“Frasier” Debuts in 1993

Frasier First Episode On September 16 in 1993, the Cheers spin-off Frasier made its debut on NBC. The show starred Kelsey Grammer relocating his Cheers character Dr. Frasier Crane from Boston to Seattle.  One of the reason for the relocation was because the creators wanted to distance the show from Cheers in more than one way.  Had it been set in Boston, fans would have expected continuing cameos from Cheers characters.

Other characters included Frasier’s father Martin (John Mahoney), Frasier’s brother Niles (David Hyde Pierce), housekeeper-therapist Daphne Moon (Jane Leeves), and Frasier’s radio show producer Roz Doyle (Peri Gilpin). And, of course, there also was the dog Eddie (played by Moose and then his son Enzo after season 7), who received more fan mail than anyone else in the cast.

Frasier stayed on the air for eleven seasons until May 2004 (matching the eleven seasons of Cheers) and won a number of Emmys. The success is not bad for a character who was supposed to only appear in a few episodes of Cheers before becoming a regular character there.

Few TV shows can make me laugh out loud, and Frasier was one of those shows. I miss it, although it is great that one can still catch reruns in syndication or streaming.

Below, travel back to 1993 with some highlights from the first season of Frasier.

Goodnight Seattle!

What is your favorite episode of Frasier? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Voyager 1 Has Left the Building (Solar System)

    Voyager 1

    Voyager 1, launched from earth in 1977 and powered by plutonium, has now left the solar system. Or as NASA puts it, “Voyager goes interstellar.” NASA believes that the spacecraft escaped the solar system and the sun’s gravitational pull more than a year ago, actually, but only now does it have the evidence to confirm that belief. The probe began its travels studying our neighbors and now it will continue radioing back information to earth about its new discoveries. If you want the full explanation, check out the video below.

    I remember the hoopla when Voyager 1 began its journey. Carl Sagan appeared on TV shows talking about the probe and a golden record on board. A committee chaired by Sagan created a record disc to go with the ship. The record included images, diagrams, voices, and music for the event that alien beings might one day discover this distant traveler far way from its home. I owned and read Sagan’s book about the record, Murmurs of Earth, although long ago I lost track of what happened to the book.

    The contents of the record caused some debate. The committee believed it was important to illustrate human reproduction for any aliens, but NASA objected to using nude photos. So, instead, the record featured human silhouettes illustrating a fetus in the woman’s womb.

    The other controversial aspect of the record was the inclusion of Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode.” Carl Sagan originally did not like the idea but he eventually was happy they included the song. Reportedly, folk music collector Alan Lomax objected to the inclusion of Berry’s song because rock music had not been around that long and was thus “adolescent.” Sagan responded with the defense, “There are a lot of adolescents on the planet,’”

    The probe itself worked its way into popular culture as it was referenced in TV and movies. A few years after the launch, I recall recognizing Voyager when it played a key role in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979). Although the movie actually used a fictional “Voyager 6,” this “Vger” still looked like the Voyager I remembered.

    Go Voyager go.

    Photo: via NASA (Public Domain). NASA Video from
    NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology.


    What music would you put on a record for aliens? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    What Did One Movie Ask Another Movie?

    In this funny video mashup from mattatjeoorlog, characters from one move ask about something said in another movie. It is pretty clever and funny, so check it out.

    What is your favorite movie that appears in the video? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    James Taylor and Children’s Choirs Shower the People

    Singer-songwriter James Taylor recently performed his classic “Shower the People” with a little help from the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the Utah Symphony. The performance, which closed the main part of the thirtieth anniversary O. C. Tanner Gift of Music Gala Concert, was held on September 6 in Salt Lake City, Utah.

    2024 Update: Unfortunately, that video is no longer available, so instead here is James Taylor with the Amani Children’s Choir (Uganda) and the Mid Cities Youth Choir (Los Angeles) at the Save The Children’s Centennial Celebration gala in Los Angeles on October 2, 2019

    What is your favorite James Taylor song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Hear the Beatles Sing Without Music on “Abbey Road” Medley

    Beatles Abbey Road Medley A recent video isolates the vocals of the Beatles on their closing Abbey Road (1969) album “medley.” The song cycle features “You Never Give Me Your Money,” “Sun King,” “Mean Mr. Mustard,” “Polythene Pam,” “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window,” “Golden Slumbers,” “Carry that Weight,” “The End,” and the epilogue “Her Majesty.”

    I always enjoy hearing the Beatles in new ways. For great classic artists, we often get so used to hearing the songs in the same way, we lose the wonder we had for the first several times we heard the song. Hearing this medley without the music helps refresh our memory about why the Beatles were so great.

    Update:  The video with just vocals is no longer available, but the video below uses clips of the vocals-only recordings to analyze what the Beatles were doing in this song cycle.  Check it out.

    Other cool things about the isolated track include that you more clearly can hear what John Lennon says before the start of “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window” (around 8:25). Also, when the quiet parts come up, you may test yourself on whether you remember the musical breaks.

    Abbey Road was the final album recorded by the Beatles, although the earlier recorded Let It Be(1970) would be their last released. In the book Tell Me Why: The Beatles: Album By Album, Song By Song, The Sixties And After, author Tim Riley writes that side two of Abbey Road, which consists largely of the above song suite, “revives different stages of their career for a remarkable nostalgic resonance and comprises an ingenious manipulation of rock ‘n’ roll textures.” From inside the studio, though, John Lennon felt that the recording of Abbey Road was “torture.”

    Now, you may return to listening to the song cycle with music.

    What is your favorite part of the isolated vocal track? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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