I met with the man, that fan, who had made “Fridays” available to folks beyond the fringe; the social activist/archivist/anarchist/ entrepreneur who, with like minded compulsives, took his bohemian business to the masses with such diverse releases as “The Transformers” and “Power Rangers” for kids, and historical revisits, like “Dobie Gillis,” “The Ernie Kovacs Show,” and “The Dick Cavett Show” for older kids. The Shout! website overflows with projects like an afterlife library, so historical turning points in TV history and pop culture aren't simply hearsay. (His list also contains two seasons of “Parker Lewis Can't Lose,” on which I co-starred for three years. I admit a bit of a pre-bias toward the man.)
Rhino and Shout midwifed so many nearly forgotten properties into immortality, how have your odds been in making them profitable?
One out of three.
Uh, huh. So, are you:
A. A madman genius;
B. A self-appointed savior, with a Robin hood rescue complex;
C. A rabid fan frothing to give favorite projects second life;
D. Someone who shares indiscriminately what he loves;
E. Someone who loathes multiple choice putting words in his mouth?
F. All of the above
Foos: F.
I've heard the definition of “geek” as being someone who is romantically or erotically aroused by inanimate entities–songs, electronics, shows, movies cars. They comprise your market. Would you agree?
Yes.
How did it feel when the film version of Nick Hornby's book “HIgh Fidelity” showed the life of a record store so much like Rhino?
Eerie.
Please feel free to give answers longer than my questions.
Oh, okay. It was eerie. We had a guy working for us who looked, talked, acted exactly like Jack Black in “High Fidelity.” He didn't sing, but he did become a music executive.
Why did you call your new company Shout! Factory?
Because we're so into what we do, and the stuff we put out, that we want to shout about it!
Great! Tell me what kept you trying for a “Fridays” deal for so many years.
I loved playing in the weeds, I liked the underground stuff, even while I was a lefty idealistic hippy doing community work. Gary Stewart and other friends who were also avid followers would ask me, “Why isn't 'Fridays” out!?” I recall trying to put out a VHS of the series early on. But there were a lot of complications.
I recall all the musical and actor gueststars, and songs needed negotiating. A couple of cast members wanted whole shows aired or nothing. Some preferred nothing.
Right. To their credit, the producers Pat Lee and John Moffit, and (the late producer Bill Lee's son) Chris Lee put a lot of effort into making it work. I think it was the “Fridays” reunion party that got some momentum going.
Right–two years ago. It was intense seeing each other, sharing crazy stories, watching risky stuff we created together thirty years ago.
It still took awhile. I was also motivated because I had a number of weird connections to Andy Kaufman for years and put out his last film “My Breakfast with Blassie” on VHS before I even had a video company. I forgot about it until I went to Bruce Kirschbaum's kid's bar mitzfah about eight years ago, and Larry Charles was sitting at my table (both were writers on the show). Larry reminded me that he used to play poker at my house and I recalled watching him do standup when he first came out to LA in the late 70's. He also said “Hey, you should put “Fridays” out, man!”
 You WERE?! I wanna put that one out!</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class=)