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Together with his friend and neighbor Jerry Goldstein, he was a dancer on Alan Freed's WNEW-TV show The Big Beat, and in 1959 the pair co-wrote a theme song for the show. Feldman and Goldstein started writing regularly together, and, as Bob and Jerry, wrote and recorded "We Put the Bomp", an answer record to Barry Mann's "Who Put the Bomp". [1] [2]
As he begins to yell to Bob for help, Bob comes onscreen and informs the viewers that Larry is confused, and that the video is actually the first "VeggieTales Sing-Along tape". He explains that they will play their favorite VeggieTales songs and place the lyrics on the bottom of the screen.
Silly Songs with Larry is a regular feature segment in Big Idea's CGI cartoon series, VeggieTales.Often secular, they generally consist of Larry the Cucumber singing a humorous child's novelty song either alone or with some of the other Veggie characters.
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Ned, Bob and Jerry on a Ranch or, The Motor Boys among the Cowboys - 1917; Ned, Bob and Jerry in the Army or, The Motor Boys as Volunteers - 1918; Ned, Bob and Jerry on the Firing Line or, The Motor Boys Fighting for Uncle Sam - 1919; Ned, Bob and Jerry Bound for Home or, The Motor Boys on the Wrecked Troopship - 1920
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On August 3, 2012, former Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir and a rotating lineup of musicians performed a five-hour concert of Grateful Dead songs at TRI Studios in San Rafael, California. The show was called "Move Me Brightly: Celebrating Jerry Garcia's 70th Birthday", and took place two days after the 70th anniversary of Garcia's birth.
The A-Tom-inable Snowman is a 1966 Tom and Jerry cartoon directed by Abe Levitow, written by Bob Ogle and produced by Chuck Jones, with the opening scene written and directed by Jones. The title is a reference to the legendary creature, the Abominable Snowman .