That's the way it's got to be Once I was so inclined to take life so seriously But I'm glad to find there's a brand new feeling Throw on your fears and doubts down the drain
You're seeing a sky where there's no rain Free and easy and free That's the way it's got to be Free and easy and free It's early in the morning soon be a new day dawning Still I'm wide awake It's not about a lot of mountains on you If it were I'd know just what to take
Know this is something I've got to face It's a sad, sad and very sorry case Oh, blah, blah I never thought I'd be counting sheep Losing the sleep and all that I thought I was a real cool kid in fact I never thought I'd be sorry I can't decide where I'm at
I thought I was a cooler candidate Well, you putting it down Like I wasn't even there What a crown You made me look square I never thought I'd be bugged by you But guess who hit the man? Girl, I thought I was some kind of acrobatic cat Well, you put me on, no, no, no, no, no
Like I didn't have a clue You were long gone Way before I knew I never thought I would flip my lid But I did hold my hand I thought I was a real cool kid With a control of a famous dad My heart goes To the path where you call When I guess I'm not a cool kid
After all I never wait down here about rolling fuck Like a dog Oh! Well, congratulations to the Skoggle Bulls You know, ladies and gentlemen, I had some difficulty And figuring out, oh, this is the show, isn't it? The computer is down, but I think it is I had just a little, I have to confess now I had a little bit of difficulty When people said, well, who are you rooting for really in the NBA finals? Now, as I was advised last week by the head of the Midwest Desk, of course, more people hear this program in Chicago than could ever hear it in Phoenix Because it's not carried in Phoenix So they're right away, it would be rooting interest, you'd think And, of course, Michael Jordan is the best basketball player Whoever have lost a million dollars At the golf course
But, you know, there was a part of me that thought, well, yeah But Phoenix really, as a team, quite team Maybe is a better team Just as a team, as a team concept kind of a deal And also, I felt, well, Charles really Maybe should get the championship this year Just so we'd shut up So I really had a great difficulty in coming down to it And deciding who to pull for And as I watched the final game I was being pulled this way in that And, of course, in the first half of the fourth quarter When neither of them could score I was being pulled out the door But it occurred to me only after the game won A game was over, and Chicago won That I really was happy And I realized the reason why It's because a good friend of Phoenix coach Paul Westfall Is Rush Limbaugh
You know, you pick your reasons This term, you may know, three-peat That is being emblazoned on all sorts of souvenirs now Pat Riley, New York Nick Coach Actually stands to make more money from the Chicago Bulls Winning the championship than he would have had the Nick's one Because Pat Riley, back when he was a Laker coach Had the foresight after the Lakers had won two championships Two trademarked the word three-peat So he's getting a lot of money right now I personally, and he also trademarked four word F-O-U-R Pretty lame, never gonna happen I suggest four-fit Send the money here Speaking of copyrights and lawsuits And I will sue you ladies and gentlemen Four-fit is mine But you get into that game and you never know how long it's gonna last Case in point, probably the only place that he's now well known Singer, songwriter, John Fogarty
Once ahead of this very famous band Readance Clearwater Revival Probably the best known he is now is in court John Fogarty's effort to be reimbursed for the legal fees he spent Defending himself against a copyright lawsuit Will be used by the U.S. Supreme Court to decide whether Winning defendants and copyright suits May collect attorney fees from losing plaintiffs Even if the lawsuits are not found to have been frivolous Or filed in bad faith Supreme Court has agreed to hear Fogarty's case Which stemmed from a lawsuit by a music publisher's fantasy Incorporated See anybody who knows anything about the show business If you read any of the show business trades Yes, there are deals announced But the main thing that are announced Unless you have to be working for MCA Are lawsuits So fantasy sued Fogarty over his 1985 song The Old Man Down the Road
Which fantasy had alleged was a copy of an earlier song Run through the jungle that Fogarty had sold to fantasy Fogarty won the trial in 1989 But both a federal trial judge And the court of appeals Turned down his request that fantasy Pay his attorney's fees The Supreme Court decision Remember this started back in 1985 The Supreme Court decision is expected In 1994 That's already true He saved me on all the songs And now that you left on the shelf I say who can you steal from
If you can't steal from yourself Better run from the court mood Better get out of town Better run from the court mood And get out from under the shadow of a doubt I used to work for the man And bought a nothing but slime And so I rewrote the song And after ten years time And I was written in again And picked her to tell you this and tell her Oh, what's it gonna do? Put me in small rock jail Let her run from the court room And get out of town
Oh, let her run from the court room And get out from under the shadow of a doubt You got your one more trick bonus You got your doctor's to respect your lies And diseases of the kickin' ass And the failures of the eyes You got a strong emotion to get You just become one of the moon All I can do is keep me writing this to you And better run from the court room Better get out of town And better run from the court room And get out from under the shadow of a doubt You got your one more trick bonus
You got your one more trick bonus Overclock at night You walk out of town You told me, baby You were going to the drugstore But I in my mind I knew you was lying The drugstore clothes out of quarter nine And there's all you gizzin' with it Of all the best I heard you tellin' Willie I don't have no sense I'm a way you's an actor It's such a tragedy
Put me in a trick bag When I come home You thought an argument Just to keep me from asking Where my foos and where Walkin' the front door I hear the back door slam She bought my windows Somebody is diggin' it on a lamp But I saw you gizzin' with it Of all the best I heard you tellin' Willie I don't have no sense Where you're an actor It's such a tragedy Put me in a trick bag We had a fight Then you got mad Got on the tail of the phone Oh, you're my man It's him who runnin' down With the bat in their hands
Don't you hear a no more You understand? I thought gizzin' with it Of all the best I heard you tellin' Willie I don't have no sense Where you's an actor It's such a tragedy Put me in a trick bag You can give me a wrong But I know I'm right It wasn't I That started the fight She's my daughter And I'm the boss You bring nothin' I bought a sonny long But I thought gizzin' with it Of all the best I heard you tellin' Willie I don't have no sense Where you're an actor It's such a tragedy Put me in a trick bag Got to clean that needle
Ladies, gentlemen A couple of weeks ago this program brought you the Conversation segment They like to call it the evening gown segment But I think it deserves a little more seriousness than that From the Miss Kansas Beauty pageant Pageant Excuse me And one can People who live especially in Los Angeles and New York Always are making NVIDIA's comparisons about those who live in the inner portions of this great and spacious country of ours So to broaden the dialogue on the serious subjects of the day in no other way geographically it's my pleasure today to present the Conversation segment from the 1993 Miss Louisiana Pageant Yes, it's serious But it's spicy This portion of the competition counts 15% of the score
So let's begin with Miss Northwestern lady of the bracelet Melissa Lee Mayboo Melissa, why do you think parents abuse their children? That is a very good question and I'd like to answer it with I believe abuse of parents will probably abuse themselves as children And unfortunately it is a generation to generation carried down obstacle that we must overcome by education and public eye Thank you Invitation Faith Hunter Faith in your opinion how can people be made more tolerant of those with special problems such as hemophilia Well I feel that the main way that they can feel more tolerant is if they learn more about hemophilia or any other disorder that people may have You must realize that hemophilia acts in other people have feelings and they care about one another but they also care about you And I truly believe that in a compassionate
well-educated society we will be able to succeed especially those with disorders Miss Independence Bowl Tiffany Mock In your opinion how can you motivate others to seek success? Well the first thing that you have to do in order to motivate someone to seek success is to get them to try The main problem that young people have today is that they have a fear of failing to try because they are afraid that if they do they are not going to succeed What we have got to show them is that you have got to try first before you can ever accomplish anything and when you first try then you are on the road to success Miss Blanchard Cook Salad Francis Marrow Why do you think the teenage suicide is on the rise? I believe that in this society we have become so goal-oriented that we have forgotten to include our young people in those goals We have gotten into such a fast-paced society that we tend to forget those who need our help the most. We must teach our young people
to believe in themselves and that even if they don't achieve the highest that the parents want them to succeed if they don't achieve that then that's okay at least they did their best. We must teach them to do their best in all in all things. Miss Louisiana Sportsman Lisa Ho Lisa, why do you think that people are hesitant to practice recycling? First of all, the public is First of all, our public needs to be educated as to the difference that they can make whenever they recycle their materials. It seems like such a problem a hectic task and it's not. With each individual throwing away three and a half pounds of garbage per day with over 60% of those materials being recyclable materials they can make a difference. We need to think of it not as a chore but as a way of life. Miss Alexandria Metro Lisa Bunfiglio Why do you believe sex education should begin at an early age? Because at an early age
our children are naive and they are willing to trust anyone that is willing to give them time. We can protect our children by educating them about their small bodies that many adults in this world are out there to damage. Miss Oil Patch Festival Alicia Ruth Wrightzo What are your feelings on adoption records being opened so that adopted children can find their biological parents? As an adopted child I feel that open records are very important. But on the other hand the mother has a right to privacy. Therefore there are certain organizations that let you register your name as an adopted child and as a mother. So when the adopted child registers her name and the mother does then they are they are joined together. Thank you. Miss Flight Out, Pamela Hiko. How do you believe that underperplaged children can be brought more into the mainstream of society? Well I think that there's a lot of children out there who are affected by social ills,
dysfunctional families and just a whole variety of things. I have a negative outlook on life. But the big buddy program is a way that you can reach out there and provide positive role models to these children. I think that there's a lot of children out there who are affected by social ills, dysfunctional families and just a whole variety of things. And I think that I need to expand this project to more areas so I can reach out to more of these affected children and help parents provide more functional home environments for them. Thank you. And now a word from our sponsors. Well, we'll skip the words from our sponsors. We've heard enough serious talk for one day. Ladies and gentlemen, there's a lot of speculation that television mass media are homogenizing this country and removing regional differences. But I ask you just to imagine what your reaction would be if, let's say your daughter came home and said, mom, dad, I'm Miss Oil Patch. See, it really does very. And for those of you who've come in late,
beauty pageants are the closest thing we have in this country to the Eurovision song contest. Music Let's sustain on my notebook where the coffee cup was. Unless I share the pages that I've got myself lost. I was writing to tell you that my feelings tonight. I'll restate on my notebook that brings your goodbye. Oh, now she's gone. And I'm back on the beat.
A stain on my notebook says nothing to me. Oh, now she's gone. And I'm out with her friend. I'm with her friend. Music On the end of the joy of the pain Joy of the pain Now knowing I'm single, there'll be fire in my eyes Fire in my eyes
I'll stay, I'm a notful for her new love tonight You love me now Oh, now she's gone And I'm back on the beat I spain on my notful Says nothing to me Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend I'm with her friend With lips for passion Coming in there Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend I'm with her friend
With lips for passion Coming in there Coffee in there Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend With lips for passion Coming in there Oh, now she's gone And I'm back on the beat
Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend With lips for passion Coming in there Oh, now she's gone And I'm back on the beat I'm with her friend With lips for passion Coming in there Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend With lips for passion Coming in there
Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend With lips for passion Coming in there Oh, now she's gone But I'm out with her friend From CPR Continental Public Radio This is Bookbag Bookbag, a weekly chit and chat
With the people who put the words on the pages between the covers that sit on the shelves and the stores That sell books I'm a Vibish Lerman I'm a Tosaire Zipkin More than the robins and the cherry blossoms are even the appearance in the butcher shops of succulent young lamb The advent of spring in America is signaled with the calling of those two legendary monosyllables Play ball And the Return of Baseball means another book By the unofficial bar to baseball the author of the Games of Summer And the baseball writer for the Atlantic Monthly Robert Bloom Welcome back to Bookbag Thank you for bringing spring with you Thanks, Aviva It took a lot of space in my luggage but it was worth it Before we get to the new book, Bob What does baseball mean to you? Why has it become? If you will, you're nine innings muse Aviva, it's become commonplace to say that the game is a metaphor What I think is more interesting and closer to the truth
Is that baseball is a metaphor for a metaphor A game enclosed in space but not in time The lines in the field but no clog Exactly, the symbiotic twinning of continuity and renewal The game exists as a paradigm of itself Very often I'll spend a couple of hours at the ballpark and most of that time I'll be sitting there with my eyes closed because it's not so much the event I want to experience as the intimations of the event Also, of course, I bring along a little portable radio Just to keep that Well, yes, and also I've become more engrossed with the play by play It's self as its own art form Robert, if the game is as you probably have written a great painting Then the play by play is a charcoal drawing of that painting, wouldn't it? I don't think I did write that Then I must, Bob, your new book takes you away from the diamond that's a man's best friend, doesn't it? That's right, a book is called Clean Up
And it's the culmination of my six months on the baseball arbitration circuit Now, of course, clean up and I must confess I come by all my baseball knowledge from your books and from watching bang the drum slowly But doesn't clean up refer to the fourth spot in the batting order An ordinary usage, sure. I'm using it to refer to the fact that these people and their clients are, in fact, cleaning up I.e. making, in some cases, incredible sums of money As this season approached, there was all a talk about possibilities of strikes and lockouts I thought it might be time to get a feel for the machinations in the boardrooms and conference rooms The players seemed to be spending more of their time in salary and contract arbitrations with the owners Also, it was something to do during the off-season besides going to the office Robert Reedus and Exit, take us into that world with you, could you? No, absolutely. This was one of the first arbitrations in minor league baseball Mike Sandefur was a pitcher with the Carolina Tars as a team owned by one of the tobacco companies
And he had a contract renegotiations claim against the team. Good left hand, they're a very promising player This is the morning of the day he was going to testify at his own arbitration There were kids playing at being lawyers that day There were boys somewhere in the great city Dramatically placing bulging, make-believe briefcases down on shiny make-believe conference tables Preparing to penetrate through their playmates testimony with tricky questions Interrogations more full of spin and spit and unpredictable contortions than a white Wilhelm Nuckler Was there something of them, those kids in the boyish face of Sandefur's attorney Brian Sloan? Sandefur, the great arm sheathed in a sleeve of mid-weight worsted, set back in his leather armchair Thinking, perhaps, of pitches not yet thrown, of hours in the whirlpool bath, not yet spent
The conference table polished to a bright parody of itself, glowed, with the reflections of vivid it looked like an all-too-instant replay It's clarity mocking in a quiet way, the confusion that was about to rage across the table smooth mahogany even their surface The arbitrator's traditional utterance, all right gentlemen, I guess we're all here Hung in the air like the smell of the burning leaves outside, spring was just a memory of a memory Arbitration season had begun again Memory of a memory, Robert, what happened in the Sandefur arbitration? As I recall, the kid wanted a two-year guaranteed contract which is unheard of in the minors He lost the case, and he's now down with Fargo into the cotal league, probably one of the more bittersweet cases I observed Robert, there's so much talk these days about the problems of baseball and it's almost become a litany of itself
After half a year of these disputes, do you feel optimistic about the future of the game? Well, Viva, as you know, I'm basically a pros-writer, but I think the best answer to your question is the verse epilogue I wrote for my new book, Clean Up Your pros is so verse-like already, please Maybe there's an office where no contracts in dispute Maybe the TV networks will still be paying out all that loot Maybe the new ball parks won't all look the same Maybe I'll still have my game Sushi and espresso will be replaced by hot dogs and coke, and the owners will stop trying to fix something that clearly isn't broke Hope will be a feeling that's worthy of the name Maybe I'll still have my game
Maybe Robert, I'd love to hear more if not all, but the clock is our empire and he's calling us out of balls Robert Bloom, good luck with Clean Up, as with baseball itself, we'll see you next year Thanks, Viva Next week another visit to the wondrous world between the acknowledgments and the index on Bookbag Bookbag is produced with help from a grant from the retail foundation reminding you that without stores there'd be no shopping I'm a Viva Schlormann for Ira Zipkin, climbing out of the Bookbag This is CPR, continental public radio Late one night when the wind was still
Daddy brought the baby to the window sill To see a bit of heaven shoot across the sky The one and only time daddy saw it fly It came from the east just as bright as a torch The neighbors had party on their porch Daddy rocked the baby mother, said, amen When Hallock came to visit in 1912 Back then Jackson was a real small town And it's not every night a comet comes around It was almost a day here since it's last time you threw
So I bet your mother would've said, amen too As it's tail stretched out like a star to streak The papers wrote about it every day for a win We wondered where it's going and where it's been When Hallock came to Jackson in 1910 I told the baby sleeping in his arms To dream a little dream of a comet's charm And he made a little wish and she slept so sound In 1986 that a wish came around It came from the east just as bright as a torch
She saw it in the sky from her daddy's porch The seven listen as it was back then When Hallock came to Jackson in 1910 Late one night when the wind was still From CPR cutting in the public radio This is Ant Loggerheads A discussion of a topic of public importance from two distinctly opposite points of view Today, what if anything should the United States do about Bosnia? On the right, TV producer and host Alan Thig On the left, movie director Gary Marshall
Alan, there's two beats we haven't nailed down yet And this whole Bosnia thing was going on over there It's like important to us because ethnic hatred is like laughter It's an infectious thing Why is it our problem when everyone else stays away from it like it's one of Ralph Cramden's business ideas? The same reason when they need someone to do the charity pitches They don't go to the star of the number 70 show They go to star number one unless it's Rosanne We're the number one country And keeping little wars from becoming big ones It's the kind of thing the number one countries do for a living When you get 17 writers at the table Everybody's pitching garbage You don't throw your arms in the air and say Hey, if no one else can score, I'm not even going to try Alan, the UN is like a family Except right now it's more like the fiendies than the defazios We need leadership You know, that's like funny You can't teach it
But you know it when you got it After all this time, the only thing that can stop the Serbs Is if you give them a big ooo Ooo, what if we get bombed? What if the Bosnians get some guns? Look, Alan, the United States doesn't have to do it all The British and the French They can come in and do little thing But in comedy or anything else, you want a big blow off Somebody's got to lay the pipe If Uncle Sam doesn't look like the plumber Put a hat on him Alan Gary, I've been in show business virtually all my life I didn't understand half of that Bosnia is an impossible situation It's like a Canada where no one speaks English Getting U.S. troops involved would be the... What the dummer I did and howard the duck And that involvement wouldn't be a mini-series like Somalia This thing could take longer than heaven's gate The trouble is U.S. intervention has already gotten as much hype as my old talk show So yes, we've got our prestige on the line But when's the last time anyone walked out humming the prestige? Is that recall Bill Clinton didn't win the election Promising to put U.S. troops in places only the guys on the McLaughlin group had heard of?
Now sure, things happen that a president has no control over But this would be a bigger mistake than casting glory or lowering in growing pains The cure for seeing unpleasant network news pictures of dinner time isn't sending troops The cure is turning the dial and enjoying something syndicated Gary, the Europeans and the Arabs all have a bigger stake and a peaceful settlement over there than we do But right now American policy is more confused than the second season of Twin Peaks Let's put this thing in a turnaround before it spoils our summer From the right, I'm out in thick From the left, I'm Gary Marshall and we both know one thing It's always a kick to be at Luggerheads And Luggerheads is produced with the assistance of a grant from the show business foundation Left and right designations for purposes of identification only Next time, another controversy gets symmetrically blindsided on at Luggerheads I'm a Rezipkin
This is CPR, cut and it'll probably radio I'll call you a fool You were kissed by a witch one night in the world And later insisted your feelings were true So it just promised what was coming Believing he listened while laughing you blew
Least spotting ready at the brown all of a sudden And the love you had found lay outside in the rain A wash queen by the water button nursing his pain The witch's promise was coming Can you look in as rare fire on selfish gain I keep loving, I keep looking for some where to be
Have you wasting your time that I'll skewer like this Everybody is still falling, you're too blind to see You won't find it easy now, it's only for you Keep us willing to look into you, you didn't understand You're waiting for our good you've already had your share The witch's promise is turning So don't you wait up ahead, it's going to be late But now wait a minute, that doesn't look stiff at all
No, it doesn't And yet there's no alcohol in it Not a drop That must be some kind of a breakthrough type thing It sure is George Bush joins TV's most excited women, Cher and Laurie Davis, the Big Fat Hair Lady I guess I shouldn't say this out of school, Argentina, but Barr does silver up her hair a little bit Well, my new six and one spray list spray would be perfect for her Hey, it'd even be good for me The next president joins the growing list of celebrities who just can't help loving Laurie and her amazing products See it for yourself all this month on the channel near you that needs fast cash Ladies and gentlemen, Jim, you've heard of him
He's part of this whole family feeling that we have here at the show Jim stands at the, well, he sits at the ready to make your personal cassette copy of this or any other Lesho broadcasts all he needs, all he wants really Is your love and a check made up to century of progress productions for $15 Plus the date of the show, the copy of which you desire That just saves Jim the job of guessing He has to ride the bus, that's tough enough, ladies and gentlemen, send your request and your check to Jim Care of Lesho in 1900 Pico, P.S. P.I.C. O. Boulevard, Santa Monica, California 90405 This is California wins this program, originates
State-ledges ledger passed a budget this week by which the state grabs about Oh, you know, give or take $2 billion in property taxes from local government We said a little government are saying, well, we're going to have to close some schools and some prisons and some libraries And most interestingly, some parks Leaving, I guess, open for the moment the question of how do you close a park? What is he? Just kick the homeless people out and figure that's, you've done the job? Stay tuned Ladies and gentlemen, I'm going to go out and, I don't know, maybe inhale some second hand tobacco smoke
It seems to be good for you now, according to the lawsuit filed this week by the tobacco industry I'm going to take their word for it and just breathe in deeply That concludes this edition of Lesho, we've looked back at the first half of 1993 sporadically Next week, of course, whatever the first week of the second half, hello of 1993 brings us Why? We'll be under the radiophonic microscope of this program that is to say it'll return At the same time over these same stations from Manhattan to Honolulu It would tickle my ticker if you'd be with me then, would you? All right, thank you very much
Lesho comes to you from century of progress productions that originates through the facilities of SaaS Light Service of KCRW Santa Monica, a community recognized around the world as the home of the homeless Thank you very much
- Series
- Le Show
- Episode
- 1993-06-27
- Producing Organization
- Century of Progress Productions
- Contributing Organization
- Century of Progress Productions (Santa Monica, California)
- AAPB ID
- cpb-aacip-ba9ba6b6ec5
If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip-ba9ba6b6ec5).
- Description
- Segment Description
- 20. "Get Out of the Courtroom" (John Fogerty song) | 21. 1993 Miss Louisiana Pageant | 22. Bookbag: Bloom on Baseball -- Clean-Up | 23. At Loggerheads: Garry Marshall & Alan Thicke
- Broadcast Date
- 1993-06-27
- Asset type
- Episode
- Media type
- Sound
- Duration
- 00:59:30.677
- Credits
-
-
Host:
Shearer, Harry
Producing Organization: Century of Progress Productions
Writer: Shearer, Harry
- AAPB Contributor Holdings
-
Century of Progress Productions
Identifier: cpb-aacip-6f1c4e80bd3 (Filename)
Format: DAT
If you have a copy of this asset and would like us to add it to our catalog, please contact us.
- Citations
- Chicago: “Le Show; 1993-06-27,” 1993-06-27, Century of Progress Productions, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed May 19, 2026, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-ba9ba6b6ec5.
- MLA: “Le Show; 1993-06-27.” 1993-06-27. Century of Progress Productions, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. May 19, 2026. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-ba9ba6b6ec5>.
- APA: Le Show; 1993-06-27. Boston, MA: Century of Progress Productions, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-ba9ba6b6ec5