My pal @AdamNedeff is _the_ world authority on game shows. Today he posted on FB what makes his "hobby" worth it: A contestant from "The Price Is Right" contacted him for a show she was on in 1959. He, of course, had and sent it.
It was the first time she'd seen it in 61 years.
Adam then asked if I had any favorite requests from DaveWorld, and that was the biggest mistake he made today. My response:
There's one that wasn't even a request.
Claudia Costa, baton-twirling champ. She had been bumped. On her 2nd visit there was no time left, so Dave invited her on in the show's closing segment, apologized for the too-brief time allotted to her.
They chatted for maybe a minute or less. He asked her to demonstrate her baton twirling. She moved to center stage and began her performance to a prepared soundtrack (Laura Branigan's "Gloria").
It lasts for maybe 15 seconds before the closing end-credit comes onscreen, and the show quickly fades out.
I had two sources for this show: The first from a viewer's broadcast capture; the second from a pre-broadcast tape that someone dubbed for me back in 2002. I digitized both on March 31, 2016, the broadcast version first.
Then the pre-broadcast version. It's the first time I've watched this version after having acquired it 14 years earlier. I'm watching the last act. Claudia begins her performance, the credits appear.
But the show doesn't fade out. The credits remain up for a while longer, then finally disappears. Her performance continues.
She does some amazing maneuvers with not just one but three batons simultaneously, at one point generating a "Woah!" from @Willbassboy.
This version preserves her entire performance, long after the broadcast has ended, a performance no one outside the studio audience has ever seen.
So I upload it three days later. Then begins the search: How can I find this woman? I put out the call in the FB/AFL. After a few hours (or minutes), @heystu818 finds her. I email her. She reads it and responds.
She is amazed.
It's one of my lowest views on the channel, but that's my favorite. (fini)
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I'm preparing something that'll mean extremely little to the vast majority on the planet, but hopefully a lot to a very select few:
The comedy team of Tom Patchett and Jay Tarses.
Jay had grown up in Baltimore. He was related to one of my mom's closest friends, which led her to babysat him in the '40s. By the mid-'60s, Jay and Tom had been performing regularly at The Cellar Door in D.C.
It was around this time when the two of them played me a reel-to-reel recording of one of their sets.
They appeared on a few talk shows, and I recorded some of them off the air onto my own reel-to-reels.