A Listener Seeks Justice For Matt Gourley | Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 336

  • @culwin
    @culwin Год назад +103

    After Conan lost the Tonight Show, he should have held a press conference, and simply said:
    Let the babies have their orange juice.

  • @augusthavince8909
    @augusthavince8909 Год назад +52

    "It's always beef au jus with you!" lol

  • @thelonelyloner7
    @thelonelyloner7 Год назад +177

    Conan telling Eduardo at 5:34 "You're never gonna make it in this country, if that's all you got" for the superman song made me laugh so hard 😂😂😂

  • @thevirtualtraveler
    @thevirtualtraveler Год назад +48

    I enjoyed it when Conan started talking about his childhood and things they would say, for just a second his Boston accent came out when he said, "No that's a foul". You could tell he was strongly remembering the time and place.

    • @mcsweeney29
      @mcsweeney29 Год назад +2

      Also hilarious how little Conan knows about sports when he calls fouls in touch football. Listening to him attempt to talk about sports is always a lark.

    • @LPChipi
      @LPChipi 5 месяцев назад +1

      "The closest city to Baaaston"

  • @weeniehutjunior
    @weeniehutjunior Год назад +93

    Whenever people on stage would yell to the audience, the generic "Are you ready?" I always wished someone in the crowd would yell back, "NO I NEED LIKE 10 MORE MINUTES!" LOL

    • @brycemcneil4404
      @brycemcneil4404 7 месяцев назад +3

      The Critic did a joke similar to that...
      "Are you ready to ROCK?"
      "Not yet, Billy's tying his shoe."
      Billy: "OK."

    • @whothefvckiscris
      @whothefvckiscris 5 месяцев назад

      i always yell nooooo

  • @rocketRobScott
    @rocketRobScott Год назад +178

    Conan is the Orange Juice, and we’re the babies.

  • @martenrange1940
    @martenrange1940 Год назад +269

    I believe Shmoopy is secretly Jerry Seinfeld. He was once called Shmoopy by one of his girlfriends on the show and he also did the inka dink in one episode.

    • @lilclerk
      @lilclerk Год назад +31

      I came here to say Shmoopy and Inka dink are both seinfeld references haha

    • @karkajouautomaton4882
      @karkajouautomaton4882 Год назад +12

      The plot thickens!

    • @bretfoltz7737
      @bretfoltz7737 Год назад +8

      Shmoopy was the “Soup Nazi” episode.

    • @briancalderon2934
      @briancalderon2934 Год назад +2

      @martenrange1940 Jerry?

    • @eoinmurphy8761
      @eoinmurphy8761 Год назад +8

      Inka Dink was used in the Seinfeld episode where the statue was stolen and George and Kramer argue over who gets it.

  • @nathonkim725
    @nathonkim725 Год назад +58

    Yes, the "kissed a girl behind a magazine" was a rhyme that I used... I always thought it meant you hid your faces with a magazine as you kissed.

    • @HollowInn
      @HollowInn 3 месяца назад +1

      I think it may be of French origin. Magazine in French is "store".

    • @stephanegerard513
      @stephanegerard513 13 дней назад

      @@HollowInn Hello HolloInn, hello nathonkim725!
      I wondered immediately if the French etymology behind "Magazine" (which itself appears to have been derived from "Maghazan", apparently an old Arabic plural form of "a cache for weapons") was a clue towards deducing the rhyme's origin, since I can confirm that at least the latter French transfer into English carried strong military overtones - in which latter language it is still unequivocally associated with war through its use in regular gun jargon as the receptacle for bullets.
      This miniaturized physical instance, though, is closer to the sense of the word as it was still used in the 1800s and early 1900s in the Americas, to my own best estimation, when its literal form strongly denoted an actual purpose-built space housing a collection of items (which gave rise at some point to "magasin", spelled without the final "e" as the modern French default term for "shop"), such as the place where arms and ordinance were kept. As a further aside, the metaphorical versatility of the general concept likely gave rise to its colloquial use thereafter for "printed materials of the periodical type" in both languages, either because of the places they were produced or the places they were disseminated.
      Since "kissing behind a magazine" in the rhyme seems slightly opaque to understanding when using both the "bullet collection" or the "regular pamphlet" derivations, might it be safer to assume the "building for weaponry" sense? If so, was the doggerel-verse perhaps first coined by children on a United States base or military outpost?
      Any actual linguistic or etymological expertise and/or personal experience would be welcome, as would a full transcription of the "superman" chant, which I would never have heard of outside of this podcast (much less be able to gather if the insufficiency Conan hinted at would itself yield a richer joke for immigrants or their children)!
      Hoping this finds everyone doing well, then,
      And wishing you all a very good day,
      -Stéphane Gérard

  • @Saint.V.
    @Saint.V. Год назад +67

    1:43 ghost in the graveyard is very much a thing! It’s like hide and go seek, except there would be a time limit on how long people could be “hidden“ and then if any were found within that time limit, they would go to the “graveyard“. Once that time limit was up, the seeker would scream “Ollie Ollie oxen, free“ which would release the “ghosts” from the graveyard, and everyone that was hidden, would no longer be allowed to hide and would have to run from the ghost because they became seekers as well. So basically “ghost in the graveyard” is a game of hide and seek that morphs into a game of tag.

    • @Sledgeh101
      @Sledgeh101 Год назад +8

      I think a lot of people my age have heard 'Olly Olly Oxen Free', but I had no idea what it meant. Thank you for the explanation.

    • @84bucco
      @84bucco Год назад +1

      So much fun with that game as a kid!

    • @davidyoder562
      @davidyoder562 Год назад +14

      We played it a little different. Not sure if it's regional or just my family/group of friends. We didn't have any time limits, it was just reverse hide and seek. So one person hides, and everybody goes looking for the one. If someone finds the ghost (hider), he/she yells "ghost in the graveyard!" and it turns into a game of tag (ghost is "it"). Whoever gets tagged is the ghost in the next round.
      Side note, when the ghost is hiding, the seekers all count aloud "one o'clock, two o'clock..." until they get to 24 and everyone yells "midnight!" Then the hunt begins.
      Ah, such fun times

    • @WithLoveThomas
      @WithLoveThomas Год назад

      Genius

    • @jules7209
      @jules7209 Год назад +1

      Our ghost in the graveyard was where everyone takes a slip if paper. And one person has the x. The person w the x has to kill the other players without anyone seeing

  • @redhead5222
    @redhead5222 Год назад +44

    I've always heard:
    Let the babies have their bottle.

    • @gersonkphone
      @gersonkphone Год назад +4

      Yeah, Homer uses that version in a season 2 Simpsons. Pre-Conan's run, though.

    • @luckyDancer100
      @luckyDancer100 Год назад +2

      Exactly. It’s always been “let the baby have its bottle” in a passive aggressive manner. I feel like some kid just messed up the expression.

  • @geloamiote
    @geloamiote Год назад +11

    7:36 old timey coco always gets me

    • @ndteegarden
      @ndteegarden Год назад

      Me too. Given enough time it always morphs into Edward G. Robinson.

  • @growupjohnny9374
    @growupjohnny9374 Год назад +92

    Conan was literally about to tell a story about Nas and Matt cut him off to talk about ink-a-dink

    • @thatsmyspotpenny651
      @thatsmyspotpenny651 Год назад +6

      i think he was referring to the nas bit he did on tour about him introducing nas and then being obnoxious about it

  • @KABE1322
    @KABE1322 Год назад +14

    I never used Ink a Dink as a child but learned about it when I was a kid from Seinfeld. Kramer and George used Ink a Dink to decide who would get the statue.

  • @ZakClaxton
    @ZakClaxton Год назад +20

    If you wanted to REALLY upset people in elementary school, you'd pull out the "Matt and Sona sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G!"

  • @Edward_John
    @Edward_John Год назад +12

    Gourley had the same rhymes as I had as a kid. Apple peaches pumpkin pie and ink a dink a bottle of Ink were our goto rhymes. Of course "Engine engine number nine" was also a favorite.

    • @franciet99
      @franciet99 Год назад

      Agreed!

    • @MrBenjamin334
      @MrBenjamin334 4 месяца назад

      I learned the apple peaches pumpkin pie rhyme from Schoolhouse Rock's "Fives": ruclips.net/video/D_1x7V1sHd0/видео.html

  • @sew75962
    @sew75962 Год назад +11

    I was waiting for the roast of schmoopy. Conan didn’t disappoint.

  • @Saint.V.
    @Saint.V. Год назад +11

    1:51 VERY REGIONAL! Something that was easier to call out and also the main reason people were allowed to claim ignorance as a feeling of bliss that we are no longer able to today. I love this conversation because it is the major change in society and regional standards/practices of the early 90s. That’s the conversation you guys are having is the breakthrough of the World Wide Web being accessible to the mass public in 1993 and how it broke down those barriers Of people living in one country but having extreme differences regionally. Whereas today I know that this conversation is going on all the way in California while I’m here in Kansas and ironically it’s a conversation about the games we used to play/sayings we used to use as kids, at a time when the World Wide Web was not so accessible to us. It really truly puts an actual, tangible meaning behind the saying “the world is at your fingertips“

  • @aaronarchermonster8539
    @aaronarchermonster8539 Год назад +22

    ghost in the graveyard for us was a round based game of tag played at night with a homebase. starts with one zombie (ghost) that hides once the zombie reveals itself you can run to homebase to be safe. each round the people tagged by the zombies now also hide until only one person survives. We played this every summer night. i dont know any rymes....

    • @winter117a
      @winter117a Год назад +1

      This is version of Ghosts that I remember. Such a fun game.
      Played many a summer night around one of the houses in our neighborhood that had a perfect layout. Front yard was flat with a large stoop by the front door (acted as base). Sides of the house sloped to a low, flat backyard. Lots of trees in random locations but very clear routes to run through. Always had excellent places for the ghosts to hide.

    • @mikebowman4692
      @mikebowman4692 Год назад

      Yep.

  • @AdmiralWinfrey
    @AdmiralWinfrey Год назад +7

    We used to add "Not because you're dirty/Not because you're clean/But because you kissed a boy/Behind a magazine" to the end of our rhymes, like all of them

  • @uhrich11
    @uhrich11 2 месяца назад +1

    I play a lot of games with my kids....you should see their faces when I say, "Let the baby have his orange juice!"
    SO GOOD.

  • @2xSundays
    @2xSundays Год назад +12

    My moms favorite bedtime story to me:
    One dark night in the middle of the day,
    two dead boys came out to play,
    back to back they faced each other, pulled out their knives and they shot each other,
    the deaf policeman heard the noise, and came and got those two dead boys,
    and if you don’t believe my story’s true ask the blind man he saw it too.
    Paradoxical and confused, yet wonderful lady my mother is. 😊

    • @THEjoelivingstone
      @THEjoelivingstone Год назад +1

      The version I got was:
      One bright day in the middle of the night
      Two dead boys got up to fight
      Back to back they faced each other
      Drew their swords and shot each other
      A deaf policeman heard the noise
      Came and shot the two dead boys
      If you don't believe this lie is true
      Ask the blind man, he saw it too

  • @leightnite3056
    @leightnite3056 Год назад +4

    "When you start rhyming beef ajou, it's time to bid you adou" that's what it shoulda been...when ya gonna hire me huh?😅

  • @JessLFH
    @JessLFH Год назад +6

    Yes! Ink a dink was necessary to choose who was it or which sibling had to do the dishes.

  • @jacktion1546
    @jacktion1546 Год назад +7

    In northern NJ, we said “Let the babies have their bottles.”
    When we needed to select teams, we went with the old “one potato two potato three potato four, five potato six potato seven potato more.”

    • @kstepko
      @kstepko Год назад

      I had forgotten all about ‘potato’!

    • @ebbderelict
      @ebbderelict Год назад

      Bottle. That's the one. That's the one you say.
      For one-potato, I always laugh when I think about this episode of Cheers, where Carla, Dianne, and Woody were trying to decided on something, and Sam starts with "My dog died last night, what colour was his blood" and Dianne doesn't want to play. So they did this thing with a baseball bat to see who's the last one that can grab it at the top. Then Woody grabs the nub, and Carla says that Dianne and her have a chance to kick it out of his hand, and Dianne asks "who gets to try first?", and that's when Woody starts with one-potato. :D

  • @yurielcundangan9090
    @yurielcundangan9090 Год назад +140

    The more we watch the Podcast, the more we like Matt's persona

    • @Aerosolli
      @Aerosolli Год назад +4

      Not really, he's getting so comfortable now that he just starts seem weird.

    • @emu_warrior
      @emu_warrior Год назад +30

      @@Aerosolli wrong, shut up Jordan

    • @yudha9417
      @yudha9417 Год назад +9

      @@Aerosolli nah

    • @Butterratbee
      @Butterratbee Год назад +3

      @@Aerosolliwrong

  • @frigginmanbeard3073
    @frigginmanbeard3073 Год назад +7

    Funny that ink a dink is not a more commonly known thing. I remember the first time I heard it was on an episode of Seinfeld. Even had the magazine part.

  • @omarazeez677
    @omarazeez677 Год назад +7

    "Let the babies have their sweets" is a saying children use in Iraq that has the exact same meaning as the one Conan said. Orange juice is sweet; would definitely mistake young white Conan for an Iraqi, especially with the "uptight bringing" and channelling emotions through sarcasm.

  • @JonEnge
    @JonEnge Год назад +5

    Oh yes! I grew up in Southern California and we had the Inka Dink extended version which we sometimes cut down because it seemed excessive.

    • @silentsmurf
      @silentsmurf Год назад

      Is this a generational thing? I’m a few years younger than Sona from Southern California and never heard of it although I’m also a child of immigrants 😂

  • @amitychief3061
    @amitychief3061 Год назад +5

    Add “Let the baby have his orange juice” to “Kedakai as god made her” and “There was talk of gerbals”

  • @thevirtualtraveler
    @thevirtualtraveler Год назад +2

    Growing up in SE MN in the 80s we had some very regional things. Instead of cutting, we called it 'budging' in line. Instead of duck duck goose, we played duck duck grey duck (which is Much more fun!). And, very specific to the town I grew up, we would say, "I see London, I see France, I see _____'s underpants. Not too big, not too small, just the size of Apache Mall!"

    • @ndteegarden
      @ndteegarden Год назад

      We said "budging" in western New York too. But I'm pretty sure Duck, Duck, Grey Duck is unique to Minnesota. It might even come from Swedish if I recall correctly.

  • @dvdlsn
    @dvdlsn Год назад +40

    Isn't it 'let the baby have his bottle'?

    • @kstepko
      @kstepko Год назад +1

      Came here to say this!

    • @pizza_guyny
      @pizza_guyny Год назад +1

      That's what I remember

    • @neolexiousneolexian6079
      @neolexiousneolexian6079 Год назад +13

      Conan said it was from his childhood, so it was obviously before bottles were invented, and they just had to give babies orange juice without a vessel to contain it.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Год назад +7

      ​@@neolexiousneolexian6079😅😅 they just tipped the baby back and squeezed the oranges over its open mouth...

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Год назад

      Seriously, though, I've been in Rhody for 24 years, never heard of it

  • @ZeroKool7140
    @ZeroKool7140 Год назад +18

    I heard “no cuts, no butts, no coconuts” in a line outside an Apple Store with friends. I left to go find a breakfast burrito and abandoned my friends there after I heard that..

    • @JomerTB
      @JomerTB Год назад +2

      That's so random and your reaction is hilarious

    • @livelifeincolour
      @livelifeincolour 3 месяца назад

      No ifs, no buts, no coconuts

  • @awoFalase
    @awoFalase Год назад +2

    Freakin Hilarious! So dumb but great. 🤣😂🤣

  • @TheOrlandoTrustfull
    @TheOrlandoTrustfull Год назад +13

    If you only know Gourley from this podcast, I highly recommend listening to The Andy Daly Podcast Pilot Project. Gourley really shines as an improvisor.

    • @MM-ud1xf
      @MM-ud1xf Год назад

      He’s great on Bonanas for Bonanza, but his HR Giger is hilarious.

  • @Holasrmateo
    @Holasrmateo Год назад +10

    I recommended to my language instructor who was working towards his citizenship, along with his wife and children, that they should watch the Simpsons Seasons 1 or 2-10 to learn English from Harvard grads as well as Americana from the middle 20th century.
    Learn perfectly cromulet words from jub jub to perspicacity.

  • @jlee4039
    @jlee4039 Год назад +1

    This topic was covered by The Atlantic a few years ago, on regional differences between children’s games and rhymes. Some really fascinating studies!

  • @Kevin2432
    @Kevin2432 Год назад +11

    Ive only heard ink a dink from seinfeld, and Im glad schmoopy defended him, but i guess the team didnt connect those.

    • @kstepko
      @kstepko Год назад +5

      Yes - Jerry Seinfeld and/or Larry David needs to come on the podcast and defend Matt! I’m sure that springs from someone’s childhood experience.

  • @nickolascochran
    @nickolascochran Год назад +4

    "The phrase is thought to have originated in the early 1900s, when orange juice was first introduced to the American market. At the time, orange juice was considered to be a luxury item, and it was often given to babies as a way to boost their immune system. As orange juice became more affordable and widely available, the phrase "let the babies have their orange juice" came to be used in a more figurative sense."
    "The phrase is a colloquial expression that is used to suggest that someone is being overly protective or cautious. It is often used in a humorous way, but it can also be used to express genuine frustration or concern."
    😆

  • @watermeloninja
    @watermeloninja Год назад +1

    OMG, I remember the "Nas" bit from "Conan O'Brien can't stop" documentary 🤣

  • @roriofficial689
    @roriofficial689 7 месяцев назад +1

    Enie mini Miny Moe always gives me the shivers, knowing the actual origin/real words to that song

  • @alexandercampbell7903
    @alexandercampbell7903 Год назад +1

    🎵Ipsy bipsy bobbilyboo. I played the stage of Bonaroo where I asked them "How do you do? and let's get some beef a jeu, and the crickets played me off boo hoo; they would rather watch Pink, Nas, and the FIghters Foo. Ipsy bipsy bobbily boo"🎶

  • @kumakhan22
    @kumakhan22 Год назад

    Shmoopy backing up Gourley with a mountain of Seinfeld references. "You owe me for the Ink-a-dink"

  • @apolloguitars
    @apolloguitars 5 месяцев назад

    Yep. “Inka dink… behind a magazine” is how we said it. Cheers! 😊

  • @Christopher_Pug
    @Christopher_Pug Год назад

    Wow, ghost in the graveyard was the best. I remember most of these sayings too, and I grew up in eastern PA in the early 90s.

  • @84bucco
    @84bucco Год назад +2

    Ghost in the graveyard is easily the best kids game around hands down! I'd play it right now!

    • @ejyounggun08
      @ejyounggun08 Год назад

      I also enjoyed Red Rover and kickball.

  • @tristanbowman7098
    @tristanbowman7098 Год назад +1

    Grew up south of Boston, it's "Ink stink purple pink, poop, fart, out!"

  • @SJ-iq1pp
    @SJ-iq1pp Год назад

    We absolutely had the “behind a magazine” part of Ink a Dink.

  • @christianfinkbeiner684
    @christianfinkbeiner684 Год назад +4

    I haven't heard the orange juice thing, but I would know right away that it's an insult. They're calling someone a baby. It's not complicated.

  • @LeftWithRight
    @LeftWithRight 7 месяцев назад +1

    We had a similar one that went:
    Inky pinky ponky
    Daddy had a donkey
    Donkey died
    Daddy cried
    Inky pinky ponky.
    I would always do this one because i knew how to rig it.

  • @masterxyr
    @masterxyr Год назад

    the Moses of Comedy parting the crowd

  • @papapeaceful8713
    @papapeaceful8713 Год назад

    Much love and God bless, thanks for the laughs and beyond

  • @samflynn3670
    @samflynn3670 Год назад +2

    Farts were called "windballs" in my hometown. I didn't learn that wasn't a thing until I got to college. Freshman year was rough. 😞

  • @ejyounggun08
    @ejyounggun08 Год назад +1

    My cousin and I used to sing this song and Idk where it comes from, surely there's a hand clapping pattern to it but it goes: One day I was walking. I saw my boyfriend talking - to a pretty little girl - with strawberry curls - and this is what he said to her, "I L-O-V-E love you. I K-I-S-S kiss you. I care for you and this is what she said to him, "Go to the river. Jump in! Sink to the bottom - can't swim! Who ya gonna marry? Sea-horse! What's gonna happen? Di-vorce!

  • @Nancy-en7ns
    @Nancy-en7ns Год назад

    Grew up in the Bronx. We said the whole ink a dink phrase. Thanks for the memories!! One potato, two potatoe...

  • @hunt0r134
    @hunt0r134 2 месяца назад

    That “Rhyme” is all over the world I think. In the ‘80’s in Ireland we had “Ip dip sky blue, not me, just you” and it was to find out who was the next person to seek in hide’n’seek or games like that. It was always the same rhythm but the words would be different depending on the game

  • @CB-pf5lb
    @CB-pf5lb Год назад +2

    Wasn't that clip deleted from this channel for some reason? Anyway, I'll say the same thing I said before. "Ink a dink" was recited on Seinfeld episode.

  • @beckyowens2635
    @beckyowens2635 Год назад

    Before games of Ghost in the Graveyard/Hide and Seek/ Sardines, my friends and I used to use the rhyme "Bubble gum, Bubble gum in a dish. How many pieces do you wish." We'd also use "Inky binky bonky. Daddy had a donkey. Donkey died. Daddy Cried. Inky binky bonky." There were others of course, such as the classic "Eeny, meeny, miny, moe," but I'd never heard of "Ink a dink, bottle of ink" until I saw it on an episode of Seinfeld which many other commenters have also mentioned.

  • @oxglen7090
    @oxglen7090 Год назад +2

    Seinfeld S2 E6. Ink a dink with the magazine line.

  • @whitenoizemaker
    @whitenoizemaker 5 месяцев назад

    I was at Bonnaroo that year and I never knew wtf it was that he said there I love this lmao

  • @allenqueen
    @allenqueen Год назад

    _Superman Superman_
    _Fly away_
    Such poetry

  • @Bitshitter
    @Bitshitter Год назад +1

    I was already in my 50s (I still am) when I first read that the "Eeny meeny miney moe" rhyme had racist origins, where the "n-word" was used instead of "Tiger" or other words. And I grew up in South Carolina, one of the original slave states of the United States. Never knew that rhyme had that dark history. But these rhymes do have regional influences, and to be truthful I never knew the rhyme to even use "Tiger" - it was always "Catch a rabbit by its toe". For one thing, this rhyme was always used with children - not even younger teens, but actually toddlers and even younger. Children that young don't want to envision catching a tiger by it's toe - the tiger would turn around and eat them. No sense in using a rhyme to decide between two things, just to give a child nightmares later that night.
    But a soft, cuddly, furry rabbit doesn't frighten young children, and in fact a young child would WANT to catch a rabbit if one was near, and hug and pet it. And in truth, rabbits will sometimes squeal loudly if it was caught by a limb. So the rhyme, "if it hollers, let it go" made perfect sense. A tiger would most likely NOT "holler" if one was to catch it by it's toe, and a tiger being a cat typically the idea was to catch it by it's TAIL, not toe. But then that would mess up the rhyme.
    "Catch a rabbit by it's toe" made more sense all the way around, and it didn't scare the bejeebers out of some 3-year old kid. And that's all I ever knew that rhyme went by......

  • @GildedShame
    @GildedShame Год назад

    I'm 42 and live in Pasadena CA....I very much remember "inka dink..."

  • @kstepko
    @kstepko Год назад +10

    When Edwardo trailed off after “einny meeny miney mo” and Conan insisted that he finish it, I thought he was trying to make the point that it used to take a racist turn that has now been substituted for “tiger”.

    • @pemo2676
      @pemo2676 Год назад +1

      me too - reminds me of an incident of jeremy clarkson saying it on the show Top gear

    • @ebbderelict
      @ebbderelict Год назад +1

      Same. "Tiger". HOW DARE THE WOKE CHANGE THE WORDS TO MY POEMS! /s

  • @lulumish8991
    @lulumish8991 5 месяцев назад

    “Inka binka dinka” ~ Luci from Disenchantment

  • @samfilmkid
    @samfilmkid Год назад +5

    For the record, Ghosts in the Graveyard is basically just hide and seek but in the dark. It can only be played at night, you can either turn off all the lights in your house or look all over the neighborhood but you have to play it in the dark, no flashlights or anything. My dad told me he grew up playing it all the time and he even made me and my cousin play it once at my grandparents house on the cape when we were nine. That was the one and only time I ever played it.

    • @cgxoxo1
      @cgxoxo1 Год назад

      My parents banned us from playing that game lol (I was in New England too)

  • @user-tt5xj5ib1e
    @user-tt5xj5ib1e 11 месяцев назад

    Shmoopy is a national treasure :D 🤔😆🤣

  • @bacardidave3148
    @bacardidave3148 7 месяцев назад

    I think I'll have a french dip for lunch. Thanks again, Conan!

  • @jrpipik
    @jrpipik Год назад +1

    I think Homer says "Let the baby have his bottle" in an episode of The Simpsons when Conan wrote for the series!

  • @mattmccartney5996
    @mattmccartney5996 Год назад +1

    Our regional version was:
    Smelly foot.
    Stepped in poo.
    Oh my God it's beef au jus!

  • @ChristianCChristian
    @ChristianCChristian Год назад +1

    "It's not because I'm dirty / it's not because I'm clean / it's not because I kiss the boys behind a magazine" is a Rickie Lee Jones lyric.

  • @thomaswiley4719
    @thomaswiley4719 Год назад +1

    "INKY BINKY BONKY, DADDY BOUGHT A DONKEY, DONKEY DIED, DADDY CRIED, INKY BUNKY BONKY"...why do I remember this.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Год назад +1

      For the same reason that I can remember the French Christmas carols that I learned in high school 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @kstepko
    @kstepko Год назад +2

    I kept thinking, “What is beef au jus?” until I Googled it. That will never catch on, but fine - let the baby have his au jus!

    • @Kris-wp3fm
      @Kris-wp3fm Год назад +2

      Oh, I love a good beef au jus dipping sandwich. I highly recommend to anyone who hasn't tried.

    • @kstepko
      @kstepko Год назад +1

      @@Kris-wp3fm Me too! I’ve tried it, but I’m more used to seeing it listed as a ‘beef dip’ on menus, with the words ‘with a side of au jus’ appearing later on in the fine print description. I meant that the expression would never catch on.

  • @deano.7533
    @deano.7533 Год назад

    On the west coast we would say... "Let the babies have their bottle." It has a better ring to it if you ask me. Take care. sincerely, Dean O. :-I

  • @thevirtualtraveler
    @thevirtualtraveler Год назад

    I don't know how wide spread it is/was but I had a friend who taught me "50 Horses in a Stable, 1 jumped OUT", as a shorter more concise alternative to eenie meenie mynie moe. There was a longer version of it, but I don't remember it now. I'm in my 40s and still use '50 horses' w/ regularity to decide things.

  • @rhapsodyinglue8758
    @rhapsodyinglue8758 Год назад

    Ghosts in the Graveyard? It’s a classic. Cmon coney

  • @dr.trebuchet3836
    @dr.trebuchet3836 Год назад +1

    I've heard people say, "let the baby have his bottle."

  • @meganmucha6127
    @meganmucha6127 Год назад

    I love Ghost in the Graveyard!!!

  • @RooftopsofAmerica
    @RooftopsofAmerica Год назад

    Ghost in the Graveyard where I grew up was basically a tag game at night!

  • @roadshowcreative
    @roadshowcreative Год назад +1

    one potato, two potato, three potato, four, five potato, six potato, seven potato, more!

  • @HollowInn
    @HollowInn 3 месяца назад

    We used to sing that song as kids to see who would be "the one" to do something. We were in Ontario Canada sing that song. Good question as to the origin of it lol

  • @djmizzou3030
    @djmizzou3030 3 месяца назад

    Ghosts in the graveyard was a game. 😂

  • @djhrecordhound4391
    @djhrecordhound4391 Год назад

    "Inka Dinka Doo"
    --Jimmy Durante

  • @davidvondoom2853
    @davidvondoom2853 Год назад +2

    Ippsy tippsy, little boy blue, fell down a hill and lost his shoe
    If you have to take a poo, make sure you do it in the lou

  • @DaveSwart
    @DaveSwart 11 месяцев назад

    7:49 THAT is the better line lol

  • @nathanhartung863
    @nathanhartung863 Год назад

    "Let the baby have his orange juice." is what Conan said to Jay when the decision for The Tonight Show was made.

  • @kumakhan22
    @kumakhan22 2 месяца назад

    Superman Superman, fly away, don't come back til the very next day

  • @mikequinlivan8842
    @mikequinlivan8842 Год назад

    I remember “Ink-a Dink-a bottle of ink,” from the Rage against the Machine song “Freedom.” 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @darrinschwieters
    @darrinschwieters Год назад +1

    we used to say, "let the baby have his bottle"

  • @michelpage4877
    @michelpage4877 Год назад

    You’re Schmoopie! No, you’re Schmoopie!

  • @captainchaos3667
    @captainchaos3667 3 месяца назад

    "Let the baby have his orange juice" might be something he said to Jay Leno at some point.

  • @Whatarewetalkingabouthere
    @Whatarewetalkingabouthere Год назад +3

    Ghost in the graveyard is just tag at night basically. We did it in a small graveyard by my houses if I remember correctly, it was basically just tag.

    • @edj1074
      @edj1074 Год назад +2

      the version I remember was someone (the ghost) hid and others would just walk around the area. The ghost whould pop out and try and grab a person. Once they did that person became the ghost for the next round

  • @markgarvey6330
    @markgarvey6330 Год назад +1

    From NYC in the 60's: Inka binka bottle of ink, cough a lot and you stink. Not because you're dirty, not because you're clean, just because you kissed a girl behind a magazine. So I'm with Matt. Conan, Sona sorry your childhood was lacking.

  • @Laki2
    @Laki2 Год назад

    We had something like that. I remember the magazine party but it was a 'patty cake' sort of thing.

  • @DigitalAndInnovation
    @DigitalAndInnovation Год назад +2

    1:27 Sona delivers GOLD and they just write it off. Her timing is getting better and better!

  • @nannerz1994
    @nannerz1994 Год назад +3

    I can't believe they didn't play Ghost in the graveyard! But to be fair it's hard to do with as many fences as LA has

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Год назад +1

      We called it "bloody murder" when I was a kid in MI, and played in our yard, which was lower than the road and surrounded by a wall made of fieldstones....just some flower bushes, a couple of trees, etc tohid behind

    • @kstepko
      @kstepko Год назад

      @@LindaC616 I’ve heard of Bloody Murder, although I don’t remember how to play.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Год назад

      @kstepko the person who was supposed to be the Assassin would run off and hide while the remaining players joined hands, formed a circle, closed their eyes, and started off with "one o'clock, two o'clock...", all the way up to midnight. At midnight, they would all have to go and start searching for the Assassin. When they spotted him or her hiding somewhere, they would scream "bloody murder!" And everyone would run and the person who was "it" would try to tag one of them. Whoever got tagged had to hide the next round

  • @stinkerton
    @stinkerton Год назад +1

    Ipsy bipsy bottle-y boo, i played the stage at Bonnaroo, but then i mentioned beef au jus, and my whole set went in the loo.

  • @ndteegarden
    @ndteegarden Год назад

    I want to believe that at some point during the Tonight Show fiasco, after Conan decided he would quit rather than host the Tonight Show at 12:05 am, that he said in reference to Jay Leno "Let the baby have his orange juice."

  • @Triangulum303
    @Triangulum303 Год назад

    Miss Suzie had a steamboat, the steamboat had a bell 🎵

  • @Miranda_Ghost
    @Miranda_Ghost Год назад +1

    "Ipsey-Dipsey-Doddily-Doo - I was young (but then I grew);
    My favorite food was Beef au jus;
    When I'm in Britain, I use the loo...
    ...And as I sit, I go: a-COCKAROO!"

  • @glenkamo
    @glenkamo Год назад

    I was shocked as an adult to discover that there was more than one way to sing "Head and Shoulders Knees and Toes!" (I am of the "London Bridge" camp whereas my wife grew up with the inferior "There's a Tavern in the Town" variant)

    • @kstepko
      @kstepko Год назад +2

      There’s a tavern in the town? Which is this the first I’m hearing of it?