Real or Fake? YOU be the judge!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • It’s a mystery!
    Thank you for watching and subscribing and commenting! You guys are awesome and we appreciate each one of you!
    You can now buy Record-ology a cup of coffee! Help support the channel by clicking here! www.buymeacoff...
    Get your Record-ology merch here; teespring.com/...
    Want to send us stuff to review? Check out our mailing address;
    Record-ology
    P.O. Box 620344
    Littleton, CO
    80162
    Looking for something interesting to watch? Check out our older videos and also our playlists! Could you do us a favor? Tell a friend about Record-ology! Better yet, share us out on your socials - then give yourself a shoutout in our comments!
    Original content Copyright 2021 Record-ology. Check the ‘about’ tab for full info and disclosures.

Комментарии • 45

  • @ThisGuyFrritz
    @ThisGuyFrritz 3 года назад +1

    It was in the early '80s when my dad asked me, "You know what are bloopers? They're funny mistakes." That's when we first started watching "TV Censored Bloopers." That was before "TV's Bloopers and Practical Jokes." A few years later, some relative of ours found a "Pardon My Bloopers" record at a flea market, maybe the first volume(?). My cousin is pretty knowledgeable about classic TV/Radio shows, comic books, movies and all that. He said, "That's the original bloopers record." It made me think that it was before "TV Censored Bloopers." Another few years later, my cousin got a series of "Pardon My Bloopers" on 45's. We've managed to record them to compact cassette. I've recorded volume 1, making sure the sides were recorded in order. At the end, there was a legal warning about making copies of that program. It made my cousin say "Uh-oh, we've broken the law!"... with laughter. It was bedtime for me when we recorded volume 3 or 4 (I didn't want to stay up too late). From there, my dad was like, "Let's not worry about what order they're in." So, that's how they've managed to record the rest of them. I don't think we have the tapes anymore.
    The last time any one of us bought one of these records, my dad got volume 1 on a 12-inch record in the early 2000's. It had the design of the one you showed on Volume 6. Do we still have it? Maybe. I'm not sure. Anyway, that's about all I can say about our experiences on bloopers and stuff.

  • @78rpmblog
    @78rpmblog 3 года назад +1

    Those Pardon my Blooper-albums are interesting. Kermit Schafer is not in any way famous here in Sweden, but I run into his albums quite often, so many were imported here with cut out sleeves. Also the number of albums produced (even though I suspect many of the recordings were reissued with different names) was also impressive. I have some of the early Jubilee-albums as well, but I've also found many 1970s-issues of Pardon my Blooper. The first record that you show there in your video (volume 4) is probably a first pressing from late 1958 and the second (volume 6) is from 1959 but a later pressing from the 1960s. Interesting video, thanks

  • @creeder44
    @creeder44 3 года назад

    A lot of those, if not most, are recreations of alleged bloopers, not the real thing. But I have a few of the LPs and enjoy them. My favorite was always, "Stay tuned for NBC's Monday Night at the Movies when Phillips' Milk of Magnesia brings you 'Woman on the Run!'" And I often quote the phrase, "Magnoosium, Aleeminum and Stool."
    As a longtime writer of radio comedy and news material, I always read my copy out loud before sending it out to make sure there aren't any inadvertent tongue twisters or other problems you don't notice on the page but that leap out at you when you say them out loud. I call it the "If you see Kay, say hello" test.

  • @SlambosCarofIdiots
    @SlambosCarofIdiots 3 года назад +1

    I've got a few of those too. Kermit Schafer also produced a few more records including one titled "The Royal Family" about Elizabeth Taylor's first marriage. It was done in the style of The First Family series of records.

  • @TorontoJon
    @TorontoJon 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing those Blooper records, Recordology. I like the graphics of the covers, but I don't think I could listen to Blooper records that often whether they are real or staged and I wouldn't go out of my way to collect them other than for the fun covers. :)

  • @charlesc920
    @charlesc920 3 года назад +1

    I think my dad brought home a vhs of these when i was a kid, they might have had film versions of these that they used to show on late night tv. The stuff we used to find in the bargain bins back then.

  • @albert71292
    @albert71292 3 года назад +1

    I have some of the reissues from the 1970's, released by MCA Records. Bought them back in the 1970's.

  • @rick420buzz
    @rick420buzz 3 года назад +1

    When I was a kid, I had a few books full of his blooper collections.

  • @larrytgroce2219
    @larrytgroce2219 3 года назад +1

    I have a bunch of these. I love this stuff. Sone they released on a set of 2 45 rpm records.

  • @TorontoJon
    @TorontoJon 3 года назад +1

    17:35 Thanks for info regarding RUclips ad revenues and copyright strikes, etc. It's interesting that there are different time restrictions based on the particular artist or studio.

  • @royalpemberton8724
    @royalpemberton8724 3 года назад

    I think quite a few were what I would consider 're-enactments' where someone would have sent him in a letter what they'd heard go wrong on a radio or TV broadcast. I remember seeing a movie in 1975 produced by K-Tel(!) called PARDON MY BLOOPER on HBO; there was also a single-disc soundtrack LP record that contained about the last 40-odd minutes of the soundtrack.

  • @Curtiz2008
    @Curtiz2008 3 года назад +1

    Long time fan of Kermit Schafer. I have one of the records and several of his books. Several are probably reconstructions of unrecorded events.
    Most of the "reality" shows on the History Channel are fake, or heavily augmented.

  • @rwparker1968
    @rwparker1968 3 года назад +1

    I actually bought the K-Tel "100 Super Duper Bloopers" collection on LP back in '77 when I was a kid, and I recall that, while some of the clips sounded legit, just as many sounded forced/intenional, or featured obviously bad impersonators in "re-creations." Even 9 year-old me was not impressed.

  • @spacemissing
    @spacemissing Год назад

    This kind of material lost its charm when I recognised obvious re-creations and outright fakes amongst the real stuff.

  • @creeder44
    @creeder44 3 года назад

    George and I are working on reviving the Hollywood Hi-Fi videos to promote a new edition of the book, and we've decided to load separate videos of the songs that we can link to from the videos and website. Seems like the only way to go to avoid your main video being demonetized, even though our videos are calling attention to records that have mostly been out of print for decades.

  • @saintmichael1779
    @saintmichael1779 3 года назад +2

    I have a book by Kermit Schafer called "Super Duper Bloopers!", 1975. Published by Avenal Books by Blooper Enterprises Inc., a division of Kermit Schafer Productions.

  • @scott-b.2161
    @scott-b.2161 3 года назад +1

    I had one of those albums. The one i had was a double album. Also the first three volumes of Pardon my Blooper were released on ten inch albums before they rereleased them on 12 inch albums.

  • @davidclark4469
    @davidclark4469 3 года назад

    I have 5 or 6 volumes of these records. Unlike Dick Clark's
    and other modern blooper shows where they featured deliberate and intentionally provocative outtakes by famous people, these were honest, unintentional, and uncensored flubs; and are, therefore, truly hilarious. I had his first volume in the 60s, and even though it was a more conservative era, they didn't hold back. There were other uncensored records in that same era, such as Rusty Warren's (female nightclub comedienne) "Knockers Up". I have seen them numerous times in thrift stores, but have never bought them, even as a collector's item.

  • @timfaracy754
    @timfaracy754 3 года назад +1

    These "blooper" records are often re-creations of alleged mistakes and malapropisms. One that I think is on the first album in this series is supposed to be announcer Harry Von Zell saying "President Hoobert Heever" instead of Herbert Hoover but it's obviously a re-creation since few air checks exist of broadcasts during Hoover's presidency. Another one may be the kiddie show host Uncle Don who was said to have spoken badly about his audience after he thought the mics were off and his career was ruined. Long time NY TV nostalgia host Joe Franklin always said it never happened. The commercial you played on volume 6 for Schwartz sounds like a remake just from the good quality of the sound compared to the next items on the album. Joey Adams' segment may be real since he was a long time comic in NYC who was on radio until he was quite old. His widow Cindy Adams still writes a column for the NY Post. I used to see these albums in stores but I feel that after one play I'd never listen again. I don't buy comedy records generally for that reason, even by the big stars like Carlin, Cosby, Newhart, etc. but there are music records I still play after fifty-sixty years.

  • @AMOKIAN
    @AMOKIAN 3 года назад +1

    I had a few of those records😝😀🎧

  • @nickbitten6037
    @nickbitten6037 3 года назад +2

    You certainly dig up some unusual stuff- no bad thing though as it is social history.

  • @stephenconley2372
    @stephenconley2372 3 года назад

    You are correct about some of the bloopers being staged. Kermit did obtain authentic recordings of mistakes, but a large share came from type-o's or poorly written scripts, and for those he employed voice actors. His most controversial "blooper" was the Uncle Don incident, which never happened. Kermit released his blooper albums from 1954 to 1978. He passed away in 1979.

  • @EricLDC
    @EricLDC 3 года назад +2

    Love your videos I found Glenn Miller today on cassette i thought of your videos.
    Old tech is an addiction to me plus i use them too I don't just collect I repair and use them
    Red needle record players aren't really that bad right ? Found Michael Jackson thriller in excellent condition at good will today all i have is a red needle player
    I've heard story's but I'm not so sure what to believe

    • @Recordology
      @Recordology  3 года назад +1

      They track heavier but should be fine in most cases...upgrade if / when you can.

  • @allen-rp3gm
    @allen-rp3gm Год назад

    I remember seeing these advertised on NY TV

  • @EricLDC
    @EricLDC 3 года назад +1

    Sorry for asking so many questions you seem to be the only RUclips person that responds lol

  • @enricosanchez894
    @enricosanchez894 3 года назад

    They used to sell these on TV all the time. Some of these are funny even if they are fake, like the excited deejay saying Connie Francis has "two of the biggest hits in the country!"

  • @jeffreyhickman3871
    @jeffreyhickman3871 3 года назад

    I like 👍 that record with the black label 🏷, but I think both records are identical with what's on them. Your friend, Jeff.

  • @TheGreenDoggoOfWisdom
    @TheGreenDoggoOfWisdom 3 года назад

    I know this is completely off topic but I would love to see a food review video from you lol

    • @Recordology
      @Recordology  3 года назад

      I did bbq sauce once.....other than that....I dont think so lol

  • @adrianandkatrinadove203
    @adrianandkatrinadove203 3 года назад +1

    Was watching the Muppets on the radio,when i turned on this,after Avha finished her bone..I guess i am a Realist and believe your latest video is not Fake,although watching whilst eating cake,makes it more fun.Candidly speaking a Great Recording...that Royalty would be proud of.

  • @Brokeninc
    @Brokeninc 3 года назад

    I just started uploading found audio I have come across and side 2 of the tape I just posted had music that RUclips said was copyrighted and asked if I wanted to remove it or keep the sections. So I had RUclips removed what was identified.

  • @hestheMaster
    @hestheMaster 3 года назад

    Those were funny for back in the day. Howard Stern in the 1990's constantly had his crew taping live TV shows doing the same thing. Looking for
    funny things done or said unintentionally. Although the listeners didn't see the stuff he put on the air which often times was bleeped , it was funny and real.
    There are a lot of reality shows on TV past and now that are done with complete intentions to get ratings this way.

  • @cardnut
    @cardnut 3 года назад

    I just ordered a LP3.

  • @jeffreyhickman3871
    @jeffreyhickman3871 3 года назад

    Every time ya say "Kermit", I think you're going to jump up ☝ there, saying "Kermit The Frog", since that's the way that I'm used to hearing 👂 it. Your friend, Jeff.

  • @martinmedrano
    @martinmedrano 3 года назад +1

    Can i request a review of the fluance rt81 turntable this will most likely be my first turntable or the denon dp 300f. What to choose?

    • @Recordology
      @Recordology  3 года назад +1

      Stay Tuned!

    • @martinmedrano
      @martinmedrano 3 года назад

      @@Recordology im now a proud owner of a fluance rt81 baught it on Facebook marketplace pristine condition only issue is seller lost all cables and 45 adapter. Retail price is 350 i got it for 160. Now to buy a power supply and some quality rca cables. I will be using the built in preamp for now until i feel that its time to upgrade it. Now i can go record shopping.

  • @plan7a
    @plan7a 3 года назад +1

    That first 'Audience Participation' clip sounds like Groucho Marx. Just saying.

    • @enricosanchez894
      @enricosanchez894 3 года назад +1

      Close, but no cigar, lol.

    • @saintmichael1779
      @saintmichael1779 3 года назад

      The last blooper sounded like Fanny Brice, but she died in 1951, so it's not her.

  • @jeffreyhickman3871
    @jeffreyhickman3871 3 года назад

    It's probably the yellow record album that's fake, but this is like 👍 trying to determine the same thing with a dollar 💵 bill. I cannot tell ya otherwise. Maybe the real record says "Made in USA" 🇺🇸, and the fake one is from China. Could be that the real record is shiny, and the fake one is flat. The quality could be in the grooves, or the sound. Your friend, Jeff.

    • @Recordology
      @Recordology  3 года назад

      I was referring to the recordings - I had stated that some were authentic and some were staged. Thanks for commenting!