People (Real)
From This Might Be A Wiki
Mentions of real people, living and dead.
[edit] Central theme
- Absolutely Bill's Mood - Bill Krauss, the original "Third Giant"
- Announcement A - Donovan Leitch
- Au Contraire - David Bowie, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jodie Foster, J. S. Bach, Mahatma Gandhi
- Brooklyn - Marty Markowitz
- Budnitz #1 - Judy Budnitz
- The Day - Marvin Gaye and Phil Ochs
- Deborah Parker
- Don't Worry Kyoko - Yoko Ono's daughter
- The Edison Museum
- Flansy Stays In The Picture - A. J. Schnack
- Irving Plaza - Washington Irving
- James K. Polk
- John Lee Supertaster
- Kendra McCormick
- Lincoln, Washington, And That Jefferson Guy
- Meet James Ensor
- The Mesopotamians - Sargon, Hammurabi, Asurbanipal, Gilgamesh
- Mr. Hughes Says - Based on a line from Motto by Langston Hughes - monopuff.org
- Oprah
- Robert Lowell
- Rosa Parks, C'est Moi
- Scott Bower
- She Thinks She's Edith Head - Edith Head (imdb.com) - won 8 Oscars (34 nominations) for costume design. Helen Gurley Brown - author (Sex and the Single Girl) long time editor of Cosmopolitan magazine and cut one of the worst spoken word albums ever.
- Theme From McSweeney's Issue 6 - Thank Yous - pretty much everyone listed
- Tom Cruise Makes Me Nervous
- Tom Landry, Existentialist, Dead At 75
- Town To Town - Tom Vu
- Vestibule - Pennsylvania's Senator Arlen Spector
- Walt Whitman
- What Bothers The Spaceman - Bill "Spaceman" Lee was an eccentric pitcher for the Red Sox and Expos during the '70s and early '80's. Dock Ellis pitched for a variety of teams during the late '60's and '70s. Probably most famous for claiming he pitched his 1970 no-hitter for the Pirates on LSD.
- Wicked Little Critta - Bobby Orr and John Havlicek were Hall of Fame players for the Boston Bruins and Celtics respectively in the late '60's and '70's.
- XTC Vs. Adam Ant
[edit] Briefly mentioned
Honorable Mention
- The guys pictured on the album cover of Lincoln are Linnell's and Flansburgh's grandfathers. General Hospital is Flansburgh's grandfather. That's his name. Seriously. (Louis T. Linnell and General Ralph Hospital.)
(Although their is some confusion about this; in some places, Louis T. is listed as his great-grandfather, not his grandfather.)
[edit] See also