From solano.community.net!uunet!panix!ddsw1!not-for-mail Thu Aug 25 10:22:06 1994 Path: solano.community.net!uunet!panix!ddsw1!not-for-mail From: barnhart@mcs.net (Aaron Barnhart) Newsgroups: alt.fan.letterman,rec.arts.tv,alt.tv.talkshows.late,news.answers,alt.answers,rec.answers Subject: alt.fan.letterman Frequently Asked Questions (read before posting) Followup-To: alt.fan.letterman Date: 20 Aug 1994 03:00:03 -0500 Organization: MCSNet Services Lines: 1257 Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu Message-ID: <334d63$ban@Venus.mcs.com> Reply-To: letterman@mcs.net NNTP-Posting-Host: venus.mcs.com Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions (and their answers) about the Late Show/Late Night with David Letterman. New readers of the alt.fan.letterman newsgroup should read this FAQ list before posting. Xref: solano.community.net alt.fan.letterman:30573 rec.arts.tv:122755 alt.tv.talkshows.late:171 news.answers:27116 alt.answers:4029 rec.answers:6811 Archive-name: letterman/faq Last-modified: Tue Aug 16 21:38:15 CDT 1994 Version: 9.08 ====================================================================== Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for the alt.fan.letterman newsgroup ====================================================================== From New York: Home of the world champion New York Knicks ... It's the FAQ LIST for David Letterman! with the A. F. of L. newsgroup ... and FAQ compiler Aaron Barnhart ... plus Paul Shaffer and the CBS Orchestra ... and now ... the voice of America ... DAAAAAAVID LLLLLETTERMAN !! ====================================================================== Top Ten Questions Asked on the A. F. of L. Newsgroup. ====================================================================== 10. Where can I write to get free tickets to the Late Show? --> Send a postcard (no letters) with your name and address to: Tickets Late Show with David Letterman Ed Sullivan Theater 1697 Broadway New York, NY 10019 Requests are limited to 2 tickets. The _Times_ says that "ordinarily, requests for specific dates cannot be accommodated." Within a few weeks you will receive a reply postcard informing you that tickets should be mailed to you within six months. It used to be three months, but with some 5,000 postcards arriving every week they've understandably had to modify their projections. (Thanks to Tony Tortorelli.) >>> And by the way, in case you got the idea in your head that those ticket people just sit around and flip pats of butter at the ceiling, dig this. As you may know, a recent taping did not air that evening because it was the Friday night that O.J. Simpson decided to go for a drive in the country with his friend Al Cowlings. The decision was made to air that show, featuring Julia Roberts, on the following Thursday. But that was a taping day as well. So the ticket office got very busy and notified all the members of Thursday's studio audience that there would be no taping and issued them all raincheck tickets! 9. I understand there is a mailing list for the nightly Top Ten list. --> Yup. Here's what you do to subscribe. Send a message to: LISTSERV@tamvm1.tamu.edu In the body of the message enter the following information: Subscribe Top-Ten my_name where "my_name" is, of course, your name. Your *full* name. Do not enter anything except what is said above. If done correctly, you will receive a confirmation message stating that you've been added to the list. 8. Can I send e-mail to Dave? --> You want the short answer? NO. Can you send e-mail to _Late Show with David Letterman_? Sure. If you have comments or suggestions about the big shoo you can mail Lateshow@pipeline.com and your mail will be answered by talented talent researcher Christine Schomer over there at the old Ed Sullivan Theater. Note: Please *don't* write for tickets by e-mail; only the postcard method will accomplish anything. Also, Christine apologizes but she simply has not been able to keep up with the flood of mail so far. Her mailbox now sends a stock response to everyone who writes; please don't be offended; she just wants you to know your note was received. Christine either replies to mail sent or forwards it along the internal LAN at Worldwide Pants to the appropriate staffer. >>> And for those of those just joining the Net, Dave has had a mailbox for approximately five months longer than Conan O'Brien has (his is Conanshow@aol.com). 7. Why are so many people discussing Jay Leno on a Letterman newsgroup? --> Until football season starts up in earnest, we'll need someone to work out our aggressions on. 6. I can't believe Dave actually picked to do his 12:35 show that old gasbag Tom Snyder. --> We were under the impression that you didn't *want* the job, Mr. Stern. 5. Why does Dave make so many jokes at fat guys' expense? --> He's terrified of fat women? 4. Do Letterman's people read this newsgroup? --> Richard "Shecky" Scheckman, the show's longtime film coordinator, reads the group regularly, as do audio consultant Michael Delugg and talent researcher Christine Schomer. Christine is the one who maintains the mailbox Lateshow@pipeline.com as well. And writer Spike Feresten has been known to fire up a colormail from time to time. 3. I can't believe Jay Leno is doing "Headlines"! David Letterman was reading from newspapers *years* ago! Leno ought to apologize on national television to Dave for this act of larceny! --> You know, if you had been around in about 1956, your gripe would've made a good letter to the editor. And then Steve Allen might have picked up the newspaper it appeared in and read it on the air! 2. Is there always such a crowd of people milling around the Ed Sullivan Theater? It seems every time Dave steps outside there are hundreds gathered there to cheer him. --> Don't be too impressed; if you listen carefully you can hear them chanting "Regis." And the Number One Question Asked on the A. F. of L. Newsgroup: 1. Where can I get me that Madonna transcript? --> At the archive site ftp.mcs.net; complete details at the end of this FAQ list. ====================================================================== Questions about David Michael Letterman. ====================================================================== Q. Was Dave born to an actual American family? A. On April 12, 1947, to Joe and Dorothy Letterman. Dave's dad was a florist and had what Dave calls a "big personality. He was loud and liked to goof off and say funny things and do things to provoke you and get under your skin." By contrast, Dave's mom, as we have all witnessed, "is the least demonstrative person in the world." When Joe died 20 years ago, Dave said it was "the worst time in my life." Dave's mom was church secretary for many years at Second Presbyterian Church in Broad Ripple, Indiana, then a suburb of Indianapolis, which is where the Lettermans (including Dave's two sisters) grew up. Q. I understand that during his growing-up years, Dave was pretty much, and I'm quoting now, a "dork." A. Over 30 years ago, Dave worked during high school in the Atlas Super Market, an Indianapolis institution even then. Caroline Latham's book _The David Letterman Story_ shows Dave standing next to an enormous side of beef. It is fair to say that in the photo Dave looked "like a 16-year-old serial killer." In his own defense, Dave has said, "I think there's something wrong if high school is the greatest experience of your life." Q. Where did Dave attend college? A. Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. He was a TV/Radio major with a minor in speech, and pledged Sigma Chi. Some of his frat brothers described Dave as very funny and self-confident. Dave has been generous with donations to the university and was largely responsible for the new Sigma Chi building at Ball State. In 1985 he endowed the David Letterman Scholarship there, an annual gift to a telecommunications major based solely on his or her creativity, *not* grades. Q. Is Dave married? A. Dave was married to a college sweetheart, Michelle Cook, but they divorced in 1977. For several years he and Late Night head writer Merrill Markoe were engaged, but that fizzled and Merrill took off for California and a writing career. Dave is presently in a relationship with former Late Night staffer Regina Lasko, who is keeping a separate residence in Manhattan, Dave says, for privacy reasons. Q. Who was the woman who kept breaking into Dave's Connecticut home claiming to be "Mrs. Letterman"? A. Margaret Ray. And she still breaks in from time to time, according to Dave in his January 1994 _Playboy_ interview. He says he has tried to get her some psychiatric help, because the state has let her case "fall through the cracks." But for now, she's on the lam. Q. Should I break into Dave's home? A. Oh, why not. Just be out of there by 10 p.m. when he comes home. Also, our friend Jen Laurie recently cruised by Dave's house (yes, she's still in college) and says that at the end of his driveway on this big tree is nailed a sign that says, "These premises protected by Security Attack Cats." Q. I heard that Dave used to be a weatherman in Indianapolis. A. From 1969 to 1974, as an intern and later a full-timer, Dave worked for his hometown Channel 13 as bench announcer, host of a Saturday morning kids' show and of the late-late movie, and yes, as weatherman. Dave once reported that the city was being pelted with hail "the size of canned hams" and he also enthusiastically congratulated a tropical storm when it was upgraded to hurricane status. Viewers of the _Late Show_ were recently treated to some old weather-report footage brought by Diane Sawyer, and here's what Dave said on the old report: "Let's take a look at the cloud-cover photograph made earlier of the United Staates today and I think you'll see that once again we've fallen to the prey of political dirty dealings. And right now you can see what I'm talking about: the higher- ups have removed the border between Indiana and Ohio, making it one giant state! Personally, I'm against it." Q. Didn't he have a radio show, too? A. For about a year following his t.v. job. It was at WNTS, back when it was all-talk. This gig did not go so well for him. "I was miscast because you have to have somebody who is fairly knowledgeable, fairly glib, possessing a natural interest in a number of topics," he later told an interviewer. "That certainly is not me. I don't care about politics. ... The Nixon-Watergate nonsense was the perfect example of something about which I knew nothing and couldn't have cared less." So Dave got bored and started making stuff up. According to Caroline Latham, one time "he told his listeners that their beloved 230-foot-tall Soldier's Monument ... had been sold to the island of Guam, whose government planned to paint it green in honor of their national vegetable, the asparagus." >>> It has been rumored that Dave got fired for his on-air remarks at Channel 13 or WNTS. In fact, the only place he ever got yanked from was Ball State's pathetic ten-watt all-classical campus radio station. Q. What else can you tell me about Dave's career in show bidness? A. As you may know, when Dave arrived in Hollywood in 1975 he found work as a comedy writer for Jimmie Walker and Paul Lynde, and as a player on Mary Tyler Moore's short-lived variety show. Because of his friendship with Allen Ludden (I am not kidding), Dave landed a guest-star spot on Dick Clark's _$10,000 Pyramid_ and Ludden's own _Liars' Club_ (as a "guest celebrity"). In his career, Dave has also played a Werner Erhard-alike in an episode of _Mork and Mindy,_ made several appearances in _Open All Night_ (a t.v. show which lasted the season between the morning and late-night shows), appeared in a murder mystery called _Fast Friends_ that starred Dick Shawn as a talk show host who drops dead and is replaced by Dave, made a cameo in _The Building_ (yet another short-lived t.v. show, which aired in 1993, starred Bonnie Hunt, and was co-produced by Dave), played himself on _The Larry Sanders Show_ (he "leaked" to Larry that the 12:35 show on CBS would be given to Tom Snyder, which in fact turned out to be true), and made a movie cameo in _Cabin Boy_ (1994), which starred Chris Elliott. He also co-hosted that hilarious Emmy Award presentation on Fox a few years back. Q. I wonder why Dave doesn't do more movies? A. In fact, Dave was under contract to Touchstone Pictures, but has since extricated himself from it. What happened was Michael Eisner, the chairman of Walt Disney Company, signed Letterman to *not* do movies for other companies. "Eisner's kid had gotten ol' Dad to wrangle some tickets when Dave was in L.A.," recalls Bill Jones, who saw Eisner interviewed by Bob Costas on _Later._ "Eisner ... got excited when he got there and saw the huge lines and movie-premiere atmosphere. He's thinking, this guy is like a movie star/rock star already. What could we do if we actually put him in the movies? Delighted to find the next day that Dave had no movie obligations, they contacted Dave's people. They were shocked to find that our TV Pal wanted no part of any movie deal. He was pretty sure he would suck, and told them so many times. ... Dave suggested they go look at his screen test for _Airplane!_ in the role eventually played by Robert Hay. After the contract was signed, they finally did, and Eisner said he turned white as a ghost -- Dave really was that bad." Eventually, as Bill Carter reports, the contract was terminated and Disney's money more or less cheerfully refunded. >> The name of Dave's movie production company? Cardboard Shoe. Q. What the hell is this thing Dave's got for Tom Snyder? A. Dave was a big _Tomorrow_ fan and has claimed to have seen between 80 and 85 percent of the shows. He was more than a little uneasy about displacing Tom in 1982 (after NBC weasels had ruined it with Rona Barrett and a studio audience, the show was cancelled to make room for Late Night). Dave often said he feels Snyder ought to be on network television again, and made good on it in August 1994 when CBS made Tom the host of the Worldwide Pants-produced late late show at 12:35 a.m., beginning this winter. Aaron Dickey has probably described the Colorcast's appeal to the younger generation best: "If Snyder isn't camp incarnate, I don't know what is." >>> And Bill Jones adds this historical footnote: "Much of the first ten Carson years of the Tonight Show were erased [1962-72, the New York years]. They were going to do same thing to the Tomorrow tapes after Snyder was gone, but they were stopped by ... David Letterman! One of the reasons that on his recent appearance, Tom described Dave as true friend." Q. I can't believe NBC just let Dave go because they didn't like his personality. A. As Bill Carter reports, one senior NBC executive was heard to say after the Letterman-Leno debacle, "It was amazing to have made that many mistakes in a row," a quote Carter apparently finds so compelling he repeats it word for word elsewhere in the same book. (Have *all* the book editors been replaced by agents?) But perhaps the biggest mistake was the network's failure to chisel out a long-range strategy for late night, which ideally would have been to coax Johnny out of his job (a task eventually taken up by Helen Kushnick, Jay Leno's longtime handler), offer Dave the 11:35 show, and throw Leno over to CBS, where he would have been more than welcome. Instead, Jay got a clause inserted in his contract that made him the next _Tonight_ host, Johnny got wind of it and quit, and Dave was left in the dust. If there is a wildcard in this, it is possibly John Agoglia, the president of NBC Productions and its "no man" in matters relating to talent relations. It is true that Letterman made life difficult for Agoglia, but the latter's weasely actions were inappropriate even for a grouchy talent like Dave. After all, here is a man who (a) threatened to bring Maury Povich's show into Studio 6A every day if Dave didn't cooperate with the network's stupid "Sunday Best" program, (b) bragged that he had Dana Carvey locked in as Dave's 12:35 replacement, a flat lie, and (c) even when instructed by his boss Robert Wright to negotiate a plan to give _Tonight_ to Letterman, would not put anything in writing. However mean Dave was to Agoglia on his show, the NBC man returned it with interest later on. The oft-heard complaint that Dave was not cooperative with the suits reminds us of the mess the Reverend Martin Luther King got into because he wouldn't return the phone calls of an undercover FBI agent who was trying to reach him. Infuriated, the G-man went to his boss Hoover and reported King as a troublemaker, and we know the rest. Only thing is King, like Letterman, simply didn't return calls from anyone except his closest advisors. Q. I've heard it said that had Dave gotten the _Tonight_ gig, he would've abandoned the _Late Night_ format entirely -- not just honed its rough edges like he did on CBS -- and done a show very much like Carson's. A. So you've been listening to frequent A. F. of L. contributor Mark Evanier, a writer for cartoons such as _Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?_ and who is most noted as the scripter for the comic book "Groo the Wanderer" which has published over 130 issues. Mark says he knows Jay Leno and Dave Letterman, and many of the people who work for them. He says, "One of Dave's current writers even told me he was glad D.L. didn't get the gig because he thinks Dave would have dumped most of the staff, moved to Burbank and done something that more resembled a variety show." And of course we can trust this insight, spoken by one writer to another, because as we all know writers are some of the most secure, neurosis-free individuals walking the face of the earth. Hell, as long as we're printing crystal ball predictions from writers, here is ours. Had Dave gotten the _Tonight_ show, he wouldn't need to do a show that was quite so busy, because he wouldn't have had to fill every last second of air time with noise to fend off the deafening silence of the Ed Sullivan Theater. And instead of roaming Broadway and 53rd Streets with his external camera, he would be roaming the facilities at 3000 Alameda Avenue, just like he used to at 30 Rock. In short, the same thing he did at 12:35, only different. (Thanks to James Langdell for the Evanier bio.) Q. Dave seems to have become a huge celebrity overnight. A. Well, that'll happen when you make the covers of _Time_ and _Newsweek_ in one summer. It's worth bearing in mind that when Dave left NBC his audience rating had tumbled to 2.1 (that is, 2.1% of all t.v. households in the U.S.) from, to pick one date in time, a 3.8 rating in 1988. _Late Show_ regularly attracts three times that many viewers. So he's more visible now. Also, as Bill Carter pointed out, late-night programming has improved substantially in quality in recent years. As a result, more viewers overall are staying up late. _Advertising Age_ suggests that late-night is its own "daypart" now since many of the shows now command ad rates that are competitive with prime time. Hence, anyone connected with a late-night show becomes a bigger story than, say, 10 years ago. Which is the only reason why _Washington Post_ t.v. critic Tom Shales would waste so many valuable column inches calling for the head of Dave's promising but very un-baby-boomerish successor Conan O'Brien. It also explains why Dave's fabled driving habits would land him rather unpleasantly on _Inside Edition._ Keith Rice reports that the tabloid t.v. show spent one morning tracking him on his way to work on the Merritt Parkway. They clocked him at 65-70 mph and showed Dave's hot rod darting in and out of traffic, with him nervously checking the rear view mirror to see if these creeps would go away. After he arrived in New York, the _Inside Edition_ reporter confronted him, Geraldo Rivera-style, asking him how if he knew fast he was going. Dave told him to check his files, so zip! out came a notebook from which the reporter began *reading* to Dave the vital statistics of each traffic ticket he had received in his adult life. This prompted Our Racing Pal to crack, "Is this a part time job for you?", to which the reporter replied, "No, it isn't, it's full time." Dave strode off in a perfectly understandable huff. Should you be allowed to file a story on a comedian when you yourself have no sense of humor? Q. Seriously, I have wondered if Dave was a recovering alcoholic. He had John Larroquette on the show one night, who is recovering, and talked about the days when he used to drink heavily. A. Unfortunately, Dave is just the kind of enigmatical, jealously private person that the media looove to speculate about. He is not forthcoming at all about his personal life in this or any other department. Worse, he's likely to mess with our minds by sending out contradictory messages. He recently denied he had lost a lot of weight prior to starting the show on CBS, when in fact he'd admitted in earlier interviews to dropping 40 pounds, something any fool with a v.c.r. could confirm by watching old NBC tapes from '92. However, he has admitted in both _Playboy_ interviews, done 10 years apart, to drinking hard each night after making his morning show and for a while there early in _Late Night_'s run before quitting cold turkey. He also smoked some pot in 1980, a short-lived experience which he says "got to the point where I'd be stoned and wished I wasn't, so I quit," which probably tells us something of his view toward drinking, though the chance that we'll know for sure is about nil. ====================================================================== Show Questions. ====================================================================== Q. Wait! I forgot to order tickets and I'm going to be in New York. Are there standby tix available? --> You may get standby tickets for the show each tapeday at the box office at the Ed Sullivan Theater. Standbys are distributed on a first-come-first-served basis, and are limited to one per person. Standbys do not guarantee admission. _You must be 16 or older to pick up a standby ticket and attend a taping._ (Taken from the CBS reply postcard to people requesting tickets.) B.J. Gleason says that people start lining up for these tix *early*, like 7 a.m. The giveaway occurs at 12 noon. >>> And S Trowbridge adds that to alleviate congestion and bad feelings at 7 a.m., ticketseekers are now being issued a number when they arrive at the theatre. That becomes their place in the standby ticket line when it forms later in the day. >>> Our pal Tucks reports, "The one time I tried I had #30 and was the last person taken around to the 'staging area' in front just before they release you to go into the theatre, but we got screwed and they only let in the first three. Those guys had been sleeping on cardboard in front of the doors since 3:00 in subfreezing temperatures (we'd arrived at 7:30). .. Now I know why part of the audience can be _real_ giddy sometimes." >>> And Chris Lang adds, "On Monday we arrived at 3:30 a.m. and were numbers 6-9, and I estimate around 15 standby ticketholders were let in. ... I think it is safe to say that if you want to see the show via the standby route, you need to show up before 5 a.m." Q. I've got tickets to the Big Show! When should I show up to get good seats? Any other tips? --> The tapings start at 5:30 p.m. Seating is on a first-come- first-served basis, and lines begin forming as early as 1 p.m. (Some attendees say come a little later, like about 2:30 or 3, because you don't want to get seated right up front, where your view's obstructed by all the equipment.) >>> Wear layers of clothes in winter. Hell, wear layers of clothes in summer. The theater is freezing. (Dave likes it at 52 degrees F., or else, as he told Bruno Kirby, "the jokes begin to spoil.") >>> Some former audience members endorse *not* getting advance tix but waiting in line for standbys instead, the advantages being you have a lot more control over what day(s) you see the show (provided the line isn't too long), and you'll probably get balcony seats, which feature unobstructed views. Standbys discussed above. >>> But if you want any chance of getting on camera, swapping gifts for t-shirts, or participating in the fabulous prize giveaways, you need to show up early and get a front-row seat. Q. Remember every night in the early months of _Late Show_ when Dave would get a standing ovation? Whatever happened to that? A. Mercifully, the practice ended, headed off at the pass by Dave, who realized that the gaudy spectacle of a standing O had become an unwelcome addition to the new show. Nowadays, _Late Show_ writer Bill Scheft, when he comes out to do the nightly warmup, advises the crowd that "we have already used up our 10-year quota for standing ovations" and that if they want to stand up for Dave, they will have their opportunity to do so just *prior* to airtime. Sure enough, the host comes onstage at about 5:28 and gets a big ovation, gives out a canned ham or two, then runs backstage as Paul and the band strike up the theme song. Freshly purged of their standing-O, the audience behaves as it should for the performance intro. Q. Is there any specific reason why audience members have to be 16 or older? A. Each evening an audience member is chosen to drive Dave home. Q. What is the address for the CBS Mailbag? A. The address is: CBS Mailbag Late Show with David Letterman Ed Sullivan Theater 1697 Broadway New York, NY 10019 Q. What is the address for Stupid Pet/Human Tricks? A. The address is: Susan Hall Sheehan Late Show with David Letterman Ed Sullivan Theater 1697 Broadway New York, NY 10019 Q. What is the address for Calvert DeForest? A. The address is: Calvert DeForest Late Show with David Letterman Ed Sullivan Theater 1697 Broadway New York, NY 10019 Are you starting to detect a pattern here? Good. Q. Has anyone else noticed that the show seems to be running a little long? A. Perfectly normal. The show runs from 11:35:00 pm till 12:36:30 pm Eastern time. Q. The audience laughter sounds sort of canned. A. First of all, the theater is heavily miked. Second, there is a deliberate push by the production staff to give the show more energy, in part because that's the way Dave feels he's going to inherit the mantle of Johnny, in part because the Ed Sullivan Theater is so cavernous the show simply cannot accommodate the range of volume levels that were acceptable back at NBC's shoebox Studio 6A. Donz5 adds: "I remember that the closeness of the studio and the state-of-the-art sound caused deafness among half the audience. There were speakers UNDER the seats. (Which may explain Chris Elliott a little bit.)" Q. These days the show seems to have some pretty noticeable edits made to it on a regular basis. I don't remember the program being edited for time quite so much back at NBC. A. Maybe, although you may have been conditioned to think that way since, after all, a show in which the host is continually asking, "How are we doing on time?" which became something of a mantra back at _Late Night,_ must if nothing else be a show that runs on time, right? Ohhhh, guess again, Pepe. Our pal Mr. Donz5 provides this eyewitness account: "The first show I was lucky enough to attend was in 1984. There was a recurring shtick before each segment (or after, I forget which) where a model sang some insipid song. But the show ran too long, and every bit with the singer in it was taken out when it broadcast that night. Shows are routinely edited for that very reason: it went on too long." Q. Does the Microphone on Dave's Desk actually work, or is it just a prop? A. Yes, the microphone (an old RCA DX 77) does work, but is usually reserved for special occasions, such as when Dave is "playing along with the band" by hitting it with a pencil. The crew at NBC gave him the mic when he left. Dave's primary mic is the wireless "tie-clip" variety. (Thanks to Mark Weber for asking and Michael Delugg for answering.) Q. What time do they tape the show? A. 5:30 to 6:30 pm, Eastern time. Says Dave, "Everything I do is designed to help me do the best job I can between 5:30 and 6:30." The thing is done live, as Dave has always felt the energy would drain out of the show were everything subject to retakes. The only reason he doesn't actually air live is he doesn't want a studio audience made up of trenchcoats. Q. Why are there *two* guest chairs? A. Siskel and Ebert. Q. What kind of ratings is the big shoo getting versus Jay et al.? A. For the season, Dave averaged a 5.8 rating, Ted Koppel a 5.0, and Jay Leno 4.4. That is, 5.8% of all t.v. homes in America were watching Dave -- this despite the fact that at season's end some 17% of t.v. markets were making their viewers stay up later than the "live clearance" time (11:35 Eastern/Pacific, 10:35 Central/ Mountain) to watch him. At season's outset on August 30, 1993, the non-live clearance figure was twice that, so that for a good part of the season Dave was beating the competition, as Robert Morton put it, "with one hand tied behind our back." In fact, Dave has won EVERY week against Leno, virtually every night. Ironically, Jay seems stuck with an aging and less-sought-after audience, which was the knock against Johnny. >>> Ted Koppel's _Nightline_ remains strong, and some weeks actually beats Dave's show, but doesn't actually "steal" viewers from him. Dave has essentially created his audience, ex nihilo, using his comic genius, a top-tier array of guests, and snappy Armani suits. >>> During the Winter Olympics, all CBS affiliates were obliged to carry the Late Show at the correct time. As a result, ratings averaged a blistering 8.8 for the two-week period, and the night of the Kerrigan-Harding skateoff Dave attracted nearly as large an audience as his opening night last August 30. >>> _Playboy_ reports CBS execs confiding they would have made money had Dave averaged merely a 3.5 rating. Q. What are some of Dave's "Indiana-isms?" A. From Tim Veatch -- o ask...or as we say in Indiana...ax o Bush...or as we say in Indiana...Boosh o extra...or as we say in Indiana...extree o Illinois...or as we say in Indiana...Illinoiz o Italian...or as we say in Indiana...Eye-talian o mosquitos...or as we say in Indiana...skeeters o nuclear...or as we say in Indiana...nuc-u-lar o President Clinton...or as we say in Indiana...Pars'dent Clinton o show business...or as we say in Indiana...show bidness o similar...or as we say in Indiana...sim-u-lar o special...or as we say in Indiana...spay-shul o statistics...or as we say in Indiana...suh-tistics o veteran...or as we say in Indiana...vet'rin o Washington...or as we say in Indiana...Warshington o wolf...or as we say in Indiana...woof Q. What are the different cities where Dave's "home office" was located during Late Night? A. o Lebanon, Pennsylvania o Lincoln, Nebraska o Milwaukee (the first Late Night home office) o Oklahoma City, Oklahoma o Omaha (home of Arnie Barnes, who called in his own Top Ten lists) o Oneonta, New York (the last Late Night home office) o Scottsdale, Arizona o Tahlequah, Oklahoma Q. The Late Show's home office is in Sioux City, Iowa. Has that town decided to start airing Dave's show? A. Yes. Q. What are the different types of "cams" that were used on Late Night? A. o Amphi-cam (8th anniversary show at Universal Amphitheatre) o Chair-cam o Cow-cam o Crash-cam o Fig-cam (worn by Anton) o Guest-cam (worn by Tom Hanks) o Host-cam (worn by Dave, of course) o Las Vegas Showgirl-Cam (from Dave's 1987 shows there) o Love-cam (Bill Murray) o Monkey-cam o Sewer-cam o Sky-cam o Thrill-cam o Thrill-cam 360 o Tiger-cam Q. Who played Helen, the Ill-Tempered Ticket Lady? A. Kathleen Ankers. She also played Peggy, the Foul-Mouthed Chambermaid and the librarian of the NBC Bookmobile on Late Night. (If you want to know what she said to Dave, see helen-quote on the archive.) Q. What types of gifts has Dave given to the audience members of his shows? A. o Bacon o Bagels o Baked ham o Beef o Bug Busters o Tom Brokaw stationery o Canned hams ("Kraukus imported Polish hams -- very expensive!!" says Mike Schneider) o Cartons of cigarettes (handed out by Larry during a remote) o Collapsible drinking cups o Composters o Edible plunger o Fajitas o French fries o Frogs (two formerly owned by Glenn Close) o Frozen turkeys o Gallon jars of mayonnaise o Two-hundred-dollar Gift certificate to K & L Rock America o Goodwill Games medals (given to audience members who asked questions of Larry "Bud" Hussein) o Handfuls of nickels from a big bucket o Handfuls of watches from a fish bowl o Hot towels (by Larry during a remote) o Jumper cables o Kentucky Fried Millipedes (actually a bucket of fried clams) o Kielbasa o Large squares of sod o Late Night with David Letterman facial blotters (if you were an *especially* good little audience member, Dave would use it first) o One volume of an encyclopedia set o Packs of assorted GE light bulbs o Pounds of hair o Randomly selected prescription eyeglasses (by Larry) o Roll of garden hose o Selections of fluorescent lighting o Six dollars o Sponges o Tee-shirts (Larry: "Bob Rooney, please give that nice lady/gentleman two Late Night t-shirts") o Tires o Toast o Toast on a stick o _Today_ show coffee mugs o Waffles Q. What were the films in LNWDL's Holiday Film Festivals? (1985) A. o "With My Own Eyes," by David Letterman o "But I'm Happy," by Michael Keaton (with Clint Howard) o A film on PMS, by Catherine O'Hara and Andrea Martin o "Dress Cool," music video by Paul and the band o "Why Bother?" by Bette Midler o Industrial video spoof, by Harry Shearer, Christopher Guest, and Michael McKean From the "2nd Annual Holiday Film Festival" (1986): o "Feelin' in Love," David Letterman o "The Iceman Hummeth," Michael J. Fox o "An Audience of My Own," Diane Sawyer o "My Day With the Stars," Jonathan Winters o "You Kill Me" (music video), Paul Shaffer w/Teri Garr o "Chris Elliott: A Television Miracle," w/George Takei (aka Mr. Sulu from "Star Trek") Q. What are the different types of "suits" Dave has worn? A. o Suit of Alka-Seltzer o Suit of Lard (worn by someone other than Dave) o Suit of Magnets o Suit of Marshmallows (they tried to light the marshmallows with propane torches but failed; eaten by audience) o Suit of Nachos (eaten by members of the audience after Dave was dunked in cheese) o Suit of Rice Krispies (milk poured on Dave) o Suit of Sponge (they weighed Dave, dunked him in water, then weighed him again, but it was off the scale) o Suit of Suet (Dave went into a cage of birds) o Suit of Teabags (no, wait, that was Steve Allen) o Suit of Vegemite (tm) o Suit of Vegetables o Suit of Velcro (Dave wore the soft part, then he jumped onto a wall covered with the other part, and stuck) Q. When Chris Elliott was still writing for Late Night, what were some of the characters he played? A. o Marlon Brando o The Guy Under the Seats o Marv Albert o Jay Leno (with large fake chin) o Letterman imitation-- "Late Night with Chris Elliott" o The Fugitive Guy o The Nervous Guy o The Regulator Guy o Chris Elliott, Jr. (Morton Downey, Jr. take-off w/ lots o' moles) o The Panicky Guy o The Conspiracy Guy o Gerard Mulligan's baby boy, "Kevin" (complete w/ diaper) o Jack Hanna of the Columbus Zoo o Walter Murphy, "the man with the miracle mind" who had memorized all the animals portrayed in that memorable NBC fantasy-adventure series, "Manimal" (as this was early in his career, Chris actually did a Harvey Korman trying to suppress the giggles) o Singularly unhelpful Radio City Music Hall custodian (Anniversary show; thanks to Jim Lyden) Q. What is Larry "Bud" Melman's real name? A. Calvert DeForest. And in fact, for intellectual property reasons, Dave is calling "Larry" Calvert on the new show. Q. I went to go see "Cabin Boy" and Dave Letterman had a cameo in the movie, but in the credits they announced that "Earl Hofert" played the part played by Dave. Who's Earl Hofert? A. Possibly an uncle on his mom's side. Every now and then you'll hear him use "Hofert" on the show. Also "Henderson." Q. Who all have been the means of delivery of Cokes, etc., from the vending machines? (Late Night) A. o The Rockettes (and now on the Late Show as well) o Members of the NYC area chapter of Mensa o Carl Lewis o Boy Scouts o Marching Band o Andy Grayson, trail bike rider, rode down the stairs and jumped up on Dave's desk (w/the bike) without touching a foot. Q. How has Dave paid tribute to his erstwhile telephone companion, the lovely auburn-haired book publicist Meg Parsont? A. o Sent the "Three Amigos" to serenade her with Mexican rest- aurant music o Sent Billy Dee Williams over with a bouquet of roses, a matching his-and-her set of his designer fragrances, and a six-pack of Colt 45 malt liquor o Closed off 49th Street so the Jamestown High School Red Raiders marching band could parade below her window playing "Happy Birthday" and spelling out M-E-G in formation Q. I know Bill Murray was the first scheduled guest on both Late Night in 1982 and the Late Show in 1993. A. Although recently, Dave told Tom Brokaw that *he* (Tom) was "the first guest on our new show" (when Tom came out to reclaim certain cue cards as "the intellectual property of NBC"). Q. Right. But back to Bill Murray in '82 -- what was *that*? A. According to Dave, "Bill wanted to do something special, so he was coming down early to talk to the writers and see what they could come up with together. When he arrived, Merrill and I were out filming a segment, and Bill showed up with about six gallons of whatever tequila was on sale. When we got back, everybody was shitfaced, and it was dark, since Bill had decided the flourescent lights were leeching Vitamin E from them and he'd hidden all the lamps. Nothing was written, and the only explanation I could get from anyone was, 'Bill was here.' When we did get on the air, Bill decided not to do any of the stuff we'd written and got an urge to sing 'Let's Get Physical' and do aerobics. So he did." >>> As a tribute to that historical debut, Paul and the band played "Physical" for Bill's intro on the first Late Show. Q. I heard that Bill Hicks was censored recently! They never showed his act, and replaced him instead with some lame in-house comedian. A. Well, it's true. On the night of October 1, 1993, comedian Hicks (who has since passed away) delivered a routine that, in post-production, was deemed inappropriate for broadcast. Although initially executive producer Robert Morton claimed CBS standards and practices had ordered the cut, CBS later countered that *Worldwide Pants* had cut Hicks -- the truth is probably that both offices agreed on the cut. In a subsequent piece in _The New Yorker,_ Hicks complained that Letterman's staff cut the routine because of attacks on pro-lifers that did not appeal to the show's "mainstream" audience, which Hicks clearly believed was a fiction. Angus MacDonald, who was in the audience that night, has a different interpretation of the events: "He did do a joke early in the same routine that could be taken as being anti-gay ... Basically, Hicks made fun of bigots ... [and was] impersonating a bigot -- 'Those people have gone too far. We've got to draw the line,' or words to that effect -- for a stretch of many seconds during which there was virtually no audience laughter, though one guy in our row yelled 'Yeah' in agreement to the excerpt above. Creepy. Because no one was laughing, Hicks had the worst of both worlds: controversial material that was not entertaining. The rest of his routine, as detailed in the New Yorker article and elsewhere, was well received. There was almost no reporting about the gay joke, though, and I think the silence it induced may have had as much to do with the excision as the attack on right-wing Christians." >>> A recent special on the life of Hicks airing on Comedy Central included interviews with Dave and Morty, both of whom expressed regrets about the incident. Dave said he felt even worse knowing that he won't be able to make it up to Bill now that he's gone. Q. What's the deal with Teri Garr? She looked *terrible* since she started appearing on _Late Show._ I heard she has MS. A. Well, as Mark Samwick observed from watching her in the twice- crossed CBS sitcom _Good Advice,_ "Her entire right side is extremely stiff, her movements quite awkward, and she has a definite limp. The camera shots try to disguise it a bit, but it's definitely noticable." But she has gone on the record denying that she has MS. Just a degenerative back condition -- spurs -- that she's slowly rehabilitating from. Q. The wife and I were up last night watching Dave, and we got to talking about the old show and that wild-eyed longhair freak who tried to kick Dave in the chops. Remember that? A. About every three weeks, it seems, on alt.fan.letterman. For that reason we have provided for the general public an annotated transcript of that episode, from July of 1987, featuring guest Crispin Glover, on the Letterman archive at ftp.mcs.net (see the end of this FAQ for info). Thanks to Mark Schweingruber for the effort. Q. Say, is it true that Cindy Crawford was once bumped from _Late Night_ so that Dave could yammer with a guy named Herb Clumpy the Third? A. Mm hmm. By the way, the name's spelled Klumpe, not "Clumpy," and he has become one of the regulars on the old A. F. of L. newsgroup. Herb, who hails from Oneonta, New York, site of the very last home office of _Late Night,_ was in the audience for one of Dave's last NBC broadcasts on June 17 '93, wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with the letters ONEONTA. Dave was notified before the show that a guy from the home office with a delightful name was in the crowd, so upon entering the studio he opened that evening's show with the line, "Tonight's program is dedicated to Herb Klumpe III." Not only did the monologue go out the window, but Herb and Dave chatted on-air after the break and they exchanged sweatshirts as the alluring Miss Crawford looked on forlornly from the green room. It turns out that Herb and four of his enterprising friends also held tickets for the very last _Late Night_ so, to commemorate his good fortune, Herb's friends showed up wearing "Friend of Herb Klumpe III" T-shirts. NBC staff spotted Mr. Klumpe and escorted him to the green room, where he got to watch the final show with a gaggle of people including Tom Hanks and his wife. He is living proof that Dave Letterman, much like his show's revered final guest Bruce Springsteen, can both entertain the masses and brighten the lives of ordinary fans -- and thereby all of us who watch him. [*flourish of patriotic music*] Q. Who are the the members of "The CBS Orchestra?" A. o Paul Shaffer, leader/keyboards o Anton Fig, drums o Will Lee, bass guitar o Sid McGinnis, guitar o Felicia Collins, guitar o Bruce Kapler and Tom "Bones" Malone, horns Q. What happened to funkmeister Bernie Worrell? A. He left the band. It didn't work out. Anyway, you'll agree it sounds much better with a horn section, no? Q. Does Sid have a "running jones"? A. Yes indeed. A full account is given in a _Runner's World_ feature on the longtime Letterman guitarist, who joined Late Night in 1984. "Nike, upon learning that its Sock Racers [running shoes] were showcased on Late Night ... supplied McGinnis with as many pairs as he needed." Now that the shoe is out of stock, "Nike has fashioned close facsimiles ... custom-made Air Sids. 'There are five million pairs of Air Jordans,' McGinnis estimates, 'and two Air Sids.'" The story also reports that at age 40, Sid ran the 1989 New York Marathon in 3:14:44. Q. Has Sid *ever* missed a show? A. Only once -- to be with his wife as she was delivering their first born child. Q. Other than Paul, Anton, Will, and Sid, who were members of "the band," later titled "The World's Most Dangerous Band" on Late Night? A. o Francisco Centano, guitar (frequent fill-in) o Hiram Bullock, guitar o Steven Khan, guitar o Omar Hakim, drums o Steve Jordan, drums o Allan Schwartzberg, drums o Charlie Drayton, drums o Leon Pendarvis, keyboards (would sub for Paul) Q. Heyyy, knock me out with some of those great musical intros Paul and the band have done over the years for Dave's guests. A. Here are just a few. As Jon Pareles recently noted in the _Times,_ "[the] CBS Orchestra seems to be prepared for an inordinate number of songs ... it will try nearly anything." Such as: o "Under the Boardwalk" for Chris Elliott as "The Guy Under the Seats" o Prince's "I Want To Be Your Lover" for Kim Basinger o "White Lines" by Grandmaster Flash/Melle Mel for Cokie Roberts o "Frankenstein" by Edgar Winter for Al Franken o "Everytime You Go Away (You Take A Piece of Me With You)" by Paul Young following "Top Ten Things Overheard at the Lorena Bobbitt Trial" o "Chest Fever" by The Band for Dolly Parton o "The Worst That Could Happen" by The Brooklyn Bridge, for Tom and Roseanne Arnold following the announcement they would be jointly marrying a third woman. (The first line of the song goes, "Heard you're getting married ...") o "Real Real Real" by Jesus Jones for a segment called "Real Books." This reportedly frightened Dave. o "I Am the Walrus" by the Fabs for Mike Wallace o "Faith" by George Michael for Faith Ford o "If" by Bread during Dave's throw-Wonder-Bread-at-the- audience sequence o "Turn, Turn, Turn" by the Byrds for Laura Dern o "A Day in the [Dana] Life" for Dana Carvey o "Pets" by Porno for Pyros, for Dana's dogs o Some Animals tune for zookeeper Jack Hanna o "Thank You Falettinme Be Myself (Again)" by Sly & Family Stone, as one of Dave's staff and his grade-school gym teacher were re-enacting a groin rejuvenation exercise o A Sam & Dave tune, when Sam (Donaldson) was on with Dave o "Wah Wah" by George Harrison for Barbara Walters o "You're Still a Young Man" by Tower of Power for Neil Patrick Harris o "Stagger Lee" for Kathie Lee Gifford o "Bennie and the Jets" by Elton John for Dave when he gets in one of his "HEY KIDS!" moods o "Cocaine" by Eric Clapton following a Top Ten list on the space shuttle Columbia o "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head" by B. J. Thomas for Jay Thomas o "You Are So Beautiful" by the Commodores for Phoebe Cates o "New Kid in Town" by the Eagles for Conan O'Brien o "Walk This Way" by Aerosmith for "Top Ten Things Aeroflot Can Do To Improve Its Image" o "It's Raining Men" (written by Paul Shaffer!) for Damon Wayans (who uses it for his "Blaine and Antoine" routines) o "Jeremy" by Pearl Jam *and* "Joy to the World" by Three Dog Night for Jeremy Irons o The theme from "Three's Company" for "Top Ten Good Things About Marrying Tom and Roseanne" o "Shipoopi," from _The Music Man_ for "Top Ten Ways To Mispronounce Jeff Gillooly" o "Tenth Avenue Freeze-out" by Bruce Springsteen for South Pole explorer Norman Vaughan o "Atomic Dog" by George Clinton for Ellen Barkin o "Pick up the Pieces" by the Average White Band for "Top Ten Fabio Pick-up Lines" o "I Touch Myself" by the DaVinyls for Sandra Bernhard o "Red Red Wine" by UB40 when Dave donated blood on stage Thanks: Malinda McCall, Barney Luttbeg, Jennifer Rippel, Basil T. Maglaris, beezus@utxvms.cc.utexas.edu, Robert Reardon, Dave Calam, Patricia Bender, Kent Sebastiano, Jason Miller, Carl Vanderbush, "Leroy Brown," Richard A. Chonak, S. Trowbridge, Kevin G. Barkes, Kurt at PSUVM, Dean Adams, Charlie Bryant, Dave Calam, Roy Eassa, Lon Huber and "skorpio." Q. I know that Paul is from Canada, but where? A. Thunder Bay, Ontario. He was born there November 28, 1949. Q. Who produces and directs LSWDL? A. Executive Producer -- Peter Lassally (a Carson associate) Executive Producer -- Robert Morton (aka "Marty Robbins") before Morty ... Jack Rollins (and for a while, Dave was co-EP) Producer -- Jude Brennan before Jude ... Barry Sand (also produced _SCTV_) Supervising Producer/Director -- Hal Gurnee Head Writer -- Rob Burnett before Rob ... Steve O'Donnell before Steve ... James Downey before James ... Merrill Markoe (the original head writer) Notable Ex-writer ... Chris Elliott Notable Ex-Visuals Coordinator ... Edd Hall (now the _Tonight_ show announcer on NBC and brother of Stupid Pet Tricks coordinator Susan Hall Sheehan) Q. What's "the GE corporate handshake"? A. In 1986, shortly after General Electric announced its acquisition of NBC, Dave went with a camera crew and a fruit basket and/or bottle of wine/champagne to the corporate headquarters in Manhattan as a gift to GE Chairman Jack Welch. In one of the most-talked moments in the show's history, Dave and the crew were met in the lobby by a security thug who told them to shut off the camera and get out of the building. Being the polite Midwesterner he is, Dave extended his hand to the security guy, who in turn extended *his* hand ... then quickly retracted it without consum- mating the grip and release. This, then, became known as the GE corporate handshake. (The security guy repeated this with Hal Gurnee, who was accompanying Dave on the shoot.) The moment is now remembered as the turning point in Dave's relationship with the network and its GE-appointed brass, notably the weasels in Burbank who thought that Dave was too "mean." Q. What's all this about an Australian version of Late Night? A. There used to be a self-admitted knockoff of Dave's show, "Tonight Live," hosted by Steve Vizard. It was cancelled in late 1993. In its place, Australian t.v. has begun to broadcast the Late Show. >>> And Don Maple writes from Germany to report this Deutscheplunderwerk: "Started a couple of months ago. The show is called _Nacht-Show_ hosted by a creature called Thomas Koschwitz. A shameless rip-off with almost identical intro, identical desk, (attempted) identical host behaviour, repartee with the band leader, top 10 lists, etc, etc." Q. What was the translation of the Japanese on the kites in the Late Night opening sequence (1992-93)? A. One said "Late Night," another, "G.E. sucks." Then, when NBC announced they'd signed Jay Leno as Johnny Carson's successor on "Tonight," a third Japanese kite appeared: "Jay sucks." Q. Boy, CBS sure pays Dave a lot of money. A. Well, but bear in mind, it's *Worldwide Pants* they're forking over the dollars to. That dollar figure you hear is, as Dave says, "a lump production fee that CBS pays us" to do the show. From this lump Dave draws his salary. However, the money is a big boost from the NBC days and has allowed the Late Show crew to attain new heights in visual excitement. (Haven't you been watching?) Exactly how big that budget or his salary is, Dave's not saying. >>> But get this. According to Bill Carter, Viacom would have paid about $50 million for Dave, given him a huge show budget, and made Dave the focal property, including possible special projects for Viacom-owned cable networks (MTV, VH1, and now Viacom owns Paramount, so Dave could've gotten Knicks season tickets to boot). Dave wanted to be on network t.v. -- and would have taken less than CBS's offer to get the _Tonight_ franchise. Q. Is the Late Show closed-captioned? A. It is. Scott Barvian says, "They obviously do the captioning after the final edits are done; all the spelling is correct and nothing is missed. They catch all of Paul's little comments that [we] don't always pick up ... they even spelled out Dave screaming in terror after picking up a hot towel (OHHHH! AHHHH! JEEEZ!)." Jeff Zuk adds that sometimes the closed captioning will even tell you what song the band is playing. Q. Hey! Dave said last night's recipe for Salmon Fillets with Capers would be on the newsletter and the hotline today and it wasn't! A. SALMON FILLETS WITH CAPERS (4/25/94) 1-1/2 pounds boneless skinless salmon fillets cut into 4 slices salt and pepper to taste 1/4 cup milk 1/2 cup all-purpose flour 2 tbsp. olive oil 4 tbsp. unsalted butter 1/3 cup drained capers 1/2 cup finely diced sweet red peppers 2 tbsp. red wine vinegar 2 tsp. balsamic vinegar 4 tbsp. chopped chives 1. Sprinkle each slice of salmon on both sides with salt and pepper to taste. Dip them in milk, remove the excess and dredge in the flour. Remove excess flour. 2. In a non-stick skillet large enough to hold all the salmon fillets in one layer heat the olive oil over high heat. Add the salmon and cook one side for 2 minutes. Flip over and cook for another 2 minutes. Do not overcook. 3. Transfer the salmon to a warm serving plate. 4. Add the capers, red pepper and butter to the skillet. Cook over high heat until lightly browned, shaking the pan often. Add both vinegars to the skillet. Bring to a boil while swirling them. Pour this immediately over the salmon. Sprinkle with the chives. Serve with boiled potatoes. Yield: 4 Servings. (Thank you, Christine.) Q. Gosh, I'm young and stupid. Wouldn't it be great to intern at the Late Show? A. There's a book that rates a Letterman gig as among the top 100 internships to have. But as it cautions, that doesn't mean an absence of donkey work. "Several interns reported having to fetch lunch for Dave ('every day it was the same pasta primavera and vegetable soup') or whip up a snack ('Dave always had to have his fresh pineapple -- cut in strips, not squares')." Still, you could touch fame, like the Talent intern who wound up finding wacky cooking lady Bev Tanner. Or, you might be asked to call aspiring novelty guests and tell them sorry. "On hearing the news, they would sometimes become angry or crestfallen because 'where else can a person show off his potato chip collection to eight million people?'" Don't expect much quality time with Dave, no matter what: he is "cordial" when you encounter him, but "aloof." Q. Is there some way to find out in advance what reruns of Late Night are showing on the E! entertainment television network? A. Call (213) 954-2750. Press 1 to hear the Late Night schedule for the week (changes every Monday). The reruns are aired "seven Daves a week" at 10 p.m. Eastern time. Or, check each week's issue of LATE SHOW NEWS (see the end of this FAQ). In fact, that's the course we recommend, because some weeks E! doesn't even bother to update the hotline -- and wouldn't you really rather learn that on someone else's nickel? Q. Let's say I want to be a guest on the show -- what should I do? A. Directly from Dave himself: "I don't care who you are, I don't care what you do. If you have four funny stories, you can be a guest on this show. That's what we're looking for." Q. I've often wondered why Dave doesn't have guest hosts on his show the way Johnny Carson always did. A. Look where it got Carson. ====================================================================== About this FAQ List, the A. F. of L. Archive, and LATE SHOW NEWS. ====================================================================== Q. Where can I find this FAQ when I need it (i.e., later)? --> It will be posted here and to news.answers twice a month, on the 6th and 20th. The list is also available via anonymous FTP from ftp.mcs.net in the file /mcsnet.users/barnhart/letterman/ alt.fan.letterman.faq.txt and is also available via anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu in the directories /pub/usenet/alt.fan.letterman OR /pub/usenet/news.answers/letterman The FAQ is also via mail server. Send mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following line in the body: send usenet/news.answers/letterman/faq Q. Is the alt.fan.letterman newsgroup available as a mailing list? A. No. Q. How can I contribute? A. Send your submissions, questions, and comments to: letterman@mcs.net Q. Does this newsgroup have an archive? A. There are others, but I'll only vouch for one, which I keep personally and have maintained for more than six months now at ftp.mcs.net:/mcsnet.users/barnhart/letterman Also, check out these World Wide Web clients if you've got WWW-compatible software: http://bingen.cs.csbsju.edu/letterman.html http://www.cen.uiuc.edu/~jl8287/letterman.html Q. Would somebody please type in the entire Playboy interview with Dave? I don't read those kinds of magazines. Thanks. A. OH NO! WE'RE GONNA GET SUED! Q. I crave that late-breaking news about all the big stars, and what bigger star is there than Dave Letterman? A. Look no further, Sparky, because your charming FAQkeeper has taken that matter into his own hands. Introducing the new electronic sheet, LATE SHOW NEWS, with up-to-the-moment info from the late-night talk circuit generally, and especially Dave's show. It will be posted to alt.fan.letterman, rec.arts. tv, alt.zines, and alt.tv.talkshows.late every Tuesday. You also may subscribe to the LATE-SHOW-NEWS mailing list to get each issue mailed directly to you. Write listserv@mcs.net, leave the Subject line blank, and send only the following as your message: subscribe late-show-news ====================================================================== Sources for this Frequently Asked Questions list. ====================================================================== --> Beautiful People. Well, of course, kudos to D. Keith Rice for maintaining the list since way back, I think 1956, '57, before giving it to me. For contributing to this list, Keith and I are indebted to Dean Adams, Fritz Anderson, Greg Anderson, Ken Anderson, Jason Bak, J.D. Baldwin, John Bartol, Scott Barvian, Laurence Bier, John Bonacci, Joel Chan, Crist Clark, John Clear, Brian Conn, Marc Conte, Todd Cooper, Lewis Coury, Richard Dawson, Matt Dittrich, Jef Dodd, Sean Donnelly, David Eccleston, Susan Fanelli, Kevin Fong, Eric Fritzius, bj gleason, Mark Goldberg, Robert Goldsborough, Norm Gregory, Chris Eliot Haroian, Mathew A. Hennessy, Rachel Hill, John Hritz, Ben Jackson, Bill Jones, Doug Krause, Ed Krauss, Lana Krotenko, Bob Kupiec, James Langdell, James LaPlaine, Don Leaman, Jason Lindquist, Gord Locke, Robert Lopez, Lon Lowen, Ian McCuaig, Ken McGlothlen, Bill McGonigle, Alan "Mr. Tucks" McKendree, Leigh Meydrech, Shamim Zvonko Mohamed, Ken Mohnker, "Noel" at microsoft.com, John Oram, Brian Peek, Marshal Perlman, Alan Perry, Tad Perry, Dave Platt, Michael Regoli, Tony Rice, Tom Sakoda, Steve Shauger, Bill Sherman, Jeff Shimbo, Jason Snell, Greg Sroka, Jeff Stephan, Ben Sterling, Christopher Taylor, David C. Tuttle, Wendy Tyrol, Rich Urena, Tim Veatch, Jeff Wilder, Mike Wittman, Eric "Beermaker" Witmayer, Eric Wood, and the illustrious yet enigmatical Mr. Donz5. --> Primary Print Sources. "Is This Man the New Johnny Carson?", _Chicago Tribune,_ 1/6/80. _Playboy_ magazine interviews, 1984 and 1994. _The Late Shift_ by Bill Carter, 1994. _The David Letterman Story_ by Caroline Latham, 1987. "Stay Up Late" by James Kaplan, _The New Yorker,_ 1/16/89. "Flying Feet & Fingers," by Peter Gambaccini, _Runner's World,_ 3/92. This article is Copyright (c) 1994 by Aaron Barnhart. It may be freely redistributed so long as the author's name, and this notice, remain intact. It may be distributed as long as no fee is charged for distribution. If it is made available for downloading on a bulletin board system (BBS) that charges a fee for downloading priv- ileges, it must be in a directory that is available to all BBS users, including those that have not paid. If the BBS does not have any file directories available for all paid and non-paid users, this FAQ must not be made available for download. .o ____~~~~_____~. ..( ).... ( Woo! Man! That )) .ooo. ( . ) / ))' \ ( is 100 proof potatoes! ) o. { , , } 'o ( ) ( "_" ) ..o' (o.. Ain't it? .) " .o. " .(. ) ) .---/\___//\----. .(.~~~ ___...) o ." .\ Y |. `. .o -------o. : .\ ^ |. `>. ; \ /^\ |. .\. >.. ; | /^\ \ " `.. `>. : \ /^\ | ./ "<.. `.. ; { /^\ \./: ""<.. `\ ________\ "~~~~...._\/_/________`\\_/===.,___________ \,,,.../~~~=~ `~~~' (courtesy Tim Veatch) -- Aaron Barnhart letterman@mcs.net