18 Haziran 2008 Çarşamba

Holy Catchphrase, Batman: 16 Famous Catchphrases in TV History











The following is reprinted from Uncle John’s Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader


Every TV show wants one, but few achieve it: a catchphrase. The best

ones not only propel their show into the limelight, but eventually take

a life of their own, sometimes getting into the dictionary, sometimes

even electing a president. Here are the stories behind some of TV’s most

famous catchphrases:


D’oh!


From:

The Simpsons (1989- )


Here’s the Story: Dan Castellaneta, the voice of Homer

Simpson, came up with Homer’s signature line himself. "It was written

into the script as a ‘frustrated grunt,’" he explains, "And

I thought of that old Laurel and Hardy character who had a grunt like

‘D’owww.’ Matt Groening (Simpsons creator) said ‘Great, but shorten

it.’ … No one thought it would become a catchphrase."


But it did - in a big way. The sitcom is seen by more than 60 million

people in more than 60 countries. In 2001, "D’oh!" earned a

spot in the Oxford English Dictionary.


Holy ______, Batman!


From:

Batman (1966-68)


Here’s the Story: Uttered by Robin (Burt Ward) whenever

he was dumbfounded, this silly phrase helped make the show a hit … and

also led to its demise. During the first season, which aired two nights

a week, Batman was fresh. ABC quickly realized that one of the

things viewers loved was Robin’s quirky lines, so they milked it for all

it was worth. But by the end of the second season, the plots were all

recycled and the "Holy whatever, Batman!" had lost its impact.

It didn’t do much for Burt Ward’s career either; he was never able to

get past the Boy Wonder image.


In the 1995 film Batman Forever, Chris O’Donnell’s Robin gave

a nod to this famous catchphrase in the following exchange with Val Kilmer’s

Batman: "Holy rusted metal, Batman!" exclaims Robin. "Huh?"

asks Batman. "The island," explains Robin, "it’s made out

of rusted metal … and holey … you know." "Oh," says

Batman dryly.


What’chu talkin’ ’bout, Willis?




The awesomeness that is Gary Coleman: [YouTube

clip
]


From: Diff’rent Strokes (1978-86)


Here’s the Story: Gary Coleman’s snub-nosed delivery

helped keep Diff’rent Strokes going for eight years. After the

show’s demise, the struggling Coleman began using it at public appearances

and in TV cameos to help keep his career afloat. But in recent years he’s

grown so sick of the line - and the TV business in general - that he’s

vowed never to say it again.


Sock it to me!




From the end of the show: [YouTube

Link
]


From: Laugh-In (1968-73)


Here’s the Story: The phrase came from pop music (Aretha

Franklin’s Respect). But the popular variety show Rowan and

Martin’s Laugh-In
turned it into a mindless slapstick sketch …

and repeated it week after week. Here’s how it worked: An unsuspecting

person (usually Judy Carne) would be tricked into saying "Sock it

to me!" Then he or she was either hit by pies, drenched with water,

or dropped through a trap door. Viewers loved it; they knew what was coming

every time, and they still loved it. It quickly became an "in"

thing to get socked.


This catchphrase was more than popular - it may have altered history:

On September 16, 1968, presidential candidate Richard Nixon appeared on

the show. HE was set up in the standard fashion but surprised everyone

by changing the command into a question: "Sock it to ME?" It

did wonders for Nixon’s staid, humorless image, and may have helped propel

him into the Oval Office.


Beam me up, Scotty


From:

Star Trek (1966-69)


Here’s the Story: Although Captain Kirk (William Shatner)

never actually said this exact phrase (the closest version he came was

on the Star Trek animated series: "Beam us up,

Scotty"), it has somehow been transported everywhere - feature films,

advertisements, and even bumper stickers ("Beam me up, Scotty - there’s

no intelligent life down here") Sometimes it even finds its way into

the news: when 39 members of the Heaven’s Gate cult committed suicide

in 1997, expecting to leave their bodies and join with a spaceship, the

press dubbed them the "Beam Me Up Scotty" cult.


Ayyyyy




Fonzie "jumping

the shark
" [YouTube

Link
]


From: Happy Days (1974-84)


Here’s the Story: Arthur "The Fonz" Fonzarelli

(Henry Winkler) was not originally intended to be the "cool"

character; Potsie was. The Fonz was added as a "bad influence"

to give the show more of an edge. But Winkler’s hip-yet-sensitive portrayal,

along with his trademark leather jacket, thumbs up, and "Ayyyyy"

had such screen presence that ABC started working him into more and more

storylines, making sure he got at least one "Ayyyyy" in each

episode. By 1977 Winkler’s billing had gone from closing credits to fifth,

and finally to second. When Ron Howard left the show in 1980, Winkler

was given top billing. ABC almost retitled the show Fonzie’s Happy

Days.


Blast From the Past: Check out the scene in Pulp

Fiction
where the hit-man Jules (Samuel L. Jackson) is trying to

calm down the diner robbers he’s terrorizing: "Let’s all be good

little Fonzies. And what was Fonzie like?" he asks. One of them sheepishly

answers, "Coo-ol." "Correctamundo!" says Jackson.


Two thumbs up




How do they get along behind the scenes? Here’s Siskel and Ebert uncensored:

[YouTube Link]


From: Sneak Previews (1975-80), renamed At

the Movies
(1980-)


Here’s the Story: "Thumbs up" has been a

symbol of approval since Roman times. But "two thumbs up"

means a whole lot more to the movie industry. Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert,

film critics for rival Chicago newspapers, worked together for 24 years

before Siskel’s death in 1999. Their opposite tastes in movies assured

moviegoers that if both of these guys liked the movie, chances are you

would too. Filmmakers also took note of the growing popularity of the

phrase; they watched the show each week, hoping their latest project would

get two thumbs up. If so, it was plastered all over movie ads. Why? Because

"two thumbs up" means big box office. If not … well, have

you ever seen a movie advertised that got "one thumb up"?


De plane! De plane!


From:

Fantasy Island (1978-84)


Here’s the Story: At the beginning of each episode,

the vertically-challenged Tattoo (Herve Villechaize) shouted this phrase

to alert his boss, Mr. Roarke (Ricardo Montalban), that "de plane"

was coming. The phrase did so much for Fantasy Island that in

1983 Villechaize asked for the same salary as Montalban. Instead, he was

fired. Ratings dropped off dramatically and the show was cancelled after

the following season. In 1992 Villechaize turned up in a Dunkin’ Donuts

commercial asking for "De plain! De plain!" donuts.


Resistance is futile




We all know the Borg from Star Trek, so here’s Bill Gates as a Borg instead:

[YouTube Link]


From: Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-94)

Here’s the Story: This line actually made its television

debut on the British TV serial Dr. Who. Its more recent use by

the Borg, aliens out to assimilate humans, made it a household phrase.

It has even became a response to the growing power of corporations and

governments. A political cartoon in the late 1990s showed a Borged-out

Bill Gates declaring, "We are Microsoft. We will add your biological

and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be assimilated.

Resistance is futile." And now a new bumper sticker is showing up

that says, "Resistance is not futile."


Book ‘em, Danno!


From:

Hawaii Five-O (1968-80)


Here’s the Story: Even though Hawaii Five-O

ran for 12 years, more people today remember this catchphrase than the

show itself. When he caught the bad guy, detective Steve McGarrett (Jack

Lord) would smugly utter this line to his assistant Danny "Danno"

Williams (James MacArthur).


To say the catchphrase is part of pop culture is an understatement: a

2002 Internet search found more than 1,000 entries for "Book ‘em,

Danno!"


Yadda Yadda Yadda


From: Seinfeld (1990-98)


Here’s the Story: The phrase has been around since the

1940s; but then it showed up on Seinfeld in the 1990s and yadda

yadda yadda, now it’s in the dictionary.


I’ve Fallen and I Can’t Get Up!




Here’s the commercial featuring Mrs. Fletcher’s famous catchphrase: [YouTube

Link
]


From: TV commercials selling LifeCall personal emergency

response system in the 1980s.


Here’s the Story: Advertisers also try to come up with

catchy catchphrases (remember the "Where’s the beef?" lady from

the Wendy’s ads?) The "I’ve fallen …" plea, however, was never

intended to be catchy - or funny. But somehow it outlasted the company

that advertised it (bankrupt) and the woman who said it (died). More than

a decade after its debut, "I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!"

is still being used by comedians from Jay Leno to Carrot Top.


Oh my God, They Killed Kenny!


From:

South Park (1997- )


Here’s the Story: A bigger part of what made South

Park
a hit was the tasteless but innovative routine of killing off

the same character in nearly every episode. Asked why, the show’s creator

Trey Parker and Matt Stone admitted, "We just like to kill him …

And we really like the line ‘Oh my God, they killed Kenny!’" A few

years later, Stone retracted: "We got sick of figuring out ways to

kill him … It was funny the first 38 or 40 times we did it. Then it

turned into, ‘OK, how can we kill him now?’" So in December 2001

they killed Kenny for good … but the phrase lives on.


Yabba-Dabba-Doo!


From:

The Flintstones (1960-66)


Here’s the Story: Just like Homer’s "D’oh!"

this one came from the man who voiced the character, Alan Reed. Flintstones

co-creator Joe Barbera tells the story: "In a recording session,

Alan said, ‘Hey Joe, where it says "yahoo," can I say "yabba-dabba-doo?"’

I said yeah. God knows where he got it, but it was one of those terrific

phrases." Reed later said that it came from his mother, who used

to say, "A little dab’ll do ya."


Just The Facts, Ma’am


From:

Dragnet (1952-59/1967-70)


Here’s the Story: Sergeant Joe Friday’s (Jack Webb)

deadpan delivery made this statement famous … sort of. He actually never

said it. Friday’s line was "All we want are the facts, Ma’am."

Satirist Stan Freberg spoofed the popular show on a 1953 record called

"St. George and the Dragonet," which featured the line: "I

just want to get the facts, Ma’am." The record sold more than two

million copies, and Freberg’s line - not Webb’s - became synonymous with

the show. According to Freberg: "Jack Webb told me, ‘Thanks for pushing

us into the number one spot,’ because after my record came out, within

three weeks, he was number one."


Let’s get ready to … (something that rhymes with ‘mumble’ but starts

with an ‘R’).


From:

Sports announcer Michael Buffer


Here’s the Story: This one wins out over many other

famous TV sports sayings because of the controversy it created. After

hearing others imitating his famous battle cry, Michael Buffer and his

brother Bruce decided to trademark it, a decision that made them both

millionaires. Michael now charges $15,000 to $30,000 just to show up,

say it, and leave. But if you feel like yelling the "rumble"

phrase out loud, do it quietly; the Buffer brothers will sue the pants

off of you if you say it at an event without paying them. (They even sued

Ollie North.) Why such big safeguards on such a trite saying? "It’s

probably the most famous phrase said by a human being in history,"

Michael explains.



The article above is reprinted with permission from Uncle John’s Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader.


Where else but in a Bathroom Reader could you learn how the banana peel changed history, how to predict the future by rolling the dice, how the Jivaro tribes shrunk heads, and the science behind love at first sight? Get ready to be thoroughly entertained while occupied on the throne. Uncle John rules the world of information and humor. It’s simply Ahh-Inspiring!


Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.


If you like Neatorama, you’ll love the Bathroom Reader Institute’s books - go ahead and check ‘em out!





--> Haberin devamını okumak için tıklayın(Click to Read Source)...

Holy Catchphrase, Batman: 16 Famous Catchphrases in TV History - 17 Haziran 2008 Salı 17:24:53:375









The following is reprinted from Uncle John’s Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader


Every TV show wants one, but few achieve it: a catchphrase. The best

ones not only propel their show into the limelight, but eventually take

a life of their own, sometimes getting into the dictionary, sometimes

even electing a president. Here are the stories behind some of TV’s most

famous catchphrases:


D’oh!


From:

The Simpsons (1989- )


Here’s the Story: Dan Castellaneta, the voice of Homer

Simpson, came up with Homer’s signature line himself. "It was written

into the script as a ‘frustrated grunt,’" he explains, "And

I thought of that old Laurel and Hardy character who had a grunt like

‘D’owww.’ Matt Groening (Simpsons creator) said ‘Great, but shorten

it.’ … No one thought it would become a catchphrase."


But it did - in a big way. The sitcom is seen by more than 60 million

people in more than 60 countries. In 2001, "D’oh!" earned a

spot in the Oxford English Dictionary.


Holy ______, Batman!


From:

Batman (1966-68)


Here’s the Story: Uttered by Robin (Burt Ward) whenever

he was dumbfounded, this silly phrase helped make the show a hit … and

also led to its demise. During the first season, which aired two nights

a week, Batman was fresh. ABC quickly realized that one of the

things viewers loved was Robin’s quirky lines, so they milked it for all

it was worth. But by the end of the second season, the plots were all

recycled and the "Holy whatever, Batman!" had lost its impact.

It didn’t do much for Burt Ward’s career either; he was never able to

get past the Boy Wonder image.


In the 1995 film Batman Forever, Chris O’Donnell’s Robin gave

a nod to this famous catchphrase in the following exchange with Val Kilmer’s

Batman: "Holy rusted metal, Batman!" exclaims Robin. "Huh?"

asks Batman. "The island," explains Robin, "it’s made out

of rusted metal … and holey … you know." "Oh," says

Batman dryly.


What’chu talkin’ ’bout, Willis?




The awesomeness that is Gary Coleman: [YouTube

clip
]


From: Diff’rent Strokes (1978-86)


Here’s the Story: Gary Coleman’s snub-nosed delivery

helped keep Diff’rent Strokes going for eight years. After the

show’s demise, the struggling Coleman began using it at public appearances

and in TV cameos to help keep his career afloat. But in recent years he’s

grown so sick of the line - and the TV business in general - that he’s

vowed never to say it again.


Sock it to me!




From the end of the show: [YouTube

Link
]


From: Laugh-In (1968-73)


Here’s the Story: The phrase came from pop music (Aretha

Franklin’s Respect). But the popular variety show Rowan and

Martin’s Laugh-In
turned it into a mindless slapstick sketch …

and repeated it week after week. Here’s how it worked: An unsuspecting

person (usually Judy Carne) would be tricked into saying "Sock it

to me!" Then he or she was either hit by pies, drenched with water,

or dropped through a trap door. Viewers loved it; they knew what was coming

every time, and they still loved it. It quickly became an "in"

thing to get socked.


This catchphrase was more than popular - it may have altered history:

On September 16, 1968, presidential candidate Richard Nixon appeared on

the show. HE was set up in the standard fashion but surprised everyone

by changing the command into a question: "Sock it to ME?" It

did wonders for Nixon’s staid, humorless image, and may have helped propel

him into the Oval Office.


Beam me up, Scotty


From:

Star Trek (1966-69)


Here’s the Story: Although Captain Kirk (William Shatner)

never actually said this exact phrase (the closest version he came was

on the Star Trek animated series: "Beam us up,

Scotty"), it has somehow been transported everywhere - feature films,

advertisements, and even bumper stickers ("Beam me up, Scotty - there’s

no intelligent life down here") Sometimes it even finds its way into

the news: when 39 members of the Heaven’s Gate cult committed suicide

in 1997, expecting to leave their bodies and join with a spaceship, the

press dubbed them the "Beam Me Up Scotty" cult.


Ayyyyy




Fonzie "jumping

the shark
" [YouTube

Link
]


From: Happy Days (1974-84)


Here’s the Story: Arthur "The Fonz" Fonzarelli

(Henry Winkler) was not originally intended to be the "cool"

character; Potsie was. The Fonz was added as a "bad influence"

to give the show more of an edge. But Winkler’s hip-yet-sensitive portrayal,

along with his trademark leather jacket, thumbs up, and "Ayyyyy"

had such screen presence that ABC started working him into more and more

storylines, making sure he got at least one "Ayyyyy" in each

episode. By 1977 Winkler’s billing had gone from closing credits to fifth,

and finally to second. When Ron Howard left the show in 1980, Winkler

was given top billing. ABC almost retitled the show Fonzie’s Happy

Days.


Blast From the Past: Check out the scene in Pulp

Fiction
where the hit-man Jules (Samuel L. Jackson) is trying to

calm down the diner robbers he’s terrorizing: "Let’s all be good

little Fonzies. And what was Fonzie like?" he asks. One of them sheepishly

answers, "Coo-ol." "Correctamundo!" says Jackson.


Two thumbs up




How do they get along behind the scenes? Here’s Siskel and Ebert uncensored:

[YouTube Link]


From: Sneak Previews (1975-80), renamed At

the Movies
(1980-)


Here’s the Story: "Thumbs up" has been a

symbol of approval since Roman times. But "two thumbs up"

means a whole lot more to the movie industry. Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert,

film critics for rival Chicago newspapers, worked together for 24 years

before Siskel’s death in 1999. Their opposite tastes in movies assured

moviegoers that if both of these guys liked the movie, chances are you

would too. Filmmakers also took note of the growing popularity of the

phrase; they watched the show each week, hoping their latest project would

get two thumbs up. If so, it was plastered all over movie ads. Why? Because

"two thumbs up" means big box office. If not … well, have

you ever seen a movie advertised that got "one thumb up"?


De plane! De plane!


From:

Fantasy Island (1978-84)


Here’s the Story: At the beginning of each episode,

the vertically-challenged Tattoo (Herve Villechaize) shouted this phrase

to alert his boss, Mr. Roarke (Ricardo Montalban), that "de plane"

was coming. The phrase did so much for Fantasy Island that in

1983 Villechaize asked for the same salary as Montalban. Instead, he was

fired. Ratings dropped off dramatically and the show was cancelled after

the following season. In 1992 Villechaize turned up in a Dunkin’ Donuts

commercial asking for "De plain! De plain!" donuts.


Resistance is futile




We all know the Borg from Star Trek, so here’s Bill Gates as a Borg instead:

[YouTube Link]


From: Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-94)

Here’s the Story: This line actually made its television

debut on the British TV serial Dr. Who. Its more recent use by

the Borg, aliens out to assimilate humans, made it a household phrase.

It has even became a response to the growing power of corporations and

governments. A political cartoon in the late 1990s showed a Borged-out

Bill Gates declaring, "We are Microsoft. We will add your biological

and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be assimilated.

Resistance is futile." And now a new bumper sticker is showing up

that says, "Resistance is not futile."


Book ‘em, Danno!


From:

Hawaii Five-O (1968-80)


Here’s the Story: Even though Hawaii Five-O

ran for 12 years, more people today remember this catchphrase than the

show itself. When he caught the bad guy, detective Steve McGarrett (Jack

Lord) would smugly utter this line to his assistant Danny "Danno"

Williams (James MacArthur).


To say the catchphrase is part of pop culture is an understatement: a

2002 Internet search found more than 1,000 entries for "Book ‘em,

Danno!"


Yadda Yadda Yadda


From: Seinfeld (1990-98)


Here’s the Story: The phrase has been around since the

1940s; but then it showed up on Seinfeld in the 1990s and yadda

yadda yadda, now it’s in the dictionary.


I’ve Fallen and I Can’t Get Up!




Here’s the commercial featuring Mrs. Fletcher’s famous catchphrase: [YouTube

Link
]


From: TV commercials selling LifeCall personal emergency

response system in the 1980s.


Here’s the Story: Advertisers also try to come up with

catchy catchphrases (remember the "Where’s the beef?" lady from

the Wendy’s ads?) The "I’ve fallen …" plea, however, was never

intended to be catchy - or funny. But somehow it outlasted the company

that advertised it (bankrupt) and the woman who said it (died). More than

a decade after its debut, "I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!"

is still being used by comedians from Jay Leno to Carrot Top.


Oh my God, They Killed Kenny!


From:

South Park (1997- )


Here’s the Story: A bigger part of what made South

Park
a hit was the tasteless but innovative routine of killing off

the same character in nearly every episode. Asked why, the show’s creator

Trey Parker and Matt Stone admitted, "We just like to kill him …

And we really like the line ‘Oh my God, they killed Kenny!’" A few

years later, Stone retracted: "We got sick of figuring out ways to

kill him … It was funny the first 38 or 40 times we did it. Then it

turned into, ‘OK, how can we kill him now?’" So in December 2001

they killed Kenny for good … but the phrase lives on.


Yabba-Dabba-Doo!


From:

The Flintstones (1960-66)


Here’s the Story: Just like Homer’s "D’oh!"

this one came from the man who voiced the character, Alan Reed. Flintstones

co-creator Joe Barbera tells the story: "In a recording session,

Alan said, ‘Hey Joe, where it says "yahoo," can I say "yabba-dabba-doo?"’

I said yeah. God knows where he got it, but it was one of those terrific

phrases." Reed later said that it came from his mother, who used

to say, "A little dab’ll do ya."


Just The Facts, Ma’am


From:

Dragnet (1952-59/1967-70)


Here’s the Story: Sergeant Joe Friday’s (Jack Webb)

deadpan delivery made this statement famous … sort of. He actually never

said it. Friday’s line was "All we want are the facts, Ma’am."

Satirist Stan Freberg spoofed the popular show on a 1953 record called

"St. George and the Dragonet," which featured the line: "I

just want to get the facts, Ma’am." The record sold more than two

million copies, and Freberg’s line - not Webb’s - became synonymous with

the show. According to Freberg: "Jack Webb told me, ‘Thanks for pushing

us into the number one spot,’ because after my record came out, within

three weeks, he was number one."


Let’s get ready to … (something that rhymes with ‘mumble’ but starts

with an ‘R’).


From:

Sports announcer Michael Buffer


Here’s the Story: This one wins out over many other

famous TV sports sayings because of the controversy it created. After

hearing others imitating his famous battle cry, Michael Buffer and his

brother Bruce decided to trademark it, a decision that made them both

millionaires. Michael now charges $15,000 to $30,000 just to show up,

say it, and leave. But if you feel like yelling the "rumble"

phrase out loud, do it quietly; the Buffer brothers will sue the pants

off of you if you say it at an event without paying them. (They even sued

Ollie North.) Why such big safeguards on such a trite saying? "It’s

probably the most famous phrase said by a human being in history,"

Michael explains.



The article above is reprinted with permission from Uncle John’s Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader.


Where else but in a Bathroom Reader could you learn how the banana peel changed history, how to predict the future by rolling the dice, how the Jivaro tribes shrunk heads, and the science behind love at first sight? Get ready to be thoroughly entertained while occupied on the throne. Uncle John rules the world of information and humor. It’s simply Ahh-Inspiring!


Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.


If you like Neatorama, you’ll love the Bathroom Reader Institute’s books - go ahead and check ‘em out!






--> Haberin devamını okumak için tıklayın(Click to Read Source)...

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