Super Dave Osborne Was Really Super

Bob Einstein

Bob Einstein, known for his role as Marty Funkhouser on Curb Your Enthusiasm, passed away on January 2, 2019.  Einstein also portrayed Larry Middleman on Arrested Development.  But to those of us who grew up watching television in the 1970s and 1980s, he will always be Super Dave Osborne.

Einstein’s Super Dave character presented a refreshing and funny take on stunt performers like Evel Knievel.  Knievel was all the rage in the late 1960s and early 1970s.  And Super Dave’s costume even copied the white outfits with red and blue worn by Knievel during his motorcycle jumps.

While Einstein made Super Dave a goofy character getting slapstick laughs, Einstein’s creation also commented on those of us entranced with watching Evel Knievel.  Yes, part of us watched with the hope that Knievel would succeed.  But part of us watched because we also hoped to see something go wrong. 

For Super Dave, something always did go wrong.  His humor inspired other performers.  One may trace a short line from Super Dave’s stunts to shows like Jackass. But somehow Super Dave seemed much kinder and gentler, perhaps because he never hurt anyone else. And the “special effects” ensured that we were in on the joke. 

After writing for The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, Einstein first appeared as Super Dave Osborne in the 1972 TV series, The John Byner Comedy Hour. Super Dave would later appear on other television shows, such as Bizarre (1979-86) and Late Night with David Letterman. And Super Dave would get his own television series in Canada in 1987-1991.  The character also starred in his own animated television show and a movie, The Extreme Adventures of Super Dave (2000).

Einstein — who was born in Los Angeles as Stewart Robert Einstein on November 20, 1942 — is the brother of actor-director Albert Brooks.  He wrote for other shows and did other wonderful acting jobs throughout his career. But every time I would see him on shows such as Curb Your Enthusiasm, I would always think of him as Super Dave Osborne, the stunt hero I hoped would never die. Rest in peace.

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    Good Ole Boys Like Me

    Good Old BoysWhile recently re-watching the movie Primary Colors (1998) for the umpteenth time, I noticed a song I had never really noticed before.  It occurs after John Travolta’s character Gov. Jack Stanton meets with Larry Hagman’s Gov. Fred Picker.  In a key scene near the end of the movie that was directed by Mike Nichols, Stanton walks away from Picker’s southern mansion singing a song.

    Stanton then says how he loves the song, in particular a line about the Williams boys, Hank and Tennessee.   He expounds, “The picture ain’t never complete without old Tennessee.”  The song is “Good Ole Boys Like Me.”

    I can still hear the soft southern winds in the live oak trees
    And those Williams boys, they still mean a lot to me
    Hank and Tennessee
    I guess we’re all gonna be what we’re gonna be
    So, what do you do with good ole boys like me?

    The song captures the charm of Travolta’s character, who is based upon Bill Clinton during his race for the presidency.  It also shows the politician’s embrace of Southern culture.

    The Song

    Bob McDill wrote “Good Ole Boys Like Me,” a song that stacks together images of Southern culture.  The images range from a Civil War general to great American novelists like Thomas Wolfe.

    McDill initially offered the song to Kenny Rogers, who found it too literary.  So, Don Williams recorded the song and created a classic.

    Other people mentioned in the song are DJ’s like Wolfman Jack and John R., the latter of whom McDill listened to as a kid on WLAC radio out of Nashville.  McDill found inspiration to write the song with images of Southern culture while reading the novel A Place to Come To, by Robert Penn Warren.

    McDill tells more about the story behind the song in the video below.  Check it out.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Lou Reed Inducting Dion Into Rock Hall

    In early 1989, Lou Reed inducted Dion into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with a short poetic introduction, followed by Dion’s short funny recollections.

    Dion Rock Hall

    On January 18, 1989, one great singer-songwriter associated with New York inducted another great singer-songwriter also associated with the city into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.  Lou Reed, injecting poetic words as only he could do, inducted Dion DiMucci into the Rock Hall.

    In the video below, listen to Reed describing the influence of Dion and his music, “Bronx Soul.”  Reed does it with language only he would use, all while reading from a sheet of paper that those of us who were around in 1989 recognize as continuous computer paper with holes on the side, printed from a dot matrix printer.

    Then, a happy Dion takes the stage to accept with a short funny speech.

    The “Phil” that Dion mentions is legendary producer Phil Spector, including a reference to Spector’s production of Dion’s 1975 album Born to Be with You and the producer’s notorious reclusiveness.  Subsequently, Spector’s strange behavior would lead to him being convicted of murder in 2009 and going to prison where he died from complications due to Covid in January 2020. The “Bruce” he mentions is, of course, Bruce Springsteen. Check it out.

    The 1989 induction ceremony was one for the ages. Other performers inducted in addition to Dion included The Rolling Stones, Stevie Wonder, and Otis Redding.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    “First Reformed” Is a Movie For Our Time

    Ethan Hawke MovieI became intrigued when I saw First Reformed (2018), starring Ethan Hawke, appearing on many lists of the best movies of the year. The movie rightfully belongs on such lists. Fifty years from now when someone wonders what it was like to live during our current decade, one would do well to advise them to watch First Reformed.

    The movie says nothing about our current president.  But it says a lot about the angst of our modern age. During a time when our historic foundations have been shattered, for good or for ill, we face a world with new anxieties, uncertain about our future, overwhelmed to inaction.

    First Reformed tells the story of a priest played by Ethan Hawke in one of his best performances. The priest serves at a small historic church in upstate New York that is attended by few people. The small church, though, is connected to a more popular mega-church. The priest considers what humans are doing to the environment, even as his own body is failing.  He contemplates the meaning of faith and the responsibilities of good people in a world coming apart.

    Part of the crisis of faith arises when a parishioner played by Amanda Seyfried approaches the priest and asks him to counsel her husband. Her husband is involved with environmental activists.  Her husband faces an existential crisis, wondering how he and his pregnant wife can bring a child into such a horrible world.

    The exchange between the husband and the priest is one of the best philosophical discussions on screen in awhile.  And the scene sets up many of the questions the priest struggles with throughout the film.

    The acting is powerful.  In addition to Hawke’s wonderful performance, Amanda Seyfried and Cedric the Entertainer (Cedric Kyles), among others, do a great job in supporting roles.  Kyles brings nuance to a character in charge of the mega-church.  Such a character might otherwise have been a caricature.  And Seyfried provides a strong grounded balance to the men coming unhinged in the face of existential dread.

    I will not give away more about the plot.  But I will warn viewers that the movie does contain two surreal scenes that may have you scratching your head. This film is directed and written by Paul Schrader, who also wrote such films as Taxi Driver (1976) and Raging Bull (1980). So he knows how to push his viewers to confront bleak and uncomfortable issues in a beautiful way. The movie is challenging, which may account for the high critics score on Rotten Tomatoes (93%) and mediocre audience score (69%).

    And, while the ending may puzzle you for awhile, some contemplation may make you appreciate the whole film even more. It did for me.

    First Reformed is now available for streaming on Amazon Prime.

    What did you think of First Reformed? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    John Legend: Bring Me Love This Christmas

    Legendary Christmas

    We wish everyone a very merry Christmas. This year, one of the best new Christmas songs comes from John Legend. In the upbeat song “Bring Me Love,” from Legend’s A Legendary Christmas album, Legend asks for one thing for Christmas.

    Bring me love this Christmas,
    ‘Cause I deserve you here;
    Bring me love this Christmas,
    ‘Cause I’ve been good this year.

    Here’s wishing you are surrounded by love this holiday season.

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