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Sunday, March 8, 2026

Random Rerun: MacArthur vs the Flying Saucers

Hello folks.  No new audio this week.  Things are still pretty disrupted around here, and the creative sunshine didn't make it to the petri dish.  So here's a plug for Bandcamp- three(?) volumes of Cutupsound, listening is free.  This week's offering:

Play (4:44)

Perhaps a fitting finale, for our efforts here.  Hope not.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Rommel Uber Dubbing

 Hooray, weekly posts again!  We were caught off-guard by the recent disaster. so I moved our monthly non-audio post to the first Sunday (because it's quicker to write).  

This week we look at the phenomenon of double-translation: the 2012 film Rommel, translated from German into Spanish, then re-translated by a computer into English.  Join us, won't you?








(Double-translations seem to be a promising source of Dada cutups.  Definitely want to keep exploring this...)

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Still kicking

Three weeks without a post.  The internet router blew out and no one besides myself was interested in fixing it (including the ISP).  My apologies to everyone who thought they could reliably find strange and original audio here.  I'm not stopping until they pry the keyboard from my stiff, dead fingers.  But I can't guarantee it will happen.  Just like I can't guarantee I'll wake up alive every morning.  

So, with that jolly thought, let's get back to it.  Come by next Sunday and I'll post something, if I can.  


Sunday, February 1, 2026

William S Burroughs birthday

 
This year's piece is a setting for excerpts from Roosevelt After Inauguration, (a reading which is considerably excerpted by the author) with other pieces collected from Ubuweb.  
 
 
 
 
 

Sunday, January 25, 2026

The Elmer Davis News

This is an example of more or less "by rote" cut and paste, conducted on an WW2-era radio broadcast.  A five-minute commentary was chopped up into beginnings of sentences, ends, and neither beginning nor end.  The pieces were re-connected in random order, according to a "beginning-middle-end" arrangement.  (A couple minutes of content was lost because one of the sections ran out of pieces, which stopped the matching process.)  Minimal editing.
 
William S Burroughs did a lot of cutup like this, except with newspapers and scissors.  We'll be doing something for his birthday next week,  so this seemed at least like a kind of warm up.
 
 
Edit, 01.27: Elmer Davis V2, now with soothing white noise (3:18)
 
 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

"Watch out for that cashy soap arop!": Examples of Doubletalk



The professional voice-people who were drawn to Radio in its early days (ten years before the Talkies)  took a lot of pride in their elocution.  
 
And the demands of the new medium were for perfection.  Little wonder, then, that silliness, the antidote to too much control, quickly sprang up in the form of Bad Announcing.  

Bloopers are part of this kind of fun.  So is doubletalk: obliterating meaning with a string of word-like noises.  Which is not exactly the same as babbling. 

Doubletalk started appearing in movies and cartoons in the late nineteen-thirties. Jackie Gleason in All Through the Night, 1941:
 
 "I said the karastan on the tagabue is a very serious problem- to say nothing of the lara sang fay!"

Good doubletalk should contain articulated word-like sounds, if not actual words.  This is more difficult than muttering gutterals, like Fred Flintstone cursing-- it needs to sound coherent, while remaining gibberish.  
 
That's probably why another rule is, mix it with actual words.  The listener should be kept wondering as long as possible, is this person unintelligible or actually scrambled, in an almost Dada kind of way.  The illusion of veracity counts a lot with language, whether it's understandable or not.
 
I've assembled a few examples.   
 
The first is from a 1941 Jack Benny radio program.  Notice how Lefty weaves normal words with word-like sounds.
 
 
"Fightin' a guy inside a faucet."  You have to wonder where that came from.  Maybe this dialog is developed from some kind of Deliberate Misperception method (as used in James Thurber's "The Day the Dam Broke", "The Admiral on the Bicycle" and others), where the mis-heard phrase is fed back as dialog, unaltered. 
 
Our next example is from the cartoon,  "Fifth-Column Mouse"  (1943):



I should probably mention, the words here are no more than my attempt to cast coherence over the whole thing.  Who knows if they even had a script?  
 
Although it seems pretty necessary; in a way, it's following the same cognitive mechanics as Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky, which hijacks the usual verb-adjective-noun structures of language to make what sense it can.  There's enough real words in there to mean...something.  If you can pull them out.  
 
It's no coincidence that most of our examples are from Warner Brothers cartoons.  This is a radio phenomenon, and Warners was closer to Radio than any other studio.  All their voice people worked in it, and the cartoons were an incessant source of catch-phrases and general show-biz lingo, as in our next example, "The Penguin Parade" (1938).
 


 
So then, they bring him back for more announcing.
 

Here's my theory: all three of these examples- the Fighter, the Mouse, and the Penguin- are done by one man.  No idea who.  I think it was this one guy in radio, who had the routine all worked out- compiling them from more coherent phrases, and writing these things.  And going on the radio with them.    
 
There might be at least one more cartoon with the same character.  The most obvious way forward would be an examination of Tex Avery's 1930s output at Warners.  Maybe more to say on this later.  

Monday, January 12, 2026

Building Code has 4 new artifacts

  
Our "Building Code Under Fire" collection has picked up four additions.  You can find it here, or through the link to the lower right.