About: Show and Yell   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : dbkwik.org associated with source dataset(s)

The children hear someone else greeting them. The voice appears to come from the waiting area, where the passenger is calmly reading a book. The man glances at the children, smiles, and takes a ventriloquist dummy out of one of his suitcases. A second voice is heard coming from the man’s other suitcase, which turns out to be a second ventriloquist dummy. One dummy introduces himself as Lazlo, and the other Eugene. Stacy then takes a phone call from the train dispatcher, and informs the ventriloquist that his train will be late. This doesn’t bother him at all, and he asks Matt and Tanya if they will watch his luggage while he runs an errand.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Show and Yell
rdfs:comment
  • The children hear someone else greeting them. The voice appears to come from the waiting area, where the passenger is calmly reading a book. The man glances at the children, smiles, and takes a ventriloquist dummy out of one of his suitcases. A second voice is heard coming from the man’s other suitcase, which turns out to be a second ventriloquist dummy. One dummy introduces himself as Lazlo, and the other Eugene. Stacy then takes a phone call from the train dispatcher, and informs the ventriloquist that his train will be late. This doesn’t bother him at all, and he asks Matt and Tanya if they will watch his luggage while he runs an errand.
dcterms:subject
Previous Episode
Next Episode
Producer
dbkwik:shiningtime...iPageUsesTemplate
Air Date
  • 1989-02-26(xsd:date)
Episode Name
  • Show and Yell
Conductor
Writer
Director
abstract
  • The children hear someone else greeting them. The voice appears to come from the waiting area, where the passenger is calmly reading a book. The man glances at the children, smiles, and takes a ventriloquist dummy out of one of his suitcases. A second voice is heard coming from the man’s other suitcase, which turns out to be a second ventriloquist dummy. One dummy introduces himself as Lazlo, and the other Eugene. Stacy then takes a phone call from the train dispatcher, and informs the ventriloquist that his train will be late. This doesn’t bother him at all, and he asks Matt and Tanya if they will watch his luggage while he runs an errand. Mr. Conductor appears to tell the children about how James didn’t give up when pulling a recalcitrant freight train. After the story, Mr. Conductor tells the children that sometimes they’ll surprise themselves with what they can do. After he disappears, Matt and Tanya begin working the puppets and after only a minute or two, decide to put on a show of their own. They go off and drag Stacy and Harry away from their work to watch them, with Schemer joining to see another free show. Matt and Tanya's performance goes wrong due to them arguing. Stacy tries to calm the situation. She suggests they practice and they’ll be better next time. Matt and Tanya aren’t convinced, and their mood isn’t helped by Schemer joking that his favorite parts of their show was when it was over and that it was free. He then invites them to cheer up by spending money in the Arcade. Matt puts a nickel in the jukebox, and selects the song “Freight Train.” None of the band knows that song, but they decide to play it anyway. Their dissonant performance shocks Matt and sparks an argument among the band members about who’s to blame. They stop arguing long enough to decide that it’s Tito’s fault, because he’s not there! Later, Tanya is moping by the Information Desk when Mr. Conductor appears and points at her accusingly, saying she must be the culprit. Tanya is confused, but Mr. Conductor says he can tell by her face that she’s the one who ate all the lemons! Tanya denies it, which leads Mr. Conductor to suggest they look for them in the Anything Tunnel. Inside the tunnel is a music video about being able to “bounce back” after a failure. Meanwhile, Matt finds himself in the workshop, where Harry asks if they’ll be seeing another puppet show soon. Matt strongly rejects the idea. Harry tells him he had a similar problem with Isaac. Harry tells him about Isaac Dripps, who at only 21 years of age was given the job of assembling the first railroad locomotive in North America, the “John Bull.” The engine worked but it kept derailing, among other problems. However, Isaac solved the problems and kept making improvements to the engine to make it better and better. Harry concludes his story with the fact that the engine is now in the Smithsonian Institute and is the oldest steam locomotive in America. He became a famous railroad mechanic. Isaac never gave up, Harry tells Matt, and neither should he. Outside the workshop, Stacy finds Tanya sitting by herself. Stacy says that she remembers putting on puppet shows herself as a girl, and all she needed was a sock and a big imagination. Tanya begins to cheer up as Stacy shows her how to make a puppet with a sock and some buttons, while Harry helps Matt make his own puppet out of nuts, bolts and some metal strips. Soon, they children meet back up and show each other their new playthings. Mr. Conductor asks if that means another puppet show, but the children are reluctant as they don’t want to be made fun of. Mr. Conductor says that if they aren’t even going to try, he’ll talk to the puppets instead. He tells the puppets to think of what happened to James when the other engines made fun of him. He tells the story of how James got to prove himself by pulling the Express. After the story, Mr. Conductor addresses the puppets again, telling them they’ll never know if they can do their best until they try again. He asks again for a show in exchange for the story, but says they should be sure they’re ready first. Over in the Jukebox Didi comments that she likes the children’s puppets while Rex suggests they provide some background music. Matt and Tanya start performing. Mr. Conductor gives them a thumbs up as they perform much better than the first time. Just then, the ventriloquist returns and asks the puppets if they’ve seen Matt or Tanya. The children keep right on performing and impress the ventriloquist as well as Stacy, Harry and Schemer. Back in the Jukebox, Tex declares he’s just remembered the words to “Freight Train” and the band begins to play as the ventriloquist claims his puppets and goes out to catch his train. When the song is over, Schemer rushes up with a sign he just made which reads “Puppet Show, only 5 cents.” He flips the sign over to display another message, “A great deal!”
is Previous Episode of
is Next Episode of
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software