From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V4 #49 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Thursday, January 27 2000 Volume 04 : Number 049 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous ["^kat^" ] Re: Nickelodeon Shows [miyax ] Re: Nickelodeon Shows [miyax ] Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous [cookie ] Re: Drums and drummers [srm9988n@aol.comicrelief (Lori at fruhead dot com] Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous [Lisa Carpenter ] Re: OT: hanging spoons from noses (was: Re: OT: Nickelodeon Shows [Tom ] power outage [Ofer Inbar ] Fwd: OT: New thread (and a bit risque at that) [LilacGirl1002@aol.com] Re: Hello [Paul Mischler ] Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous [fruvousgirl@aol.comical (Angela)] Re: Nickelodeon Shows and others [mmstevens18@cs.comwhatever (Princess)] Re: letter people [simeean ] Fruvous "tripping" [cookie ] Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous [cookie ] OT:looking for brian McClelland [Veronika Berchtold ] Re: how about Chipmunk adventure? [bbwminors@aol.com (BBWMinors)] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 22:09:53 -0500 From: "^kat^" Subject: Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous >"Where were you when you heard about the OJ Simpson Verdict?" > > And everyone seems to have been in 8th grade math class. And I start thinking > > that it was 9th grade science class when I learned of the Challenger crash. well, i remember seeing the footage of the challenger on the 11:00 news as a wee child... but i was definitely in 9th grade science (biology, to be precise) for OJ. we were all watching our tvs & immediately afterward some kid went running down the hallways yelling out "not guilty!" yepyep. what a silly thing to define a generation by. gulf war... i have most specific memories of in fourth grade. we wrote letters to soldiers stationed in the gulf after a speaker came in and gave a presentation on the importance of communication for these men who were fighting for our country. i definitely didn't understand the greater significance back then. even now, i don't think i fully understand the government's rationale behind that conflict. hmm. > again looking back on my selfish, insencitive childhood, the only thing i really > remember about the beginning of the Gulf War was that the Simpsons was pre-empted > and i was ticked 'cause i wanted to watch that, not the stupid war. well, here's another one: the russian coup of july '91? i remember exactly where i was: watching the price is right. and i was *furious* that they had the audacity to cut in over the end of the showcase showdown to show something about a "coup." i had no idea the significance. of course, at the time the price is right was one of the highlights of my day (being bedridden for 7 weeks is no fun), but i still chuckle when i think of my pre-fifth grade insensitivity to the changing fate of an entire nation. anyway. decidedly off-topic, but what else do we have to talk about right now? ^kat^ "all you had you wasted" http://fly.to/the.midway.after.dark ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 09:02:31 -0500 From: miyax Subject: Re: Nickelodeon Shows polk wrote: > One last bit -- anyone recall the programs Nickelodeon used to show > under the series title "Special Delivery"? Everything from > after-school-special fare to an anthology of short films (with "Bambi > vs. Godzilla"!), all introduced by a squiggly animation of the series > logo being "delivered" over hill and dale, and finally fallling into a > spider web. Wonderful, imaginative escapist fare for an introverted > grade-schooler, when Nick had not yet been corrupted by the American > cash-ethic into a 24-hour advertisment for toys and videos. > Yeah!! I used to watch that religously as well! ::sigh:: I miss Nick as it used to be, before corruption...kids these days, they'll never know of the Nick we remember, they'll never know the Origin of the Green Slime, they'll never know much of Canadian television and of Alasdair Gillis (^_^), they'll never know Rugrats as a *GOOD* cartoon, before it got run over by corporate greed and bad plot lines (not to mention tacky gimics). Oh, ::sigh::. .... I've got it! ::jumps onto the stage:: I'm starting my own cable network, and I'm buying all these old shows we've spoke of! Who's with me? ^_^ - -- miyax, the Evil and Sinister Prime Minister of the Silver Millennium turnip-rat-ant-type person (bwa ha ha) Also known as "Bob" on AHSM, if not there (here) nowhere else. _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ the Interesting Link of the Month hq @ http://secondhandwonder.virtualave.net "Sheesh - hot on the heels of the Corel story, I'm just waiting to see 'Red Hat to acquire Abominable Snowman & Department of Defense in Massive Stock Swap.'" - Hemos ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 09:05:07 -0500 From: miyax Subject: Re: Nickelodeon Shows Luella Benn wrote: > > "..." wrote: > > > I preferred 3-2-1 Contact... even got the magazine... > > > Harlan > > And speaking of magazines, er well, speaking of things that got delivered to > your house when you were a kid.... > Did anyone else get Sweet Pickles as a kid? Or even remember what it was? I > remember anxiously awaiting the green Sweet Pickles bus on Thursday afternoons > to see what new cards would be delivered for my little box of animal knowledge. > There were sweet pickles books too, about different animals. I remember that I > had a little green box that was shaped like a bus to hold all of my cards that > each listed different facts about animals. Hey, this is were I first learned > what an aardvark was! Oh this is one of my *best* childhood memories. > I used to get...what was it now...Cricket? Was that the name? It was something along the lines of what you've spoke of, maybe it was Sweet Pickles...no, it was called Cricket ^_^ That, and Highlights ^_^ And 3-2-1 Contact we used to watch in tech class...::warm fuzzies:: - -- miyax, the Evil and Sinister Prime Minister of the Silver Millennium turnip-rat-ant-type person (bwa ha ha) Also known as "Bob" on AHSM, if not there (here) nowhere else. _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ the Interesting Link of the Month hq @ http://secondhandwonder.virtualave.net "Sheesh - hot on the heels of the Corel story, I'm just waiting to see 'Red Hat to acquire Abominable Snowman & Department of Defense in Massive Stock Swap.'" - Hemos ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 08:18:41 -0800 From: cookie Subject: Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous Princess wrote: > And I'm pondering this, and pondering the fact that people are complaining > there's been no fru-content as of late, and "The Gulf War" song pops into my > head. This is the song that hooked me into the lads-- I'd gotten a mix tape > with KOS and B'ville on it, then a friend made me copies of B'ville and Wood on > tape, and listening to B'ville it was all well and good until The Gulf War Song > came on and then I was hooked for life. > > Learning of the war was one of those defining moments of my historical life. (I > was in the lobby of the HSS building at WOSC on my way out of my accounting > class) Are there lots of folks on the group who were too young for the war to > be of significant impact on their lives? No need to really answer... just > feeling the need to ramble and post and create some fru-content from all of > this. Excellent attempt! Your creativity should not go unrewarded! I've been trying to think of what exactly I should add to this topic, unfortunately, there really is too much to say. I'll just leave you with my most vivid memory of the night the war started: I had been working at Kinko's when a customer came in and told us we had started bombing. We then spent the rest of the shift listening to the radio. After work, we all went to one of my co-worker's apartment to watch CNN. After a couple of beers, and a couple of hours of watching the depressing news, one of my friends decided to add a little levity to the situation and recapped his previous weekend where he and a buddy had gone camping in Wisconsin. They ended up at a strip bar in some small town, and mentioned how the fantasy of the whole thing was shattered when a stripper exposed all her womanly wiles directly in his face and then--at that moment--started up a normal introductory conversation with him..."Hi! I'm Tina! So, where are you boys from?" He immediately started laughing at the ridiculousness of the whole thing. Of course, this was the funniest thing any of us had heard EVER, so we laughed for about 10 minutes straight. I guess we were all in dire need of a little comic relief at that point. Unfortunately, my most vivid memory of that night is about a stripper. Weird, huh? Cookie ------------------------------ Date: 26 Jan 2000 20:56:21 GMT From: srm9988n@aol.comicrelief (Lori at fruhead dot com) Subject: Re: Drums and drummers Wench went wildly off topic with the following question: >Ok, I've been draggin my itty bitty baby drum around to FruShows and >festivals >and I have only managed to sit down ONCE with another FruHead and drum for >about 5 minutes. Are there REALLY drummers out there? Yes there are. But you know, when you're not talking about children's television around here, and decide to introduce such irrelevancies as FruShows and Fruhead activities related thereto, you really do need to precede your post with the header OT. Geez! Some people never learn, no matter HOW LONG they hang out on amm-f. ;) >Do you all play trap >sets or do you really play dumbeks you could bring with you? Well Wenchy (the Fruhead, not the song) knows perfectly well that there are several mad dumbek players here. Me, Trace, Drea, Angie, Mosch ;) ... and no doubt others. The proposed >drumming circle for last year's FruCon never really happened, and I know at >least four people brought drums. Any hope of one this year? I think your best bet is to contact each other in advance and plan a time, and a specific room, to gather in. Because once all the hubbub of the Con weekend starts, anything that's not already scheduled (and many things that are ;) ) just seem to drop by the wayside. I used my drums last Con weekend, and so did a few others. But not during the official Con-Frushow dates; rather, at a smallish gathering before the hordes descended on Toronto. I have not used them in a group since, and I think that barring an actual plan to get together a group of drummers or would-be drummers to play, I won't be bringing them along in the future. They're bulky, and somewhat fragile, and it seems silly to drag them along to no purpose. It's not like they fit in your pocket or anything. ;) That said, I think a drumming circle WOULD be a fun thing. I won't be at FruCon, but if others are interested, or if something actually happens at FruCon, maybe we could work on something for Falcon Ridge. Last year we camped near a big compound of drummers, and it was kind of cool (even if they did play one rhythm nonstop for, like, 4 hours -- and no, alas, it was NOT Sahara). So maybe one of the nights at this year's FRFF we could all gather at my tent with our respective instruments and have a drumming circle. - -- Lori Glitter Fairy/Tattooing Fru ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 01:20:57 GMT From: Lisa Carpenter Subject: Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous Princess wrote: > And someone, somewhere, mentioned something about the linking moment of their > generation being "Where were you when you heard about the OJ Simpson Verdict?" > And everyone seems to have been in 8th grade math class. And I start thinking > that it was 9th grade science class when I learned of the Challenger crash. > (Actually saw it live, we're the ones who told the rest of the school, creepy) > i kept thinking that the simpson trial wasn't all that important in my life since i couldn't even remember what year it was when the verdict came out, but then, after thinking about it for a few seconds i remembered that a bunch of the kids in my class pilfered a key to the av room and brought one of the tvs into the main hall so everyone could watch. as to the Challenger disaster, i was in grade 3 or 4 and a bunch of us were gathered in the library so we could watch the launching on tv. the teachers were very upset when it exploded, but being young and neive, i was rather unconcerned since i wasn't personaly involved. a few years later i realised the impact the Challenger had on the world, not only on the scientific world, but also the families of the people involved. >Learning of the war was one of those defining moments of my historical life. (I >was in the lobby of the HSS building at WOSC on my way out of my accounting >class) Are there lots of folks on the group who were too young for the war to >be of significant impact on their lives? again looking back on my selfish, insencitive childhood, the only thing i really remember about the beginning of the Gulf War was that the Simpsons was pre-empted and i was ticked 'cause i wanted to watch that, not the stupid war. later on i got mad because all these idiots were doing was hurting people and poluting the earth, and it didn't seem like they were doing much else. it wasn't until recently (past 2 or so years) that GWS really hit home with me, and i look back on those newscasts with renewed rancor. prarieFrü ******************** and these were our words our words were our songs these songs are our prayers these prayers keep me strong and i still believe..... ******************** ------------------------------ Date: 26 Jan 2000 23:36:28 GMT From: srm9988n@aol.comicrelief (Lori at fruhead dot com) Subject: Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous Michelle reflected: >someone, somewhere, mentioned something about the linking moment of their >generation being "Where were you when you heard about the OJ Simpson >Verdict?" >And everyone seems to have been in 8th grade math class. Oddly, I have completely blanked wherever I was from my memory. And I start thinking >that it was 9th grade science class when I learned of the Challenger crash. >(Actually saw it live, we're the ones who told the rest of the school, >creepy) eww. I did something rather similar. I was working at the circulation desk in a college library, and my mother, who worked in a movie studio, called me at work, her voice shaking, to tell me about it -- she had just seen it live on the monitors. So I essentially was the one who let much of my building know of it. And that was how I found out that astronaut Judith Resnick, who died on Challenger, was the cousin of one of the women in the counseling department. That was a horrible day. :( >Learning of the war was one of those defining moments of my historical life. >(I >was in the lobby of the HSS building at WOSC on my way out of my accounting >class) Are there lots of folks on the group who were too young for the war to >be of significant impact on their lives? No need to really answer... just >feeling the need to ramble and post and create some fru-content from all of >this. I think it's important you brought this up, because these are events that shaped us, and make us so passionate about certain things -- and how Fruvous articulates that passion in song is the reason we're all hanging out here. Even when we're just talking about television, we choose to talk about it here because we have these other things, and feelings about them, in common. The Gulf War? I was at home with an infant. And what I remember most was the "entertainment", impressive-visuals-and-human-interest, non-factual element of live or nearly-live coverage on CNN. Outrage at that, and a feeling of profound regret for the largely ignored, largely unmourned Iraqi rank-and-file who never had a choice about going to war, much less being buried alive in the sand by "withdrawing" troops, were mainly what I brought out of my television experience of that war. "So we read and we watched all the specially-selected news And we learned so much more about the good guys" Including, apparently, that they're so much more important, much more human, much more worthy of detailed coverage of their trials, than those who have the misfortune to be the ordinary citizens of a rogue regime. At least by the standards of those considering the all-powerful interest of media stocks and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. - -- Lori Glitter Fairy/Tattooing Fru ------------------------------ Date: 27 Jan 2000 04:25:08 GMT From: magicofbff@aol.com (MagicOfBFF) Subject: Re: how about Chipmunk adventure? OMG i loved that movie ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 21:28:37 -0700 From: Tom Salyers Subject: Re: nickelodeon shows In article <20000126195145.11758.00000212@ng-ce1.aol.com>, srm9988n@aol.comicrelief (Lori at fruhead dot com) says... > Yeah! I mean, even *I* watched Pete and Pete. Silliest thing in the world, > yet infinitely better than (uggh) All That. Pete and Pete are GOD. "Carrot-topped Judas! THOU HAST FORSAKEN MEEEEE!" - -- | "I could really use to lose my Catholic conscience Tom Salyers | Cuz I'm getting sick of feeling guilty all the time Denver, CO | I won't abuse it--yeah, I've got the best intentions | For a little bit of anarchy but not the hurting kind." ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 21:29:58 -0700 From: Tom Salyers Subject: Re: OT: hanging spoons from noses (was: Re: OT: Nickelodeon Shows In article <20000126185835.13963.00000131@ng-cn1.aol.com>, srm9988n@aol.comicrelief (Lori at fruhead dot com) says... > miyax/Bob said: > > >> -Saph > >> (Who learned to hang a spoon from her nose by watching this video) > > > >Yeah? I learned that from this old Pizza Hut commercial ^_^ > > Ho ho. Yes, I think in lieu of Frucontent, discussing where we each learned to > perform this feat is an excellent idea. Philistines, all. I learned to do it by watching Gonzo on the original Muppet Show. =) - -- | "I could really use to lose my Catholic conscience Tom Salyers | Cuz I'm getting sick of feeling guilty all the time Denver, CO | I won't abuse it--yeah, I've got the best intentions | For a little bit of anarchy but not the hurting kind." ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 05:35:49 GMT From: Ofer Inbar Subject: power outage There was a power outage in Woburn, MA, in the area where our office (and the ammf mail-news gateway) is located, on Tuesday night, lasting about 12 hours. This evening I brought the news server back up, and the gateway should be working now. -- Cos (Ofer Inbar) -- cos@polyamory.org http://www.leftbank.com/CosWeb/ -- WBRS (100.1 FM) -- info@wbrs.org http://www.wbrs.org/ "We're a bunch of geeks, and so is our audience. We like that. If you're not a geek, don't come to the show." -- Mike Ford of moxy fruvous ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 05:44:19 GMT From: LilacGirl1002@aol.com Subject: Fwd: OT: New thread (and a bit risque at that) - --part1_38.15f36be.25c132f6_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit In a message dated 1/25/2000 1:55:28 PM Pacific Standard Time, LilacGirl1002 writes: << << What is/are your favorite song/songs to play when you're ... well ... alone with the guy/gal of your dreams if you know what I mean??? When I was in college, my favorite was the second side of Jeff Beck's "Blow By Blow." Now I like BNL's "Wrap Your Arms Around Me." >> ***** Eish, don't you find that BNL song just a little bit creepy. What the hell are they really talking about anyway. I think it's like a murder scene. But if I weren't so creeped out by the lyrics I would like that song for ... too. Here's mine: Edwin McCain: I'll Be Dido: Thank you BNL: You Will Be Waiting, Am I the Only One, their version of Lovers In A Dangerous Time, and Some Fanastic Seal: Crazy and Kiss from a Rose Brothers Creegan: Squiggly Line and Live at Montreaux Collective Soul: No More, No Less Chris Issak: Flying Moxy Fruvous: I've Just Gotta Get a Message to You, Fly, No no Raja Vertical Horizon: Grey Sky Morning Fatboy Slim: Praise You Elvis Costello: Veronica, She, I Never Want to Fall in Love Rheostatics: Claire Kenny Wayne Shepard: Last Goodbye Jeremy Toback: You Make Me Feel Wood: Stay You Sting/Police: Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic, Brand New Day Betsy, who now feels slightly inferior to her list. >> - --part1_38.15f36be.25c132f6_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-path: LilacGirl1002@aol.com From: LilacGirl1002@aol.com Full-name: LilacGirl1002 Message-ID: Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2000 16:55:28 EST Subject: Re: OT: New thread (and a bit risque at that) To: ammf@fruvous.com MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: Windows AOL sub 54 In a message dated 1/25/2000 7:35:00 AM Pacific Standard Time, bbwminors@aol.com writes: << What is/are your favorite song/songs to play when you're ... well ... alone with the guy/gal of your dreams if you know what I mean??? When I was in college, my favorite was the second side of Jeff Beck's "Blow By Blow." Now I like BNL's "Wrap Your Arms Around Me." >> ***** Eish, don't you find that BNL song just a little bit creepy. What the hell are they really talking about anyway. I think it's like a murder scene. But if I weren't so creeped out by the lyrics I would like that song for ... too. Here's mine: Edwin McCain: I'll Be Dido: Thank you BNL: You Will Be Waiting, Am I the Only One, their version of Lovers In A Dangerous Time, and Some Fanastic Seal: Crazy and Kiss from a Rose Brothers Creegan: Squiggly Line and Live at Montreaux Collective Soul: No More, No Less Chris Issak: Flying Moxy Fruvous: I've Just Gotta Get a Message to You, Fly, No no Raja Vertical Horizon: Grey Sky Morning Fatboy Slim: Praise You Elvis Costello: Veronica, She, I Never Want to Fall in Love Rheostatics: Claire Kenny Wayne Shepard: Last Goodbye Jeremy Toback: You Make Me Feel Wood: Stay You Sting/Police: Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic, Brand New Day Betsy, who now feels slightly inferior to her list. - --part1_38.15f36be.25c132f6_boundary-- ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 01:02:23 -0500 From: Paul Mischler Subject: Re: Hello Ce Cal Stanutz is a reference to Cal Stanutz, the band's Production Manager, and FOH Mixer. More info about Cal and the rest of the guys can be found on Fruvous.com, http://www.fruvous.com/band.html Welcome to the NG Aaron! - -Paul Mischler Aaron Birenbaum wrote: > My first time on MF newsgroup. Love Moxy Fruvous. Why, in the song > Psycho Killer say Cal Stanutz? ------------------------------ Date: 27 Jan 2000 06:39:08 GMT From: fruvousgirl@aol.comical (Angela) Subject: Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous >it was 9th grade science class when I learned of the Challenger crash. I cant remember if I was in 9th or 10th grade. I do remember that I was in the dining hall and a girl in my grade came in to tell all the teachers. I was just passing by their tables as she was telling them. I vaguely recall this girl being under the impression that all of the astornauts were going to be ok. >Learning of the [gulf] war was one of those defining moments of my historical life. I was a freshman in college, in Jacksonville, FL, a town that is practically surrounded by military bases. My roomate was in NROTC and had many friends in the gulf and a girl down the hall had a brother over there, not her real brother but he might as well have been. >Where were you when you heard about the OJ Simpson Verdict?" Dont remember. I didnt really care very much. I was a little scared of riots, since I have friends in LA. Heres another one. Anyone remember watching the Branch Dividian Compound burn to the ground? I think I spent that whole afternoon on the couch crying. Angela "and history seems to agree, that I would fight you for me, that us would fight them for we" - GWS "I was out in the field collecting strength for my sheild, and I misplaced what made me real" - Misplaced ------------------------------ Date: 27 Jan 2000 07:24:25 GMT From: mmstevens18@cs.comwhatever (Princess) Subject: Re: Nickelodeon Shows and others >OK... Now help me out on this one. I remember two shows that NO ONE seems >to remember. I don't know what station they were on.. maybe PBS... the >first one was called "Alphabet Soup." That's all I remember. Then there >was "The Letter People," and the only thing I remember is the first line of >the theme song.. "Come and meet the Letter People..." can ANYONE help me >out on those!? > "The Letter People" ROCKED!!! I think we may be the only 2 people on the planet who remember it, though. Was up at something like 4 a.m. about 8 years ago and stumbled across an episode. What happened to the truly great shows of our PBS youth? Electric Company anyone? M ************************************* Michelle Princess of Swank MMStevens18@cs.com ************************************* ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 07:43:02 GMT From: simeean Subject: Re: letter people "..." wrote: >... "The Letter People," and the only thing I remember is the first line of > the theme song.. "Come and meet the Letter People..." can ANYONE help me > out on those!? i don't think i ever saw the show, but the letter people were the sole means of teaching us the alphabet in kindergarten.... this was almost 20 years ago now, and the last time i went spying around at the school (last summer?) there were still letter people galore hanging around the classroom. the vowels were female and the consonants were male, right? are these the same letter people? (wow, 21 m and 5 f, kind of like the smurfs...) or maybe not... i remember: miss a (ah-choo) miss e (eh-eh-exercise) mr. g (gum) mr. m (moustache?) mr. s (sssssssss) where'd sooozieee go? she'd remember..... ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 20:23:46 -0800 From: cookie Subject: Fruvous "tripping" Lisa Carpenter wrote: > > SaphiraCat83 wrote: > > > -Saph > > (Who cracks up whenever she dubs tapes on high speed) > > ever try Früvous on high speed? Nope! Only on 'shrooms. (whoops!) Cookie ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2000 20:41:37 -0800 From: cookie Subject: Re: You Can't Do That On Moxy Fruvous Kathleen Cain wrote: > After the pub closed, we walked to Buckingham > Palace where we were 3 obnoxious Americans in front of the gates. HEY! Speak for yourself! Apparently, you aren't aware that it's a long-standing tradition upon a tourist's first midnight viewing of Buckingham Palace to hang off the gates yelling, "LIZ! Can we come in for tea?" I know you're thinking that the liquor doing the talking, but you're wrong. You're only uninformed of certain requisite tourist protocols. I was SO embarrassed that you refused to participate. *I* didn't want to bring this up, but since you did, well...I hope you're satisfactorily humiliated. :-P Cookie ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2000 10:37:56 GMT From: Veronika Berchtold Subject: OT:looking for brian McClelland hello, if you are not Brian McClelland you may ignore this post. Brian please email me, I got something to tell you Veronika from Austria ------------------------------ Date: 27 Jan 2000 12:54:48 GMT From: bbwminors@aol.com (BBWMinors) Subject: Re: how about Chipmunk adventure? I once did an entire radio set like that (yeah, it was Boo Time). It started when someone had requested a song by Neil Diamond and I decided to honor the request and halfway through the song realized I couldn't stand it so turned up the speed to make it go faster. Great song at high speed: "Emotional Rescue" by the Stones. Luckily I had the program director and GM there with me (college station, natch) and they thought it was hysterical. Best part was when someone called to complain and I simply responded to them in a very high fast voice that we had no idea what they were talking about but maybe someone had put something in their drink? QL ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V4 #49 *******************************************