As a marketing ploy that was a tribute to a classic “WKRP in
Cincinnati” TV sitcom episode, White Castle had a helicopter drop turkey
sliders toward 15 customers/targets in West Chester, Ohio on Friday.
There were no reports of mass hysteria in southwest Ohio so the
marketing plot did not equal the calamity of the live-turkey drop orchestrated
by WKRP management in the TV episode. Turkeys plopped onto the mythical
Pinedale Shopping Mall with disastrous results for the birds. An oven would
have been a kinder fate. Car windshields were smashed. People scrambled for
cover.
And Johnny Fever announced after Les Nessman’s frantic
descriptions: “Pinedale Shopping Mall has just been bombed with live turkeys.”
Flustered station owner Arthur “Big Guy” Carlson sputtered one of
the all-time classic TV sitcom lines: “As God is my witness, I thought turkeys
could fly.”
Gordon Jump, in real life, once had been a Dayton, Ohio radio
personality.
It was one of the most hilarious TV sitcom episodes I’ve ever
watched in my life. “WKRP,” for you youngsters, was about a mythical Cincinnati
radio station that barely survived with a bumbling station owner whose
overbearing mama put him in charge. It aired in 1978-1982.
The cast included buxom, in every sense of the word, Loni Anderson
as the secretary who overwhelmed the testosterone gender and won her two Emmy
nominations and eventually a marriage to Burt Reynolds; Dayton native Gary
Sandy as Andy Travis; Dayton native Gordon Jump as Arthur Carlson, put in
charge by his mother, who later regained fame as the lonely Magtag repairman in
TV commercials; Oregon native Howard Hesseman as the drug-loving DJ Johnny
Fever, who later starred in the classic 1984 movie, “This Is Spinal Tap”; Harrisburg
native Richard Sanders as the wannabe famous newsman Les Nessman; Little Rock
native Frank Bonner as Herb Tarlek, who had an Arkansas Razorbacks coffee mug
on his desk in the series and was married and divorced four times (must have
been the outrageous suits he wore on the show); Norfolk native Tim Reid as
Venus Flytrap, the cool black guy who in real life with wife Daphne Reid
performs in the Hollywood Black Movie Festival; and Jan Smithers, born in the
Woodland Hills section of the San Fernando Valley in California and married to
and divorced from James Brolin, as Bailey Quarters.
You can watch the classic scene by clicking on
http://entertainthis.usatoday.com/2014/11/27/watch-the-classic-turkey-drop-scene-from-wkrp-in-cincinnati/
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