<slyzog@hotmail.com>) And 3-1-97
(soundboard) was broadcast by German radio (NDR 2) on two different
dates (circa May and June 1997) for the two sets, leaving the Adeline
encore unaired.
Singled Out: On the March
3, 1997, "Singled Out" on MTV,
during the final round, one set of options was "some other
band or Phish" (The guy and two of the three gals' said
Phish, and the host turned to the musician and asked, "Have
you ever seen those guys They're great!")
MSNBC: On July 12 and 13, 1997, MSNBC's Edgewise program
aired American Road, "a seven-minute tour of all 48
contiguous states set to the music of Phish." The filmakers
-- two new college alums (Peter Shapiro and a friend) living off
credit cards -- filmed events and landmarks nationwide on a 30-day
trip covering 13,254 miles, and set the seven-minute clip of edited
results to the first half of "You
Enjoy Myself" (the portion just prior to the singing).
Actually, they aired it four times each day (and ran an
article online titled "Phish's Song Remains The Same".)
Rolling Stone aired a special 5/21/97 called "The
Rolling Stone State of the Union", and featured YEM
as the background to a segment on the Zendik Farm community in
Texas.
NFL: "Cars
Trucks Buses" was the theme song on the ABC NFL Air
It Out on 8/24/97, according to Dan Epstein <depstein@pipeline.com>.
Seinfeld: The
executive producer is Suzie Mamann Greenberg -- no relation, but
M. Barton Hodges <barton@gcmcomputers.com> posted that at
the close of a 10/97 episode, Seinfeld said "fish" (talking
about a fish tank) at the moment that Greenberg's credit came
on the screen. Coincidence
ESPN, on the 11:30 Center 10/21/97, "Linda Cohn did
the Flyers v. Lightning Highlights, and after the segment, she
mentions the band phish, and the lead singer trey anastasio, anastasio
(she said it twice because she had a hard time with pronounciation).
anyways, she mentions that trey is a huge flyers fan and that
he and john leclair are great buddies." (Reported by Paul
Chung <chungp@umich.edu>)
Real Stories of the Highway Patrol: On the 11/17/97 episode
(according to Dennis John Midkiff <djmidkiff@mindspring.com
>), when five guys in a weaving maroon Volvo coupe were pulled
over and the trooper searched the car, he found a "flipdisc"
which included A Live One (both
discs), Lawn Boy, and Hoist.
Random Fan: During a televised footbal game 11/23/97,
Michael Wagner <mwagner@prizmpharm.com> noticed a fan's
sign that read "Trey 420" (likely
mocking the then-popular "John 3:16" signs).
ABC Sports: During the halftime of ABC's televised Nebraska
vs. Colorado football game on [11/28/97], they had a segment on
the best unheard of players in college football. There were four
players and during the highlights they played "Cars, Trucks,
& Buses" in the background. (R. Sindelar
<rsindela@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu>)
Airline Ad: An American Airlines advertisement (fall '97)
is said to have used the last piano riff from "Bathtub Gin"
as background music (according to Mike Weitman <mweitman@bu.edu>
12/1/97). Others insist that "they used the riff from 'Rhapsody
in Blue', which is where Phish kind of got it from." Emil
Hedaya <emil@liii.com> 4/7/98 (See Lawnboy.)
SportsCenter: Phish sang the national anthem before the
Flyers-Sabres game 12-1-97. SportsCenter's Linda Cohn said "nobody,
nobody, belts out Run Like An Antelope
better than Trey!" (Cohn grew up in Vermont, and went to
UVM with Mike.) (Thanks to Arlen <arlenkid@aol.com>
and Isaac <st951387@pip.cc.brandeis.edu> 12/4/97.)
More MTV: On MTV's Holiday Shopping Guide (12/18/97),
host Matt Pinfield recommended Slip Stitch
and Pass as "a great Christmas gift" for viewers'
"hippie" friends or relatives.
RathofRoth <rathofroth@aol.com>
Olympics: Jeffrey B. Lukens <0210777@acad.nwmissouri.edu>
posted that during TNT's coverage of the Olympic games 2/10/98,
and "they were doing a story on Japanese supermarkets ...
and the background music >was none other than Sparkle."
Early Edition: In 1998, the album cover of Ghost
was shown on Early Edition, a series (which ran for about
two years) in which the main character found a newspaper each
morning that would have that day's news in it. (Reported
by Mike <WhoooaFee@aol.com>)
Final Four: On 3/21/98, during the Road to the Final Four
Show, "they were showing clips of Arizona's Championship
last year, they played a clip of Cities [from Slip].
No words, just the music." Matt Reading
<matt@linkmeup.net>
Skiing Show: A local Ann Arbor station showed extreme
skiing with "Chalkdust Torture" as background music
on 3/22/98 (possibly from the Tony
Roberts video. Josh Pashman <jpashman@umich.edu>
And "Free" appears in a free-skiing video entitled Harvest,
published by Teton Gravity Research, Jackson Hole Wyoming. (Thanks
to Lisa J. Hunt <slvb9@cc.usu.edu>.)
More MTV: On MTV's program 12 Angry Viewers (spring '98),
one of the "jurors" said she did not like a video by
a band called Liquid Liquid because it was too trippy and "too
much like a Phish concert" Ryan Murphy
<zooropa@gwis2.circ.gwu.edu>
Jeopardy: One of the board answers was "Phish
Food and Cherry Garcia are both flavors of this company's
ice cream." The 'question' was of cource Ben & Jerry's.
Pete Pidgeon <pidgeon316@aol.com>
4/13/98
Boston Common: "Two burned-out kinda hippie guys
are talking and remember to go get Phish tickets. Later in the
show only one of them comes back and says [the band] started to
play the Mango Song and then he couldn't find his friend."
(Andy Beauchemin <Bonsea@aol.com>)
Local News: On 7/3/98 (and possibly other dates), KOMU
TV channel 8 Columbia, MO, used "Stash" to accompany
the weather report (Brian <rooney@eagle.cc.ukans.edu>
7/4/98), and WRGB TV in upstate NY has used the opening
of "Weigh" for their news promos (Matt
Fuller <fee@global2000.net> 7/4/98)
Colorado PBS: As of August 1998, "Chalkdust Torture"
(just the music, no words) was used as the theme song to the Denver
PBS show Colorado Inside and Out. (Tom
Selegue <selegue@tda.com> 8/3/98)
American Journal: This tabloidy news show had a report
on abuse of nitrous oxide amongst American
teens. Part of the report centered on a Phish parking lot outside
a Denver show, where people were lined up for nitrous and one
guy talked to the camera while huffing on a balloon. The report
showed a brief clip of Phish playing ("Glass
Onion", strangely enough). The report also noted the
the band discourages nitrous sales and consumption at Phish shows.
Ellis Klein <ellis0059@aol.com> 8/31/98
Letterman's Top 10: "From the Home Office in Wahoo,
Nebraska,it's the Top Ten List for September 1, 1998: Top Ten
Things That Average Americans Think 'NASDAQ' Is:"
10. The drug Mark
McGwire uses to hit homeruns.
9. One of the
sweathogs on "Welcome Back Kotter."
8. Merv Griffin's
Peruvian houseboy.
7. I dunno, but
it has something to do with how Jodie Foster got pregnant.
6. That country
whose butt we kicked in the Gulf War.
5. God willing,
it's some delicious new kind of fudge.
4. Something
you bake in brownies and sell at Phish
concerts.
3. Pakistan's
version of the "Rat Pack."
2. A new Ben
and Jerry's flavor made with nazberries and duck.
1. The North
American Society of Daqs.
The audience roared at number four. (Posted
by <zwick@pilot.infi.net> 9/2/98)
Farm Aid: ...
Buffy: There was a poster for a 7/30/ Phish show on
the bulletin board in the school courtyard on an August 1998 episode
of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer". (Jeremy
Birchman) And there was a posted for Phish at Madison Square
Garden in the coffeeshop (the main characters' handout joint)
in two episodes, aired 9/29/98 and circa 10/1/98. Thanks
to Russelle Suszanne Snyder <rss172@psu.edu> (9/30/98) and
Dan Hobbs <fiver_elf@yahoo.com> (10/8/98).
Dawson's Creek: featured "Birds of a Feather"
as background music 10/7/98, less than a week after the single
was sent to radio stations and nearly three weeks before its release
on album
Viva Variety: On an October 1998 episode of the Comedy
Channel's Viva Variety, Mr. Laupin announced during the
opening, "we have lost of fabulous guests on our show, like
Jenaine Garafolo, who dresses like she just got kicked out of
a Phish concert." (Reported by <emailfmj@aol.com>
10/7/98)
More Conan: On 1/5/99, Conan O'Brian rambled on about
having attended 12/31/98 (see
photo).
He said "it's a scene baby" -- said he felt stiff and
out of place for 5 or 10 minutes then started spinning (at which
he waved his arms side to side and went "woooOOOOoooooo! wooooOOOOOoooo!")
and got into the scene. He "became a hepster". Then he said he
left a little bit early and on the way out was getting recognized
and "about six thousand" people, with no shirts, wanted to hug
him ("i looooooove you, man!") on the way out so that when he
got home (still in his suit) he smelled like 3000 sweaty guys
("and I kinda LIKED it.") No comment on the music or show (only
on the scene), but it was nice and upbeat and fairly positive.
Sessions
on West 54th: Phish performed a one-hour set in the studios
of Sessions at
West 54th, a PBS show which in this (its second) season
is hosted by David Byrne. The broadcast
(between 1/9/99 and 1/16/99, depending on local broadcast schedules)
included three songs (Birds of a Feather, Ghost, Taste) interspersed
with clips of interviews with Byrne.
Still More Conan: On "2/11/99, Conan O'Brien mentioned
being at a Phish concert where Fred Savage tapped him on the shoulder,
and told Daniel Stern, whom he was interviewing how funny it would
have been if Daniel had been behind Savage narrating the events,
as Stern was the narrator of The Wonder Years, of which Savage
was the star." (Thanks to Dave Herrnecklace
<ThirdAce98@aol.com> 2/13/99).
Even More Conan: On 2/24/99, Fred Savage was a guest and
the first subject was how Fred and Conan saw each other at the
12/31/98 Phish show. Fred
said he was freaked out by it, like seeing one of your teachers
at the mall. (Thanks to Abdul Rhajad <dr_abdul_rhajad@hotmail.com>,
Mark Toscano >mt@vastnet.net>, and Dan Meilcarz.)
CNN again: Phish was featured in an episode of CNN's World
Beat, aired thrice on the weekend of 2/13-14/99.
Another Letterman Top 10: From the Home Office in Wahoo,
Nebraska, it's the Top Ten List for April 5, 1999: Top Ten Historical
Inaccuracies in Peter Jennings' The Century: 10.
Lincoln was not assassinated at a "Phish show"
9. Dogs were not "invented in 1963"
8. Prior to invention of the airplane, people did not "fly around
by flapping their arms"
7. Eleanor Roosevelt never competed in a wet T-shirt contest
6. World War I did not start because Fabio was hit in the face
by a goose 5.
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were not the neighbors on "I Love Lucy"
4. Lyndon Johnson
known as "LBJ" not "LL Cool J"
3. Turning point of World War II not "that part where Tom Hanks
finds Matt Damon"
2. Neil Armstrong's first words on the moon were not, "Pretty
fly for a white guy"
1. Person of the Century probably not "Peter Jennings"
Dirge When JFK Jr. was missing and presumed dead (August
1999), either CNN or MSNBC showed him on his boat and played Phish's
"Bliss". (Joe Boncek <phishmoe24@prodigy.net>)
More about Letterman: As is true of all acts on television
variety shows, Phish's performances on Letterman have been very
short, compared to the average length of songs in their more-typical
live
performances. As Jake Hall <jahall@rockbridge.net> reported
to rec.music.phish
(3/1/97), "A bunch of people have written the Late Show asking
them to give Phish more time to play. An intern who apparently
likes them responded, but isn't sure that they'll get more time.
Here's a copy of the post:
From: asoriero@aol.com (ASoriero)
Subject: LETTERMAN SHOW RESPONDED TO OUR REQUEST
Date: 28 Feb 1997 00:33:59 GMT
I got this letter from the letterman show today. Here it is.
Hello,
I am the lowly intern who reads all the email and I am also an
admirer of the band. I saw them play a Halloweenshow
in Colorado Springs about 4 or 5 years ago. I fully understand
your eagerness to have extra time for the band. I myself am a
unrepentant deadhead who understands the importance of extended
improvisation with regards to certain types of music.
I have told the people above me about the overwhelming responses
from folks over the net. I have no idea what will come of it.
I would be surprised If extra time was alloted for the band because
the show is already run on such a tight schedule already.
I suggest you try and contact the manager or publicist of Phish
and see if they can notify the Late Show about the tremendous
response and potential audience of Phish fans. If the publicist
can convince the show that Phish fans could truly boost the ratings
(or something to that effect), the show might allot more time.
I am not sure at this point.
I do want you to know that I am the only one who reads all the
emails so no matter what I say to my employers, they never really
see the viewer response. The whole internet thing is still fairly
new here and is more of a side project than a direct pipeline
into the show. So you can continue to tell people to send me mail
and I can continue to tell my superiors but all the emails really
stop at me without the other employees having a clue about them.
I am pulling for you guys.
Not bad huh. At least we got a response now to all of you who didn't
write in yet can
do it now!
Thanks also to MT <mt@vastnet.net> 3/99.>