Monday, May 25, 2015

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Paul McCartney - Out There Tokyo Japan (2013))

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Genesis Live At Wembley Stadium 1987)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (KISS - Live At The Summit - Love Gun Tour '77 {Full Concert} {1977})

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (David Bowie Glass Spider tour live full concert 87)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band Live 85)

Vertigo World's HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY


Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (IN CONCERT '' SIMON AND GARFUNKEL '' LIVE IN CENTRAL PARK NEW YORK 1981 )

Lee Greenwood - God Bless the USA (Live in 1985) Happy Memorial Day

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Sunday, May 24, 2015

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Concert for George)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Bon JovI Live At Cleveland 2013 Full Concert)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Roger Waters - In The Flesh LIVE FULL CONCERT)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Dave Matthews Band - 14/12/2013 - [Full Concert - Pro Shot 1080p] - Buenos Aires, Argentina )

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (U2 "Go Home" DVD Live Slane Castle 2001 (Full Concert) )

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (ERIC CLAPTON Live at Budokan, Tokyo, 2001 (Full Concert) )

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Elvis Presley Aloha From Hawaii 1973)

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Saturday, May 23, 2015

HAPPY MEMORIAL WEEKEND


Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Frank Sinatra Spectacular: The Rat Pack Live )

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (John Lennon - Live in NY City {1972})

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (The Police - Synchronicity Concert-1983)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Stevie Ray Vaughan - Live at Montreux (1985) FULL CONCERT)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Queen - Live At Wembley Stadium (full version))

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Bryan Adams - Live In Toronto / Canada 2014 {TV Concert})

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Paul McCartney Unplugged Live In London 1991)

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Friday, May 22, 2015

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Nirvana Live at Reading 1992(full concert) )

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (The Clash - Live in Tokyo, Japan 1982 - full concert )

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Ringo Starr Live 2013 with the Drumheads)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Billy Joel - LIVE AT TOKYO 2006)

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Elton John - 1995 - Rio de Janeiro - Made In England Tour {Full Concert})

Vertigo World Memorial Weekend Concerts (Paul Mc Cartney & Wings - Rockshow)

HAPPY MEMORIAL WEEKEND!!


GMM'S Best BBQ in Texas

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Thursday, May 21, 2015

Celebrity Top Ten Things I've Always Wanted to Say To David Letterman

Foo Fighters: "Everlong" - David Letterman

Top Ten Things I'll Miss About Working At The Late Show - David Letterman

Top 10 Things We'll Miss About David Letterman



10. The Grin.
The early Dave, with his auburn mane and gapped teeth, looked like nothing less than a grown-up version of Mad magazine mascot Alfred E. Neuman. Indeed, every night, as he flashed that mischievous smile and took a sledgehammer to the rules and conventions of television, his slogan might have been, 'What, Me Worry?" Later, Dave grew cranky and started to worry about an awful lot, but even when railing at stupidity or running out of patience with guests, that impish grin remained.
9. The Music.
Dave (and his talent bookers) had an excellent ear for new music. Bands from R.E.M. to Weezer to Future Islands made their TV debuts on his stage. He was especially fond of roots-rock, alt-country, Americana, and other non-Top-40 musics that got little play on other late-night shows. And then there were the unique, must-watch events that wouldn't have happened elsewhere. In 1987, Letterman reunited a reluctant Sonny & Cher for the first time in more than a decade, to sing "I Got You Babe." He famously devoted an hour to Warren Zevon and his music when the maverick songwriter was dying of cancer in 2002, an episoe that's one of the most bittersweet, joyous hours in TV history. Tom Waits showed up last week to perform a farewell ode to Dave; who else would he have done that for? (Indeed, who else's show would he even visit?) And of course, there was Darlene Love belting out her half-century-old signature hit "Christmas (Baby, Please Come Home)" every December (she has said that, out of respect for Dave, she'll never perform the song on TV again). Plus, you had Paul and the band, who could play pretty much every tune composed since the birth of rock 'n' roll and who could back anyone. True, Jimmy Fallon can book pretty much anyone to sing on "The Tonight Show" (even Barbra Streisand), and he has the Roots, but for sheer breadth, it's going to be hard to top Dave's musical legacy.
8. The Supporting Players.
Everything was found comedy to Letterman, and that included the people around him. He turned stage manager Biff Henderson, announcer Alan Kalter, stagehands Pat and Kenny, neighboring merchants (sandwich maker Rupert Jee, souvenir sellers Mujibur and Sirajul), and even his own mom into comic all-stars. The ultimate human-as-found-comic-object was clerk Calvert DeForest, the bizarre little old man who played Larry "Bud" Melman on the old "Late Night," who'd be sent out to do things like greet arriving passengers at the Port Authority Bus Terminal. The one ringer was Chris Elliott, who became a bona fide star doing bits on "Late Night" like pretending to be Marlon Brando or living in the studio as the Guy Under the Seats. Every late-night host now has his own ensemble of semi-pro players, but except for Elliott, we'll never see any of Dave's crew again.
7. The Old-Schoolers.
Letterman has said that one reason he's retiring is that the 68-year-old host feels late-night is a young person's game now. Which is fine, and you certainly can't fault Dave's peers for their pursuit of the fresh and new. But Letterman's "Late Show" has become what Carson's "Tonight Show" once was, the last place on TV still hospitable to old-school talent. Not just oldtimers like Tom Dreesen or Regis Philbin (who appeared on "Late Show" some 136 times), but the performers who've been visiting Dave since they were rising young stars 30 years ago -- Bill Murray, Tom Hanks, Michael Keaton, Bruce Willis, Martin Short, Julia Roberts. They'll appear on other talk shows if they have something to plug, but it won't be like visiting Dave, where they could just show up anytime and feel at home.
6. Paul Shaffer
Don't forget, Paul Shaffer has been with Dave every step of the way, and we'll be losing him, too. He's been an ideal foil; while Dave has spent a career deconstructing the falseness of showbiz, Paul has been an ironic parody of showbiz glitz, phoniness, and excess. The one thing he's been sincere about is the music, both as a keyboard virtuoso and a bandleader of the most versatile ensemble on TV.
5. His Interviewing Skills.
US Presidents and much much more at the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York.
4. Those Unexpected Personal Moments.
Letterman may have been more guarded than any human who's spent 33 years in our living rooms, hiding his private self beneath layers of irony and shtick. So when he did open up and share his true feelings -- bringing on the doctors who performed his life-saving quintuple-bypass, weeping with Dan Rather in the wake of 9/11, reveling in the birth of his son Harry, or calmly offering the remarkable revelation that he was being blackmailed over having had affairs with his staffers -- it made for shocking, liberating, compelling television.
3. His Willingness to Try Anything.
Letterman idolized Johnny Carson, but he still upended all the rules Carson had set for doing a talk show. Everything on Carson's "Tonight Show" was cool and controlled, while Letterman was anything but. Following the examples of TV pioneers like Steve Allen and Ernie Kovacs, who created comedy bits before the rules were set in stone, Letterman was open to any idea, whether it was dropping melons out a fifth story window or wearing a suit made of Alka-Seltzer and jumping into a tank of water. Later, on CBS, he made the stretch of 53rd Street outside his stage door into his laboratory, a place large and open enough to stage Civil War re-enactments or to make hundreds of fountains out of Diet Coke bottles stuffed with Mentos. Anything could be good television, and good television could be anything. It's a lesson not lost on Letterman's followers, who go out of their way to create stunts that will go viral, but there's little they're doing now that Dave didn't try first.
2. The Reliability.
Do anything on TV long enough, and you become an institution. That's not necessarily a bad thing. As with Johnny Carson, it eventually became comforting to know that, even if you weren't always watching, Letterman would still be there every night to put you to bed. He was never the reassuring voice of conventional wisdom the way Carson was, though he was the first late-night comic to return to the airwaves after 9/11, and his remarkable monologue that night, when he acknowledged that he was no more able to make sense of the attack than anyone else was, proved surprisingly comforting and cathartic. And while he pretended not to be that Carson-esque voice (he kept saying, over the years, that he was just a dumb guy from Indiana, as if he'd just gotten off the bus in Times Square), his monologues did take on a sort of curmudgeonly, heartland common-sense irritation with the craziness of world events. He'd have thought that assessment of his persona was corny, but it was true.
1. The Attitude.
Dave is often credited with ushering in the age of irony, though he was less about irony than irreverence. His approach to comedy and to television was rooted in a deep skepticism, one whose response to rules, conventions, and authority (including the authorities who signed his paycheck) ranged from disrespect to outright mockery. As Letterman matured, he did find institutions and people who were worthy of respect, though he continued to direct his most merciless mockery at himself. In any case, that attitude became the defining mode of comedy on TV and in movies -- and, for a time, all of pop culture. (We Gen X-ers didn't trust anybody -- except maybe Dave himself). To the extent that that attitude lives on, both in the talk-show hosts who openly emulate Dave, and in the culture at large, that's one thing about Letterman we won't actually have to miss.

Top Ten Famous Last Words - David Letterman

Eddie Vedder: "Better Man" - David Letterman

Tom Hanks & David Letterman Use The Selfie Stick

David Letterman Works at Taco Bell

Bill Murray Pops Out of a Cake for David Letterman

Tina Fey's #LastDressEver - David Letterman Show

WatchMojo's Top 10 Most Memorable David Letterman Moments

23 Things That David Letterman Invented




1. THE SHORT, NON-TOPICAL MONOLOGUE
Carson Productions, as in Johnny Carson’s production company, co-produced Late Night with David Letterman, and as the upcoming lead-out programming for The Tonight Show, it was important to Carson’s people that Letterman not copy Carson. Letterman’s people were told that among other things, they couldn’t have a sidekick sitting next to the host like Ed McMahon, a band with horns like Doc Severinsen’s, or a monologue. Instead, Letterman opened the show standing in front of the audience and viewers at home with “opening remarks,” a monologue consisting of just one or two jokes with weird imagery, like tattoos melting in warm weather.
2. POST-INTERVIEW INTERVIEWS
On February 3, 1982—his third-ever broadcast—Late Night conducted two interviews with baseball hall-of-famer Hank Aaron: One was a standard talk show back-and-forth between host and guest. The other occurred after that conversation ended, where NBC Sports reporter Al Albert (son of Marv Albert) asked Aaron how he felt his last few minutes with Letterman went, with the idea that it was the equivalent of a post-game interview.
3. STUPID PET TRICKS
“Stupid Pet Tricks” began on David Letterman’s short-lived but Emmy-winning morning show, and was a consistently popular segment on both Late Night and The Late Show. The idea came from original head writer Merrill Markoe’s college nights of hanging out with friends, a few adult beverages, and putting socks on a dog.
4. WORLD’S LARGEST VASE CONTESTS
After questioning people who claimed to have the “world’s largest vase” over the phone in what New York Magazine estimated as a “longish” segment, the vase was brought into the studio and displayed on Late Night from May 30-June 2, 1983 (SCTV and Friday Night Videos usually aired during Late Night’s 12:30 a.m. time slot on Fridays until 1986). On its third night, a 35-inch radio transmitting tower was added to the case when it was discovered that it was shorter than one in Canada. On its final night of national exhibition, Letterman read alleged letters from children addressed to the Vase, and the vase “spoke” to wish for peace for mankind.
5. CATCHPHRASE CONTESTS
Two on-air catchphrase contests, which aired a little over a month apart in the summer of 1984, gave lucky studio audiences the power to make “They pelted us with rocks and garbage” the first rallying cry, before it was displaced by, "I do and do and do for you kids, and this is the thanks I get!"
6. A CAMERA FROM THE HOST'S P.O.V.
The February 15, 1982 installment of Late Night began with one continuous five minute and 17 second take through Letterman’s P.O.V. called “Dave Cam.” Cameos included that night’s guest Andy Rooney, Merrill Markoe, and Calvert DeForest, who played Larry “Bud” Melman on Late Night, as “Bert the Human Caboose.”
7. A CAMERA FROM THE GUEST’S P.O.V.
Letterman favorite Tom Hanks was the first wearer of the “Late Night Guest-Cam.” Hanks was on the show the night of December 12, 1985 to promote The Money Pit, which was initially supposed to debut the next day, but would be delayed until the following March. “The Late Night Sky-Cam” makes a cameo.
8. A CAMERA FROM A MONKEY’S P.O.V.
After a false start with a 30-year-old chimp named Bo who was too small to handle the camera, “Monkey Cam” got its start on March 19, 1986. Zippy, who was on the cover of The Ramones' Animal Boy album, would return on roller skates with the “Late Night Monkey Cam Mobile Unit.”
9. PURPOSELY FUNNY TOP 10 LISTS
The very first Top Ten—“The Top Ten Things That Almost Rhyme With Peas"—aired on September 18, 1985, set up as a satire of the random lists publications like Good Housekeeping were starting to produce at the time. Credit for who thought up the idea for Late Night is disputed; over the years, head writer Steve O’Donnell, former head writer and longtime SNL scribe Jim Downey, Late Night writer Randy Cohen, and producer Robert Morton have all gotten some or all of the credit. Top Ten made it to the end of Late Show’s run, even though the writers were already tiring of it by the February 6, 1986 show, which had the Top Ten list “Top Ten Reasons to Continue the Top Ten Lists Just a Little Longer.”
10. WEARING SUITS OF VELCRO, ALKA-SELTZER, MAGNETS, SPONGES, SUET, AND FOODS
On February 28, 1984, Letterman slipped into a “Suit of Velcro” and ushered in an era of strange outfits including a magnet get-up, which Letterman wore to attach himself to a huge GE fridge. Lowering himself into a 1,000-gallon tank of water, Letterman’s suit of Alka-Seltzer fizzed and vaporized. There were also suits of suet, marshmallows, chips, and Rice Krispies, the latter of which made David “snap, crackle, and pop” in a large tub of milk. An influence was Steve Allen, the original host of The Tonight Show, who threw himself into Jell-O vats on television. Allen’s “Man on the Street” interviews were also something Letterman took to new levels of absurdity.
11. HOSTING A SHOW ABOARD AN AIRPLANE
Late Night’s fourth anniversary was celebrated on board a flight from New York City to Miami.
12. AN EPISODE THAT ROTATES 360 DEGREES
Writers Randy Cohen and Kevin Curran came up with the unique way to celebrate the 800th episode of Late Night. NBC received “several hundred” phone calls about the December 9, 1986 show from viewers complaining that it was giving them headaches, dizziness, and nausea. Carson Productions executives were apparently not informed of the stunt beforehand and were “furious.”
13. FEUDING WITH BRYANT GUMBEL
After Letterman interrupted an August 19, 1985 broadcast of Today co-hosted by Bryant Gumbel, Gumbel called out the Late Night host for being “unprofessional” and didn’t publicly forgive him for four years. (Letterman claims it was a Today producer who invited him to pull the stunt.)
14. FEUDING WITH OPRAH WINFREY
In the 16 years between Oprah's 1989 appearance on Late Night and her December 1, 2005 Late Show interview, rumors swirled about a feud between Winfrey and Letterman. The reasons why—and even if—there was a “feud” at all are unclear.
15. CO-HOSTING AN EPISODE WITH A CORNY MORNING SHOW THEME
On February 27, 1985, Letterman shared hosting duties with “Tawny Harper Reynolds,” with guests Michael Palin, a Pet Psychic, and an exercise segment with Carol Channing.
16. AN HOUR-LONG PARODY OF 1970s PRIMETIME VARIETY SHOWS
“Dave Letterman's Summertime Sunshine Happy Hour” graced the NBC airwaves on the night of August 29, 1985. Early in his TV career, Letterman wrote and was a part of the cast of The Starland Vocal Band Show.
17. AN HOUR-LONG PARODY OF CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
December 19, 1984’s "Christmas With the Lettermans," featuring Pat Boone, won Late Night a 1985 Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Variety, Music or Comedy Program.
18. ‘CUSTOM-MADE’ SHOWS
On November 15, 1983, Late Night relinquished control of the show to the audience, giving them a choice on everything from the furniture to the theme song. On March 27, 1984’s version, the show opened with the theme to Bonanza, the announcer was the New York Lieutenant Governor, and Jane Pauley was interviewed in a dentist's chair.
19. DUBBING A RERUN FROM ENGLISH TO ENGLISH
When the February 17, 1986 episode re-aired on September 25th of that year, 250 confused viewers called the network. After 60 hours and four professional dubbers, everyone on the episode (Raquel Welch was the main guest) magically had different voices. Even Letterman's voice was dubbed (by Speed Racer's Peter Fernandez).
20. 4 A.M. SHOWS
May 14, 2004’s Late Show was taped at four in the morning, on purpose. Amy Sedaris, rat expert Robert Sullivan, and Modest Mouse were the guests. Letterman rode a horse, Sedaris gave an unsafe late night tour of her neighborhood, and Modest Mouse played in their pajamas.
21. DEDICATING MOST OF AN EPISODE TO A DECEASED COMEDIAN AND HIS FAMILY
Letterman invited Bill Hicks’ mother, Mary, to appear on the January 30, 2009 episode to apologize face-to-face for not airing Hicks’ controversial October 1, 1993 stand-up performance. In February of 1994, Hicks passed away from pancreatic cancer at 32 years old. After talking to Mary, Letterman finally presented Bill’s set.
22. DEDICATING AN ENTIRE EPISODE TO A COMEDY HERO
On the first new Late Show after Johnny Carson's passing, Letterman's monologue was filled with jokes that the retired Carson had anonymously submitted to David over the years. Long-time The Tonight Show executive producer Peter Lassally and bandleader Doc Severinsen were that night's only guests.
23. THE ‘WILL IT FLOAT?’ GAME
The first installment of “Will It Float?” was on February 6, 2002. A brick of Velveeta cheese sank. Dave got it right, whereas Paul got it wrong.

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Friday, May 15, 2015

The Mythical Show Ep 9 (Sourcefed, Frontier Wok & Goorgen)

B.B. King - The Thrill Is Gone ft. Tracy Chapman

10 Interesting Facts about B.B. King

Riley “B.B.” King has been called the “King of the Blues” and “Ambassador of the Blues.” He is arguably the genre’s most recognizable and influential artist. He has been one of the hardest working musicians of all time and has consistently logged between 200-300 shows a year, even well into his seventies.

Here are some interesting facts about B.B. King:
1. His real name is Riley B. King. (bbking.com)
2. King was born to a family of poor sharecroppers on a plantation near the small town of Itta Bena in the Mississippi Delta. (Academy of Achievement)
3. King is a licensed pilot. (bbking.com)
4. King has earned 15 Grammy awards, has been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, and has received a lifetime achievement award due to his contributions in music. (CNN)
5. In 1956, King and his band played 342 shows. (bbking.com)
6. After a fire broke out at a dance club in Arkansas, King ran out of the building forgetting his guitar. He went back in to go get it. He later found out that two men fighting over a woman named Lucille had knocked over a kerosene heater that started the fire, he named the guitar Lucille, “to remind myself never to do anything that foolish.” (CNN)
7. He claims to have fathered over 15 children with many different women. (CNN)
8. King served in World War 2. (Bio)
9. King was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. (Bio)
 10. As a young musician, King studied recordings by both blues and jazz guitarists, including T-Bone Walker, Charlie Christian, and Django Reinhardt. (RollingStone)

B.B. King ft. Eric Clapton | Riding With The King

B.B. King's 10 Greatest Songs




1. "Three O'Clock Blues" (1951)
It wasn't B.B. King's first single — more like his ninth — but this cover version of Lowell Fulson's "Three O'Clock Blues" that King released in 1951 became his first and biggest hit, topping the R&B charts for five weeks. As crudely recorded as it is (King's singing and guitar are far louder than everything else), "Three O'Clock Blues" set the template for his career, with the rich, urbane tone of his voice answered after nearly every phrase by a cruelly prickly comment from his guitar, and an arrangement that's a bit fancier than the backwoods-shack country blues it suggests. There's even a horn section.
2. "You Upset Me Baby" (1954)
King's fourth Number One R&B hit lurches into gear with a six-note horn fanfare that drops out to make way for a distinctively looping guitar introduction. Subsequent live versions would streamline this King original into a brisk workout, but the studio version's unrushed lope suits King's awestruck profession of good-natured lust made with offhanded charm. And his casual boast about the object of his desire's measurements — 36-28-44 — attests to the timeless pop-song appeal of big butts.
3. "Every Day I Have the Blues" (1955)
King's rendition may have been outsold by the rival version recorded that same year by Joe Williams and the Count Basie Orchestra, but by opening his live shows with "Every Day I Have the Blues" well into the Seventies, King became the bluesman with whom the malleable blues standard is most identified to this day. He credited his success with the tune, which originated with the Sparks brothers in the Thirties and achieved its modern form (if not its title) in 1949 with Memphis Slim's "Nobody Loves Me," to the "crisp and relaxed" horn charts of arranger Maxwell Davis.
4. "Sweet Sixteen" (1960)
After he began favoring softer pop ballads in the late Fifties in an attempt to broaden his audience, King's career as an R&B hitmaker stalled — not one of his singles charted in 1959. But he got back to what he did best with "Sweet Sixteen," a Big Joe Turner number that King stripped of its punchy brass. King echoes each vocal plaint here with a terse guitar commentary, verse after verse building slowly to a fierce simmer that's all the more powerful because it never boils over into catharsis.
5. "Don't Answer the Door" (1966)
By the mid-Sixties, King had arrived at his mature guitar style, characterized by bursts of sharp, precise phrases subtly inflected with the left-hand vibrato that you can hear showcased on this particularly moody hit. As an organ broods in the background, shifting from one chord to the next like tectonic plates, King howls insistently that his woman stay locked up in their home throughout the day, away from her family. He never reveals the source of his lyrics' possessive fury.
6. "Why I Sing the Blues" (1969)
The climax of King's 1969 album Live & Well — recorded with a studio band including Al Kooper on piano — is an understated but furious catalogue of the indignities of Black American history, from the Middle Passage to urban poverty, with an extra verse in which King (then in his early forties) laments how old he's getting. It's also got a more contemporary groove than many of his singles at the time: His old label, Kent Records, which he'd left in 1962, continued to score hits with their stockpile of his recordings as late as 1971.
7. "The Thrill Is Gone" (1970)
King's biggest pop hit drastically reworked Roy Hawkins' 1951 original recording, edging the plaint of a wronged man past heartbroken rage toward a vengeful chill. As produced by Bill Szymczyk, who would soon work with the Eagles on their biggest Seventies records, the groove is sleek and controlled and the strings restrained enough to add drama and tension, as well as a low-end melodic counterpoint. King's guitar work is at its most wide-ranging — he pinches notes with an icy dismissive precision, then expands lyrically into subtle variations on the vocal melody.
8. "Chains and Things" (1970)
After the success of "The Thrill Is Gone," King started experimenting more frequently with pop- and rock-inspired arrangements. The most successful of the six singles released from 1970's crossover hit Indianola Mississipi Seeds is a slow, regretful song whose most distinctive bluer-than-blue phrase came from a mistake. King, he later explained, "hit the wrong note and worked my way out of it. . .We got the arranger to have the strings follow it." The haunting electric piano riff that underscores the song is played by none other than Carole King.
9. "To Know You Is to Love You" (1973)
Stevie Wonder and Syreeta Wright co-wrote the slow-building, eight-and-a-half-minute title track of King's 1973 album, on which he was backed up by the Philadelphia-based studio musicians — including drummer Earl Young and guitarist Norman Harris — who were beginning to create the sound of disco. The bubbling funk that resulted was far from the straight-ahead blues King was (mostly) still playing on stage, but it stretched his art much further in the direction that "The Thrill Is Gone" had opened up, and even got him onto Soul Train.
10. "Never Make a Move Too Soon" (1978)
Jazz-fusion band the Crusaders backed King up for his 1978 album Midnight Believer. Adapted from an instrumental that the Crusaders had recorded years earlier as "Greasy Spoon," "Never Make a Move Too Soon" was modernized with a sly, precise lyric about relationship strategies and a souped-up, party-time arrangement that recalls Marvin Gaye's "Got to Give It Up." It became a Top 20 R&B hit and a bit of a standard, covered by everyone from Bonnie Raitt to Toni Tennille. King later re-recorded it as a duet with Roger Daltrey.

B.B. King - Live in Dallas (1983) - Full Concert

B.B. King & Robert Downey Jr in Heart and Souls

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Thursday, May 14, 2015

The Best Slow Motion Bouncing Boobs Compilation

Slow motion sneeze

Massive Lightning Strikes in HD Slow Motion

Cats vs Dogs in slow motion - Slo Mo #5 - Earth Unplugged

Tiger Woods Driver Swing Slow Motion

Slow motion bouncing boobs

GMM'S Spotting a Fake Laugh (Slo-Mo Experiment)

Top 10 funny things in slow motion

1. Things in slow motion
There are so many things appear around us that can be so funny in slow motion video. We all are aware of balloon burst, it can be so funny in slow motion. There are so many things can be captured in camera and changed into slow motion. Breaking of things is called dynamic braking and you can see the things how they are breaking even better in any slow motion video. Balloon burst can give pretty much fun when it is seen in slow motion. You can try both the things with a balloon with water and without water. It’s the best fun thing to try with slow motion video creation. The things are easily understood in any slow motion video. A bullet shooting by gun in slow motion video can be amazing in the aspect of understanding how released bullet and the gun reacts. We will easily come to know how gun react with our body and how the low of Newton get proved here that every action has equal and opposite reaction. People thing the slow motion video can only be done by camera but that is not a true fact, there are so many video editing tools are available like iSkysoft Video Editor for Mac that can create amazing piece of work in slow motion. Exploring things for the kids can be so amazing for them, so exploring thing with slow it down can fascinate them that how the things are going around them. You can easily explore the things for them that they can understand and the best thing you try for their science practice.
2. Slow motion cat drinking 

Have you ever tried slow motion cat drinking. That mentioned before that a simple thing can be very amazing in slow motion, for the same a cat drinking seems like the simplest thing in the world. Record this activity with your camera and slow it down with the video editing software. You will be amazed with the thing that what she actually does when they drink water or milk.
3. Slow motion dog drinking 

Dog drinks with the same phenomenon which cat do. It can be very fascinating and incredibly amazing for you if you do with your pet dog. Shoot a video with your lovely dog and edit in slow motion with iSkysoft Video Editor for Mac (available for windows as well) and upload on your status. Best thing which any slow motion video creates is that, it reveals so many secret things from which we are not much known.
4. Tiger Woods slow motion swing 

Have you ever seen Tiger woods’ when he is playing Golf, the answer would be yes. Few are the Tiger Woods’s fan. He is an incredible player and exploring the things about him can be a shugal for few people. Why don’t you try Tiger Woods slow motion swing? What if you see how he exactly plays and what is his move? It would be quite amazing and fascinating. Also people who love golfing can improve their game through a variety of slow motion videos of their favorite golfer. You can try your own with any other sport you love a lot to play and player’s special shot. Slow motion videos are the great thing for sports activity. It can give a great learning platform. Download few videos of your favorite player who is your ideal, slow them down with iSkysoft Video Editor learn their secret of the playing method.
5. Slow motion bouncing boobs


Watch slow motion bouncing boobs or and get a hilarious video in slow motion.
6. Slow motion sneeze 

There are few other amazing things can happen to with the simple human behavior like cough and sneezing. Need to know how exactly we react on this sudden phenomenon. Sneezing can be quite fun with any slow motion video. You will some interesting video for the slow motion sneezing even better this video is used for making awareness among people regarding to the health concerns. You can try slow motion video with other human phenomenon and truly it can be so much fun.
7. Slow motion fart
Fart seems odd but it very funny for others, what if you try a slow motion video? yes It can be really very funny.

8. Slow motion baby laugh 

Have you ever tried creepy slow motion video on baby laugh video? Baby laugh can make any one a laugh or even make them to get a smile on their face but when you will try out slow motion it can be quite creepy but amazing. It can be the gift for the little one as the gift of his birthday for the future; yes it can be very amazing for them to try for their birthday. Here I have a video that can make you laugh for next few second for sure.

9 Slow motion lightning
There are so many bizarre phenomenons happening in our everyday life and one of them is lightening. Lightening is one of them that even fascinate the world by its amazing process. A simple video can blow your mind for each and every time you see them even in the rain. Shoot your own lightening video and slow them down and just amaze the people around by that. Check out the amazing few pulses of light one after another here It will completely blow your mind away: There are also few other bizarre and terrifying things are present in the world like tornado and other. Don’t go to capture, you will find the one on internet just go through and download it, after that create your own slow motion video with iSkysoft Video Editor for Mac (available for windows as well). It’s a very easy process to go with this software. Each and every facility is available to create amazing video. This software is also available in both Free and paid version same as any other software available on the Internet with two version of itself. The Free version can be tried first and has enough editing tool that can create a slow motion video.
10. Slow motion golf swing 

Most people wanted to know how their favorite player plays; few people need to analyze how they exactly play the swing. iSkysoft Video Editor provide the ability of slow down the captured video. It can provide lots of thing to explore of any golf swing from your favorite golfer. Here’s a slow motion video Luke Donald, watch his golf swing and you will learn a lot. You will be find few video of your favorite player, edit them, slow it down and lean from that how your favorite golfer swing the golf.

Rhett & Link's SLOW MO CHEESE HOSE (and How To)

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GMM'S The Slowest Animals on Earth

Color Me Badd - Slow Motion

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Wednesday, May 13, 2015

WatchMojo's Top 10 Saddest Animal Deaths in Movies

Katy Perry - Roar

WatchMojo's Top 10 Live-Action Animal Buddy Movies

Survivor - Eye Of The Tiger

WatchMojo's Top 10 Horror Movie Animals

10 Amazing New Discoveries About Animals




10. Limb Regeneration
The ability to fly, super speed, super strength… these are just some of the superpowers every kid (and most adults) wishes they have. But how about the ability to regenerate limbs? This power has long been observed in amphibians like salamanders and newts, and scientists have been trying to find ways to pass this amazing ability to humans. Researchers from London discovered that a chain of proteins called the ERK pathway plays a vital role in the regeneration of a salamander’s limb. Unfortunately, this chain of protein isn’t fully active in mice (and therefore humans), but it could be activated with force to increase the chance of acquiring a regenerative ability. Even though we’re still very far from human limb regeneration, this is great news for people who want to be Wolverine and even greater news for cannibals.
9. Baboon Hierarchy
In most cases, dominance hierarchy is commonly observed in males. But female baboons have been observed to be ranked in their society according to how highly ranked their mothers are. This means that a female baboon’s status is predetermined before she’s even born, and a higher-ranked mother means a better life. This was determined by a team of researchers who studied nine social groups of yellow baboons over a period of 33 years. They found that higher ranked baboons tend to bully those of the lower class to show them who gets food first. Having more sisters could boost a female baboon’s ranking because they tend to team up against other baboons, and even against their sisters from another mother. Like most hierarchies, the older a sister is the higher her rank in the family, and she is in no way willing to give up this position to her younger siblings. Males, meanwhile, bear very little influence on the social ranking of a female baboon because they mate with multiple females.
8. Dolphin Origins
A new study suggests that dolphins might have existed six million years earlier than previously thought, and they might have originated from the Pacific Ocean. The family of Delphinidae is the most diverse among living marine mammals, and the lack of good fossil specimens has raised many questions about their evolution and fossil record. But a further study of the oldest dolphin fossil discovered in Japan back in 1977 has solved some of these questions. The species, renamed Eodelphis kabatensis, was discovered from sediments in a river and is believed to have existed about 13 to 8.5 million years ago. The study of the skull provides an important link to the evolutionary history of dolphins. Prior to the study, there was a huge discrepancy as to the age of the oldest dolphin found — fossil records suggest it to be less than six million years old, while molecular studies suggest they started to diversify about nine to 12 million years ago. The new study not only solved this discrepancy, but also provided implications as to the geographic history of dolphins.
7. Fish Aren’t So Dumb After All
We tend to think of fish, particularly goldfish, as unintelligent. There’s a common myth that goldfish only have a memory span of about three seconds, making every day in their bowl an exciting new adventure. Well, some fish have been observed using tools, which is a standard sign of intelligence. As for the memory myth, a study conducted in Australia could finally put it to rest. The study found that fish actually have a fairly long memory span. They trained fish to remember the location of food and other objects, and fish in a community that cooperate with one another can recall a particularly uncooperative fish and will no longer work with that fish on future fish activities. There’s a reason fish are always in schools.
6. Colorful World?
Mantis shrimp are colorful crustaceans that live on reefs and are known for claws that are so fast and strong it puts some professional boxers to shame. They also have eyes that can move independently of each other, and researchers found that these eyes might be seeing a more spectacular rainbow than us. Their eyes have 12 color receptors, much more than the three found on humans that are used to differentiate between the hues of red, green and blue. Some animals are lucky enough to get an extra receptor for UV light, so at first it appeared as though mantis shrimp won the eye lottery to get an additional nine. But they’re actually not that lucky. After researchers did a little experiment, they found that instead of having a more colorful and detailed view, the shrimp are actually not seeing colors in as much detail as other animals. Humans can see the difference between colors shades about five nanometers apart, while mantis shrimps can only differentiate those 25 nanometers apart, the difference between orange and yellow. Humans see color by comparing the outputs between the red, green and blue receptors, while scientists believe the reason for the mantis’ bland vision is that they use all 12 receptors at once and pass the entire output to the brain without processing the information. Sometimes less is more.
5. 360 Degree Vision
Speaking of eyes, what evolution has done to the Glasshead barreleye is quite amazing. The barreleye is a deep sea fish living at a depth of about one kilometer. Since very little light reaches this depth, the fish had to develop something to help it adapt to the darkness. Most deep sea creatures have developed bio-luminescence, but the barreleye developed a reflector eye, something usually found in mollusks. Its main eyes are pointed upwards and the light from above hits the retina to help it see predators, prey and even potential mates. Then a secondary lens is hit by bio-luminescence to be focused on another set of retinas that helps it see to the side and below, giving it a mirror-like 360 degree field of vision. This is a huge advantage when you’re looking to eat or avoid being eaten.
4. Birds Adapt to Radiation
The infamous Chernobyl disaster was the worst nuclear accident in history, with hundreds of thousands of people exposed to potentially deadly radiation. However some birds from the area were found to have actually adapted to the radiation. Researchers found that birds living in areas with high levels of radiation have more glutathione in their blood, which is an antioxidant that helps get rid of highly reactive and damaging molecules created when exposed to radiation. Animals and humans have been seen to adapt to low levels of radiation when exposed for some time, but the birds in Chernobyl were the first to be seen adapting to radiation in the wild. The study also found that as the amount of radiation increases, the level of antioxidants likewise increases, while damage to DNA decreases.
3. Smoking Seals
A new study found that carbon monoxide, the same gas that poisons chain smokers, is found at a surprisingly high level in the blood of elephant seals. But instead of acting as a poison, the odorless gas appears to helping the seals with their diving. Researchers believe that the high level of gas has something to do with deep diving. Because seals can dive as deep as 1.5 kilometers they tend to hold their breath for a very long time, which restricts blood flow between tissues. And since injuries are known to occur once the restricted blood flows back to the tissues, the researchers hypothesized that the gas protects the elephant seals from injury. Don’t start feeding them cigarettes, though.
2. Little Architects
Israeli scientists found that a scorpion’s burrow isn’t just a simple hole, but rather was built with a design that meets their physiological needs. Scorpions rely on external sources to regulate their temperature, and the researchers found that each burrow begins with a short, vertical entrance that leads to a warm horizontal platform where they regulate their temperature before going for a night hunt. The platform then leads downwards to a cool chamber, which is where they stay and rest during hot days. Studying the relationship between a burrow’s structure and environment conditions could help determine how these architects will respond to climate change.
1. Fighter Jet Flies 

You know that feeling when you try to swat a fly and it easily evades you, then immediately comes back to continue its harassment, probably while saying “Ha! You missed me!” Just how can these dumb little bugs avoid our attacks so easily? With the help of three high-speed cameras that can take up to 7500 shots per second, researchers recorded the incredible flight behavior of a common fruit fly species. They found that when a fruit fly is threatened it can change its course faster than the blink of an eye. The flies will then accelerate away from the threat, or perhaps return to tease you, and it’s all done at a ridiculously fast pace. How they’re able to detect and avoid a threat so quickly is still unknown, but perhaps their tiny brains aren’t just for simple decision making.

WatchMojo's Top 10 Animal Heroes in Video Games

Elvis Presley - Tiger Man (68 Comeback)

GMM'S Best Animal Ever

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts - Bad Reputation

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts - Crimson & Clover

Joan Jett, The Blackhearts - I Hate Myself for Loving You

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts - Do You Wanna Touch Me

WatchMojo's Top 10 Female Guitarists of All Time

Paul McCartney & Bruce Springsteen - I Saw Her Standing There & Twist And Shout

Top 10 Famous Penises

10. Milton Berle
Emmy-winning comedian and actor
Milton Berle was notorious within show business for the rumored extremely large size of his penis. Phil Silvers once told a story about standing next to Berle at a urinal, glancing down, and quipping, “You’d better feed that thing, or it’s liable to turn on you!” At a memorial service for Milton Berle at the New York Friars’ Club, Freddie Roman solemnly announced, “On May 1st and May 2nd, his penis will be buried.”
9. Little Donnie
Child with an extraordinary penis in a comedy skit
Little Donny was a character in a comedy sketch from the comedic troupe, The Upright Citizen’s Brigade, starring Amy Pohler. In the skit Donny was said to be suffering from magnimus-obliviophallocytis which caused him to have a large penis at a young age. Through digital blurring, the tv show was able to give a vague, blurred outline of his member as it flopped around with a life of its own – hilarious and disturbing to watch. Quite similar to a car wreck that you just can’t look away from. Amy Poehler got her big break here.


8. Minister from Little Mermaid
Animated character performing wedding ceremonype


During the wedding scene in The Little Mermaid it has been reported that the Minister is a little overexcited about the nuptials and you can see an erection under his robes. It has been dismissed as only being his knee. I can see both sides of the argument, but even so, it “stands up” as a male member of recognition.
7. Bart Simpson
10 year-old animated character

In probably the most unlikely nude scene since Kathy Bates in About Schmidt, Bart Simpson exposed his taliwacker in The Simpsons Movie. It was the first time such an exposure in a movie was not given an “R” rating. His yellow twig and berries made a brief but audacious appearance.
6. Dirk Diggler
Porn star from Boogie Nights fame

The movie Boogie Nights features Dirk Diggler a dimwitted high school dropout with a 13-inch penis who is recruited into the porn industry. While this movie focuses on Dirk’s life within the porn industry it waits strategically until the very end to show the “goods”. The famous scene in which Dirk Diggler reveals his huge, flaccid member has drawn questions from the star Mark Wahlberg. Suffice to say, it is not his natural body part, but a prosthetic penis.
5. Joey Stivic Doll
Anatomically correct doll, the first
Joey Stivic is a fictional character who first appeared on All in the Family. Joey Stivic was the son and only child of Mike Stivic (played by Rob Reiner) and Gloria Bunker Stivic (played by Sally Struthers). The character first appeared, as a newborn baby, in a two-part episode of All in the Family airing in December 1975. Such was the popularity of All in the Family that in 1976 the Ideal Toy Company released a 14-inch “Joey Stivic doll” (called “Archie Bunker’s Grandson”) which was billed as the “first anatomically correct male doll.” The doll inspired mild controversy at the time, and is a collectors’ item today.
4. Wilt Chamberlain
Basketballs Superstar
Wilt’s nickname, “Wilt the Stilt” was aptly given to the Hall of Fame basketball player. If there existed a Hall of Fame promiscuity he would have surely been inducted on his first try. Wilt traveled the globe while playing basketball which put him and his member in contact with thousands of women. In fact, the lifelong bachelor claimed he had sex with 20,000 women. For this to be true, he would have had to had sex with 1.14 women per day from the age of 15 up until the day of his death, a rate of almost eight women a week. I won’t even mention his basketballs.
3. John Holmes
Porn Actor
John Holmes or Johnny Wadd (after the lead character in a series of related films), was one of the most famous male adult film stars of all time, appearing in about 2,500 adult movies in the 1970s and 1980s. He was best known for his exceptionally large penis, which was heavily promoted as being the longest in the porn industry. Although claims have been made that his was actually between 10 – 14 inches, his ex-wives both stated he measured 10 inches. While not the gargantuan 16 inches some reported, he reputation puts him solidly at #3 on this list.
2. David
Large stone statue

Considered one of the greatest, if not the greatest works of sculpture, Michelangelo’s David is regarded as a symbol both of strength and youthful human beauty, including a clear view of the figure’s penis. There was controversy over the statue’s supposed Biblical reference, since the statue seemed to portray an uncircumcised male, whereas the historical King David was undoubtedly circumcised. It was also suggested that this was a conscious decision in Michelangelo’s effort to emulate the ancient Greek aesthetic ideal, which regarded the circumcised body part as mutilated. While conservative groups have sought to categorize the statue’s brazenness with soft pornography the statue is still held as a great work of art, pubic hair and all.
1. John Wayne Bobbit
Less than stellar husband
ohn Wayne Bobbitt and Lorena Bobbitt made Mr. Bobbit’s male member the most famous one on the planet in 1993 during an incident in which Lorena severed John’s member with a kitchen knife. John arrived home intoxicated and, according to testimony by Lorena, raped his wife. (Note: He was tried and acquitted for this alleged spousal rape in 1994) Afterward, Lorena went to the kitchen for a drink of water and saw a knife on the counter. She grabbed the knife and entered the bedroom where John was asleep; and she proceeded to cut off almost half of his penis. After assaulting her husband, Lorena left the apartment, with the severed body part. After driving a short while, she rolled down the car window and threw it out into a field. Realizing the severity of the incident, she stopped and called 911. The body part was located, packed in ice, and brought to the hospital where it was re-attached by doctors during a nine and a half hour surgery.

The Beatles - Ticket to Ride (Live at Wembley Stadium 1965)

GMM'S Screwed Over on Craigslist

Vertigo World's Quote of the Day


Friday, May 8, 2015

The Top 20 TV Moms of All Time

20. Jane Kaczmarek — Lois on ‘Malcolm in the Middle’ 

 Hot headed, stubborn and a little offbeat, Lois is the mother to Francis, Reese, Malcolm, and Dewey. Her sons see her as a somewhat tyrannical figure, and a crazed control freak, but that personality has given audiences plenty of laughs. Her reasoning for acting that way? She wants to see them succeed.


19. Carolyn Jones — Morticia Addams on ‘The Addams Family’
 Morticia Addams was of course creepy and spooky, mysterious and kooky…but she wanted nothing but the best for her children. She wore nothing but black, spoke French to drive her husband crazy with desire and kept the audience entertained with her unusual tactics.


18. Catherine Hicks - Annie Camden on "Seventh Heaven" 
Now here's something you don't see on TV everyday, a woman who turns to God instead of her girlfriends when she's got a problem. Annie Camden raised seven kids and then some and she handled every crisis with the patience of a saint. A woman of faith raising seven kids and then some. Talk about the patience of a saint.
17. Lauren Graham — Lorelai Gilmore on ‘Gilmore Girls’ 
 Lorelai Gilmore is a devoted mother. She is daughter Rory’s best friend and comrade. However, Lorelai is her own mother’s worst nightmare, getting pregnant at a young age and stealing off to raise her daughter on her own. Lorelai would do anything for Rory, even visit her parents for “Friday night dinners,” so Rory could attend a prestigous private school.




16. Yvonne De Carlo - Lily Munster on "The Munsters" 
Her race is a Vampire. She is known as, Lily, Aunt Lily Mrs. Munster & of course Mom!! She is often scolding Herman for his deeds and snaps quickly at him. But she still loves Herman all the same. She is a vampire by looks but not of nature as she is very kind at heart. She is a favorite among many because she was always so understanding and still had her house in control.
15. Debra Jo Rupp — Kitty Forman on ‘That 70s Show’ 
 Her laugh being her most memorable trait, Kitty Forman loves to bake, cook, do the laundry, clean…but most of all, she loves looking after her children, Eric and Lorie. She even loves having Eric’s friends over, often times smothering them with unconditional love as well. 


14. Estelle Getty — Sophia Petrillo on ‘The Golden Girls’ 
One of the funniest characters of all time, Sophia Petrillo is best known for her wisecracks and put-downs. However, despite her sharp criticism of her daughter, Dorothy, and roommates, Rose and Blanche, she loves and cares for them all deeply.
13. Estelle Harris — Estelle Costanza on ‘Seinfeld’
 Estelle Costanza brought upon endless amounts of laughter with her snide remarks and constant negative bantering. Her persistence in always putting her son, George, down and complaining about everything he did has earned her a top spot on our list.


12. Marion Ross — Marion Cunningham on ‘Happy Days’ 
 Marion Cunningham and her husband Howard are the definition of the classic 1950’s couple. She gave up her secretarial job in order to become a stay-at-home mother and take her of her children, Richie and Joanie. She also acted like a pseudo mom to “Arthur.”


11. Shirley Jones as Shirley Partridge on "The Partridge Family"
 Like many parents, Shirley Partridge saw her family slipping away from her. She was a single mom, struggling to make ends meet and there was hardly ever any time left to share with her five kids. Solution? Join their musical group, what else? Cause nothings better than being together....when we're singing... The family that sings together...

10. Katey Sagal — Peggy Bundy on ‘Married With Children’ 
You can hear the clunking of her heels just by saying her name. Peggy Bundy is not much of a doting mother. In fact, she would much rather sit in front of the television and watch daytime talk shows, go shopping - for herself of course, as opposed to cook, clean or work. But somehow Peggy has stolen our hearts and given us constant humor.
9. Elizabeth Montgomery as Samantha Stephens on "Bewitched"
 It's hard to be a normal suburban housewife when Tabitha, your daughter who can make ponies appear out of thin air, but Samantha had plenty of practice at keeping magic under wraps even before little Tabitha graced the scene.

8. Sally Field — Nora Walker on ‘Brothers and Sisters’ 
The epitome of overbearing, Nora Walker cannot help but meddle into her children’s life, but at least it is all out of love. She cannot stand the thought of leaving her children to fend for themselves - even though they are all adults, and mostly married. She cares, probably a little too much, for all those who enter her life.
7. Julie Kavner — Marge Simpson on ‘The Simpsons’
 The most well-known animated mother of all time, with her scratchy voice and big hair, Marge Simpson is loving, thoughtful, and most of all, patient with all members of the Simpson family. She instills morals, and provides a grounding voice in the midst of her family’s antics; landing her a spot on our Top TV Moms list.

6. Meredith Baxter — Elyse Keaton on ‘Family Ties’ 
 Elyse Keaton is the definition of a “cool” Mom. With her new agey, former hippie lifestyle, she always tried her best to bond with her kids. Elyse had the capability of showing how to love your children even under the most challenging circumstances.

5. Phylicia Rashad — Clair Huxtable on ‘The Cosby Show’ 
Loving, warm, strong and witty, Clair Huxtable is often the caring disciplinarian for her children. Her role as a pioneering, family-balancing professional was a positive one in a sea of dysfunctional TV families. She was a strong working mother, yet fair and loving with her children.
4. Barbara Billingsley — June Cleaver on ‘Leave it to Beaver’ 
A typical trophy wife, June Cleaver enjoys needlepoint, cake decorating and arranging tea roses. While her youngest son, “Beaver” has a hard time staying out of trouble, June is still nurturing, and tries her best to support her son through all of his ordeals.
3. Doris Roberts — Marie Barone on ‘Everybody Loves Raymond’ 
 Sarcastic, passive-aggressive and judgmental, Marie Barone has one difficult personality to put up with. Her tell-it-like it is comments and “not done raising her son” attitude makes it unbearable for others to be around her, even her son Ray cannot stand it. Her criticism brought laughter into American homes throughout the years.

2. Florence Henderson — Carol Brady on ‘The Brady Bunch’ 
 And finally, Carol Brady, our number one TV mom; the typical story of two parents with children from different marriages, get together and form one big, happy family. Though she chose to be a stay-at-home mother, she did much more - she was a freelance writer, a sculptor, she organized school events and worked with the PTA; she was a warm and caring mother who loved all of her six children. 

1. Donna Reed - Donna Stone - "The Donna Reed Show" 
The mother of all moms. Baking cookies while wearing high heels and pearls, she was every man's dream wife. One of television's first moms, the titan of early television's trail is still blazing by those TV moms mentioned earlier and those still to come. Donna Stone is a relic of another era, but her unmatched maternal love is something she shares with mothers all over the world.