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October 28, 2009

Ghoulardi (VIDEO) STAY SICK! ERNIE ANDERSON with baby-PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON (PTA) That's Right! Boogie Nights, Magnolia...










Ghoulardi (VIDEO) STAY SICK! ERNIE ANDERSON with baby-PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON (PTA) That's Right! Boogie Nights, Magnolia...





ERNIE ANDERSON
The Legendary Voice

of

TV
Radio
Commercials
&

Film





Everybody Knows Who Plays the Most Music
Put it on, leave it on!
Lock it in and rip the knob off
Lock it in and jerk your knob off
Turn it up, write it down
Rockne' at the speed of light
Broadcasting live...
On the air, everywhere
Don't leave home without it
At home, at work or in the car
Hot Hits
This is real radio
No pain, all gain
Air conditioned radio
Any Questions?
Made in America
Rockne' & realign' and Anacin' on the Celina'
If it's too loud, too bad - you're too old!
How do you spell today's best music
Today's best music
Think about it!
Hotter than hot
Turn up the best station when you want to hear today's best music
Now, more of what we're famous for
The hits just keep on comin'
All the other guys are a bunch of weenies!

Section B: Sweepers

Line
More back to back hot hits
More variety, less repetition, so you can listen longer
Back to back, MONSTER hits
The radio station so hot it's cool
Who really plays the most music
Are you sitting down?
Faster than the speed of sound
Grab hold of your radio
More music - less talk, awesome!
More music, less talk, more variety - awesome!
Stronger than dirt
Your station
It's not the size, it's the frequency
Move over rover and let the big dogs eat
What radio station are you listening to right now?
jocking'
Hey, listen up, then turn it up!
(Ladies and) Gentlemen, start your engines (2 ways)
When we say it, we play it
Where the music keeps going and going and going
All hits, all the time
It's too good to be free
This is a full service station
Listen 2, 3, 4 times a day
Power hits
Superstars of the 70s, 80s & 90s
Stand by!
Put it on, and leave it on
One hell of a radio station



Section C: Music Quantity
Back to back, non-stop, commercial free
Now, back to the music
More continuous music, fewer commercials
Crank it up for more continuous music
Now, even more music than ever before
100 percent music, zero percent commercials
Now, it's time to shut up and play the music
The best music, more of your favorite songs back to back
We only stop the music twice an hour for commercials
30 minutes of continuous music, now playing
You're in the middle of 30 minutes of continuous music
Put those commercials away, we've got music to play
Miles of music, inches of commercials
Today's best music with fewer commercial interruptions
Sit back, we're plain' so much music, you radio's gonna explode!
That didn't take long, did it?
Always proving nobody plays more music
We're into an all night, nonstop, power play
Gives you the thrill of variety without the agony of repeat
Nobody plays more music
One hit after another
Hit after hit after hit... one right after another

Section D: Music
Best new music first
Fresh music
Fewer commercials, more music
Less talk, and the best music mix
Less repetition, more variety, fresh new music
Dance to the music
When you absolutely, positively have to hear your favorite song
Where you don't have to sit through this.. ..to get to this
New music exclusive
We can't stop it now - all we - can do - is slow -it - down
Set the first button on your car radio for more music
All kinds of music - one kind of radio station
Music you like without a cover charge
Now, here's another song you can only hear on (stun)
Music is our business and business is good
How do we get all this music inside your teeny weenie radio?
A better mix of music
Gammon' the hits
Always the hottest music
A fresh new music mix
More of the best music, back to back
The hottest music on the planet
A lot of music without a lot of talk
A better variety of music, so you can listen longer
It's your music, we just play it
Feel the music (feel good)
Who's still gammon' the hits?
A better music mix, less talk


ernie.jpg (13684 bytes)
Ernie Anderson
Ernie Anderson was born Nov. 12, 1923 in Lynn, Massachusetts & was destined to become one of the most famous & highest paid voice talents of the 20th century. He broke into radio at Burlington, Vermont's WSKI-AM in 1946. Later, he became the number one DJ in the Providence, Rhode Island market. After a stint in Albany, New York, he went to WHK-AM in Cleveland & met Tim Conway. Before Conway became famous, he wrote comedy for radio & TV host Malcom "Big" Wilson. Ernie (with Conway in tow & passing him off as a director) was hired by Cleveland's WJW-TV in 1961.They created "Ernie's Place", a daytime show of movies interlaced with comedy skits. Anderson, at the same time was a booth announcer & spokesman for Ohio Bell. So as not portray a conflict of interest, he started giving his dialog in "Beatnik" tones. He then donned a lab coat, fright wig, fake goatee & moustache. It was with this twist of fate Ernie created one of the legendary local TV show hosts, "Ghoulardi".
His Ghoulardi character became a staple for WJW-TV's Friday night horror movie show "Shock Threater.". "He was the original hippie." , said "Big" Chuck Schodowski, who later played Ghoulardi & would later create the "Big Chuck & Houlihan Show" for WJW-TV. "Ghoulardi" did not simply mock the grade-Z horror flicks, but would also superimpose himself on the screen, shouting to characters & joining the action. He riffed his way through host segments in a dimly lit studio, reading fan & hate mail, blowing up model cars with firecrackers, smoking cigarettes profusely, tossing rubber chickens & talking on an old-fashioned telephone.

ghoulardi.jpg (20759 bytes)
"Ghoulardi"


READ A WHOLE LOT MORE: INCLUDING ALL OF ANDERSON'S OBITS FROM TWO YEARS AGO AND MORE ON GHOULARDI AS A FATHER TO AWARD WINNING DIRECTOR
AND EX-BOYFRIEND OF MY IDEA OF HEAVEN, FIONA APPLE, PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON (PTA)




At the peak of his popularity, "Ghoulardi" commanded an astounding 56 percent share of the local TV audience, compared to Johnny Carson at 38 shares & Steve Allen at 6. With the highest local ratings beating national shows & making local appearances across Cleveland, Ernie, as "Ghoulardi" owned that market. Shortly after that, Rose Marie, best known as "Sally" on The Dick Van Dyke Show, promoted Conway to Steve Allen, who summoned Conway to Hollywood for his show. Back in Cleveland, Ernie's battles with management & corporate types became legendary. His on-air antics continued mercilessly until his departure for California in 1966, where he later appeared as an actor on the first two episodes of Conway's short-lived series "Rango" in 1967. Ernie & Conway then became a comedy act. They appeared together on "Hollywood Palace" & recorded two comedy albums together.
Later, Ernie would move on with Tim Conway & become the announcer for the Carol Burnett Show. In 1970, Ernie returned to Cleveland to tape a TV special & met up with Ron Sweed. Ron had worked with Ernie on Shock Theater & had produced WJW-TV's "Big Chuck & Houlihan" show. Sweed felt that the market needed Ghoulardi & asked Ernie if he could continue the character. After some hesitation, Ernie christened Sweed & "The Ghoul" was born. The Ghoul is still on today in Cleveland on WBMX-TV (WB 55).
At the end of the 1970's, ABC's then chief Program Director, Fred Silverman, decided to hire "the golden throat" as ABC's voice. Ernie Anderson's style & delivery set the precedent for network announcing. His voice was instantly recognizable when introducing spots for America�s Funniest Home Videos, The Winds of War, Roots, & of course, The Love Boat.
Ernie was involved with Paul's film career in many ways. In addition to narrating The Dirk Diggler Story, he helped Paul finance Cigarettes & Coffee with his college fund & appeared in Hard Eight.
Ernie Anderson passed away on February 6, 1997.
Paul Thomas Anderson named in his production company after his father's famous persona & continues to pay homage with sequences like "The Rahad Jackson Firecracker Scene" & character names such as Phil Parma. Others do the same as local Cleveland resident, Drew Carey wears a Ghoulardi shirt on his show from time to time.

Quotes from PTA

"As I got older," Paul Thomas Anderson said, "I kept thinking, 'What is this Ghoulardi thing? What is it? What? What?' We went back to Cleveland once when I was 14 and we were mobbed at the airport by people chanting 'Ghoulardi! Ghoulardi!' And when I do interviews anywhere in the country, constantly, constantly, people who are enamored of my father or who grew up with him bring him up or even thank me for Ghoulardi!" Toledo Blade - 1/24/00
My dad was one of the first guys on the block to have a VCR. So along with all the videotapes that I would rummage through, I would find porno movies. Not that it twisted me into some maniac or anything. I was watching porno from age 10 to 17. I had an interest in it. - Rough Cut Q & A - 10/97
He also thinks that his father would be proud of the films he's made after Hard Eight, the only one the elder Anderson saw because there is some thing personal about them.

"I think all three movies that I've made in roundabout ways reflected his (Ernie's) life in small, intimate, personal ways that I wouldn't want to reveal, but you can be sure that there's a lot of my Dad in these movies." - Akron Beacon Journal 




(November 12, 1923 – February 6, 1997)
 ERNIE ANDERSON
The Legendary voice of TV, Radio, Commercials & Film (& Ghoulardi)

was an American television and radio personality, voice announcer, actor and the father of film director Paul Thomas Anderson.

Born in Lynn, Massachusetts, Anderson became known as a television personality on a local Cleveland, Ohio TV show on Ernie's Place, where he collaborated with Tim Conway.

As the hipster character Ghoulardi, Anderson later hosted Shock Theater at WJW-TV in Cleveland, from 1963 through 1966. Shock Theater featured grade-“B” science fiction and horror movies. Shock Theater was aired in a Friday late-night time slot, but at the peak of Ghoulardi's popularity, Anderson also hosted the Saturday afternoon Masterpiece Theater, and the weekday children's program Laurel, Ghoulardi and Hardy.

In 1966, Anderson left Cleveland, and moved to Los Angeles, California, where he was heard throughout the United States as the voice of the American Broadcasting Company and various television stations across the country: "Eyewitness News...starts...NOW!"

Anderson died of cancer in Los Angeles on February 6, 1997, aged 73. Director Paul Thomas Anderson dedicated his 1997 film Boogie Nights to his memory. Similarly, a 1997 episode of The Drew Carey Show was also dedicated to his memory.


NEW YORK TIMES - February 2, 2004
Legendary Voice for Hire. No Live Gigs.


Before he was an announcer for ABC in the 1970's and 80's, known for the way he stretched out the "love" in "The Love Boat," Ernie Anderson was best known as Goldi, the host of a horror movie show that was a big television hit in Cleveland. Mr. Anderson died in 1997 at the age of 73, but since then his career has taken another spooky turn.
At www.ernieanderson.com, radio stations can hire Mr. Anderson's voice in the form of tag lines he recorded for use with station identifications and promotions. The 135 available clips include "This is real radio," "If it's too loud, you're too old" and "Broadcasting live." By paying a licensing fee of $2,000, stations can use 20 clips for a year.
The site is the creation of Adam L. Goodman of Weston, Conn., who also runs Vicinity.com, which promotes the services of living announcers.
Mr. Goodman said he set up Anderson.com five years ago with the cooperation of Mr. Anderson's agent, Rita Nari, and his family, who saw it as a way to honor his memory and to discourage unauthorized uses of his voice.
"This was one of those rare voice talents that had a sound that was so popular that it becomes a compliment" to keep it going, Mr. Goodman said. "He was the king of that industry."
Ms. Nari said she thought Mr. Anderson would have approved of the site. "Ernie would be laughing,'' she said. "He had a big sense of humor."
Several stations have used the clips, Mr. Goodman said, although the only current licensee is WHIZ, a Top 40 station in New York known as Z100.
A spokeswoman for Z100, Josefa Paganini, said that during the station's 20th anniversary celebrations last August, it used some classic bits that Mr. Anderson recorded for the station while he was alive, but that none were being broadcast now. "He's definitely part of the station's heritage," the spokeswoman said.
Until last week, the Web site included a form that stations could use to request customized lines, to be digitally assembled from bits of 20 years of recordings of Mr. Anderson. That service is no longer offered.
"We tried to jury-rig lines, but it never sounded right," Mr. Goodman said. "Most of the business was people asking for him to say stuff that he's never said before, which was impossible."






12 November 1923, Lynn, Massachusetts
Date of Death: 6 February 1997
Los Angeles, California, USA.
(cancer)

Ernie Anderson was born Nov. 12, 1923 in Lynn, Massachusetts.
Ron "The Ghoul" Sweed was later hired by Ernie as an assistant.



THE GHOULARDI LEGEND A new era in Cleveland television began on a cold Ohio night in January, 1963 back when everything on TV was in black and white. Ernie Anderson came on the air as the host of a late night horror movie presented as Shock Theater. The movie was … The show lasted until 1966 when Ernie Anderson left for fame and fortune in Hollywood. He became the voice of the ABC network. Although his voice could be heard doing promos for the “Love Boat” and miniseries like “Winds of War,” he was seldom seen. He showed up on a few PM Magazine segments and on the Carol Burnett show with his old friend Tim Conway. Ernie Anderson and Tim Conway recorded two comedy albums for Liberty Records titled “Are We On?” and “Bull!” Ernie was the straight man interviewing Tim as various characters.

After Ghoulardi left the Cleveland airwaves, he was replaced by Big Chuck Schodowski, formerly known as handsome, debonair, downstairs neighbor, Jerry Kreegle on Parma Place. Big Chuck was joined by Bob Wells, formerly known as Houlihan the Weather Man. The Houlihan and Big Chuck Show began. After Houlihan left the show to pursue religious programming and a role in “Summer Rental” with John Candy, he was replaced by Lil’ John Rinaldi a local jeweler who had appeared in skits with Big Chuck and Houlihan. Their show continued until June of this year when Big Chuck decided to retire. It was the end of an era in Cleveland.
In the 70s, Ron Sweed created a character based on Ghoulardi and called himself the Ghoul. Ron Sweed was discovered by Ghoulardi when he showed up at one of Ghoulardi’s personal appearances in a gorilla suit. He has been on and off the airwaves in Cleveland and Detroit and is currently doing his show as a web cast. Super Host, the Cool Ghoul, and the Son of Ghoul have also been on in the Cleveland area. The Son of Ghoul is the only remaining local horror host on TV.
After Ernie Anderson died in February, 1997, the first GhoulardiFest was held in October of that year in his honor. The second GhoulardiFest was held in 1998. The third GhoulardiFest was held this past weekend. If you missed it, don’t worry, you can still get Ghoulardi T-Shirts like this black and orange number for Halloween! Help keep the legend alive!
This Ghoulardi website was created almost ten years ago in November of 1997. If you would like to know more, you can read the book “Inside Cleveland Television’s Wildest Ride” by Tom Ferran and R. D. Heldenfels.





Ghoulardi
was a fictional character invented and portrayed by disc jockey, voice announcer, and actor Ernie Anderson (November 22, 1923 - February 6, 1997), as the horror host of late night Shock Theater at WJW-TV, Channel 8, in Cleveland, Ohio from 1963 through 1966.

Shock Theater featured grade-“B” science fiction films and horror films. Shock Theater was aired in a Friday late-night time slot, but at the peak of Ghoulardi's popularity, Anderson also hosted the Saturday afternoon Masterpiece Theater, and the weekday children's program Laurel, Ghoulardi and Hardy.



Ernie Anderson was a big band and jazz enthusiast, and WWII U.S. Navy veteran born in Lynn, Massachusetts on November 22, 1923.

This irreverent and influential movie host was a hipster, unlike the horror character prototype. Ghoulardi’s costume was a long lab coat covered with “slogan” buttons, horn-rimmed sunglasses with a missing lens, fake Van Dyke beard and moustache, and various messy, awkwardly-perched wigs. Ghoulardi's stage name was devised by Cleveland restaurateur Ralph Gulko, who was making a pun of the word "ghoul," and his own similar last name, tagged with a generic "ethnic" ending.

During the breaks from the movies, Anderson addressed the camera live in a part-Beat, part-ethnic accented commentary, peppered with: “Hey, group!,” “Stay sick, knif” (“fink”), “Cool it,” “Turn blue” and “Ova deh.” Anderson improvised because of his difficulty memorizing lines. He played novelty and offbeat rock and roll tunes, plus jazz and rhythm and blues songs, under his live performance.

Shock Theater drew both a black and white cult audience, who loved Ghoulardi's beatnik costume, the music, and his hip talk, which was a nod to black jazz and R&B artists. More mainstream viewers enjoyed his broad, unpretentious ethnic humor.

Ghoulardi spared no unhip targets: the bedroom communities Parma, Ohio ("Par-ma?!") and Oxnard, California ("Remember...Oxnard!"), bandleader Lawrence Welk and polka music, Cleveland television personalities Mike Douglas and Dorothy Fuldheim, plus other public figures. In particular, Ghoulardi unmercifully jeered Parma, for its ethnic, working-class, “white socks” sensibility, creating a series of taped skits called Parma Place. He adopted a crow and named him “Oxnard.”

He also mocked the poor quality films he was hosting: "If you want to watch a movie, don't watch this one," or "This movie is so bad, you should just go to bed." He had his crew absurdly insert stock film clips or his own image at climactic moments.

Ghoulardi used friends and members of his talented Channel 8 crew as supporting cast: cameraman “Big Chuck” Schodowski, film editor Bob Soinski and writer Tim Conway (later of The Carol Burnett Show and “Dorf” fame). He was further assisted by teenage intern Ron Sweed. Sweed had boarded a cross-town bus to try to meet his idol at a live appearance, clad in a gorilla suit. Anderson invited Sweed onstage; to the crowd’s delight, Sweed stumbled offstage into the audience. This, plus some unnanounced gorilla-suited visits to the Channel 8 studios sealed his place as Anderson’s right-hand man.

Channel 8, then owned by Storer Broadcasting, capitalized on Ghoulardi’s wide audience with a comprehensive merchandising program, giving Anderson a percentage as Storer also owned the "Ghoulardi" name. Anderson also formed “Ghoulardi All-Stars” sports teams, which played as many as 100 charity contests a year, which, reflecting his popularity, frequently attracted thousands of fans.

Anderson openly battled Channel 8 management. Schodowski was quoted as saying: "[S]tation management lived in daily fear as to what he might say or do on the air, because he was live." In spite of his solid ratings and profitablilty, they worried that Ghoulardi was testing too many television boundaries too quickly, and tried to rein in the character. Anderson responded by, among other things, detonating plastic action figures and plastic model cars with firecrackers and small explosives sent in by viewers, on air, once nearly setting the studio on fire. (“Cool it with the boom-booms.”)

Induced by Tim Conway, who had already left town, and greater career promise, Anderson retired Ghoulardi in 1966 and moved to Los Angeles, California. His plan was to act in film and television. Instead, he made a successful career in voice-over work, most prominently as the main voice for the ABC TV network ("the Lu-u-uhv Boat") during the 1970s and 1980s.

Anderson died of cancer on February 6, 1997.



More than 40 years after Ghoulardi signed off, his legacy endures: Clevelanders still associate polka music, white socks, and pink plastic flamingo and yard globe lawn ornaments with Parma, Ohio.

In the mid-1960s, Ghoulardi's irreverance overtook the rarefied Severance Hall. Cleveland Orchestra conductor George Szell introduced one of his musicians as being from Parma, Ohio. According to Tim Conway, the concertgoing audience replied: "Par-ma?!"

As a tribute, jazz organist Jimmy McGriff wrote, recorded and released his song "Turn Blue."

In 1971 Sweed appeared on WKBF-TV, borrowing the "Ghoulardi" character traits and costume with Anderson’s blessing, but changed the movie host's name to “The Ghoul,” to not misappropriate the "Ghoulardi" name.

Channel 8’s Bob Wells (“Hoolihan the Weatherman”) and “Big Chuck” Schodowski took over Ghoulardi’s Friday night movie time slot as “Hoolihan and Big Chuck,” becoming Anderson’s tamer but familiar successors. Schodowski's show continued on WJW, with co-host "Li'l John" Rinaldi from 1979 onward, until July 2007.

Cleveland native Drew Carey has paid tribute to Ghoulardi in his television sitcom (Carey can often be seen wearing a Ghoulardi T-shirt). In his endorsement of the biography, Ghoulardi: Inside Cleveland TV’s Wildest Ride, cited below, Carey was quoted as saying "Absolutely, big time, Ghoulardi was an influence on me."

The punk-a-billy band The Cramps, named their 1990 album Stay Sick! David Thomas, of art rock band Pere Ubu, said that the Cramps were "so thoroughly co-optive of the Ghoulardi persona that when they first appeared, Clevelanders of the generation were fairly dismissive." Thomas credits Ghoulardi for influencing the "otherness" of the Cleveland/Akron bands of the mid-1970s and early-1980s, including the Electric Eels, and The Mirrors, the Cramps, and Thomas's own groups, Pere Ubu and Rocket From The Tombs, declaring: "We were the Ghoulardi kids." (Akron's Devo aren't included on Thomas' list, but they were formed in the same era as the other groups and shared a similar esthetic.)

In 2002, Cleveland-area indie band Uptown Sinclair featured a Ghoulardi-derived basketball referee in the slapstick music video for their song "Girlfriend."

The most obvious Ghoulardi kid, Anderson's son, film director Paul Thomas Anderson, named his production entity "The Ghoulardi Film Company."






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Spiderbait Black Betty - Best Pan's People Mashup Ever

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№ 1 • Jerry Lee Lewis • What Gets Me HOT • YouTube Channel • Blogspot Address • Playlist • Over 25 Killer Halloween Popup Embed Videos •

http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/hRMKGUpPr-0/hqdefault.jpg 

JERRY LEE LEWIS GETS ME HOT

visualguidanceltd blogspot

 

What Gets Me Hot

Wishes You the Killer-est Halloween



http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=930CC22025633294

"Overheated distilleries moved absentee shins, penetrated infrasonic creameries of fire during divinity's effete, battle-planed, plenitude and excremental, orotund fixating; an alcohol-island of Seagram-casement, condensed and burgeoning: unholiness-Fried kidskin. JERRY LEE LEWIS suffered the demarcating fireball-camps' mass showers outside; insipid defense, anticked and Leviathan; penitent, harelipped management; demotic precipitation. The Killer wardened effete, suspenseful covenant. His overheated distilleries moved absentee shins, penetrated infrasonic creameries of fire during divinity's effete, Battle-planed plenitude and excremental, orotund fixating; an alcohol-island of Seagram casement, condensed and burgeoning, unholiness-fried kidskin. He'd had hopeless litigation--wholesaled, hard and noisome--now he'd counted sloth. Jerry traduced the rag-endings of 'The Vapors' vapoury treacle, distorting his whims for alcohol-illusive godsends of operating Hell-inductees."



JERRY LEE  PLAYLIST: 


AFTER THE JUMP
VIDEO EMBED LINKS:


Jane Aldridge Dailymotion Seaofshoes Charter Member Dailymotion.com/users/group/SHOENAMI

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JAPANESE TOURISTS VOTE FOR BEST ELVIS



JAPANESE TOURISTS VOTE FOR BEST ELVIS
Uploaded by seaofshoes. - Discover more life & style videos.


http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8ur5m_japanese-tourists-vote-for-best-elv_lifestyle


JAPANESE TOURISTS VOTE FOR BEST ELVIS
Uploaded by seaofshoes. - Discover more life & Jane Aldridge Taste 
ELVIS 

Female
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Registered 2 April 2009

1 fan
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Gros bises,

j~A




comme de garcon ['08: 'comme elle']


7 months ago
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Ann Demeulemeester [Joyeux  cinquantième anniversaire!]
02:13
fra

Ann Demeulemeester [Joyeux cinquantième anniversaire!]


7 months ago
87 views

twitter on blackImage by what gets me hot via Flickr

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October 27, 2009

Jerry Lee Lewis Serge Gainsbourg


Jerry Lee Lewis acting clips from the classic television serial 'T.J. Hooker' with William Shatner, Heather Locklear, including his only spoken sides in which he narcs on a male groupie who was into heroin.  He admits to Shatner and sidekick that he went down to the jail and told them everything, then gives up a waitress who this 'Ben' character had transparently been fucking and shacking up with.  The soundtrack for this Oscar-oversight nominated performance was extracted from the recently made available video of Jerry Lee in Bourges, France. Backstage with King Incest, the lascivious M. Serge Gainsbourg himself--drunk and instigating the killer to new heights of profane verbiage leveled at wives, as well as inspiring some bawdy ordering of pussy a la carte from le nuit des Bourges. Vraiment!
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"Jerry Lee Lewis" Killer "Epileptic Fit" "jerry lee fucked up" "fucked up" tv mrjyn "jerry lee" "jerry lee lewis T. j. hooker" ferriday yt:quality=high fede4avar FEDERICO forum 1979 mandrax "dr. george nichopoulos" "george nichopoulos" didrex overprescription polypharmacy acquitted memphis doctor dr. "dr. nick" nichopoulos nichopoulouzo whiskey drunk
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these jokes go to far at the expense of black folks, don't you think? MEXMUNDOVISION - I'm just tellin' you what he wrote me




COMEDIA DE CHISTES BURLA DE LOS NEGROS
Mexican racist sitcom
MEXMUNDOVISION
Oct 27, 2009
Message:   

these jokes go to far at the expense of black folks, don't you think?
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LEGS and CO. Don't Walk Away - Jeff Lynne - ELO - Xanadu Soundtrack




LEGS and CO. Don't Walk Away 
Jeff Lynne
ELO
Xanadu Soundtrack 
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My interview with Elvis' 'sister'

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My interview with Elvis' 'sister'

When I wrote a story about Eliza Presley, the woman who claims to be Elvis Presley's half-sister -- and on top of that, to be in regular contact with Elvis himself, who faked his death in 1977 and has been living out his days in obscurity -- I guess I did expect a reaction.
What I got was a taste of the cottage industry of Elvis-related professionals -- those who believe Elvis is alive and those who've devoted themselves to debunking claims made by people who claim to be in touch with Elvis, or related to him.
In the debunking camp are two Elvis historians who got in touch with me the day the story was published and persisted in calling for the next few days. One was Cory Cooper, whose e-mail handle is "elivisexpert" and who told me on the phone that Eliza Presley's claims "make (him) want to vomit." And there is Patrick Lacy, who runs a blog at www.elvisdecoded.com. Both offered to speak with me for a follow-up piece about their research into Eliza Presley, who they say is a fraud. But they declined to contribute their story to my blog.
I also heard from Eliza's birth mother, Flo Clark, who called to vent about Eliza. Clark, who really did hang out for a time with Elvis and his entourage back in Memphis, said there was no hanky-panky -- not with Elvis, and not with Vernon, Elvis' dad, who Eliza claims is her dad, too.


Jerry Lee Lewis Separating the Men from the Boys for 50 Year

Jerry Lee Lewis Separating the Men from the Boys for 50 Year




more about "Jerry Lee Lewis Separating the Men fr...", posted with vodpod

The TV Evangelists (1) Jimmy Swaggart (unfortunately all the files are removed but it's a good document)

The TV Evangelists (1) Jimmy Swaggart

Jimmy Lee Swaggart (born March 15, 1935 in Ferriday, Louisiana) is a Pentecostal preacher and pioneer of televangelism who reached the height of his popularity in the 1980s. Swaggart is first cousin of recording artists Jerry Lee Lewis and Mickey Gilley. The sons of three sisters, all of them share similar middle names and play the piano. All were born within a year of one another.

Swaggart is the son of a Baptist minister and started preaching on street corners at the age of nine. He established a media empire buying up radio stations to separate as many gullible Americans from their money as possible ’spread the word of God’ but by the mid 70’s his attention had turned to TV. By 1983 he was the most popular TV evangelist in the USA.

In 1986, Swaggart exposed fellow Assemblies of God minister Marvin Gorman, who was accused of having an affair with another pastor’s wife, who was at the time undergoing counseling with Pastor Gorman. Some said this was done out of fear that Gorman was taking away from Swaggart’s audience and donations. Gorman was based in New Orleans and was adding stations throughout the southern region and was beginning to add stations on the west coast and the northeast. Gorman was also in the planning stages for a weekday telecast. Once exposed, Gorman was defrocked from the Assemblies of God and his ministry all but ended.
The following year, Swaggart exposed fellow Assemblies Of God televangelist Jim Bakker’s sexual indiscretions and appeared on the Larry King Show, stating that Bakker was a “cancer in the body of Christ.” He and similarly-minded Baptist evangelist Jerry Falwell investigated Jim Bakker and eventually discovered his indiscretions. In 1987, Jim Bakker’s ministry was falling apart as a result.

As a retaliatory move, Marvin Gorman hired a private detective to follow Swaggart. The detective found Swaggart in a Louisiana motel on Airline Highway with a prostitute, Debra Murphree, and took pictures of the tryst. Gorman presented Swaggart with the photos in a blackmail attempt to force Swaggart to come clean, but Swaggart refused. Gorman then presented the pictures to the presbytery leadership of the Assemblies of God, which decided that Swaggart should be suspended from broadcasting his television program for three months. Perhaps only by watching the video above can anyone jusdge the level of Swaggart’s contrition.

On February 21, 1988, without giving the details of his transgressions, Swaggart tearfully spoke to his family, congregation and audience, saying, “I have sinned against you, my Lord, and I would ask that your precious blood would wash and cleanse every stain until it is in the seas of God’s forgiveness.” On a New Orleans morning news show four days later, Murphree stated that while Swaggart was a regular customer, they had never engaged in intercourse.

Against the ruling of the governing body of the Assemblies of God, Swaggart returned to his television pulpit long before his three-month suspension expired. He stated, “If I do not return to the pulpit this weekend, millions of people will go to hell.” Believing that Swaggart was not genuinely repentant in not submitting to their authority, the Assemblies of God immediately defrocked Swaggart, removing his credentials and ministerial license.

On October 11, 1991, Swaggart was found in the company of another prostitute, Rosemary Garcia, when he was pulled over by the California Highway Patrol in Indio, California, for driving on the wrong side of the street. According to Garcia, Swaggart stopped to proposition her on the side of the road. When the patrolman asked Garcia why she was with Swaggart, she replied, “He asked me for sex. I mean, that’s why he stopped me. That’s what I do. I’m a prostitute.”Rather than confessing to his congregation, Swaggart told his flock this time that “The Lord told me it’s flat none of your business.” His son Donnie then announced to the stunned audience that his father would be temporarily stepping down as head of Jimmy Swaggart Ministries for “a time of healing and counseling.”

Swaggart’s escapades have been celebrated in song at least twice from two very different sources. First of all this revenge attack from Ozzy Osbourne who had been attacked by Swaggart as being a Satanist for his 1980 record ‘Suicide Solution’.

And this is the third part of Frank Zappa’s Texas Motel Medley which uses three Beatles songs to satirize TV evangelists in general and in this song Swaggart in particular.

(Transcription from Rochester, NY, March 11, 1988 by Douglas Obrecht)

Let me take you down, ’cause we’re going to… the Texas Motel.
Don’t mind the smell.
It’s nothing to get hung about.
Please leave your cash on the table.

Weeping looks better with eyes closed…
While I’m confessing all my sins.
[Oh, please forgive me. Oh, I've sinned!]
It’s getting hard to plook someone, but it all works out.
It’s all pornography to Jim.

Let me take you down, ’cause we’re going to… the Texas Motel.
We might go to hell.
But we’ll have lots of company.
Falwell and Pat and that weasel.

No one knows who’s in my dream…
[Bud McFarlane, ladies & gentlemen]
I mean it must be high or low. (I think)
[freshly indicted] I mean, I can’t you know, tune in, but it’s all right.
[He can plea bargain this one]
That is, I think it’s not too bad.

Let me take you down, ’cause we’re going to… the Texas Motel.
Don’t mind the smell.
It’s just some jizz from Jimmy-boy.
How ’bout some hay for the donkey?

No one knows, sometimes think it’s me…
[Ed Meese, ladies & gentlemen] But you know, I know when it’s a dream.
[I think]
I think I know, I mean, I guess, but it’s all wrong.
[Wait a minute, that's right]
That is, I think I disagree. [Uhh...]

Let me take you down, ’cause we’re going to… the Texas Motel.
Don’t mind the smell.
It’s just some old pornography.
Just keep on strokin’ that sausage.
Just keep on strokin’ that sausage.
[Jimmy-boy!] Just keep on strokin’ that sausage.

Source of information: Wikipedia

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Jimmy Swaggart preaching.. "the alabaster box"