It's Night Side with Dan Way on WBS Boston's news video.
I'll thank you very much for that little promo. Not only am I here tonight, I'm here through the rest of the week, next Monday and next Tuesday, filling in for Dan. Dan has a nice week and a half long holiday given to him by the powers that be, and he'll be back to begin the new year. But I am here, and I've got a whole letherack of guests. And this next gentleman the start off my week, is a man you can talk to about the Twilight Zone because he's written a book about the Twilight Zone. And
the man who's written several books are Bond. James Bond, Bond's gadgets, the litany of all the movies he just doesn't stop creating with his type.
At the computer. Steven J. Rubin, good evening to you.
Good evening, Morgan. It's good to hear your voice.
Good to hear your voice too.
And I am going to entertain phone traffic on both issues, Bond and the Twilight Zone. I'm sure we should get many a person calling in tonight that we want to discuss both and what got you inter Let's do one at a time. What got you interested in the Twilight Zone.
Well, it's a good question. I'm a working screenwriter in Hollywood. There can be literally years between making sales, and rather than sitting around waiting for Hollywood to come to their senses, I decide I've got to get back to book writing. And I had been a big fan of a book by Mark Zakree called The Twilight Zone Companion, which had
been published in nineteen eighty two. But I have I'd had success with a James Bond movie encyclopedia, and I thought that The Zone would be perfect fodder for an encyclopedia format, and that brought me to Chicago Review Press, and they loved the idea of doing a Twilight Zone encyclopedia, particularly because of all the people involved in the series,
particularly the actors. I would maintain that The Twilight Zone, over its original first five years, had the best cast ever in a TV series, clearly.
And I'm going to give you something I noticed last weekend. Periodically, I will watch The Wild Wild West on me TV and they show that at ten o'clock in the morning on Saturday, and it was the episode with Agnes Moorehead and she was just so dulled up, and she she looked fantastic. And a few days before that, I saw the Twilight Zone when she was the no lines at all, but she was the frightened little old lady in her shack, and all of a sudden, UFO and UFO appeared and
we found out the hook at the end. Not to be a spoiler, but if you don't know that episode, blocky ears because it was a craft from Earth that wound up frightening.
Now, Twilight Zone played so interestingly with their subject matters. You saw so many different types of shows you wouldn't see anywhere else, and you know, here it is. Let's see, the first episode went on the air in the fall of fifty nine, so we're talking sixty five years ago. Sixty five years ago, which is insane. And I maintain you can watch those episodes today and they're still as fresh as they were when they first were on, probably because no one has matched the quality.
And you know what I do watch.
I watched them on Sci Fi Channel, I watched them on MeTV, and no one has matched the quality. Even they tried to reboot Twilight Zone on a couple of occasions, and they fell short of their own mark. They fell short well you know Indes.
Oh yeah, And more recently with Jordan Peele. Jordan Peele, the film director, producer abroad off I know, it's funny you show a black and white show to a younger person today and there's a lot of resistance, like Dad, why am I watching this show from sixty years ago? And it's like an alien art form? But you put
the twilight zone in color and you lose something. And I thought about this a lot while I was watching the encyclopedia I was writing an encyclopedia, is that when you're watching a black and white show, it's supposed to be a little alien to you. It takes you out of your sweet spot. Everything is magnified. It's because it's not the color you're used to, so you're off balance. And the other thing I noticed, after watching five years of episodes, one hundred and fifty six episodes, is that
there was virtually no product placement in the show. Nothing familiar, nothing like a Union seventy six station or a McDonald's or the equivalent of nineteen sixties America. And that was determined by Rod Sterling that he didn't want you to become too familiar with your surroundings, so you question every thing, and sometimes you were surprised at what you discovered.
And the key is.
There are black and white shows sprinkled along current television. The Andrey Griffith Show their first five or six years, the first season of Gilligan's Island, all of the Alfred Hitchcocks, just to name a few. And it holds attention if you let it, and you have to let it. And if you're my age, I'm seventy one.
And if you're.
Over fifty five or sixty years old and you watch TV when you were in elementary school, you remember when TV was all black and white except for Bonanza.
Oh I remember. I remember the logo for NBC the following program is brought to you in living color.
There you go, and the peak cock Feathers switched an interchange until they locked in to the way.
That image I just resented. I think.
I think the first show I remember watching in color was not Bonanza, but was the Wonderful World of Disney. I think that on Sun's Nights, the Disney show was in color, and that was pretty sweet.
The world is a fabulous world of color anyway, don't don't give me song cues because I can't resist them. I've got to take a break. And when we come back to them, break our first called me Nick and Charlestown. Anyone else wants to join Nick on hold six one, seven, five, four to ten thirty or eight eight, eight, nine to nine, ten thirty. Rob Brooks is on the phones tonight per usual here on Nightside. This is Nightside. Dan Ray is off for the next nine days. I am here until
the thirty first of December. On the first of the year, Dan will be back, I promise you.
So.
I've got Stephen J.
Rubin here and we're talking both about the Twilight Zone, and we'll kick in a few words about James Bond as well. Again, this is Nightside. The time here in Nightside eight fifteen, temperature twenty five degrees.
Now back to Dan Ray live from the Window World Nightside Studios on WBZ News Radio.
There is a fifth dimension beyond that which is known to man.
It is a dimension as vast.
As space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition, and it lies between the pit of man's fears and the summit of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It is an area which we call the twilight zone.
That is our subject tonight here on night Side, I'm Morgan filling.
It for Dan.
And if you would like to call in six one, seven, two, five, four, ten thirty or eight eight, eight, nine to nine, ten thirty, we welcome you. When I say we, I've got a gentleman who's written a number of books, and we will talk about James Bond shortly, but we're talking about the twilight Zone. And before I take our next call, who's been patiently holding uh Stephen? Why was there a change periodically in the opening. I know the four famous notes of do do do Do Do Do Do Do Do
Do do doo is the theme everybody remembers. But why was there a change or do you know?
Well, you had Bernard Herman doing the music. And Bernard Herman was the wonderful composer. They were lucky to get him. He did all the Hitchcock films, the Sinbad films. When they introduced the Twilight Zone theme by Marius Constant, the French composer, they decided to rejigger the opening words, and every so often they would hone it, and I just think it was like freshening up the series.
A little bit.
Okay, I'm just curious about that. I've had Nick holding for eleven minutes. So Nick, it's your turn to speak with Stephen J.
Rubin. Welcome to Night's Side.
Good evening, gentlemen, Happy holidays, Happy holidays.
See you.
Yeah, Stephen, I wanted to mention two of my favorite episodes, but before that, I'd like to ask you a question. In your opinion, which episode do you think is the most popular episode. I've got one of three. I'm thinking either I of the Beholder to Serve Man or Nightmare at twenty thousand Feet. Would you consider one of those three the most popular episodes?
Yes, you pick three of the best episodes and three of the most popular. I would throw in the Burgess Meredith episode which is called time Enough at Last, which I think is also good.
And maybe the Monster's ad on Maple Street too. Possibly.
Yeah, you know, there are so many excellent episodes. You'll have to forgive me, everybody, because I'm getting over a colt, so I'm coughing a little bit here.
We'll deal with it. Don't worry about that.
But I did you know? Go ahead, I'm sorry.
Oh, I'll go ahead.
No, go ahead, go ahead.
No, I'm I'm telling you ton't have anything to say, but keep talking. I'm sorry.
So I wanted to mention two of my favorite episodes. One from the first season in When the Sky was Opened.
Oh with Rod Taylor.
Yeah, that's a yes, that is a very cool episode. You know, it's interesting the episodes that run.
What happened, Oh, we're here?
Oh, I'm sorry, I thought you got off the because I'm in the car. The episodes that run well, the ones they run in heavy rotation in the marathons always seem to be the same episodes. So like When the Sky Opens sometimes isn't run And that's a really terrific episode. You know, some of the episodes literally have disappeared because there was some controversy. Uh the encounter which starred George
Oh yeah, Neville Brand. Yeah, that's the one where the gardener, the Japanese American gardener confronts the ex marine in his attic, and that that featured some dialogue that wasn't accurate. They you know, they say in the episode that the Japanese had spies at Pearl Harbor who were Japanese Americans and that was not true. So they got a lot of flak from the Japanese American community. So that episode literally never ran again. It's popped up since. But I think with an explanation.
Yeah that that is a great episode. Yeah, I've seen that. And the other episode I wanted to mention real quick is Richard Matthews Richard Matthewson episode Uh Diana Highland spur.
Of the moment. Oh yeah, yeah, that's the one where she keeps seeing that figure.
Yes, yeah, yeah, her doppel ganger.
Yeah, that's a creepy episod. So there's something for everybody in the Twilight Zone, that's for sure.
Well absolutely, okay, Johonna mean, thank you, Nick, thank you for your call.
Than Happy holidays to you. All right, let's go too. I think this young lady spoke with you the last time I had you on Allison. You've got Stephen J.
Rubin, Oh hello, Hi. Yeah, I'm big sanatic about old TV, the same way Morgan is and you are. Mister Reuben. I just thought he the one elements in one of the episodes I want to talk about, but we talked about I've talked about some of the famous ones and everything, but he did mention it when and When the Sky was Opened. I was gonna kind of mention tonight that one and a couple of the other ones that that I didn't when I was young. They didn't affect me
as much as they do now. And when the Sky was Open, person a person's unknown and a world of Difference with Howard Duff, where people are just really strange things are happening, and their their lives are just falling up from under them kind of and in a world of in a world of a world of difference, I should say. And and in that case, he's an actor playing character, and he feels miserable in his own life.
He just wants to become the character essentially. And in personal Person's an un Richard Long wakes up and and nobody recognizes him or anything in his normal life. And of course, and I think the most and and all those are just very disquieting episodes. And I think and then and when this Guy was Open is the most disturbing, because it's not just the fact that that they're they're disappearing, it's like it's the characters that they disappear one by one,
and it's a great ensemble cast. Uh what is it Charles Aidman, Jim Hutton and Rod Taylor and uh and but it's the fact that they never existed somehow, whatever whatever the force is doing that, what is being done to them alien or whatever it is after they went up into space, it's making them as if they never existed at all. And that is just so oh wow. That just gets them under your skin. It really does. I mean, don't get me wrong, I love the I
love the Christic Monster episodes and everything and all. They were just full on scary ones, believe me. But there's something about that that really those those that kind of episode really lingers.
I think one was a Mathewson Also, I want to just want to jump in real quickly. Also, the fact that the story is told in a half hour such a compact and effective story type, and I think that's another thing that The Twilight Zone perfected. In four of the five seasons, they had half hour episodes and they were always very tightly written.
Mm hmm. Yeah, there was no Patty, although I like some of the hour long ones too. Definitely, you do Morgan, right, you love the one I was killing you more right, So of.
Late, I think of Cliff is my favorite Twilight Zone episode.
Wow, And I like a miniature a lot with Robert Yvall. I like that one a lot that was almost Yeah.
Don't get Alice, don't get me wrong. I also liked the Hours. In fact, James wentmore episode on Thursday We Leave for Home is one of my favorites. That the Hours have been disparaged over the years as being kind of you know, they they didn't they weren't as tight as the original half hours, and that they were a bit bloated. But I didn't find that at all. There's
just some great one hour episodes. And the reason there was one hour episodes is they canceled the series at the end of the third season and then they made the mistake of putting a different show and that did
no ratings whatsoever. So James Aubrey, who couldn't stand Serling or the format of anthology, he had to come with his hat in his hands and ask Serling to do a mid season replacement, and that's when they came up with the one hour episode, the eighteen one Hours, which of course are are really opponents.
Yeah, there were a lot of our long shows like Thriller and Bod Carlos Thriller and and obviously the oter limits of not Dations. So you know, there was such good writing in those days. And don't get me start James Aubery. He was one of those awful, awful people
that never should have gotten to where he was anyway. Yeah, Dan Curtis made two Dark Shadows movies, and after you know, when Dark Shadows was being towards the end of Dark Shadows, and he made him cut the second one night Dark Shadows by half an hour within just within a patter of days, and it'll totally wreck the movie. And and and he's just was awful.
Yeah.
He also he also sold the MGM lot to a developer, was the one, Oh no, but which could have you know that that is just a bunch of condominiums now, but that could have outrivaled the Universal Lot as an attraction. But yeah, it's pretty bad.
I don't speak ill of the dead, but why not anyway.
I gotta take a break.
Allison, Okay, good bye.
Thank you for your call, Allison. And if you have a stopwatch and you time her call, she'll get more words.
In one minute than anybody I know.
She is just always on full wind up when we allow her to come in. Anyway, I've got a news hit to take and when we come back, maybe we'll add a little James Bond into our conversation. Victor in Boston, you will be next. I promise others. You want the phone number, I'll give it to you. Six one, seven, two, five, four ten thirty or eight eight, eight, nine, two, nine, ten thirty. This is night Side without Dan tonight. I'm Morgan Time and temperature eight thirty twenty five degrees.
Night Side God is Dan Ray on WBZY, Boston's news radio.
You're traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind, a journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries or that of imagination. You're next stop, the Twilight Zone.
I'm Morgan.
Dan is off tonight. He's off for the rest of the year. He'll be back on the first of January twenty twenty five. Stephen Jay Rubin is my guest. He and I are talking about Twilight Zone and James Bond, which you really haven't delved into as much. And I'm remembering in my mind a lot of people used to mimic Rod Serling and the opening of Twilight Zone. But the best mimicker I ever saw was Dan Aykroyd. I don't know how you feel about.
That, Steven, I'm not surprised. Dan was a huge fan of the show, and of course he gets to play a part in the Twilight Zone movie, which gets the show office enthusiasm for the show.
That was the theme that they were playing trivia game. That's right there you are. Let me bring Victor into our conversation. Victor, thank you for being patient holding. Welcome to Night's Side.
Hey Morgan, first time caller.
Welcome Victor. Thank you.
I'm a seventies and eighties kid. I'm actually a sixty one year old kid. I'm an action adventure guy. But if there's one show on my top ten list, the top five.
Is The Twilight Zone. Okay, I will watch.
I will watch that regardless of anything else. I don't care what's coming on or what's so called hot or whatever. I have a tie for my two favorite episodes, it's scary to me. One was called the Howling Man and the other one was with a Francis. He was a living mannequin in the department store.
Right after hours, after hours.
After hours.
Yeah, both of those episodes. I always watching them with the lights on, will around other people.
I don't watch them by myself.
The Howling The Howling Man is a great episode and it is filled with filled with the atmosphere for the listeners who don't know the episode. A man comes to a monastery to seek a refuge in the stormy night, manned by these very quiet monks. Uh, they haven't taken a vow of silence, but they're they're very old school, and they've managed to capture the devil and he's being held in a cell in the underground part of this monastery. And every night, this guy who's sleeping there, here's a howling,
and that's the setup. It is very very creepy.
Well, like I said, I watched that show every opportunity I can get. Regardless, I don't really think there's some things they're not really gonna be able to replicate.
That's one of them.
I've seen the film in eighty three, the first segment of that with dan Aykroyd and the other act in the car.
That was scary. Yeah, that was kind of scary.
But I don't really think they're gonna be able to recreate a show like that, a redoer or reboot it, I don't think so.
It has been attempted on a number of occasions, and in my opinion, it always falls short.
Yeah, it's always shows what the original is. You really won't be able to do anything with it.
You're gonna leave it alone.
Margaret, what I was thinking of when we were earlier talking about why the color episodes don't work. The other thing that happens when you see these episodes now, a lot of people don't know who these actors are because they've been dead for many years. Adds another dimension of weirdness. Who are these strange people and how are they caught up in this weird show? So as the show gets older, it can get even more effective.
They don't know who Frank Elletter is, they don't know who Albert Salami is. They don't know They might know Burgess Meredith from the Rocky films, but.
Actors like Jack Klugman, John Anderson, you know, Robert Redford obviously is well known today, although not as well known as they used to be. I mean, Charles Bronson, you know, the they're always in those twilight zones and always so good and.
The most attractive woman in the world at one time.
She was called that.
And Francis, and they did have an array of beautiful women. I mean, Donna Douglass from the Beverly Hillbillies was a very attractive young lady.
And oh yeah yeah, and and Francis was one.
Somebody who I really had in mind, though, was Hazel Court.
Okay, oh sure, sure, yeah, yeah, I kind.
Of she was a crush of mine while still.
Is, but you know, uh.
And Francis, Yeah, I liked her. I liked her personality, among other things.
So I've got a I've got a collection of TV Guy.
Of magnets from TV and a couple of them are from TV Guide, So I have the TV Guide on which Anne Francis was on the cover. So I get to see her every day still and she's still up there. Compare her to anybody, she is still a knockout.
Yes, thank you, lie, gentlemen. I appreciate it.
Thank you so much, Victor, thank you, thank you for your call.
Let's go to the Cape and speak to Phil Line open by the way, Victor was on at six one, seven, two, five, fourteen, thirty eight, eight, eight nine two nineteen thirty Open nine, Go for It.
Hello Phil, Hello Morgan, how are you?
I'm finding you, sir good.
And one of my favorite episodes on the Twilight Zone was The Last Flight. Does anyone remember that one?
Sure? Sure? That's the episode where a World War One biplane pilot lands at a modern Air Force base, and that is that is one heck of an episode. I really liked.
That one too, And what really makes that episode fun for me was the pilot who landed that biplane was a British actor named Kenneth Hag and he also plays an uncredited role in my favorite scene in the Beatles movie A Hard Day's Night. He's the guy who sat there with George Harrison trying to convince George about this new model who's going to be the latest thing, and George thinks she's awful. That was my favorite scene in Hard Day's Night, and that was the same actor.
A Hard Day's Night was just shown in rotation on HBO. I watched it literally one week ago. One week ago I watched The Hard Day's Night and Phil.
On Morgan, I heard you mentioned you loved the Cliffordville episode.
One of my favorites, if not my favorite Twilight Zone.
How can it not be? Julie Numark?
Good lord, Phil, Phil, Phil? Are you Phil? Are you a fan of Odyssey A flight thirty three?
Oh?
Sure?
As they go over the UH that was like on this right?
No, no, no, that h John Anderson's the pilot. It's about the airliner that goes into UH back in time and right ends up over the over some dinosaurs where Manhattan should be exactly.
Yes, right, yeah, oh no, that's a great one too. That's where we don't know if Yeah, that's.
That's where Roth Sterling contacted his brother who was an aviation right and got all the cockpit dialogue examined to make sure it was accurate.
And Phil, I'm gonna say that episode.
Go ahead, Morgan, I'm going to say this because you brought up the name Julie Newmar. I have been in contact with her agent for over a year and a half and the only reason I haven't gotten her yet she doesn't want to do any publicity until.
Her book is released.
It's still to be released in twenty twenty five. And if you hear her book's been released, know that I'm going to be getting Julie Newmar.
For the radio and know that I'll be on the stone.
Phil. Thank you very much for to call. Take care bye bye very much.
All right, I have another break to take and we had one open line. I don't know if we accidentally cut someone off. Just now as we cut off Pill, I'll just say down the phone number six one, seven, two, five, four ten thirty eight, eight eight, nine to nine, ten thirty. This is night Side. I'm Morgan's filling in. I've got author Stephen J. Rubin with me and we're taking your phone calls here on BZ time and temperature eight forty five and twenty five degrees.
Now back to Dan Ray live from the Window World Life Sight Studios on WBZ News Radio.
You unlock this door with the key of imagination. Beyond it is another dimension, a dimension of sound, a dimension of sight, a dimension of mind. You're moving into a land of both shadow and substance of things and ideas. You've just crossed over into the twilight zone.
That's the third opening we have played tonight. Thank you.
Rob Brooks in the control room, my guests Stephen J. Rubin and Steven are you ready for another call?
Absolutely? Morgan, let him, let me.
Let's go to Drake and Mass and speak to Ernie. Ernie.
You're next here at night side, Ernie, Ernie, are you there?
I hated when this happened. Where were you? I'm right here, yeah, but where were you? The first three times I said your name?
I didn't go anywhere. Okay, I'm in a bad cell zone in my house there.
Okay, Well you get on now.
Okay. I got a comment and a question for Steven. Go ahead, Steven. I guess you could say my opinion, the Twilight Zone and now for Hitchcock, but probably two of the best anthology shows of all time, if not one of two in the top five.
You agree, I agree one hundred percent. You have two masters of suspense.
Yeah. And it was always a theme with Rod about going back the home, going back home. You know what I'm saying.
Yes, see, particularly in the two nostalgia episodes Walking Distance, Yeah and a stop at Willoughby where he kind of like you guys. They're both the lead characters in both episodes are burnt out advertising executives who just can't take it anymore. And yeah, I love those episodes. And Rod always had a fondness for his hometown of Ingham to be Ork.
Absolutely, he would always go back when he had a chance.
You know, I went back to Binghamton for a symposium a few years ago. I think I told you the story, Morgan, that I went to his house where he grew up, and the lady came to the house. She couldn't have been nicer, and she offered to take a picture of my friend and I and so I handed her my iPhone and she took a picture. And I looked at the picture and it was in black and white?
How appropriate? Right?
All right, Ernie, you have a question.
I got it, Yeah, Steven, I got a question. One of my probably one of my favorite episodes was I don't know the title of it. This salesman coming through town on a haws and buggy selling you know, tonic in a and he brings it. I guess the dog was pretend he brings the dog back to life and he's telling you this.
I think that was the second or third episode ever ever aired. And uh, yes, yes it was.
Uh what was the name of that episode?
Yeah?
I knew you were gonna ask me that, And that's gonna be a tough one for me to get.
Right now.
I'll probably remembered a half hour after the show ends.
But it's all it. Did people come walking out of the cemetery?
Yes?
Episode, No, that's a different episode. That's a that's a that is a fifth season episode. This episode starred Dan Durier, the wonderful character actor and early role for Martin Landau who plays the black hat.
Yeah.
I'm trying to remember the episode. I'll think of it. But it's a great episode.
But the episode i'm thinking of, I guess he comes selling this tonic to the people to bring people back a live, make them well with something.
You know.
I think that's one of the one hour episodes. And it's uh, yeah, I think that's a one hour episode. And uh and at the end.
You see the people you know, supposedly did people like walking out of the cemetery alive?
Shootout with Lance lagrew? Does that ring a bell either one of your Showdown with Lance McGrew.
Oh, yeah, that's not the one I'm talking about.
Okay, that's a good episode too.
Yeah.
Yeah, he pulls up, He pulls up in his brand new Thunderbird. All right, Hey, I am enjoying the show. Merry Christmas and Happy New.
Year, Happy New Year. To you too.
One more on, one more call on before I have to do news, and that would be Karen in Wisconsin.
Karen, happy holidays.
Wait here, I'm sorry, I'm there. I'm very sorry, okay, but sorry. Why Well, because all of a sudden I was on and you know, I had a hand line landline in my hand, and you were coming out of the computer and I'm trying to turn everything off, okay, and I thought you were hearing it all.
But let's talk twilights.
But yeah, I just want to say congratulations on getting three hours.
Very much for that.
Thanks, and now we can work on getting more phone lines back for you in six hours.
Well, one thing at a time, baby.
Steps, Okay, I know.
So what do you want to talk about? Twilight Show?
The the one that I see. I didn't know these all had all these episodes had names, but the one that scares me to this day.
I mean.
The little girls that went under the bed and went yeah and then went in the ball Yes? Oh no, I yes, Rob Or you mean I used to my you already uh talked about because I wasn't gonna get.
That is an episode called Little Girl Lost. And when they made the movie many years later Poultergeist. Uh they stole that idea from Rod. I think that it was long. It was long after you passed away though, but that older guys. It's very much based on that same episode Little Girl Loss.
Wow.
Well, this computer, it's like when I when I go in the computer every time, like if like if Bradley say, let's go to my travel page. I right, I'm so scared that if I subscribe anything, I'm going to turn into that little girl and go into the computer. Now I know I'm not You're not sensation. So I don't like computers because it reminds me of that all the time. I just don't know who will pull me back out, and then you.
Know Bradley's going to be on Friday Night with me on that side.
Yes, I hope that I don't have a whole list. Maybe somebody printed them out. I'm there, but uh no, the all the people you're having on, are you going to allow for I want somebody to call more than once when you're on all I will.
Give you special permission to call for Bradley Jay.
On Friday, But Bradley doesn't want to hear from me.
I doubt that's the case. But I'm giving you special They're not allowed to call more than once a week. But because I'm filling in, people are hoping there's a loophole.
Karen. Well you, I'm giving the loophole.
Okay, can you tell me about all the other people in there so I can have loopholes for everything anyway. Anyway, I will say that the bunnies out back are saying hi to you, and they're dancing around. And I'm going to end with this, both of you. Why do radio and now Truth have little hands?
I don't know. Tell us why.
We pause the station identification?
Oh?
We pause? W ee paws. Thank you Karen, good night.
And and what is the best way to find a new dentist?
I don't know, Stephen, what is the best way?
Word of mouth?
On that note, I'm going to take my news break at the top of the hour. Stephen will be here next hour as well. Maybe we can get some Bond conversation going as well as twilight Zone.
Don't stop the twilight Zone.
I'm just going in addition to twilight Zone, James Bond time and temperature eight fifty eight twenty five degrees
