21. Mustang Sally - Wilson Pickett
There is nothing deep about “Mustang Sally.” She’s got to slow her mustang down, simple as that. When you’ve got Wilson Pickett delivering the vocals you don’t need to waste time trying to analyze it. Just sit back and let Mr. Pickett do the driving.
Monday, May 25, 2009
Songs with a Girls' Name in the Title #22
22. Proud Mary - Credence Clearwater Revival
Another song with a girls’ name in the title that isn’t about a girl. Proud Mary is a riverboat and John Fogerty’s exceptional musical talents do create the feeling of a giant paddle boat making it’s way down the Mississippi River. Though the CCR original is what I list, this song should probably get double billing for Ike and Tina Turner’s equally classic rendition as well.
Another song with a girls’ name in the title that isn’t about a girl. Proud Mary is a riverboat and John Fogerty’s exceptional musical talents do create the feeling of a giant paddle boat making it’s way down the Mississippi River. Though the CCR original is what I list, this song should probably get double billing for Ike and Tina Turner’s equally classic rendition as well.
Songs with a Girls' Name in the Title
Sorry for the delay in continuing this series of posts. Remember I said I was having some computer issues, still am to some degree, but it's kept continuing this series a challenge. But, for now, some of the bugs may have been worked out. So here's a refresher of the songs we've covered so far...
40. Come on Eileen – Dexy’s Midnight Runners
39. Jezebel - Chely Wright
38. Iris - Go0-Goo Dolls
37. Maggie May - Rod Stewart
36. Mandy - Barry Manilow
35. Walk Away Renee - Left Banke
34. Brandy (You're a Fine Girl) - Looking Glass
33. Oh Sherry - Steve Perry
32. A Boy Named Sue - Johnny Cash
31. Rhiannon - Fleetwood Mac
30. Wake Up Little Sussie - The Everly Brothers
29. Valerie - Steve Winwood
28. Runaround Sue - Dion
27. Elvira - The Oak Ridge Boys
26. Lucille - Little Richard
25. Barbara Ann - The Beach Boys
24. Lola - The Kinks
23. Veronica - Elvis Costello
40. Come on Eileen – Dexy’s Midnight Runners
39. Jezebel - Chely Wright
38. Iris - Go0-Goo Dolls
37. Maggie May - Rod Stewart
36. Mandy - Barry Manilow
35. Walk Away Renee - Left Banke
34. Brandy (You're a Fine Girl) - Looking Glass
33. Oh Sherry - Steve Perry
32. A Boy Named Sue - Johnny Cash
31. Rhiannon - Fleetwood Mac
30. Wake Up Little Sussie - The Everly Brothers
29. Valerie - Steve Winwood
28. Runaround Sue - Dion
27. Elvira - The Oak Ridge Boys
26. Lucille - Little Richard
25. Barbara Ann - The Beach Boys
24. Lola - The Kinks
23. Veronica - Elvis Costello
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Cartoon a Day: Toot Whistle Plunk and Boom

1953
Directed by Ward Kimball and Charles A Nichols
Available on: Walt Disney Treasures - Disney Rarities
Today's short is one of my all-time favorite cartoons. I was in either kindergarten or first grade when I saw it for the first timein the library at Clifford Elementary School. "Toot Whistle Plunk and Boom" is an educational short about music, but it is also one of the Disney studio's most creative shorts. Others must've thought so too, since it won an Academy Award. And to top it all off, it's in beautiful widescreen.


The film serves it's purpose, it is very educational, in fact it still used in classrooms today. The film is also very funny, though. The "plunk" sequence is my favorite from a comedic standpoint. They demonstrate several different types of string instruments in this sequence...from violins to hammer dulcimers and more...each one of them ends up breaking a string which hits it's player. It's a very funny sequence.





Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Cartoon a Day: All A Bir-r-r-rd

1950
Directed by Friz Freleng (as I. Freleng)
Available on: Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol 2
In this Tweety and Sylvester cartoon the duo are aboard a train. Both are riding in a luggage compartment and, as usual, Sylvester is trying to make a snack of Tweety.


Cartoon a Day: The Hare-Brained Hypnotist

1942
Directed by Friz Freleng (As I. Freleng)
Available on: Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 2
"The Hare-Brained Hypnotist" is a Bugs Bunny / Elmer Fudd hunting picture, but one with a bit a of a twist. It begins with Elmer reading a book on hypnosis. He plans on trying to hypnotize the animals he is hunting.


Sunday, May 17, 2009
10 years of The Phantom Menace

This Tuesday marks the 10th anniversary of the release of "Star Wars Episode 1 - The Phantom Menace." It's hard to believe that it's been that long. I remember going on the opening day. My office pretty much shut down and we all went to an afternoon show together. It was such a thrill being in a packed theater and having every single person in the audience cheer when the words "Star Wars" appeared on the screen. The look of the title and the "a long time ago..." lead in were exactly the same as the three original films. I didn't fully believe I was seeing a new Star Wars film until the words "Episode I" scrolled up.
- Watto
- Pod Racing
- Duel of the Fates
So happy 10th anniversay Phantom Menace! Everyone grab your double-edged lightsaber and party like it's 1999, or at least watch the movie again.
Many people were less than thrilled with this new creation from the mind of Lucas. I had a great time at the movies that day, and I still enjoy the film today. I admit it is probably the weakest of the Star Wars films, but the way the current generation has responded to this film and it's sequels over the last few years I think proves that it is not the films that changed, but the audience. Simply put, the children of the 70's grew up and many were unwilling to approach these films as they did when they were young.
So, in celebration of the film's 10th anniversary, here are a few of the things I love about The Phantom Menace:
- Giant Monsters

It must be the Godzilla fan in me, but I loved the giant undersea creatures that Qui Gon, Obi Wan, and Jar Jar encounter during their underwater bongo trip to Theed. Giant monsters are a Star Wars tradition, so it was fun to meet some of the aquatic variety.

Watto, the junk dealer who owns Anakin and his mother, is a great character. I love his design...pot bellied, unshaven, broken teeth that won't fit behind his mouth...he looks like a guy who's spent too much time at the race track. He's also got one of the best character voices of the series. I wish we we could've seen more of him as the saga progressed.

The pod race sequence is one of the best action scenes in any of the Star Wars films. This is Lucas' imagination working on all cylinders. Just the idea of racers being dragged along by two giant engines at dizzying speeds is wonderfully insane by itself, but there's so much more to like about this race. The cast of alien drivers make this Episode 1's version of the cantina scene. The nods to the other Star Wars films are great...buzzing by some Jawas, Jabba the Hutt falling asleep at the race, and best of all, Tusken Raiders taking pot shots at the racers. Ingenious! But as good as the pod race is, it may not be the film's best moment, which leads us to...

It turns out that after all those years we really had no concept of what a real lightsaber battle was like. The moment when Darth Maul ignites his double-edged lightsaber had appeared in the first trailer for the film, so fans had played and replayed it hundred of times in the six months leading up to the film's release, yet there were still audible gasps in the audience when the moment came. The battle that followed was beyond what anyone had imagined. You've got to hand it to Lucas for not giving Darth Maul the same sort of sword fighting chit chat that Darth Vader was fond of in the original trilogy. It helped make this villain a creature of pure rage. I think my favorite moment of the duel is when, to open a door, Darth Maul points at an object on the floor, then points at a control panel to send the item hurling into it, thus opening the door. The music for this sequence also represents on of John Williams' finest moments in either of the trilogies.
So happy 10th anniversay Phantom Menace! Everyone grab your double-edged lightsaber and party like it's 1999, or at least watch the movie again.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Cartoon a Day: Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp

1934
Directed by Ub Iwerks
Available on: Cartoons that Time Forgot - The Ub Iwerks Collection Vol. 1
"Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp," not to be confused with the famous Popeye two-realer "Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp," is another Ub Iwerks cartoon from his post-Disney days.


Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Cartoon a Day: A Clean Shaven Man

1936
Directed by Dave Fleischer
Available on: Popeye the Sailor 1933-1938
Several of the Popeye shorts feature some very simple but memorable little songs. Such is the case for "A Clean Shaven Man." As soon as I started watching this cartoon I was singing the title song in my head from having watched the short many many times as a child.


The best moments come after Popeye has had his spinach. I love when he is beating up on Bluto in a classic fight cloud, all the while muttering along with the music of the film's soundtrack. The final gag is also great in which Olive ends up walking down the street on the arm of a long-bearded man. The man actually looks like he could be Mr. Geezil from the comic strips which Popeye is based on. A rare appearance from one of the the many other characters that appeared with Popeye in print.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Cartoon a Day: Yankee Dood It

1956
Directed by Friz Freleng
Available on: Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 6
This is an odd Looney Tunes short that can be described with 4 words that aren't usually used to describe Looney Tunes..."It Just Ain't Funny."


Monday, May 11, 2009
Cartoon a Day: Motor Mania

1950
Directed by Jack Kinney
Available on: Walt Disney Treasures - The Complete Goofy
Goofy is an interesting character if you look at his history. In many of his later cartoons he doesn't really play himself. He's used to play a variety of different characters. In fact, in several cartoons, every character is based on his design. One of those cartoons is "Motor Mania," a cartoon that addresses the problem of road rage before it was ever fashionable to do so.


H.R. Pufnstuf on iTunes

Sunday, May 10, 2009
Cartoon a Day: Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl

1950
Directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
Available on: Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection
We've talked before about how there are certain scenarios that most major cartoon characters seem to cover at some point in their career. Don't wake the sleeping neighbor is one of them. The bullfight is another popular one. And then, of course, there is the conducting an orchestra bit, which leads us to "Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl."


Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Cartoon a Day: The Shooting of Dan McGoo

1945
Directed by Tex Avery
Available on: Tex Avery's Droopy - The Complete Theatrical Collection.
If, God forbid, there were ever a great calamity and only one of Tex Avery's cartoons from his time at MGM were to survive, "The Shooting of Dan McGoo" may as well be it. Just about everything that defines Avery's style during this period is in this cartoon.
This is the second outing for the character Droopy, and it isn't a cartoon that was a part of the kid show rotation in my hometown. Make no mistake, this is not a kids cartoon. Why the very first gag of the film involves a pun on some mature language. What follows are scenes of drinking, gambling, gun play, and a scantily clad dancing girl...and it's all very funny too. Avery's three great MGM era characters all appear in this cartoon, Droopy, the Wolf, and the dancing girl often known as "Red Hot Ridding Hood," here referred to as "Lou."
The sight gags are hilarious in this short. I love the little signs that speak directly to the audience, like the one that declares "Noisy, isn't it" as the camera pans across the violent saloon.

Another great sight gag involves a strategically placed bartender standing in front of a painting of women reclining. That gag seems pretty risque at first but actually has a pretty innocent payoff later in the film.


"The Shooting of Dan McGoo" may not be for younger viewers, but it's one of Tex Avery's quintessential works.
Monday, May 04, 2009
Cartoon a Day: Stratos Fear

1933
Directed by Ub Iwerks
Available on: Cartoons that Time Forgot: The Ub Iwerks Collection Vol. 2
Ub Iwerks was Walt Disney's top animator and co-creator of Mickey Mouse. After several years with Disney, he ventured out on his own, but most of the films he made have pretty much faded into obscurity. One of the characters he created during this time was a portly kid who told unbelievable stories named Willie Whopper. Today's cartoon, "Stratos Fear," is a part of the Willie Whopper series.


Take Me Out to the Ballgame with Denise Richards!!?!?
Two of my good friends have a teenage son who is a big sports fan. He's been known to come up to me and say things like, "Hey Todd, the Cubs suck this year." Even when that statement has been true I've just reminded him that there is nothing you can say or do that can hurt a Cubs fan. This, however, comes pretty close. Here is the former Mrs. Charlie Sheen, Denise Richards, singing "Take me out to the Ballgame" at Wrigley Field last Friday.
The best part of this video has to be the expressions on the faces of the fans. They just can't believe what they're hearing!
The best part of this video has to be the expressions on the faces of the fans. They just can't believe what they're hearing!
Sorry for the blogging Delay
Hey folks, sorry that there's been a bit of a lull in activity here at "Squonk." I've been dealing with some weird computer issues the last week or so which has made it tough for me to blog. Hopefully we'll be back to normal here now.