Blog

  • Pre-School – Saturday Night Live

    Pre-School – Saturday Night Live

    Mr. and Mrs. Geebler are at a parent-teacher conference with their daughter’s teacher, Carl Best. Aired 11/15/86

  • Sam Kinison “Wild Thing” on MTV New Year’s Eve (1988)

    Sam Kinison “Wild Thing” on MTV New Year’s Eve (1988)

    Live performance of “Wild Thing” by Sam Kinison on MTV New Years Eve ’88 with host Downtown Julie Brown.

  • Haunted Hollywood: The ‘Atuk’ Curse

    Haunted Hollywood: The ‘Atuk’ Curse

    By: Neda Raouf
    Originally printed in The Los Angeles Times
    Sunday, February 21, 1999

    Montgomery Clift hangs out at the Hollywood Roosevelt. Lon Chaney frequents a corner bus stop. Joan Crawford’s dog won’t leave her former home. The latest tale to join the burgeoning ranks of haunted Hollywood lore is the buzz that surrounds a decade-old script named “Atuk,” a comedy about an Eskimo. In its quest to become a film, it has passed through the hands of famously oversized–and prematurely deceased–comedians Sam Kinison, John Candy and Chris Farley.

    The rumored superstition surrounding the script is news to screenwriter Tod Carroll. “No matter what anybody’s impression was, I think it’s either coincidence or practical explanation,” says Carroll, 51, when reached at his new Tucson, Ariz., home.

    Carroll, who penned the 1988 movie “Clean and Sober,” based “Atuk” on Canadian author Mordecai Richler’s book, “The Incomparable Atuk,” a satire about an Eskimo on his first trip out of Alaska, which is to New York. Originally, Kinison was attached to the role. “When it came time to start filming, Sam wanted it rewritten,” says Carroll. “Once they started shooting it, it had accumulated a lot of costs.” The production eventually shut down, and Candy and Farley, among others, read it and expressed interest. United Artists has retained the rights and the film project remains in turnaround. “I’m not a superstitious person,” Carroll says, “and it doesn’t have any meaning to me.”

    On screenwriting hiatus to write a murder mystery, Carroll hasn’t heard about plans to revive the script, to his disappointment. “With the right actor and right tone,” he says, perhaps a bit cautiously, “it may have been a nice movie.”

  • Tributes: Sam Kinison

    Tributes: Sam Kinison

    Originally printed in Life: The Year in Pictures 1992
    January 1993

    He sneered, snarled and shrieked. Assaulting his audiences with insults – and parlaying his outrageous brand of humor into numerous television appearances and his own HBO special. When he died in April at the age of 38, the victim of a head-on collision on a California highway, he had just returned from his honeymoon. The comic’s wife of six days, Malika, survived the crash.

  • Live From Hell (1993)

    Live From Hell (1993)

    Sam Kinison’s fourth album, released posthumously in 1993, one year after his death.

    1. “I Missed the Joan Rivers Show”
    2. “Execution for Pee Wee”
    3. “Captain Kangaroo”
    4. “Russians Are Losers”
    5. “Sammy’s Pawnshop”
    6. “J.F.K.”
    7. “Space Pussies”
    8. “The Kurds”
    9. “Willie Nelson”
    10. “The Smart Bomb”
    11. “100 Hour War”
    12. “Bob Hope”
    13. “The Pee Trough”
    14. “Know When to Die”
    15. “Sam’s Tirade”
    16. “Rap Sucks”
    17. “Cable TV”
    18. “Bad Taste”
    19. “The Homeless”
    20. “Don’t Swallow”

    Resources

    Sam Kinison - Live from Hell
    Sam Kinison – Live From Hell (1993)