Joe McDoakes and his wife love to participate in radio show contests, but something seems to interfere every time they are lucky enough to be chosen as participants.Joe McDoakes and his wife love to participate in radio show contests, but something seems to interfere every time they are lucky enough to be chosen as participants.Joe McDoakes and his wife love to participate in radio show contests, but something seems to interfere every time they are lucky enough to be chosen as participants.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
Phyllis Coates
- Mrs. Alice McDoakes
- (uncredited)
- …
George Ford
- Audience Member
- (uncredited)
Fred Kelsey
- Senator Backtrack
- (uncredited)
Jack Lomas
- Man Dumping Washtub of Water on Joe
- (uncredited)
- …
Forbes Murray
- Member of Audience
- (uncredited)
Jack Perrin
- Radio Official
- (uncredited)
Ted Stanhope
- Host of 'Aren't People Ridiculous?'
- (uncredited)
Leo White
- Pierre - Pie Thrower
- (uncredited)
Clifton Young
- Host of 'Double Up or Drop Dead!'
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
George O'Hanlon and wife Phyllis Coates win a chance to go on a radio quiz show. After going on one of those shows where they torture you, he winds up on another show where he has to answer questions on Abyssinian statesmen.
It's another zany episode in Richard L. Bare's series of shorts for Warner Brothers, in which everything is exagerated beyond belief. Like others in the series, this was nominated for an Oscar for best short subject, probably because the motion picture industry never really got over their competition with that other entertainment medium. The series continued until 1956, when Warners starting eliminating their shorts, because people could get the same thing on TV.
It's another zany episode in Richard L. Bare's series of shorts for Warner Brothers, in which everything is exagerated beyond belief. Like others in the series, this was nominated for an Oscar for best short subject, probably because the motion picture industry never really got over their competition with that other entertainment medium. The series continued until 1956, when Warners starting eliminating their shorts, because people could get the same thing on TV.
7tavm
Having previously seen So You Want to Be a Detective on YouTube and thinking it was only slightly funny, I found this other Joe McDoakes comedy short in the Related Videos section and found this one a little better. In this one, McDoakes (George O'Hanlon) and his wife (Phyllis Coates) are called to a radio quiz show in which Joe gets splashed with water or hit with pie on face every time his wife answers question wrong. (and how can she get any right when one of them asks to name all first 32 U.S. presidents!) They do get some consolation prizes among which is some tickets for another quiz show in which the host is so obvious about some clues, McDoakes seems a sure winner except...oh, watch the short. I think I liked this one better because there was more consistency in plot and characterization during the proceedings. And the way things twist at the turn of a dime was also very amusing. So on that note, I recommend So You Want to Be on the Radio.
In this installment of the Joe McDoakes series (starring George O'Hanlon), Joe and his wife (Phyllis Coates) are amazingly lucky. During the short course of the film, they appear on three separate radio quiz shows! I could say more about what happens next, but I don't want to spoil the fun by telling you if they won or not or what they won--just watch it and see.
As the short played on Turner Classic Movies, my wife commented about how silly the film was--and I would agree. It was ridiculous--but also quite funny in a brainless, madcap way. My only negative comment is that in one portion, Joe is being tormented to the delight of the audience at the radio show. BUT, as they never describe what's happening, the people listening to the show at how would have no idea whatsoever what's occurring. This, oddly, is a relatively common cliché in movies involving radio--and is seen in other films such as "The Great American Broadcast".
As the short played on Turner Classic Movies, my wife commented about how silly the film was--and I would agree. It was ridiculous--but also quite funny in a brainless, madcap way. My only negative comment is that in one portion, Joe is being tormented to the delight of the audience at the radio show. BUT, as they never describe what's happening, the people listening to the show at how would have no idea whatsoever what's occurring. This, oddly, is a relatively common cliché in movies involving radio--and is seen in other films such as "The Great American Broadcast".
Long before television and its plethora of game and quiz shows, radio had such shows. This 1948 short by Warner Brothers is a very good and funny spoof of the quiz and game shows that aired over radio before TV squeezed them out. Made in the series of Joe McDoakes, "So you want to," or "Behind the 8-ball" format, it stars George O'Hanlon in one of his many short comic roles. Phyllis Coates plays his wife, Alice; Fred Kelsey plays Senator Backtrack, and Jack Perrin plays the radio official.
One of the shows Joe tries to get on is called, "Aren't People Ridiculous." Joe says to Alice, "We can be as ridiculous as anyone else. Maybe even more so." The last show they get on is called "Double Up or Drop Dead."
What a great parody - years before some popular TV shows that would last for decades. And what laughs this provided. Here are the subjects from the blackboard on Double Up or Drop Dead. 1 - Mid Victorian Literature; 2 - Abyssinian Statesmen; 3 - Nuclear Fission; 4 - Einstein's Relativity; 5 - Social Habits of the Aborigines; 6 - Dynamic Tension; 7 - Girls; 8 - Protracted Physics.
This is a nice 10-minute short for some good laughs.
One of the shows Joe tries to get on is called, "Aren't People Ridiculous." Joe says to Alice, "We can be as ridiculous as anyone else. Maybe even more so." The last show they get on is called "Double Up or Drop Dead."
What a great parody - years before some popular TV shows that would last for decades. And what laughs this provided. Here are the subjects from the blackboard on Double Up or Drop Dead. 1 - Mid Victorian Literature; 2 - Abyssinian Statesmen; 3 - Nuclear Fission; 4 - Einstein's Relativity; 5 - Social Habits of the Aborigines; 6 - Dynamic Tension; 7 - Girls; 8 - Protracted Physics.
This is a nice 10-minute short for some good laughs.
What passed for humor in the '40s is quite different than today's silliness and nowhere is this more evident than in some of these Joe McDoake comedy shorts that people thought were so hilariously funny in the '40s.
This one attempts to spoof a couple who are crazy about radio quiz shows and get called frequently to participate in them. McDoake (GEORGE O'HANLON) makes a fool of himself over and over again, failing even to answer simple questions like "Who wrote 'The Last of the Mohicans' by James Fenimore Cooper?", and fluffing the answer while his exasperated wife can't believe how dumb he is. Very funny, sure.
O'Hanlon is reasonably okay as a comedian but the script is so foolish, it's sometimes painful to watch. These sort of comedy shorts drew chuckles in the '40s as fillers between double features, but everything about the radio era is so dated today that it all seems even worse than it is. Can't give this a good recommendation, even to nostalgia buffs.
This one attempts to spoof a couple who are crazy about radio quiz shows and get called frequently to participate in them. McDoake (GEORGE O'HANLON) makes a fool of himself over and over again, failing even to answer simple questions like "Who wrote 'The Last of the Mohicans' by James Fenimore Cooper?", and fluffing the answer while his exasperated wife can't believe how dumb he is. Very funny, sure.
O'Hanlon is reasonably okay as a comedian but the script is so foolish, it's sometimes painful to watch. These sort of comedy shorts drew chuckles in the '40s as fillers between double features, but everything about the radio era is so dated today that it all seems even worse than it is. Can't give this a good recommendation, even to nostalgia buffs.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMrs. McDoakes thinks the mysterious sneezing man in the quiz show contest is Errol Flynn.
- GoofsIn "The Sneezing Man Contest", the announcer mispronounces the town of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.
- Quotes
Mrs. Alice McDoakes: That's just the program I've always wanted to go to. Maybe we'll be selected to do something ridiculous, and - and win all those wonderful prizes!
Joe McDoakes: Sure; we can - we can be as ridiculous as anyone else! Even more so.
- ConnectionsFollowed by So You Want to Be a Baby Sitter (1949)
- SoundtracksI Know That You Know
(1926) (uncredited)
Music by Vincent Youmans
Played during the opening credits and at the end
Details
- Runtime10 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was So You Want to Be on the Radio (1948) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer