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[email protected] February 9th 09 02:01 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 8:35*pm, HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 8, 8:18 pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 8 Feb 2009 16:42:46 -0800 (PST),
wrote:
On Feb 8, 3:53 pm, HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 8, 10:14 am, wrote:
On Feb 7, 8:21 pm, wrote:
On Feb 7, 5:39 pm, GC Boater wrote:
On Feb 7, 12:54 pm, wrote:
On Feb 7, 10:59 am, wrote:
You stated you went to school with the person who wrote the jingle for
the Dating Game, correct? Which college was that?
crickets
It must have been Columbia when he was there with Obama, or possibly
at Yale with "W". *God forbid it be some place like Kansas State.
Nobody there would have any musical ability.
Nobody there would have any musical ability.
In the time I've been here, I have never read anything from Harry
saying he had any musical talent, or played any instrument.
Oh, really? He stated that he played guitar at one time, but backed
off of that lie when proven he didn't know ****. But, do you remember
just recently he stated that he went to college with the person that
wrote the Dating Game jingle? How much do you want to bet it's a lie,
and I can prove it's a lie?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Show me a " Notarized Letter " from a Lawyer, on his, or her
letterhead.
I never stated I went to school with whoever wrote the dating game
jingle. The problem with so many of the retards here is that their
reading *comprehension* is close to zero. I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Yeah, yeah.. I was there too, weren't you too Tim? I think John,
Loogie, Tom, Dick and the rest of the bunch went to that school just
like you did :)
Up - don't include me in that.
I didn't go to no fancy school - I went to a state university.
Like the rest of the 'po fokes...
JustHate didn't go to school, or at least not long enough to graduate.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Why would you say that? You know it's a lie..


I'm just going on what I see of you here...poor reading comprehension,
bad language skills, juvenile logical processes.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -?


Pfffttt... projecting again? W all know you have had a couple of
pretty bad weeks here. You have been called to the table on several of
your lies and each time you fold and run to the next thread.. Don't
you think it's time to run along little boy

Zombie of Woodstock February 9th 09 02:12 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:

I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.

Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.


I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.

Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.



Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?

What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.

Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?

Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:

"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80

"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81

"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79

"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78

Other music cues used on the show include:

"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.

"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.

"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.

"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.

Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.

New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.

So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?

--

"Never fight an inanimate object."

P.J. O'Rourke

[email protected] February 9th 09 02:16 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 9:12*pm, Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:


Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:


I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.


Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.


I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. *Most were in the 80s when they died.


Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.


Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?


What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too. * * * *


Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?


Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:

"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80

"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81

"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79

"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78

Other music cues used on the show include:

"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") *I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.

"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.

"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.

"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.

Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.

New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.

So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?

--

"Never fight an inanimate object."

P.J. O'Rourke- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Que the Crickets ;)

HK February 9th 09 02:24 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:

I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.

Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.

Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.


Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?

What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.

Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?

Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:

"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80

"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81

"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79

"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78

Other music cues used on the show include:

"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.

"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.

"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.

"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.

Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.

New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.

So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?

--

"Never fight an inanimate object."

P.J. O'Rourke



None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.

Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.

HK February 9th 09 02:25 AM

Hey, Harry
 
wrote:



Que the Crickets ;)



I doubt the Crickets were on that show.

Oh...you mean the ones you hear.


[email protected] February 9th 09 02:26 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 9:24*pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:


Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:


Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:


I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.


Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. *Most were in the 80s when they died.


Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.


Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?


What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too. *


Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?


Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:


"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80


"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81


"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79


"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78


Other music cues used on the show include:


"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") *I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.


"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.


"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.


"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.


Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.


New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.


So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?


--


"Never fight an inanimate object."


P.J. O'Rourke


None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.

Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


LOL, the plot thickens.... I saw my name in the credits of a few shows
last year, do you suppose...???

HK February 9th 09 02:29 AM

Hey, Harry
 
wrote:
On Feb 8, 9:24 pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:
I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.
Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.
Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.
Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?
What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.
Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?
Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.
The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:
"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80
"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81
"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79
"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78
Other music cues used on the show include:
"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.
"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.
"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.
"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.
Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.
New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.
So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?
--
"Never fight an inanimate object."
P.J. O'Rourke

None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.

Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


LOL, the plot thickens.... I saw my name in the credits of a few shows
last year, do you suppose...???



On what? America's Dumbest?

Tim February 9th 09 02:36 AM

Hey, Harry
 
"I got you beat...I went to college with the guy who wrote music for
The
Dating Game."

"have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game"

ok, so... which is it?


HK February 9th 09 02:37 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Tim wrote:
"I got you beat...I went to college with the guy who wrote music for
The
Dating Game."

"have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game"

ok, so... which is it?


Which is what?

Tim February 9th 09 02:46 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 8:37*pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:
"I got you beat...I went to college with the guy who wrote music for
The
Dating Game."


"have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game"


ok, so... which is it?


Which is what?


Which statement is true Harry. My question isn't really that difficult
to figure out.

.. If I didn't know better I would feel that you are trying to evade
the subject at hand.

Or maybe you actually are....

HK February 9th 09 02:51 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Tim wrote:
On Feb 8, 8:37 pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:
"I got you beat...I went to college with the guy who wrote music for
The
Dating Game."
"have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game"
ok, so... which is it?

Which is what?


Which statement is true Harry. My question isn't really that difficult
to figure out.

. If I didn't know better I would feel that you are trying to evade
the subject at hand.

Or maybe you actually are....



Both statements are pretty much the same, tim.

I have to admit, though, that one of the few pleasures here is to write
a statement in pretty plain english and then sit back and watch the
jackals parse it.

"What did he mean? Did he mean this? Did he mean that? We have to know
and now! I see it this way. He said X, no, he said Y."

Crikey.


Zombie of Woodstock February 9th 09 02:52 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:24:23 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:

I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.

Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.

Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.

Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?

What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.

Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?

Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:

"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80

"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81

"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79

"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78

Other music cues used on the show include:

"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.

"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.

"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.

"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.

Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.

New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.

So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?


None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.


Yeah - right. Those are the credit lines moron.

Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.


Perhaps you need to stop trying to play with the Big Boys and just
admit that you never went to school with anybody associated with
either The Dating Game versions.

Sometimes Harry you really are a jerk.

--

When I want your opinion, I'll beat it out of you

HK February 9th 09 02:54 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:24:23 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:

I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.

Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.

Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.
Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?

What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.

Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?

Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.
The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:

"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80

"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81

"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79

"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78

Other music cues used on the show include:

"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.

"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.

"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.

"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.

Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.

New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.

So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?

None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.


Yeah - right. Those are the credit lines moron.

Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.


Perhaps you need to stop trying to play with the Big Boys and just
admit that you never went to school with anybody associated with
either The Dating Game versions.

Sometimes Harry you really are a jerk.



Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here.

That in itself is worth a laugh.


"...anybody associated with...the Dating Game."

Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


Tim February 9th 09 03:01 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 8:54*pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:24:23 -0500, HK wrote:


Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:


Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:


Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:


I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.


Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. *Most were in the 80s when they died.


Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.
Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?


What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too. *


Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?


Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.
The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:


"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80


"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81


"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79


"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78


Other music cues used on the show include:


"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") *I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.


"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.


"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.


"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.


Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.


New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.


So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?
None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.


Yeah - right. *Those are the credit lines moron.


Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.


Perhaps you need to stop trying to play with the Big Boys and just
admit that you never went to school with anybody associated with
either The Dating Game versions.


Sometimes Harry you really are a jerk.


Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here.

That in itself is worth a laugh.

"...anybody associated with...the Dating Game."

Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


Well then, I'm proud to say that I went to theological school with
Thomas and Alexander Campbell.

Their pictures are in the hallway.

HK February 9th 09 03:02 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Tim wrote:
On Feb 8, 8:54 pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:24:23 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:
I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.
Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.
Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.
Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?
What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.
Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?
Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.
The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:
"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80
"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81
"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79
"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78
Other music cues used on the show include:
"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.
"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.
"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.
"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.
Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.
New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.
So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?
None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.
Yeah - right. Those are the credit lines moron.
Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.
Perhaps you need to stop trying to play with the Big Boys and just
admit that you never went to school with anybody associated with
either The Dating Game versions.
Sometimes Harry you really are a jerk.

Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here.

That in itself is worth a laugh.

"...anybody associated with...the Dating Game."

Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


Well then, I'm proud to say that I went to theological school with
Thomas and Alexander Campbell.

Their pictures are in the hallway.


Theological school? Yikes. Have you been deprogrammed?

[email protected] February 9th 09 03:11 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 9:51*pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:
On Feb 8, 8:37 pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:
"I got you beat...I went to college with the guy who wrote music for
The
Dating Game."
"have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game"
ok, so... which is it?
Which is what?


Which statement is true Harry. My question isn't really that difficult
to figure out.


. If I didn't know better I would feel that you are trying to evade
the subject at hand.


Or maybe you actually are....


Both statements are pretty much the same, tim.

I have to admit, though, that one of the few pleasures here is to write
a statement in pretty plain english and then sit back and watch the
jackals parse it.

"What did he mean? Did he mean this? Did he mean that? We have to know
and now! I see it this way. He said X, no, he said Y."

Crikey.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Crikey is right.. what a load of ****...

Tim February 9th 09 03:16 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 8, 9:02*pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:
On Feb 8, 8:54 pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:24:23 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:
I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.
Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. *Most were in the 80s when they died.
Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.
Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?
What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too. *
Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?
Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.
The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:
"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80
"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81
"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79
"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78
Other music cues used on the show include:
"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") *I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.
"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.
"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.
"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.
Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.
New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.
So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?
None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.
Yeah - right. *Those are the credit lines moron.
Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.
Perhaps you need to stop trying to play with the Big Boys and just
admit that you never went to school with anybody associated with
either The Dating Game versions.
Sometimes Harry you really are a jerk.
Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here..


That in itself is worth a laugh.


"...anybody associated with...the Dating Game."


Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


Well then, I'm proud to say that I went to theological school with
Thomas and Alexander Campbell.


Their pictures are in the hallway.


Theological school? Yikes. Have you been deprogrammed?


Deprogrammed?

Forgive me, but I'm not following you comment.

HK February 9th 09 03:31 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Tim wrote:
On Feb 8, 9:02 pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:
On Feb 8, 8:54 pm, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:24:23 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 20:17:20 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:
I did go to college with a
fellow who wrote music for the dating game and another of those silly
dating-marriage shows.
Really.
Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.
I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.
Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.
Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?
What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.
Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?
Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.
The following music used on the series were done by Herb Alpert and
the Tijuana Brass:
"Spanish Flea" (bachelor intro) Written by Julius Wechter - dead at 80
"Whipped Cream" (bachelorette intro) Written by Allen Toussaint who is
still alive - at 81
"Lollipops and Roses" (meet your date cue) Written by Anthony Velona -
dead at 79
"Ladyfingers" and "Lemon Tree" (think cues) Written by Will Holt -
allive - 78
Other music cues used on the show include:
"Fantail" by Count Basie (turntable cue when Jim Lange (later Chuck
Woolery) says, "and here they are!") I know you didn't go to school
with Count Basie.
"Little Rosie" by Chuck Barris (New Dating Game 1973 closing theme) -
Ditto.
"Love Sickness" by The Trumpets Ole (times up cue) Milton Delugg who
was born in 1918 and is now dead.
"Boston Bust-Out" by Jimmy McGriff (prize intro cue) - Never went to a
formal school.
Dating Game 1965, main theme Chet Baker/The Mariachi Brass - never
went to school - never graduated junior high school.
New Dating Game 1973, main theme by David Mook - counldn't have been
David Mook becasue David Mook is a pseudonym for somebody listed
above.
So, Mr. Wizard - who was it?
None of those guys. But you are assuming those tunes were the only music
on the show. I haven't the foggiest what music my college buddy wrote or
arranged for the shows, only that the one time I saw the show, he was
listed in the credits.
Yeah - right. Those are the credit lines moron.
Perhaps you can track down everyone who worked on the show...that should
keep you out of mischief.
Perhaps you need to stop trying to play with the Big Boys and just
admit that you never went to school with anybody associated with
either The Dating Game versions.
Sometimes Harry you really are a jerk.
Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here.
That in itself is worth a laugh.
"...anybody associated with...the Dating Game."
Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.
Well then, I'm proud to say that I went to theological school with
Thomas and Alexander Campbell.
Their pictures are in the hallway.

Theological school? Yikes. Have you been deprogrammed?


Deprogrammed?

Forgive me, but I'm not following you comment.




Exit counseling?

Zombie of Woodstock February 9th 09 03:57 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:54:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here.


No - the Dating Game is not the issue here. Your "association" with
the Dating Game is the issue.

Here's the thing of it. I don't know what you expect to have happen -
other people have interests that extend beyond the mere mundane - like
a broader interest in music for instance. I knew that a lot of the
music on the Dating Game was from the popular genre most being from my
era and before and that pretty much all of it pre-dated our college
school years - you aren't that much older than I am - these guys,
those that did attend higher institutions of learning, did so long
before you and I got out of elementary school. Not that I know any of
the people who wrote these tunes, but I was familiar with the artists
who did.

It's a simple construct - a broad range of interest, a claim I know to
be iffy at best and a 30 second search of iMDB to verify what I knew
to be true.

I would suggest that next time, use Google and at least make the story
match the facts.

--

When I want your opinion, I'll beat it out of you

Eisboch[_4_] February 9th 09 07:14 AM

Hey, Harry
 

"HK" wrote in message
...
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:

I did go to college with a fellow who wrote music for the dating game
and another of those silly dating-marriage shows.
Really.

Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.


I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.

Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.



Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last and
the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that everyone who
works in any television show is the same age as everyone else on the show?
Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show stays long enough to be
"identified" with it?

What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college buddies,
he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's putting together
the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the show and there was
his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed game and one other for a
while, too.
Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was everyone
doing that show the same aqe as Clark?

Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.

Eisboch


Eisboch[_4_] February 9th 09 07:24 AM

Hey, Harry
 

"HK" wrote in message
...


Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


There is/was an audio engineer who shares my name exactly (even the middle
initial) who did the audio work for a number of TV shows and our name
appears in the credits. Because I was always a audio nut as a teenager,
some people I knew at the time thought it was me. It isn't/wasn't
obviously.

Eisboch


[email protected] February 9th 09 08:58 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 9, 2:24*am, "Eisboch" wrote:
"HK" wrote in message

...



Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


There is/was an audio engineer who shares my name exactly *(even the middle
initial) *who did the audio work for a number of TV shows and our name
appears in the credits. * Because I was always a audio nut as a teenager,
some people I knew at the time thought it was me. * It isn't/wasn't
obviously.

Eisboch


Yeah, but it's so much fun watching Harry wiggle out of this one...

HK February 9th 09 10:46 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 21:54:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Apparently the Dating Game was a big deal to you and a few others here.


No - the Dating Game is not the issue here. Your "association" with
the Dating Game is the issue.


D'oh. I have no association with the Dating Game. Someone I knew in
college worked on the show for a while. That's all there is to it.

HK February 9th 09 10:48 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
...
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 17:58:42 -0500, HK wrote:

Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 15:53:58 -0500, HK wrote:

I did go to college with a fellow who wrote music for the dating
game and another of those silly dating-marriage shows.
Really.

Who was it because if you did, you've got to be at least 80 years old.
Check your math, Mr. Wizard.

I did - most of the people, with the exception of Chuck Barris, is
dead and gone. Most were in the 80s when they died.

Check it yourself Mr. Dating Game Music.



Try again. The Dating Game hit the airwaves in the mid 1960s. Are you
assuming that all who worked that show from its first year to its last
and the derivative shows were the same age? Are you assuming that
everyone who works in any television show is the same age as everyone
else on the show? Are you assuming that everyone who works a TV show
stays long enough to be "identified" with it?

What I know is that when I was in contact with one of my college
buddies, he said something like..."have you heard about XXX...he's
putting together the music on the dating game." Well, i looked for the
show and there was his name...in the credits. He worked the newlywed
game and one other for a while, too.
Dick Clark did the new year's eve show this past December 31. Was
everyone doing that show the same aqe as Clark?

Sometimes, but not often, I wonder about you binary thinking guys.


I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he
went to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell
High School in MA. Never met.

Eisboch


Further, he's dead. You aren't.


HK February 9th 09 10:49 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Eisboch wrote:

"HK" wrote in message
...


Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.


There is/was an audio engineer who shares my name exactly (even the
middle initial) who did the audio work for a number of TV shows and our
name appears in the credits. Because I was always a audio nut as a
teenager, some people I knew at the time thought it was me. It
isn't/wasn't obviously.

Eisboch


What a coincidence!

HK February 9th 09 10:50 AM

Hey, Harry
 
wrote:
On Feb 9, 2:24 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
"HK" wrote in message

...



Well, he was. I was told by a friend he was, and I saw his name in the
credits. That's the beginning and end of my interest in it.

There is/was an audio engineer who shares my name exactly (even the middle
initial) who did the audio work for a number of TV shows and our name
appears in the credits. Because I was always a audio nut as a teenager,
some people I knew at the time thought it was me. It isn't/wasn't
obviously.

Eisboch


Yeah, but it's so much fun watching Harry wiggle out of this one...



It's another day, Shorty...time enough for you to get over your
disappointment that your motorcycling daughter is not a son.

Zombie of Woodstock February 9th 09 11:14 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:

I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.


I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.

I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.

Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.

--

"I have tried to know absolutely nothing about a great
many things, and I have succeeded fairly well."

Robert Benchley

HK February 9th 09 11:30 AM

Hey, Harry
 
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:

I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.


I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.

I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.

Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.



Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.

I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he was at
his "chosen" game.


John H[_2_] February 9th 09 11:58 AM

Hey, Harry
 
On Mon, 09 Feb 2009 11:14:31 GMT, Zombie of Woodstock
wrote:

On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:

I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.


I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.

I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.

Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.


Shame. Natalie Wood and I were great friends. Met while she was
filming 'From Here to Eternity'. The Pearl Harbor attack scenes, at
least some of the fighter strafing scenes, were filmed at Ft.
MacArthur in San Pedro while I was stationed there.

I talked to her, waved at her, looked awe-struck at her, and got her
signature on my 'West Side Story' album cover.

She never waved back, or talked to me, or looked awe-struck when I was
around, but I still considered her a great friend -- 'til she got
murdered.

[email protected] February 9th 09 12:01 PM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 9, 6:30*am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:


I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. *Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY *and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. * Never met.


I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. *I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.


I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.


Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.


Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.

I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?

Vic Smith February 9th 09 12:16 PM

Hey, Harry
 
On Mon, 09 Feb 2009 06:58:03 -0500, John H
wrote:

On Mon, 09 Feb 2009 11:14:31 GMT, Zombie of Woodstock
wrote:

On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:

I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.


I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.

I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.

Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.


Shame. Natalie Wood and I were great friends. Met while she was
filming 'From Here to Eternity'. The Pearl Harbor attack scenes, at
least some of the fighter strafing scenes, were filmed at Ft.
MacArthur in San Pedro while I was stationed there.

I talked to her, waved at her, looked awe-struck at her, and got her
signature on my 'West Side Story' album cover.

She never waved back, or talked to me, or looked awe-struck when I was
around, but I still considered her a great friend -- 'til she got
murdered.


Dick Butkus graduated from CVS the year before I started there.
Never saw the guy in person.
But somebody who looked a little like him sucker punched me to the
gut. Couldn't get my breath back for about half a minute.
True story.
Needless to say, I didn't have much fun in HS.
Now if it had been Natalie Wood who slammed me, I might have stuck
around.

--Vic

HK February 9th 09 12:33 PM

Hey, Harry
 
wrote:
On Feb 9, 6:30 am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:
I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.
I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.
I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.
Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.

Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.

I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?


Told you this the other day; much more fun watching low-brain-output
assholes like you react. I'm conducting experiments in classical
conditioning. Your job is to react. You do well at this, Fideaux.

Zombie of Woodstock February 9th 09 12:34 PM

Hey, Harry
 
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 04:01:53 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.


Really.

And how do you know that Harry?

--

Real engineers don't document - If it was hard to
design, it should be hard to understand.

[email protected] February 9th 09 12:35 PM

Hey, Harry
 
On Feb 9, 7:33*am, HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 9, 6:30 am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:
I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. *Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY *and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. * Never met.
I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. *I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.
I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.
Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.
Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.


I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?


Told you this the other day; much more fun watching low-brain-output
assholes like you react. I'm conducting experiments in classical
conditioning. Your job is to react. You do well at this, Fideaux.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Wiggle wiggle little worm... So, you throw up a lie and watch people
laugh at you?

BAR[_2_] February 9th 09 12:40 PM

Hey, Harry
 
HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 9, 6:30 am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:
I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing
is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell
High
School in MA. Never met.
I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.
I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.
Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.
Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.

I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?


Told you this the other day; much more fun watching low-brain-output
assholes like you react. I'm conducting experiments in classical
conditioning. Your job is to react. You do well at this, Fideaux.


You couldn't conduct an experiment if it bit you in the ass. With all of
your psychosis, neurosis, and other afflictions it's a wonder you
haven't spontaneously combusted yet.

HK February 9th 09 12:42 PM

Hey, Harry
 
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 04:01:53 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.


Really.

And how do you know that Harry?


I asked everyone of consequence.

HK February 9th 09 12:43 PM

Hey, Harry
 
wrote:
On Feb 9, 7:33 am, HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 9, 6:30 am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:
I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.
I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.
I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.
Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.
Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.
I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?

Told you this the other day; much more fun watching low-brain-output
assholes like you react. I'm conducting experiments in classical
conditioning. Your job is to react. You do well at this, Fideaux.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Wiggle wiggle little worm... So, you throw up a lie and watch people
laugh at you?



I didn't say that, dumfoch, but, of course, your language skills are
lacking, and so are the conclusions you reach.

Good Fideaux. Here's a treat...


BAR[_2_] February 9th 09 12:44 PM

Hey, Harry
 
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 04:01:53 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.


Really.

And how do you know that Harry?


When I was fired from McDonalds, at the age of 16, the area supervisor
wanted to know who I knew who could get the manager who fired me fired
and me rehired so fast when he called to offer me my job back the next day.


HK February 9th 09 12:44 PM

Hey, Harry
 
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 9, 6:30 am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:
I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing
is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to
Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.
I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.
I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.
Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.
Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.

I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he
was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?


Told you this the other day; much more fun watching low-brain-output
assholes like you react. I'm conducting experiments in classical
conditioning. Your job is to react. You do well at this, Fideaux.


You couldn't conduct an experiment if it bit you in the ass. With all of
your psychosis, neurosis, and other afflictions it's a wonder you
haven't spontaneously combusted yet.


Go back to high school. This time, concentrate on your studies instead
of Mary Sue's teats.

BAR[_2_] February 9th 09 12:53 PM

Hey, Harry
 
HK wrote:
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 9, 6:30 am, HK wrote:
Zombie of Woodstock wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 02:14:56 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote:
I was in the same high school class as Andy Kaufman. Only thing
is, he went
to Great Neck High School on Long Island, NY and I went to
Norwell High
School in MA. Never met.
I went to school with Tony Conigliaro - only he went to St Mary's in
Lynn and I went to Marblehead High. I did meet him and, minor claim
to fame, struck him out with three straight fastballs in the state
championship game pitching in relief.
I was born on the same day as Gisele Bundchen, Thomas Friedman,
Natalie Wood and Carlos Santana.
Unfortunately, I don't know any of them.
Not to worry; no one of consequence knows you, either, or at least
admits to it.

I went to high school with Floyd Little. He was a couple of years
ahead
of me. I knew him. So did everyone else at the school. He was a very
popular fellow. He was at least as good a basketball player as he
was at
his "chosen" game.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -

Wiggle wiggle little worm.... Why won't you just tell us the name of
your Dating Game composer? Could it have been a lie?

Told you this the other day; much more fun watching low-brain-output
assholes like you react. I'm conducting experiments in classical
conditioning. Your job is to react. You do well at this, Fideaux.


You couldn't conduct an experiment if it bit you in the ass. With all
of your psychosis, neurosis, and other afflictions it's a wonder you
haven't spontaneously combusted yet.


Go back to high school. This time, concentrate on your studies instead
of Mary Sue's teats.


Mary Sue had breats/tits/boobies/jugs/knockers by the time she was in
high school and the felt nice.


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