The Musers — 2024-09-26

Marge Schwimdiddler

Fake Mack Brown

Jub Chicken 2

The Musers — 1310 The Ticket, Dallas | Thursday, September 26, 2024

📋 Segments This Day

  • Marge Schwimdiddler
  • Fake Mack Brown
  • Jub Chicken 2

🎙️ Early Show Analysis

Segments

Marge Schwimdiddler [00:00:00-00:04:46]: A Gordo character bit featuring “Marge,” supposedly George’s old swim coach, who visits the studio. She claims George quit the swim team and cost her Olympic dreams, discusses her current dire living situation, and wants to watch the Cowboys game with George.

Fake Mack Brown [00:00:00-00:04:20]: An interview parody with a fake version of UNC football coach Mack Brown discussing his team’s 70-50 loss to James Madison, featuring inappropriate commentary about his wife Sally and bizarre coaching philosophy.

Sports Topics Discussed

  • Cowboys: Marge mentions being a huge Cowboys fan and wanting to watch “her boys” play, with references to throwing waste at coaching staff including Dan Quinn
  • College Football: North Carolina’s 70-50 loss to James Madison discussed extensively in the fake Mack Brown segment

Funny Moments, Gordo Bits, or Memorable Quotes

  • [00:00:40] Marge’s backstory about being “left with three freshmen and one Jamaican that wouldn’t touch the water”
  • [00:01:57] Marge claiming she “knocked Dan Quinn’s cap off at 23 yards” with thrown excrement as “my proudest accomplishment”
  • [00:02:15] Reference to dropping “fat man and little boy from five feet” in the bathroom
  • [00:03:28] Marge’s description of her last meal: “a palm full of grub worms foraged three nights ago”
  • [00:00:52] Fake Mack Brown’s inappropriate comment about being “humiliated…like in the bedroom with restraints and a penile cage”
  • [00:02:22] Confusing Dolly Madison with Dolly Parton and making inappropriate comments about both
  • [00:04:01] Mack Brown’s self-aware description of his speaking pattern as “Morse code fashion, punching out syllables in a rhythmic pulsing”

Recurring Bits, Characters, or Inside Jokes Referenced

  • Marge Schwimdiddler: A recurring Gordo character who appears to be homeless/disabled and has an imagined romantic history with George
  • Fake Coach Interviews: The Mack Brown segment follows the show’s tradition of parodying sports figures with increasingly inappropriate and absurd commentary
  • George’s supposed wealth referenced through mentions of “$150,000 worth of river rocks” and “secondary media room”

Summary

This portion of The Musers features two classic Gordo character bits that showcase the show’s signature absurdist humor. The first segment introduces Marge Schwimdiddler, a delusional former swim coach character who claims a romantic and professional history with George Dunham that clearly never existed. Her increasingly desperate living situation and crude behavior create both uncomfortable and hilarious moments as she tries to convince George to let her watch the Cowboys game with him.

The second segment parodies college football coach interviews through a fake Mack Brown appearance discussing North Carolina’s embarrassing 70-50 loss to James Madison. The bit escalates from standard coach-speak apologies into increasingly inappropriate commentary about his wife Sally and bizarre justifications for the loss, including claims about honoring founding father James Madison and proving UNC is a basketball school.

Both segments exemplify The Musers’ ability to blend sports talk with surreal comedy, using familiar radio formats (studio visits and coach interviews) as vehicles for increasingly outrageous character work. The humor derives from the contrast between the hosts’ attempts to maintain normal conversations and the characters’ complete lack of social awareness or appropriate boundaries.


⏰ Mid-Show Analysis

Segments

Jub Chicken 2 [00:00:00-00:11:41] – George tells a story about an awkward encounter with a teenage grocery store employee who didn’t know what the dairy section was, paralleling the famous “Jub chicken” incident from years past where a teenager rudely asked him about grilled chicken at a graduation party.

Sports Topics Discussed

  • Brief mention of the “Maestro Dobell D&M Open” golf event [00:03:13-00:03:25]

Notable Debates or Host Disagreements

Age and Knowledge Expectations [00:08:54-00:11:41] – The hosts debated what percentage of 16-year-olds would know what a grocery store’s “dairy section” is:

  • Craig/Junior argued 99.999% of Americans, including teenagers, would know this
  • Gordo suggested it could be as high as 20% who don’t know, citing how kids today have food delivered and don’t grocery shop
  • George estimated it might be 20% who are “flipping dumb”

Funny Moments, Gordo Bits, or Memorable One-Liners

  • “Still a bag, isn’t it?” [00:05:37] – The dismissive teenage employee’s response when George asked for paper instead of plastic bags
  • “OK, boomer” [00:07:35] – Gordo’s interjection during George’s internal rant about the teenager
  • “Who’s dairy?” [00:06:02] – The confused teenager’s repeated question, thinking “dairy” was someone’s name
  • “Yeah, they’ll handle it” [00:07:07] – The teenager’s dismissive response about the bagging preference
  • The original “Jub chicken” story retelling [00:00:46-00:02:06] featuring an 18-year-old blowing cigar smoke and rudely asking “Hey, Jub, is my chicken ready yet?”

Summary

This segment centers around George Dunham’s latest embarrassing social encounter, this time with a supremely confident but clueless teenage grocery store employee. The story serves as a sequel to the legendary “Jub chicken” incident, where an 18-year-old graduate rudely dismissed George while he was grilling at a party. George’s frustration with entitled youth continues as he encounters a teenager who not only gives him attitude about bag preferences but genuinely doesn’t understand what the “dairy section” means.

The encounter escalates George’s bewilderment as the kid, complete with lollipop and gum-chewing swagger, repeatedly asks “Who’s dairy?” when told he might be needed in that section. The teenager’s combination of arrogance and ignorance leaves George speechless, though he mentally prepares a speech about the kid’s ridiculous haircut and general cluelessness. The hosts find themselves debating whether this represents a broader generational shift in basic knowledge.

The discussion evolves into a fascinating generational debate about what teenagers should reasonably know, with Craig insisting 99.999% of kids would understand “dairy section” while Gordo argues that modern conveniences like DoorDash have created a generation disconnected from basic retail concepts. George finds himself caught between outrage at individual stupidity and concern that this might represent a larger societal trend toward ignorance.


🏁 Final Hour Analysis

Segments in this portion:

  • Observation Deck with Gordo [00:12:14] – Gordo analyzes George’s earlier grocery store conflict and presents a list of stupid things people have said or done

Sports topics were discussed in this portion:

  • Brief mention of working at a golf course in customer service context [00:16:08]
  • Reference to golf terminology (“bogey”) at the end [00:24:09]

Funny moments or memorable Gordo bits:

  • Gordo’s “Observation Deck” segment analyzing whether the 16-year-old grocery worker was making a sex joke with “Who’s dairy?” or genuinely didn’t know what the dairy section was
  • Extended discussion of stupid things people have said, including: wanting a flu shot over the phone, trying to take a train from US to Europe, expecting a balcony on a below-sea-level cruise ship room
  • Misunderstandings about women’s periods – men thinking all women menstruate at the same time globally and that women can “hold it in”
  • Compass pillow with directions in wrong order (North, South, East, West clockwise)
  • Person thinking eggs are dairy products
  • Someone thinking the sun isn’t a star because “stars are way far away and smaller”
  • Discussion about whether kids can still read analog clocks, ending with a joke about military “bogey at 11 o’clock” confusing the grocery store kid

How did the show wrap up:

The show ended mid-conversation during the analog clock discussion, with George making a joke about the 16-year-old grocery worker being completely confused by military time references like “bogey at 11 o’clock” [00:24:19]

This final portion of The Musers focused entirely on Gordo’s “Observation Deck” segment, which grew out of George’s earlier story about a conflict with a teenage grocery store worker. The discussion centered around whether the kid was genuinely clueless about what the dairy section was or was attempting some kind of inappropriate joke. Gordo seemed to lean toward the theory that it was just plain ignorance rather than failed humor.

The segment evolved into an entertaining exploration of human stupidity, with Gordo sharing various anecdotes about remarkably dumb things people have said or believed. These ranged from the absurd (wanting medical injections over the phone) to the geographically impossible (trains to Europe from the US) to basic misunderstandings about human biology and astronomy. The examples provided plenty of comedic material while also serving as a reality check about how much basic knowledge can’t be taken for granted.

The show wrapped up with a tangential discussion about whether modern kids can read analog clocks, questioning if this is still a necessary skill in the digital age. The conversation maintained the show’s characteristic blend of humor and genuine curiosity about generational differences, ending with George’s quip about how military directional references would completely baffle the grocery store teenager who sparked the entire discussion.


Analysis generated from archived transcripts. Hosts: Gordon Keith (Gordo), George Dunham, Craig Miller, Mike Rhyner, Donovan Lewis (Junior). Station: 1310 The Ticket, Dallas, TX.

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