DAVETV If you could look at only one thing on the Internet, DaveTV would be the obvious choice. What other so-called "website" lets you watch LATE SHOW Highlights, Comedy Clips, Slideshows, Stupid Trick clips and The Tony Mendez Show?
TOP TEN LIST You know it, you love it, you can't live without it: the revolutionary comedy bit that won Dave the Nobel Peace Prize. Check out the latest Top Ten List here.
TOP TEN ARCHIVES Old Top Ten Lists never die, they just get archived. The Top Ten Archives is searchable by date and keyword. Also, please note that the word "archives" contains the word "chives."
TOP TEN CONTEST So you think you're as funny as Dave's writers? Or maybe you just enjoy wasting time at work? See if you've got the chops to win a great prize in our weekly Top Ten Contest.
TOP TEN SEARCH Search Results.
TOP TEN SEARCH Search Results.
WAHOO GAZETTE LATE SHOW staffer Mike McIntee gives you a daily show summary and the behind-the-scenes lowdown with his daily Wahoo Gazette. So much juicy inside information that you'll say "Wahoo!"
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
THE WAHOO GAZETTE ARCHIVE Mike McIntee's popular Wahoo Gazette is archived here in the aptly- named Wahoo Gazette Archive. You can search by date, keyword, or show number, or even Dave's tie pattern (coming June 2012).
Helen Hunt; Jason Grant; DJ Shadow, Q-Tip, and Laeef;
and Dr. Phil. PLUS: Late Show Holiday Move
Preview; Great Moments in Presidential Speeches; Late Show Fun
Facts; a Top Ten List; and Will It Float?
Its the time of year when the big holiday films
start hitting theaters, so to get everyone excited, please enjoy
this Late Show Holiday Movie Preview. We
see nice Christmas and holiday footage; sweet holiday music;
lovely holiday graphics . . . . and thats it.
Thats all we have so far. Time is tight during the
holidays.
And now its time for
Great Moments in Presidential
Speeches. We see FDR. We see JFK. We see
George W. Bush mumbling something about a kick to our economy.
Each Friday, Dave receives a packet of Fun
Facts from a guy named Gary at the FBMI, Federal Bureau
of Miscellaneous Information, and tonight we get to meet him.
Its Gary Klein. Gary enters and takes a
seat by Dave. He looks a lot like Johnny Dark, the
oldest CBS Page. Gary is your typical information office wonk;
great at collecting facts and numbers; not very good in a social
setting. Dave involves him in a chat, but Gary
doesnt reciprocate. His answers are on the one-word
variety, and if he could have used less words, he would. But
its not because hes bashful. Gary is
tight-lipped because he has an angry edge. Anyway, Gary is here
to personally deliver this weeks Late Show Fun Facts.
The quicker this guy got up and left the better. Late Show Fun Facts - There are no
poisonous snakes in Maine. - Europe is the only
continent without deserts - There are 132 rooms
in the White House - Most of Yogi
Berras nonsensical quips are the result of an
addiction to cough medicine - The Center of
Sleep Research has spent $7 million trying to disprove the
widely held belief that if you snooze, you lose. -
The Nobel Prize in Literature has twice been awarded for phone
books - In the event of an electoral vote tie
and a tie in the House of Representatives, a Presidential
election would be decided by applause - The FDA
technically classifies pancake batter as soup -
The country most recently admitted to the United Nations is
responsible for refreshments - Tiger
Woods cant play miniature golf to save his
life - Mercurys retrograde shift into
Scorpio makes this week a good time for financial
investments - Apple is developing an artificial
heart hat holds a thousand songs - 5% of people
who have voices in their head say at least one sounds like
sportscasting legend Chick Hearn -
Saddam Hussein recently sent out invitations to his
hanging - Donald Trump wears twice
as much makeup as his wife - Before a family
squabble, one of Americas largest companies was known
as Johnson & Johnson & Johnson - In
Soviet Union, television watches you - During
the 20th Century, Western Union did a brisk business in X-Rated
telegrams - Elizabeth Taylor once
divorced a man she never married - Like
George W. Bush, in college Saddam
Hussein was a cheerleader - It is
customary to tip toll booth operators. - In
1997, the Supreme Court ruled that women could be admitted to
the Hair Club for Men - The most common street
name in America is 138th Street - The French
Dip is consistently voted the worlds dampest sandwich
TOP TEN SIGNS YOUR FAMILY IS NUTS
And to present tonights Top Ten list, the national
spokesperson for Toys For Tots, here is Dr.
Phil. Dr. Phil enters to huge applause. Dave
greets him and asks, How was your
Thanksgiving? Dr. Phil says, I
havent had it yet . . . . . woops. #10. Youre 41, but your dad still makes
you watch the parade on his shoulders #9.
All of moms recipes require 1 part gin and 3 parts
tonic #8. Breaking the wishbone usually
ends in a trip to the hospital #7. The
Shi-ites next door ask you to keep the fighting down #6. Never had Thanksgiving with family because you
work at the Late Show #5. Have to eat your
dinner without utensils because everyones on suicide
watch #4. In honor of the Pilgrims,
everyone gets scurvy #3. So-called turkey
is wearing a dog collar. #2. Instead of
spouses, each member brings an attorney #1.
Caught your wife giving thanks to the
caterer
And that was Dr. Phil. Dave mentions,
it was nice of him to drop in after the
holidays.
HELEN HUNT:
Its Thanksgiving, which means turkey, family, and the
parade. Has Helen ever been in a parade? She participated in
one at the age of 12. She admits it was a pathetic thing. She
was on the Swiss Family Robinson TV series.
Because of the show, she was asked to march in the Hollywood
Christmas Parade, which goes down Hollywood Boulevard. If you
know Los Angeles, Hollywood Boulevard is a street
thats, well, skanky in parts. She remembers herself
as a little girl in pigtails, followed by a grimy Santa Claus.
All the kids were asking, Why do Santas eyes
match his suit? Helen is a mom to a 2-and-a-half year
old, Makena-lei, and every car trip is an ordeal. Her daughter
just sits in the back seat asking for snacks. Raisins!
Cheerios! Cheddar Bunnies! Apple Juice! Yes, as a parent,
one of the first things you learn is to keep well stocked. You
cant allow a free moment. Every second needs to be
filled with food, TV, or crayons. You want to teach them the
importance of living without, but you soon learn life is so much
easier living with with. Youll do anything for
peace. Helen is in the new film, Bobby,
about the Robert Kennedy assassination. It opened
Wednesday. Hearing about the movie made me realize I know
nothing about the murder. I was 10 at the time and remember
some of that day. But I have hardly read anything about it.
All I know is Sirhan Sirhan is the assassin and he comes up for
parole every few years. And as a model prisoner, I wonder why
he isnt paroled. If he had shot me, hed be
out by now. But thats another story. I am very
interested in the film and this is one of the few I may make a
point in seeing.
JASON GRANT: What a
story this guy has. Hes a school teacher up in
Rochester, New York and went out browsing at a tag sale. He saw
this statue he thought would look great in his rec room and
bought it. His brother-in-law Chet, who thinks of himself as a
bit of an art enthusiast, saw the piece and thought it could be
worth something. Sure enough and lo and behold and who would
believe it and other meaningless lead-ins, the darn thing turned
out to be an Edgar Degas worth $110 million. Wow! Who did he
buy it from? Jason says some lady in Rochester. Will Jason
contact her and share in the windfall? Jason doesnt
answer. The audience titters with laughter. Jason tells the
audience to quiet down and says, Hold it . . . . yes,
I will contact her. And says no more. He says
nothing about sharing. Dave has the piece behind the desk and
shows the beautiful and exquisite Spanish
Dance statue by Degas. Its a rare piece,
indeed. Dave revels over the beauty and delicacy of the piece.
And then . . . . . oh, no. . . . Jason Grant notices
something. While Dave was looking over the Spanish
Dance, he accidentally broke off the arm. Like anyone
who just broke a $110 million item, Dave tries to put it back
together without the owner noticing, but Jason saw what happened
right in front of him. Jason stands up and takes hold of his
Spanish Dance. The arm is no broken,
making it worthless. Jason reacts like anyone who sees a life
of leisure suddenly turn to a life of labor . . . and in
Rochester, at that! He curses Dave for his clumsiness.
Curses himself for coming to the show. Curses his terrible
misfortune. Jason, in a fit of frustration, takes the damaged
Spanish Dance and smashes it to the ground.
He exits in anger with a promise to sue anyone and everyone
affiliated with the Late Show. And with that, he flees back
home to Rochester.
WILL IT FLOAT? Item:
a 6 pound, 12 ounce can of whole yams. Stored in what? Alan
says A metal can. Dave says itll
sink. Paul says itll float. And Paul changes his
pick to Sink. The Late Show models drop the 6 pound, 12 ounce
can of whole yams into the Will It Float tank and it . . . . .
sinks!
ACT 5: Time for Behind
the Scenes at the Late Show. We see a nothing shot of
an empty backstage. A stagehand walks by.
This has been Behind the Scenes at the Late Show.
Tell your friends.
DJ SHADOW, Q-TIP,
AND LATEEF: From DJ Shadows CD, The
Outsider, the trio perform Enuff.
And that was our show for Friday, November 24,
2006. Wahoo
EXTRA! I lost the e-mail
but someone wrote the reason the NFL features the Detroit Lions
every Thanksgiving on national TV is because the citys
car-making industry is such a big and loyal sponsor to the NFL.
Hey, its Cut and Paste Day
The Truth Behind Black Friday from the
urbanmyth website:
The day
after Thanksgiving is the day millions of Americans head for the
malls to kick off the Christmas shopping season.
Black Friday (as it is known in the retail
industry, supposedly because it's the day when retailers turn
the corner and see their income statements move out of the red
and into the black, or it's the day when retail workers are
exposed to the worst crowds and customer behavior) is regularly
cited as the busiest shopping day of the
year.
But although Black Friday may be the
day the greatest number of holiday shoppers traipse through
malls, it isn't necessarily the biggest day of the year in terms
of dollars spent. The consistent holiday shopping trend is that
sales figures spike on the day after Thanksgiving, drop sharply
immediately afterwards, then steadily increase throughout
December, peaking on the four days comprising the two weekends
before Christmas. The result is that Black Friday nearly always
ends up ranking below the last Saturday before Christmas (or
December 23, if Christmas Day falls on a weekend), and in recent
years it has ranked between fourth and eighth on charts of the
year's busiest shopping days.
November 25, 2006 marks the 10th Anniversary of the Wahoo
Gazette. How did it all start? I was in charge of
running the LATE SHOW football pool at the time. To drum up
interest, I would recap the results on the back of each
weeks football sheet. Staffers liked my snide
remarks and masked compliments. Walter and
Jay were putting this thing together . . . . a
website they called it . . . and asked if I
would like to help out. Still feeling like a new guy on the
staff, I said I would do anything necessary. I had no idea
where this thing would go. In fact, for the first few months I
thought this was called the Wazoo Gazette. Anyway,
I slapped something together for the first night, and then the
second night, and then the third, and on and on and on. It
went from a short daily report to a lengthier two-to-three times
a week Wahoo. And then it became a too-long/
every-day Wahoo Gazette. Anyway, here are the
first two Wahoo Gazettes from ten years ago . . .
or was it the Wazoo Gazette?
******************************* MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1996 Tonight is the
Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony in New York Citys
Rockefeller Center, so if you like pushing, shoving, and
pickpockets while listening to Silent Night,
thats the place to be.
Mailboy Bob
Borden is scheduled to appear LIVE on tonights
show, and is in his dressing room at this very moment running
his lines. Bob is wearing a navy blue terry-cloth robe, white
towel around his neck, open back slippers, and is sipping from a
green coffee mug.
Can you believe we have a grown man
on our staff who calls himself Corky?
Some plans by LATE SHOW staff members for the Thanksgiving
holiday Nancy Agostini
work Zoran Zgonc work Chris Schukei work
more tomorrow
*******************************
And
The Wahoo Gazette from November 26, 1996:
******************************* TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1996 The LATE SHOW
canned food drive is doing quite well, although sound effects
guy Gary Kiffel keeps showing up with a knife and
fork. I dont think he understands the true spirit of
the drive.
We have two Canadians on our staff; one of
course being Paul Shaffer. The other is writer
Tim Long. So if you see them on the street, be
sure to give them a big Buenos Dios, Senors.
Rupert Jee, proprietor of the Hello
Deli on 53rd Street has this bit of culinary advice
for you this Thanksgiving. . . . . Dont
gobble your turkey.
A survey among NYC
pedestrians found that last weeks favorite top ten
items were Tuesdays number 7, Mondays number
6, and Fridays number 2.
More plans by LATE
SHOW staff members for the Thanksgiving holiday . . . Theresa Gavigan work Alex
Kreisler work Amanda
Baehr - work *******************************
Back then, each days
Wahoo was about a half page. How I miss those
days. Ill be reprinting original Wahoos
from ten years ago for the next two weeks. Make copies and put
them in your Wahoo binder.
Helen Hunt; Jason Grant; DJ Shadow, Q-Tip, and Laeef;
and Dr. Phil. PLUS: Late Show Holiday Move
Preview; Great Moments in Presidential Speeches; Late Show Fun
Facts; a Top Ten List; and Will It Float?
Its the time of year when the big holiday films
start hitting theaters, so to get everyone excited, please enjoy
this Late Show Holiday Movie Preview. We
see nice Christmas and holiday footage; sweet holiday music;
lovely holiday graphics . . . . and thats it.
Thats all we have so far. Time is tight during the
holidays.
And now its time for
Great Moments in Presidential
Speeches. We see FDR. We see JFK. We see
George W. Bush mumbling something about a kick to our economy.
Each Friday, Dave receives a packet of Fun
Facts from a guy named Gary at the FBMI, Federal Bureau
of Miscellaneous Information, and tonight we get to meet him.
Its Gary Klein. Gary enters and takes a
seat by Dave. He looks a lot like Johnny Dark, the
oldest CBS Page. Gary is your typical information office wonk;
great at collecting facts and numbers; not very good in a social
setting. Dave involves him in a chat, but Gary
doesnt reciprocate. His answers are on the one-word
variety, and if he could have used less words, he would. But
its not because hes bashful. Gary is
tight-lipped because he has an angry edge. Anyway, Gary is here
to personally deliver this weeks Late Show Fun Facts.
The quicker this guy got up and left the better. Late Show Fun Facts - There are no
poisonous snakes in Maine. - Europe is the only
continent without deserts - There are 132 rooms
in the White House - Most of Yogi
Berras nonsensical quips are the result of an
addiction to cough medicine - The Center of
Sleep Research has spent $7 million trying to disprove the
widely held belief that if you snooze, you lose. -
The Nobel Prize in Literature has twice been awarded for phone
books - In the event of an electoral vote tie
and a tie in the House of Representatives, a Presidential
election would be decided by applause - The FDA
technically classifies pancake batter as soup -
The country most recently admitted to the United Nations is
responsible for refreshments - Tiger
Woods cant play miniature golf to save his
life - Mercurys retrograde shift into
Scorpio makes this week a good time for financial
investments - Apple is developing an artificial
heart hat holds a thousand songs - 5% of people
who have voices in their head say at least one sounds like
sportscasting legend Chick Hearn -
Saddam Hussein recently sent out invitations to his
hanging - Donald Trump wears twice
as much makeup as his wife - Before a family
squabble, one of Americas largest companies was known
as Johnson & Johnson & Johnson - In
Soviet Union, television watches you - During
the 20th Century, Western Union did a brisk business in X-Rated
telegrams - Elizabeth Taylor once
divorced a man she never married - Like
George W. Bush, in college Saddam
Hussein was a cheerleader - It is
customary to tip toll booth operators. - In
1997, the Supreme Court ruled that women could be admitted to
the Hair Club for Men - The most common street
name in America is 138th Street - The French
Dip is consistently voted the worlds dampest sandwich
TOP TEN SIGNS YOUR FAMILY IS NUTS
And to present tonights Top Ten list, the national
spokesperson for Toys For Tots, here is Dr.
Phil. Dr. Phil enters to huge applause. Dave
greets him and asks, How was your
Thanksgiving? Dr. Phil says, I
havent had it yet . . . . . woops. #10. Youre 41, but your dad still makes
you watch the parade on his shoulders #9.
All of moms recipes require 1 part gin and 3 parts
tonic #8. Breaking the wishbone usually
ends in a trip to the hospital #7. The
Shi-ites next door ask you to keep the fighting down #6. Never had Thanksgiving with family because you
work at the Late Show #5. Have to eat your
dinner without utensils because everyones on suicide
watch #4. In honor of the Pilgrims,
everyone gets scurvy #3. So-called turkey
is wearing a dog collar. #2. Instead of
spouses, each member brings an attorney #1.
Caught your wife giving thanks to the
caterer
And that was Dr. Phil. Dave mentions,
it was nice of him to drop in after the
holidays.
HELEN HUNT:
Its Thanksgiving, which means turkey, family, and the
parade. Has Helen ever been in a parade? She participated in
one at the age of 12. She admits it was a pathetic thing. She
was on the Swiss Family Robinson TV series.
Because of the show, she was asked to march in the Hollywood
Christmas Parade, which goes down Hollywood Boulevard. If you
know Los Angeles, Hollywood Boulevard is a street
thats, well, skanky in parts. She remembers herself
as a little girl in pigtails, followed by a grimy Santa Claus.
All the kids were asking, Why do Santas eyes
match his suit? Helen is a mom to a 2-and-a-half year
old, Makena-lei, and every car trip is an ordeal. Her daughter
just sits in the back seat asking for snacks. Raisins!
Cheerios! Cheddar Bunnies! Apple Juice! Yes, as a parent,
one of the first things you learn is to keep well stocked. You
cant allow a free moment. Every second needs to be
filled with food, TV, or crayons. You want to teach them the
importance of living without, but you soon learn life is so much
easier living with with. Youll do anything for
peace. Helen is in the new film, Bobby,
about the Robert Kennedy assassination. It opened
Wednesday. Hearing about the movie made me realize I know
nothing about the murder. I was 10 at the time and remember
some of that day. But I have hardly read anything about it.
All I know is Sirhan Sirhan is the assassin and he comes up for
parole every few years. And as a model prisoner, I wonder why
he isnt paroled. If he had shot me, hed be
out by now. But thats another story. I am very
interested in the film and this is one of the few I may make a
point in seeing.
JASON GRANT: What a
story this guy has. Hes a school teacher up in
Rochester, New York and went out browsing at a tag sale. He saw
this statue he thought would look great in his rec room and
bought it. His brother-in-law Chet, who thinks of himself as a
bit of an art enthusiast, saw the piece and thought it could be
worth something. Sure enough and lo and behold and who would
believe it and other meaningless lead-ins, the darn thing turned
out to be an Edgar Degas worth $110 million. Wow! Who did he
buy it from? Jason says some lady in Rochester. Will Jason
contact her and share in the windfall? Jason doesnt
answer. The audience titters with laughter. Jason tells the
audience to quiet down and says, Hold it . . . . yes,
I will contact her. And says no more. He says
nothing about sharing. Dave has the piece behind the desk and
shows the beautiful and exquisite Spanish
Dance statue by Degas. Its a rare piece,
indeed. Dave revels over the beauty and delicacy of the piece.
And then . . . . . oh, no. . . . Jason Grant notices
something. While Dave was looking over the Spanish
Dance, he accidentally broke off the arm. Like anyone
who just broke a $110 million item, Dave tries to put it back
together without the owner noticing, but Jason saw what happened
right in front of him. Jason stands up and takes hold of his
Spanish Dance. The arm is no broken,
making it worthless. Jason reacts like anyone who sees a life
of leisure suddenly turn to a life of labor . . . and in
Rochester, at that! He curses Dave for his clumsiness.
Curses himself for coming to the show. Curses his terrible
misfortune. Jason, in a fit of frustration, takes the damaged
Spanish Dance and smashes it to the ground.
He exits in anger with a promise to sue anyone and everyone
affiliated with the Late Show. And with that, he flees back
home to Rochester.
WILL IT FLOAT? Item:
a 6 pound, 12 ounce can of whole yams. Stored in what? Alan
says A metal can. Dave says itll
sink. Paul says itll float. And Paul changes his
pick to Sink. The Late Show models drop the 6 pound, 12 ounce
can of whole yams into the Will It Float tank and it . . . . .
sinks!
ACT 5: Time for Behind
the Scenes at the Late Show. We see a nothing shot of
an empty backstage. A stagehand walks by.
This has been Behind the Scenes at the Late Show.
Tell your friends.
DJ SHADOW, Q-TIP,
AND LATEEF: From DJ Shadows CD, The
Outsider, the trio perform Enuff.
And that was our show for Friday, November 24,
2006. Wahoo
EXTRA! I lost the e-mail
but someone wrote the reason the NFL features the Detroit Lions
every Thanksgiving on national TV is because the citys
car-making industry is such a big and loyal sponsor to the NFL.
Hey, its Cut and Paste Day
The Truth Behind Black Friday from the
urbanmyth website:
The day
after Thanksgiving is the day millions of Americans head for the
malls to kick off the Christmas shopping season.
Black Friday (as it is known in the retail
industry, supposedly because it's the day when retailers turn
the corner and see their income statements move out of the red
and into the black, or it's the day when retail workers are
exposed to the worst crowds and customer behavior) is regularly
cited as the busiest shopping day of the
year.
But although Black Friday may be the
day the greatest number of holiday shoppers traipse through
malls, it isn't necessarily the biggest day of the year in terms
of dollars spent. The consistent holiday shopping trend is that
sales figures spike on the day after Thanksgiving, drop sharply
immediately afterwards, then steadily increase throughout
December, peaking on the four days comprising the two weekends
before Christmas. The result is that Black Friday nearly always
ends up ranking below the last Saturday before Christmas (or
December 23, if Christmas Day falls on a weekend), and in recent
years it has ranked between fourth and eighth on charts of the
year's busiest shopping days.
November 25, 2006 marks the 10th Anniversary of the Wahoo
Gazette. How did it all start? I was in charge of
running the LATE SHOW football pool at the time. To drum up
interest, I would recap the results on the back of each
weeks football sheet. Staffers liked my snide
remarks and masked compliments. Walter and
Jay were putting this thing together . . . . a
website they called it . . . and asked if I
would like to help out. Still feeling like a new guy on the
staff, I said I would do anything necessary. I had no idea
where this thing would go. In fact, for the first few months I
thought this was called the Wazoo Gazette. Anyway,
I slapped something together for the first night, and then the
second night, and then the third, and on and on and on. It
went from a short daily report to a lengthier two-to-three times
a week Wahoo. And then it became a too-long/
every-day Wahoo Gazette. Anyway, here are the
first two Wahoo Gazettes from ten years ago . . .
or was it the Wazoo Gazette?
******************************* MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1996 Tonight is the
Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony in New York Citys
Rockefeller Center, so if you like pushing, shoving, and
pickpockets while listening to Silent Night,
thats the place to be.
Mailboy Bob
Borden is scheduled to appear LIVE on tonights
show, and is in his dressing room at this very moment running
his lines. Bob is wearing a navy blue terry-cloth robe, white
towel around his neck, open back slippers, and is sipping from a
green coffee mug.
Can you believe we have a grown man
on our staff who calls himself Corky?
Some plans by LATE SHOW staff members for the Thanksgiving
holiday Nancy Agostini
work Zoran Zgonc work Chris Schukei work
more tomorrow
*******************************
And
The Wahoo Gazette from November 26, 1996:
******************************* TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1996 The LATE SHOW
canned food drive is doing quite well, although sound effects
guy Gary Kiffel keeps showing up with a knife and
fork. I dont think he understands the true spirit of
the drive.
We have two Canadians on our staff; one of
course being Paul Shaffer. The other is writer
Tim Long. So if you see them on the street, be
sure to give them a big Buenos Dios, Senors.
Rupert Jee, proprietor of the Hello
Deli on 53rd Street has this bit of culinary advice
for you this Thanksgiving. . . . . Dont
gobble your turkey.
A survey among NYC
pedestrians found that last weeks favorite top ten
items were Tuesdays number 7, Mondays number
6, and Fridays number 2.
More plans by LATE
SHOW staff members for the Thanksgiving holiday . . . Theresa Gavigan work Alex
Kreisler work Amanda
Baehr - work *******************************
Back then, each days
Wahoo was about a half page. How I miss those
days. Ill be reprinting original Wahoos
from ten years ago for the next two weeks. Make copies and put
them in your Wahoo binder.