I memorized and translated the chorus of “Les anthropophages” (The Cannibals) by Serge Gainsbourg. There are three verses left to learn.
I weighed 90.45 kilos before breakfast, which is the heaviest I’ve been in the morning since March 4.
I played my Kramer during song practice and it stayed in tune pretty much the whole time.
I was behind on my journal and worked on getting caught up.
At around 13:20 it smelled like burning plastic outside and there was smoke coming from behind the Dollarama. Maybe somebody lit a fire or tossed a cigarette in the dumpster.
I weighed 91.1 kilos before lunch.
In the afternoon I took a bike ride downtown and back.
I weighed 90.5 kilos at 18:10.
I worked some more on getting caught up in my journal but was still behind at suppertime.
I had two small potatoes with gravy and my last two chicken wings while watching season 8, episode 16 of The Carol Burnett Show.
During the audience warmup someone asks Carol if her daughters have any favourite characters that she plays. She says she’ll have to ask them but she thinks they like Mama’s Family because lately they’ve been going around the house talking like they’re from the southern United States.
Carol acknowledges the LA County March of Dimes poster child Carmen Louise. She goes into the audience to give the 8 year old a kiss.
The Jackson 5 perform the 1974 song “The Life of the Party” by Clarence Drayton, Hal Davis and Tamy Smith.
In the first sketch Harvey is at a party and learns that Cookie Davis, who he had a fling with, is coming. Harvey has to warn his wife before Cookie says anything. He draws her away from the people she’s chatting with and sits with her. He says he wants to tell hewr something but is worried about her nerves. She says she’s overcome her nervous condition and is totally fine now. He says that some of the women in his office show off their bodies in sexy outfits. Carol says “Mmhm” but her right eye begins to twitch slightly. He admits that it’s a turn-on when they do, and the right side of Carol’s face gets a small spasm. He starts telling her about his kiss with Cookie Davis and now Carol’s nervousness has fully returned. They are sitting on a wicker couch and Carol has already broken off a piece. She then rips open a pillow and nervously removes the stuffing. By the time Carol meets the perky and effervescent Cookie she is absolutely spastic. Cookie goes to mingle and Harvey and Carol are leaving when a handsome man approaches and says, “Carol!” Suddenly Carol’s nervousness is gone as he takes her in his arms and Harvey begins to twitch. Carol introduces their milkman John.
William Conrad sings a tribute to silent movies in a a very bad singing voice. The dancers act out many of the tropes of silent films. Later on Conrad does a very good silent impersonation of Oliver Hardy. Bill Richmond, as Stan Laurel, eating a banana, comes up beside him. Ollie tries to indicate to him with gestures that he wants some of his banana. Stan reaches in his pocket and hands him a banana but it is actually the peel of the banana that Stan is eating. Ollie takes the banana from him and gives him the peel. Stan tosses it on the sidewalk and a cop slips upon it. Since Ollie is the one eating the banana the cop thinks he tossed it. The cop hits Ollie on the head with his club, then Stan takes the banana back and walks away. Then Conrad finishes the song.
Harvey and William play two doctors having a drink after a round of golf. The waiter brings a phone to their table and it’s a call for William from a Mr. Perks. But William nervously says he knows no one named Perks and addresses the caller as Mr. Parks. He quickly tells the caller he’ll be over in an hour and hangs up. he tries to re-engage Harvey in their original conversation but Harvey confronts him and says, “You’ve been seeing George Perks!” At first he denies that he’s been treating Harvey’s patient but finally admits it. This is another skit in which the professional interactions of men are treated as romantic relationships. It started when Perks came to William with itching stitches and had him remove them. Harvey is hurt that he wasn’t enough for his patient. William tells Harvey that Perks has been to every doctor in town. He says it’s better that he hears it from him than reading about it in some sleezy medical journal. Then William reveals that he’s having an affair with this wife. Harvey asks “How can you do that to me?” William starts to explain but Harvey stops him and says, “I mean, if you have good news and bad news, give the good news first”.
In the Mama’s Family sketch, Mama (Vicki) is tidying up her home when there is a knock. She happily answers it but is disappointed to see it’s her daughter Eunice (Carol) and her husband Ed (Harvey). Mama tells them she’s got a boyfriend. She says he’s spent more money on her in the last week than Ed makes in a month. Willie arrives, embraces Mama and gives her a pat on the bum. Ed starts to tell Willie about the new shopping mall where he owns a hardware store but Mama interrupts him. She says, “Don’t think you can impress Willie! He’s got a whole flock of shopping malls and each one has a hardware store that’s three times the size of your puny little store!” Ed asks, “Is that another needle?” Mama says, “I’m only stating facts. Why are you so touchy on the subject of your failure in life?” Mama says Willie is taking her to Funland on Saturday. Eunice reminds Mama that she promised to babysit her boys on Saturday so she could go to Nancy Lee’s shower. Mama says she’s not the only babysitter in town. Ed says she’s the only free one. Willie says he has to go to New York next week and asks Mama to come with him. Mama says she’s tempted to take him up on that and goes to get some beer. Eunice follows her into the kitchen and confronts her about letting a man paw her in front of her children with their father dead for only nine years. She asks Mama if she’s really going to New York with that dirty old man? Mama says, “I’ll not have you talk that way about a man who could become her father. Eunice is horrified. She says, “My daddy was the only man in your life!” Mama scandalizes Eunice by telling her that she first knew Willie before she ever met her father and she wasn’t a nun. Eunice starts banging her own head against the refrigerator. Mama says, “Quit gettin that greasy hairspray all over my ice box!” They go back to the living room and sit on the couch on either side of Willie while leaning towards each other and shouting. Eunice says Mama’s gonna leave her in this one horse town with Freddie the failure as she points to Ed. Ed shouts, “Why don’t you just tattoo it on my forehead: ‘F-A-Y-L-U-R’!” Eunice tells Ed she should have kicked him out a long time ago. Mama tells Eunice she should have never brought her home from the hospital. Eunice and Ed leave. Willie comments that Eunice is sure high strung. Mama says she can’t imagine who she takes after. She asks, “Are we goin ta dinner or ain’t we?” Willie says he’s gonna buy her the biggest, best dinner she ever had in her life. Then he hands her a large amount of cash and walks away. Mama seems fine with that as she sits there counting the money.
Carol introduces The Jackson 5: Jackie, Jermaine, Tito, Marlon, Michael, and Randy. She tells them she’d like to be in a vocal group. They tell her she would have had to start young so Carol walks away and lets them do a medley of vocal group songs. They do The Mills Brothers “Opus One”; The Andrews Sisters “Bei Mir Bist Du Schön”; The Coasters “Yakety Yak”; The Supremes “Stop in the Name of Love”; and finally their own “Dancing Machine”.
Carol gets Randy to agree to sing “The Beat Goes On” by Sonny and Cher with her but 8 year old Janet Jackson steps up to say that’s her part. So Janet and Randy sing and dance to the song.
William Conrad was a fighter pilot during WWII and a producer-director of The Armed Forces Radio Service. He played over 7500 parts on the radio, including Marshall Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke. He produced the radio series The Hermit’s Cave from 1940 to 1944. He narrated the radio series Escape. He made his uncredited film debut in Pillow to Post in 1945. He made his credited film debut in The Killers in 1946. He directed 2 episodes of the Gunsmoke TV series, 6 episodes of 77 Sunset Strip; and episodes of The Rifleman, Bat Masterson, Route 66, Have Gun Will Travel, He directed the movies , Two on a Guillotine, My Blood Runs Cold, and Brainstorm. He produced the movie Countdown. He co-starred in The Sword of Monte Cristo, The Racket, Five Against the House, Johnny Concho, The Ride Back, 30, Body and Soul, He was the narrator for the TV series The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, Dudley Do Right of the Mounties, The Highwayman, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, and The Fugitive. He narrated the 1971 anti-pollution public service announcement that starred Iron Eyes Cody as a First Nations man shedding a tear over pollution. He became famous when he starred in Cannon from 1971 to 1976. From 1987 to 1992 he starred in Jake and the Fatman. He starred in the short-lived series Nero Wolfe.












