Here is the closing to "Free Therapy Tuesday". Thanks to Gregory's diligence I posted early. (I also had great confidence in the audience being bored and prepared all three at the same time. Knowing I mostly likely would need to post them). I know about four of them off the top. Modesty will not allow me to arrogantly list them :-) Just like the substitute teacher shouldn't find all the easy words in the word find. Good Luck and God Bless.
Remember if I see good participation, you win a chance to dissect the difficult Hatorade segment.
Actually, that one wasn't as hard as I remember. But I'll give someone else a chance this time.
I'm assuming all this is Lou's work, by the way. It's pretty brilliant.
These openings were created by the talented Tom "The Bird" Falcone. The Pre Christine phone screener. BTW, Tom also did the "Real Men of Catholocism" ads. He is the singer in the background. My understanding is that he wrote most of the material for the ads.
Gregeory keep checking in though, just incase no one else participates. Then there will be no Hatorade game :-(
Okay, no one else is stepping to the plate, so here goes:
* Clip from "Analyze This" (?)
* "Crazy" by Patsy Cline (for my money, the best crazy song of all time, and ever shall be, world without end, Amen.)
* No idea.
* "Crazy on You," Heart.
* "Crazy Mixed Up World," by Soul Asylum. (Happy to help, Father Jim!)
* No idea.
* "I Go Crazy," by Paul Davis. (I had to look up his name. One-hit wonder?)
* I've heard it somewhere, but can't place it.
* This one's easy: Cypress Hill, "Insane in the Membrane." And, come to think of it, the opening line is "Don't you know I'm loco," which is in the Free Therapy Tuesday opener.
* "Crazy Train," by Ozzy Osbourne. (What will the Catholic Taliban say about that?!)
* "Still Crazy After All These Years," by Paul Simon.
A related topic: What songs SHOULD have been included?
If I were updating the intros and outros, I'd include Liz Phair's "Insanity," and "All Mixed Up" by 311.
And I can't believe they overlooked the obvious -- perhaps the greatest novelty song of all time -- the Dr. Demento classic: "They're Coming to Take Me Away (Ha-Ha!)" by Napoleon XIV.