
ZEjackbennykid wrote:Hey, been a while since I was on the forum. I've been watching the original Star Trek series lately because my mom loves the original series of Star Trek. Anyway I have been around my school and have noticed somthing great. Our school shows the Whos On First tv routine as part of a 6th grade shakespeare unit reading Comedy of the Errors. Now in eighth grade I know people who still remember me playing the radio version in class. One of my fellow peers even has the routine on his iPod.It wont be long before Jack is on his iPod
LLeff wrote:ZEjackbennykid wrote:Hey, been a while since I was on the forum. I've been watching the original Star Trek series lately because my mom loves the original series of Star Trek. Anyway I have been around my school and have noticed somthing great. Our school shows the Whos On First tv routine as part of a 6th grade shakespeare unit reading Comedy of the Errors. Now in eighth grade I know people who still remember me playing the radio version in class. One of my fellow peers even has the routine on his iPod.It wont be long before Jack is on his iPod
Hey, welcome back ZE! And good choice on Star Trek (speaking as a Trekker myself)...
I've noticed from my own experience that Abbott and Costello do still seem to resonate well with a younger audience--both the wordplays like "Who's on First" and the slapstick like the candle routine in "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein". Like you said, it's a great introduction to OTR and getting through the misconception of "It's old so it's boring." Keep spreading the word!
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