Friday, January 16, 2009

ABC had the idea, and the guts to give America its first animated prime-timer. What a yabba dabba deal!





It is a sitcom that needs no introduction. The Flinstones carved their place in the stone of history in 1960. ABC decided to take a risk and give us the first animated series aimed primarily at adults and we've loved it ever since.


Beginning with the third season it was also the first ABC series to be aired in color. The first two seasons were later colorized to match the others. (Sad, but true). Another change that I just found out about recently involved advertising. In the first two seasons during the ending sequence the camera would zoom into the window of Fred and Wilma's home to reveal Fred relaxing in front of the TV and lighting up a cigarette. Winston was a sponsor and Fred would be heard singing the Winston jingle "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should."


These scenes were later reanimated to the way it is today. By the way, for those of us not old enough to remember cigarette ads, this practice was NOT uncommon for that time period. MOST shows that had a cigarette company as a sponsor would have the actors themselves doing an on camera bit touting the cigarette's qualities. Ha.


One of the most memorable bits seen in most every episode was the practice of using animals for technology. Here are a few examples found on Wikipedia.


a baby woolly mammoth being used as a vacuum cleaner
An adult wolly mammoth would act as a shower by spraying water with its trunk
Lifts are raised and lowered by ropes around brontosaurs' necks
"automatic" windows are powered by monkeys that dwell on the outside windowsill
birds configured as "Ryan Coombes" are activated by pulling on their tails
An electric razor is depicted as a clam shell housing a honey-bee vibrating it as the edges are rubbed against the character's face.

It has remained one of the most, if not THE most enduring cartoons of our time. One of the reasons for its success is the voice actors. Alan Reed provided the voice of Fred and some say that Fred physically resembled Reed. Barney was characterized by the most famous cartoon voice of all time, Mel Blanc. However, if some of you remember a high pitched Barney voice in some of the early episodes you may think another actor did the voice but that's not the case. Blanc changed his voice to the Barney we know and love after only a few episodes. Some say it was to imitate the Art Carney voice of Ed Norton from The Honeymooners. In a 1980's interview with Jackie Gleason, Gleason said he had considered suing Hanna Barbera over the issue but decided not to be referred to as the guy who sued Fred Flintstone. You see Alan Reed had done voice overs for Gleason in the early days and could imitate him like no one else. Boy, I'll say. For years I thought the entire series was an animated Honeymooners...and I guess it evolved to being just that.

By the way, Mel Blank did all but 5 episodes in the 2nd season when he nearly died in a car crash. Hanna Barbera called in the talents of one of their regular voice actors Daws Butler. But his fame was short lived as the entire cast went to Blanc's bedside with a full recording studio so Blanc could voice the episodes.

The Flintstones only ran from 1960 to 1966 but I think its safe to say that it has probably never been off the air since its first run. Oh and if you need a little extra Bedrock trivia ask your friends who voiced that little green alien that drove Fred and Barney crazy when he showed up. The answer: The Great Gazoo was voiced by Carol Burnette regular, Harvey Korman. Who knew.
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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

NOTE: CHANGE IN TIME THIS SUNDAY

PROGRAMMING NOTE: PLEASE REMEMBER THE CHANGE IN TIME FOR THIS WEEKS LIVE TAPING. WE HAVE MOVED FROM 7PM EST TO 6PM. BUT ONLY FOR THIS WEEK. WE HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!

Khan, Cordobas and...Class. The death of an icon.


I was extremely sad to find out that Ricardo Montalban died today at the age of 88. I remember vividly those Saturday nights watching Mr. Rourke say "smiles, smiles, everyone!"
He was a part of my childhood AND later by way of Star Trek movies, my adolescence. Remember, "revenge is a dish best served cold!"
I found the most complete report of his life on, of all places, Bloomberg.com. They did such a great job, filled with factoids, that I had to copy it here. Read on. You will love it. It does Ricardo justice.

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Ricardo Montalban, the Mexican-born actor whose regal bearing and sonorous voice led to roles as a science-fiction villain, the host on the mysterious “Fantasy Island” and pitchman for the “soft Corinthian leather” of the Chrysler Cordoba, has died. He was 88.
Montalban died at his home in Los Angeles, the Associated Press reported today, citing City Council President
Eric Garcetti. No cause or date of death was given.
Though he appeared in movies with stars such as
Esther Williams, Lana Turner and Shirley MacLaine, Montalban said Hollywood wasn’t willing to make full use of a Latin-American actor. He once tried out for a part of a Mexican, only to lose out to American actor John Garfield.
So Montalban turned to television, starting with the live dramas of the 1950s that many actors shied away from. New Yorker magazine film critic
Pauline Kael called Montalban “one of those potentially major actors who never got the roles that might have made them movie stars.”
Montalban was perhaps best known for his portrayal of the character Khan Noonian Singh, a genetically engineered, tyrannical super-human introduced in a 1967 episode of “Star Trek” that ended with the space ship USS Enterprise depositing Khan and his followers on an inhospitable planet. The plotline resumed 15 years later in the
movie “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” (1982), with Montalban’s character seeking vengeance.
Getting Noticed
In 1974, Montalban played the title role in
George Bernard Shaw’s “Don Juan in Hell” on a six-month national tour after two-dozen performances on Broadway. In Detroit, his performance drew the interest of executives at Chrysler Corp., which was about to unveil a new car with a Spanish name: the Cordoba.
In television advertisements for the car, Montalban extolled the “tastefulness of its appearance” and the “thickly cushioned luxury of seats available even in soft Corinthian leather.”
The phrase “Corinthian leather,” which rolled off Montalban’s tongue, had been made up by copy writers at Young & Rubicam, Adweek later reported. No matter: it became a popular line, widely imitated and parodied.
Montalban worked with Chrysler for 15 years, hawking other luxury models including the LeBaron and the New Yorker.
Aaron Spelling, the prolific TV producer whose creations dominated ABC prime time in the 1970s and early 1980s, saw the Cordoba commercial and thought of Montalban for a new show about an island that lets visitors live out a lifelong dream.
Dreams Fulfilled
As Mr. Roarke, the white-suited superintendent of “
Fantasy Island,” Montalban oversaw the fulfillment of the dreams, urging his staff to welcome each week’s visitors with “smiles, everyone, smiles!”
Though Roarke’s powers were never explained, Montalban said he came up with a theory that informed his portrayal.
“I decided this man was an angel that still had a little bit of sin of pride in him -- too proud,” Montalban said in a 2002
interview with the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Foundation. In this view, Roarke was in charge of purgatory, “where people go through tests, and some of them go for the better, and some for the worse.”
The series ran from 1978 to 1984 and cemented Montalban’s reputation as a congenial and cooperative star.
“Working with Ricardo was a joy,” Spelling, who died in 2006, wrote in “
Aaron Spelling: A Prime-Time Life,” his 1996 memoir. “Ricardo made good scripts better and not-so-good scripts work. I don’t remember him ever doing any rewrites. He set a perfect example for the rest of the cast.”
Early Frustration
Ricardo Gonzalo Pedro Montalban Merino was born Nov. 25, 1920, in Mexico City. His parents had emigrated from northern Spain so Montalban’s father could take a job running a store. After a few years the family settled in Torreon, in northern Mexico.
Montalban moved in with an older brother in Los Angeles to attend high school. There, he got the acting bug after landing the lead in a school play.
After moving to New York, he appeared on stage and in the short musical films known as “soundies.” Frustrated after losing the part of a Mexican to Garfield in “
Tortilla Flat” (1942), he returned to Mexico.
Leaving the U.S. behind, he recalled feeling, “I have no chance in this country. They don’t write for Mexicans.”
He made 13 films in four years and became a star in his native country, then was rediscovered by Hollywood when Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer went on location in Mexico to film the Esther Williams matador movie “
Fiesta” (1947). In an improbable pairing, given their different accents and appearances, he and Williams were cast as twins.
Leading Man
Signed by MGM, Montalban played twice more opposite Williams, as her fiance in “On an Island With You” (1948) and as the Argentinian polo player who wins her heart in “
Neptune’s Daughter” (1949). In that film they sang “Baby, It’s Cold Outside,” which won Frank Loesser an Academy Award for best original score.
Montalban also played a wealthy Brazilian who charms Lana Turner in “Latin Lovers” (1953).
After MGM chose not to renew his contract, Montalban turned to television, appearing in episodes of live drama shows including “Ford Television Theatre” and “Playhouse 90.”
He would go on to appear in movies including the John Ford- directed western “Cheyenne Autumn” (1964), “Madame X” (1966) with Lana Turner and
John Forsythe, “Sweet Charity” (1969) and “The Naked Gun” (1988).
His biggest TV role after “Fantasy Island” was as Zach Powers on “
The Colbys,” the Spelling-produced “Dynasty” spinoff that aired on ABC from 1985-87. Montalban played a scheming business rival of the Colby clan.
Awards, Recognition
Montalban won an Emmy award for outstanding supporting actor playing a Sioux Indian leader in “How the West Was Won” (1978), a television mini-series. The Screen Actors Guild gave him a lifetime achievement award in 1993.
He founded
Nosotros, a Hollywood-based nonprofit that trains and supports Latino actors. The group bought and renovated a theater, which opened in 2004.
Montalban’s brother Carlos played a Latin American dictator in
Woody Allen’s “Bananas” (1971) and appeared as El Exigente in TV commercials for Savarin coffee.
Montalban’s wife of more than 60 years, Georgiana, a half- sister of film star
Loretta Young, died in 2007. They had four children: Mark, Victor, Laura and Anita.


Sunday, January 11, 2009

MUST SEE TRIVIA SITES!


I stumbled upon a blog recently that I absolutely loved. Check out the Pop Culture Dish! It is a must read for trivia buffs. Especially the Tuesday trivia. Test your knowledge of Pop Culture every week. The posts are awesome! They are filled with information that makes a trivia king's day! Its hard to find good trivia sites these days but this will keep you ruling the watercooler for quite sometime.


Another site I love is the site for the magazine Mental Floss. Incredible trivia on every subject. Often times we find trivia sites that dedicate themselves to only a few topics but this site is full of clever, witty and intelligent writing. Even though I am a University of North Carolina grad and this site is run by some Duke University grads...I have to give them props!! Ha Ha!!
AND if you want to see the craziest, smartest, most outlandish set of blog sites dedicated to all things yeateryear than go to Pop Art Diva's world!! That's all I can say...there aren't words to express the blog-glomerate she has created.


You can check out these sites here. Pop Culture Dish , Mental Floss and Pop Art Diva.