Amazon.com
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir, I looked in the handbook index under 'unauthorized personnel' and 'people without passes' and 'apes,' and 'ape's toes,' but it's not in there....") Something Like This... is a generous sampling of Newhart's best stand-up bits, and while some of his topics--airplanes, hating to fly--have now been so overdone as to be comic faux pas, rather than making his material seem dated they often serve to demonstrate just how rare a talent he is simply because the routines still elicit involuntary snorts of laughter some 30 years later. --Mark Hunstman
Product Description
Bob Newhart is credited with having better conversations with himself than most folks have with other people. In two of the funniest television shows ever, Bob drew from the dry, clever material that rocketed his albums to the top of the charts in the 1960s (the first time spoken word ever outsold music). From the early days of the master, 24 routines on two CDs that will have you grinning, including the classic bits "Driving Instructor" and "Retirement Party." About 2-1/2 hours., ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCDAmazon.com
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir, I looked in the handbook index under 'unauthorized personnel' and 'people without passes' and 'apes,' and 'ape's toes,' but it's not in there....") Something Like This... is a generous sampling of Newhart's best stand-up bits, and while some of his topics--airplanes, hating to fly--have now been so overdone as to be comic faux pas, rather than making his material seem dated they often serve to demonstrate just how rare a talent he is simply because the routines still elicit involuntary snorts of laughter some 30 years later. --Mark Hunstman
Product Description
Bob Newhart is credited with having better conversations with himself than most folks have with other people. In two of the funniest television shows ever, Bob drew from the dry, clever material that rocketed his albums to the top of the charts in the 1960s (the first time spoken word ever outsold music). From the early days of the master, 24 routines on two CDs that will have you grinning, including the classic bits "Driving Instructor" and "Retirement Party." About 2-1/2 hours., ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCD , ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCD
Amazon.com
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir I looked in the...
Free Shipping over $50
Free Returns Within 30 days
Description
Amazon.com
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir, I looked in the handbook index under 'unauthorized personnel' and 'people without passes' and 'apes,' and 'ape's toes,' but it's not in there....") Something Like This... is a generous sampling of Newhart's best stand-up bits, and while some of his topics--airplanes, hating to fly--have now been so overdone as to be comic faux pas, rather than making his material seem dated they often serve to demonstrate just how rare a talent he is simply because the routines still elicit involuntary snorts of laughter some 30 years later. --Mark Hunstman
Product Description
Bob Newhart is credited with having better conversations with himself than most folks have with other people. In two of the funniest television shows ever, Bob drew from the dry, clever material that rocketed his albums to the top of the charts in the 1960s (the first time spoken word ever outsold music). From the early days of the master, 24 routines on two CDs that will have you grinning, including the classic bits "Driving Instructor" and "Retirement Party." About 2-1/2 hours., ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCDAmazon.com
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir, I looked in the handbook index under 'unauthorized personnel' and 'people without passes' and 'apes,' and 'ape's toes,' but it's not in there....") Something Like This... is a generous sampling of Newhart's best stand-up bits, and while some of his topics--airplanes, hating to fly--have now been so overdone as to be comic faux pas, rather than making his material seem dated they often serve to demonstrate just how rare a talent he is simply because the routines still elicit involuntary snorts of laughter some 30 years later. --Mark Hunstman
Product Description
Bob Newhart is credited with having better conversations with himself than most folks have with other people. In two of the funniest television shows ever, Bob drew from the dry, clever material that rocketed his albums to the top of the charts in the 1960s (the first time spoken word ever outsold music). From the early days of the master, 24 routines on two CDs that will have you grinning, including the classic bits "Driving Instructor" and "Retirement Party." About 2-1/2 hours., ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCD , ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCD
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir, I looked in the handbook index under 'unauthorized personnel' and 'people without passes' and 'apes,' and 'ape's toes,' but it's not in there....") Something Like This... is a generous sampling of Newhart's best stand-up bits, and while some of his topics--airplanes, hating to fly--have now been so overdone as to be comic faux pas, rather than making his material seem dated they often serve to demonstrate just how rare a talent he is simply because the routines still elicit involuntary snorts of laughter some 30 years later. --Mark Hunstman
Product Description
Bob Newhart is credited with having better conversations with himself than most folks have with other people. In two of the funniest television shows ever, Bob drew from the dry, clever material that rocketed his albums to the top of the charts in the 1960s (the first time spoken word ever outsold music). From the early days of the master, 24 routines on two CDs that will have you grinning, including the classic bits "Driving Instructor" and "Retirement Party." About 2-1/2 hours., ISBN13: B000059Z84 ISBN10: B000059Z84 Material Type: audioCD
Amazon.com
Part of what Bob Newhart mastered, earlier on stand-up albums like The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! and later on his long-running TV series The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart, was capturing a brand of Everyman neuroses and heightening it, bringing mundane, common scenarios into the realm of the absurd--and the absurdly funny. Newhart also perfected playing a character involved in a conversation with the other party in absentia, as in one of his most famous routines, "King Kong," in which he plays the part of an Empire State Building security guard who calls his boss the night King Kong makes his famous ascent. ("Yes, sir I looked in the...