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WordWolf

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Everything posted by WordWolf

  1. Roll out of bed, Mr Coffee's dead, you're morning's looking bright...
  2. "Robbie? This is Urich. Get ready to replate the front page. I've got a REAL story.." Unless he appeared in a Spiderman movie, Ben Urich only appeared in 'DareDevil", where he was played by JOE PANTOLIANO. Was Bob Keane "Bobbo"??? Was Doc Robbins from a season 1 "Highlander" episode? *slaps forehead* Snake was from "Running Scared." (Duh.) Cosmo Renfro sounds familiar. Was he a Federal Marshall in "the Fugitive"?
  3. A) was "the Beast Must Die." I saw that on SciFi once, IIRC. (I DID guess correctly, but I had it down to 2 suspects and then guessed.) B) was "the Abominable Dr Phibes", as George said. IIRC, TCM's aired this in October. (Possibly AMC.) C) was "the Tingler." I discovered it by accident, looking among movies released into the public domain. It's watchable, but not nail-biting. The monster is something that can kill- but it can be stopped if the victim SCREAMS. During the movie, there's a moment where it looks like the monster crosses the film projection, like it was in the booth or in front of the booth. The announcer then says "THE TINGLER IS LOOSE IN THIS THEATER! SCREAM, SCREAM FOR YOUR LIVES!" The victims are supposed to feel a tingling if the monster is attacking them- either scream now or die in seconds. In some of the bigger markets, they had some of the audience chairs rigged to vibrate a bit on command- which is why the opening announcement is a setup to a unique promotional (or gag, depending on your perspective.) D) was "Macabre." William Castle ALSO directed this one, which explains all the gimmicks. George's turn!
  4. Ok, it's a round of obscure Halloween-style movies. Name ANY of them to take the round. A) This movie's cast includes Peter Cushing. It''s a horror movie, and a murder mystery. Before the movie's climax, there's a 60-second pause in the movie, allowing the theater audience a chance to see if they can guess which character is the werewolf. B) This movie's cast includes Vincent Price. The killer takes revenge for the death of his wife (seen in photos as Caroline Munro). He himself survived a car crash, but chose to wear prosthetic masks to cover his face, and had to retrain himself to be able to speak again. (The resulting visual is a bit unnerving.) He plans his killings with a theme of the 10 plagues of Egypt. The ending looked pretty final, but this movie had a sequel anyway. C) This movie is in the public domain now. It was a black-and-white horror movie. The producer/director recorded a small expository scene to play before the movie. It was himself, reading the following script: "I am William Castle, the director of the motion picture you are about to see. I feel obligated to warn you that some of the sensations—some of the physical reactions which the actors on the screen will feel—will also be experienced, for the first time in motion picture history, by certain members of this audience. I say 'certain members' because some people are more sensitive to these mysterious electronic impulses than others. These unfortunate, sensitive people will at times feel a strange, tingling sensation; other people will feel it less strongly. But don't be alarmed—you can protect yourself. At any time you are conscious of a tingling sensation, you may obtain immediate relief by screaming. Don't be embarrassed about opening your mouth and letting rip with all you've got, because the person in the seat right next to you will probably be screaming too. And remember—a scream at the right time may save your life." D) This movie's cast includes Jim Backus. A killer has kidnapped someone and trapped them in a coffin. They have 5 hours to find the victim or they will suffocate. Theater-goers were given a $1000 certificate for a life insurance policy from Lloyd's of London, to pay off if they died while watching the movie in the theater. They also had "nurses" on hand in case a viewer needed medical assistance, and parked hearses nearby. The directer himself showed up to the premiere emerging from a coffin.
  5. Ok, my router decided to call an early night last night, so my last attempt to post this blew away. Universal did the classic movie monsters, including the classic Frankenstein look that was used for Herman M. The Munster Koach was part Model T Ford (that's why it has that black hood!) Mel Blanc did the voice of the Raven (in some episodes.) Yvonne De Carlo was in "the Ten Commandments". I noted that the episode of "I Love Lucy" where Ricky's press agent tried to have him connected with every Hollywood Starlet (while promoting "Don Juan") had Yvonne de Carlo's name at the end of the list.
  6. All I've got is that the Fratellis where the baddies in "Goonies." (And a band with 2 hits containing none of the actors from that movie.)
  7. Richard Gere First Knight Sean Connery
  8. Back in the early lcm era, lcm redefined "research" as "re-search", or "search again," as in "to search twi materials again to memorize their contents." The Oxford English Dictionary says "research" means: "The systematic investigation into and study of materials and sources in order to establish facts and reach new conclusions." Dictionary.com says it means: "diligent and systematic inquiry or investigation into a subject in order to discover or revise facts, theories, applications, etc.: " American Heritage: "1. Careful study of a given subject, field, or problem, undertaken to discover facts or principles." Merriam-Webster: "studious inquiry or examination especially : investigation or experimentation aimed at the discovery and interpretation of facts, revision of accepted theories or laws in the light of new facts, or practical application of such new or revised theories or laws " Nothing about "searching again." Except for those people who think twi or vpw and lcm are more authoritative concerning word definitions than dictionaries, that's pretty clear. lcm sounded foolish when he said it- because it was foolish and obviously incorrect.
  9. According to WD, he saw the pics of the incident you're describing, but said he saw a different incident. On the thread for "TW:LIW" Wonderland thread, he claimed the following... "...it was a ROA family table. Yes I was there it was in Sidney toward the east end of the fairgrounds on the way out of the gate to the little grocery store at the edge of the grounds. If you want to pay the airfair I most likely could find the spot for you. The pictures I have somewhere in storage are ones I took with some sort of camera that I most likely would not want to admit I owned. " He claimed vpw played that same song. (I wonder if he only knew the one song.) " As I said not being a player I will refrain from critique but he did play the guitar. He was not Les Paul,or Clapton by any strech but it was passable." " I did notice that on the one that was from the Way Magazine, I think he did have another guitar player with him which most likely gave the song a better sound. " (He was claiming he saw photos of the one you described, and it was a different incident.) ==================================================== In other news, lcm's account of the rain on stage differs slightly from yours (I believe yours over his.) In the "vp & me in Wonderland" thread, he skipped any mentions of an umbrella. He said that vpw said "IF THE AUDIENCE GETS WET, SO DO YOU! " and pushed him onstage. Interesting how vpw becomes a nicer guy in the cleaned-up version.
  10. Universal produced this show, and it was a good thing for the show that they did- the character visuals benefited greatly (at least one.) It was set in a suburb of Southern California. Thre was initial disagreement as to whether it should be animated or live-action (the latter won out.) It featured an automobile that was a hot rod partly built out of a Model T Ford. The house that was used was also used in at least 3 other shows (the last time after a remodel.) It had an Easter Special once. Recurring actors were Paul Lynde, Dom de Luise, and John Carradine. Leo Durocher also appeared (coach of the LA Dodgers), which helped position the show as being somewhere not very far from Los Angeles. Mel Blanc was in the cast, as was a previous Hollywood starlet (actress, dancer, singer) once described by a producer she worked for at the time as "the most beautiful girl in the world." The most famous movie she was ever in, AFAIK, was "THE TEN COMMANDMENTS." This was NOT a show ABOUT a car.
  11. No. For the record, I've never seen any episodes of "MMtC." I HAVE seen a number of episodes of THIS show.
  12. Universal produced this show, and it was a good thing for the show that they did- the character visuals benefited greatly (at least one.) It was set in a suburb of Southern California. Thre was initial disagreement as to whether it should be animated or live-action (the latter won out.) It featured an automobile that was a hot rod partly built out of a Model T Ford. The house that was used was also used in at least 3 other shows (the last time after a remodel.) It had an Easter Special once. Recurring actors were Paul Lynde, Dom de Luise, and John Carradine. Leo Durocher also appeared (coach of the LA Dodgers), which helped position the show as being somewhere not very far from Los Angeles. Mel Blanc was in the cast, as was a previous Hollywood starlet (actress, dancer, singer) once described by a producer she worked for at the time as "the most beautiful girl in the world."
  13. Mark Wahlberg Three Kings George Clooney
  14. 1) Once he was in charge, lcm absolutely had to be in the middle of EVERYTHING. He was in "High Country Caravan" despite lacking talent. He showed up onstage when bands did musical numbers (not singing, not performing, just posing). So, of course he ended up in the middle of this. I'm fully convinced he hinted around until someone commented offhand that they thought he should be in it- then that was his excuse to say people wanted that, lack of dance experience or no. It sure explains why a football exercise ended up in the production, even if it made no sense. The previous male lead was still in the final product, if moved back behind lcm. 2) Does not surprise me that vpw's limit of understanding DANCE was limited to, say, square dance and clogging, and thinking that people with "dance training" and "dance experience" would be experienced CLOGGERS. 3) twi STILL billed AOS as better than the world could put out, because that's what twi has always said. So, no matter how much better trained dancers could have been, that was the party line, and that should surprise no one. 4) See previous point. Also, in answer to your question, someone here (JohnIam, IIRC) once posted he saw vpw at an ROA wandering around with a little guitar, a banjo-sized thing, and saw him/heard him play a little. Didn't say he was particularly good, but he gave the impression that he could do backup in a garage band or something. We knew vpw definitely could not SING, as in William Hung level can't sing. He apparently couldn't keep the beat, as you're saying. *checks* It was WhiteDove, who said of vpw's playing, "It was passable." (That was from a FAN of vpw.) (It was at a Family Table at a Sidney ROA, not wandering around.) It was A L P, among others, that said vpw was seen with the little ukelele sized guitar. dmiller later confirmed the size of the guitar ("Ala -- I remember that pic too. I think it may be in one of the old way magazines (roa edition -- mid 70's) I seem to remember that it was a Martin guitar he had. The reason it looks so small, is because it was a 00-18, or 000-18 size -- which is much smaller than the size one sees today.") Both posters saw the PHOTOS. WD was present when he actually played. 5) It's obvious in hindsight the obsession with sex would show up there. It was just plain uncomfortable every single time the video aired, especially if kids were in the room. The theology of the production was awful. The devils were given a LOT of time, and OUR goal was to "stand our ground." General Patton said "I don’t want to get any messages from the front saying that we are holding our position. We’ll let the Hun [Germans] do that. We are attacking constantly and we’re not interested in holding on to anything except the enemy." I thought we were supposed to go forward and witness the new kingdom so others would get born again. In the production, that happened for less than a minute in a 2-hour program. After that, we were smacking around devils or standing our ground. It was about devils and about US. Wasn't about Christ, the new birth, and so on. God was relegated to the role of background player and team mascot. Nice to see you drop in, Shaz.
  15. Actually, I've gotten the impression that it's a lot more blatant and up-front for the last decade or so. That's part of Rosilla's legacy with twi.
  16. Now that I'm trying to look at the complete picture..... In pfal, we were told that there were keys to "have the Word interpret itself." The idea was to enable us to read the Bible and understand it. It SOUNDED like the goal was to produce autonomous Bible students and Bible teachers. In practice, on the field, NOBODY at any level higher than "twig coordinator" wanted that of anyone lower than that. What they wanted was us to reread twi materials, and teach from that. It's blatant and now they all but say it outright. Back then, it wasn't said outright under normal circumstances. But I DO remember a certain Territory Coordinator who was scared of the idea of people getting together to read the Bible, and getting together to actually do their own work and present it. His counter-suggestion was to have them all get together and read twi publications instead. And this was someone who was either preparing to jump ship or was already canned and working entirely outside of twi Inc. So, it was all set up to make twi'ers entirely dependent upon twi- for understanding the Bible, for making major decisions, etc. That was the goal for EVERYONE, and EVERY level.
  17. (That Vince Vaughn sure gets around. He was linked twice in this page so far. I could have linked illegally for a 3rd movie.)
  18. OWEN Wilson Starsky & Hutch Vince Vaughn Ben Stiller
  19. Thanks for clearing all that up. I haven't seen that since the original airing. Only 1-2 moments stick with me, like the "Mousie...." scene, and the end of the first movie, with the Holocaust survivor telling/showing the kids how to resist. That and their first appearance where they step out and put on the Chilean miner sunglasses. That's about it. I didn't realize there was a version where the Phantom WAS named. (For all I know, most of them do, but it's news to me.)
  20. Matthew Broderick the Producers Will Farrell
  21. I was so confident nobody would even know Englund played Willie, let alone remember Willie from one name, that I didn't even consider looking him up for inclusion in the list. (Willie was a character in the original "V" and "V-the Final Battle." IIRC, he was the "visitor" who looked for a mouse outdoors where he could have been seen.) So, I didn't connect the name when you mentioned it. So, yes, this was Robert Englund, the man who will always be remembered for playing Freddy Krueger in the "Nightmare on Elm St" franchise.
  22. Michael Sutherland Beebo Crozier Erik Destler Anthony Wager Paul Chevalier Bill Gartley Raymond Beaumont Professor Wexler Jackson "Jack" Roth Bernie Garces Erroll Douglas Jack Sampson Felix Faust Dormammu Ray Buxley Dr Stanly Wheelwright Samuel Lee Detective Gassner Jim Bickerman Dr TelAmeriCorp Dr James Aldohn Ernest "Ernie" Trainor Edward Kent Dennis Shothoffer Dr Peter Andover Mr Hezekiah Confab Wayne Jackson Rory Columbus Ian Essko Mr Doust Professor Gordon Crowley Sheriff Roger Berger Doc Halloran Sampson Dunston Mayor George W. Buckman Dr Anton Rudolph
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