Pop My Culture

May10th

6 Comments

Garfunkel & Oates on Pop My Culture Podcast

Cole, Vanessa and the dynamic musical comedy duo Garfunkel & Oates (Riki Lindhome & Kate Micucci) talk vanity plates, Odyssey of the Mind, blue snowsuits, the White House Correspondents Dinner, Famous Food, Bristol Palin’s face work, The Olive Garden, the premiere of PMC Thunderdome, Glee duets, ABC’s old school TGIF, the Just the Ten of Us Theme Song, haunted iPhones, school lunches, their new HBO pilot, and the debut of Vanessa’s soon to be classic pee-pee song.

Tell us your answer to the firsts question (the first song you ever wrote, as a child or later) for a chance to win a Pop My Culture T-Shirt (as soon as we get ’em printed!)

 

Garfunkel & Oates with hosts Cole Stratton and Vanessa Ragland

6 Comments

  • Comment by Rob — May 11, 2011 @ 2:37 am

    How much pressure would Cole have to be under to have to change his name to Diamond?

  • Comment by Rob — May 11, 2011 @ 2:42 am

    Wait this one is Number 42! The answer to life, the universe, and everything!

  • Comment by Erin — May 11, 2011 @ 11:48 am

    I love Garfunkel and Oats!! Woohoo! Great podcast you guys. 🙂

    The first song I ever wrote went like this, “She is a rich bitch, sitting in a big ditch!” My sister and I would repeatedly sing this while we were playing in our neighbors front yard. There was a slight divot in her front yard giving us our “ditch.”

  • Comment by Todd Mason — May 11, 2011 @ 5:14 pm

    1. Ms. Ragland, you hair just won’t quit, either. (Never let it be said that your listeners are not accomodating.)

    2. Clearly I have not been thinking enough about Garfunkel and Oates, or at least not looking at them enough (always a pleasant prospect), because it’s only now struck me that Ms. Lindhome might as well be Garfunkel as the taller and blonder of the two, though perhaps Turning that Logic On Its Head is the name of this game, and Ms. Micucci is therefore Not Oates. I imagine I am somewhere around the 30,000th person this has occurred to, most of us independently, I’m sure.

    3. I hope none of you are ever afflicted with the dread Peppered Queefs. I imagine this could be particularly problematic if Mr. Stratton was so stricken, albeit the men’s expression of this malady, while rare, is also quieter due to the smaller bore, if you get my drift. (See: flute v. sousaphone, or soprano v. baritone sex [sic]).

    4. Looking forward to The Urethra Monologues.

    5. And to the HBO series. Folks, don’t let them saddle you with the scripts the Flight of the Conchords never got around to…

    6. Fine episode…thanks.

  • Comment by corinne — May 11, 2011 @ 9:16 pm

    When my brother and I were fairly young we saw a bagpipe on tv, and made up this duet to the tune that was just the word ‘annoying’ over and over to the tune of the bagpipe song. Annoying our parents with that song was one of the only things we agreed on.

  • Comment by Mattamatics — May 12, 2011 @ 12:35 pm

    My first song was ALSO for OM! Our skit was a business meeting and infomercial for an imaginary product that featured a celebrity. Our celeb was Lucille Ball, and we wrote a song about our product, “Vita-meata-fruita-wheata-larda-lacta-poultra-fisha-min.” It was F@*KING EPIC.

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