It's me once more...about a week ago (June 5th) Ray Stevens uploaded a brief sketch from his VHS release, Amazing Rolling Revue. The program was referred to as a pilot for a television series that had never been aired. The premise of the show is that it took place inside Ray's tour bus...a bus that comically housed a full scale performance venue complete with stage and audience...with the driver of the tour bus being race car driver Darrell Waltrip. Throughout various moments in the program Ray and his band and the audience could be seen "shaking" from side to side due to Waltrip's tendency to forget he wasn't on the racetrack. Now, of course, that comical effect was achieved by simply shaking the hand-held camera while Ray and company simulated being tossed around from side as side as Waltrip was speeding around curves.
Speaking of Darrell...he's been a part of the NASCAR broadcasting team for Fox Sports since 2000 and later this month he'll be retiring. I don't follow auto racing and so I wasn't aware of his upcoming retirement from broadcasting. I was more or less browsing the internet to see if he was still in broadcasting when I came across the news articles of his upcoming retirement. He'd dabbled in broadcasting since the mid 1990s, according to research, but didn't pursue it full-time until after he retired as an auto racer in 2000. I do recall several times in the 1990s he guest-hosted for Ralph Emery on episodes of Nashville Now. His first assignment as a NASCAR broadcaster occurred early in 2001 for Fox during their airing of the Daytona 500. His last assignment will be later this month on June 23 in a race titled Toyota/Save Mart 350. He's closely identified with a phrase which also appears in Ray's 1974 hit, "The Streak". The phrase being "boogity, boogity"...but getting back to the origins of the video clip...
The Amazing Rolling Revue VHS was never sold over television like some of Ray's other VHS releases and so the only way to purchase it was through his fan club or at the gift shop at his former theater in Branson, Missouri.
The half hour program was comprised of comic sketches and performances which anticipated his current sketch driven series, Rayality TV, by more than 20 years. The only difference is that the sketches appearing on Amazing Rolling Revue were to be exclusive to that series should it have been picked up by a broadcast or cable network at that time...it wasn't going to be a collection of sketches and concert footage taped in the past and assembled together to form a half hour series...which is what Rayality TV happens to be. There have been several episodes of Rayality TV that have inserted footage from Amazing Rolling Revue. The video clip uploaded back on June 5th is the scene of Ray, speaking in a comically exaggerated Austrian accent, portraying a captured, yet boastful, spy being interrogated...bragging about how much torture he'll be able to endure...but we see it's all talk...
The video clip above is comprised of the various sketches of the routine which appeared throughout the Amazing Rolling Revue half hour episode. If you watch closely you'll see the edits when each scene starts to fade to black. The opening scene lasts 30 seconds before it fades to black and then a second scene from later in the episode is shown for the next 16 seconds before the third scene gets underway at the 47 second mark in the video clip with Ray asking if he's going to be hit with the glove. The third scene, of course, takes up the remaining seconds of the nearly 1 minute video clip.
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