Imaginary Worlds - Making The Muppets
Episode Date: May 10, 2023When Jim Henson hired Bonnie Erickson to design Muppets in the early 1970s, Bonnie had no idea this experimental project they were working on – a prime time TV show with puppets – would evolve int...o the cultural phenomenon of The Muppet Show. I talked with Bonnie about how the crew tried several one-off specials where they figured out who the main characters would be, what they’d look like, and what they’d sound like. Bonnie explains how she came up with the designs for Miss Piggy, Statler and Waldorf, Zoot and others. And we talk about one of the biggest challenges in making The Muppets seem believable – where to place the pupils in their eyes. This episode is sponsored by ExpressVPN. Our ad partner is Multitude. If you’re interested in advertising on Imaginary Worlds, you can contact them here or email us at sponsors@multitude.productions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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You're listening to Imaginary Worlds, a show about how we create them and why we suspend
our disbelief.
I'm Eric Malinsky.
Welcome to the mayhem.
We're more than just a band, we're a family.
This week, a new show called The Muppets Mayhem comes out on Disney+.
It's the first Muppet project in a while that I've been looking forward to.
This show is all about the electric mayhem band,
which I have loved since I was a kid. In fact, I watched the first episode of The Muppet Show
when it debuted in 1976. It's The Muppet Show with our very special guest star, Miss Juliet
Prowse. I was very young, but I remember my father saying to me, there's this new show that I think you're going to like.
And I sat there mesmerized for the next half hour.
And then over the years, I watched The Muppets become a cultural phenomenon in real time.
And I do remember that when I watched The Muppet Show for the first time,
the characters seemed fully formed, like they had been around for years.
But that wasn't really the case, except for Kermit.
Kermit first appeared on television in the 1950s.
Jim Henson was a teenager when he created his first puppet show for a local TV station.
It was called Salmon Friends.
Salmon Friends is brought to you by...
Asker.
In 1969, Sesame Street launched with the help of Jim Henson.
He designed Big Bird, Oscar the Grouch, and other famous characters.
And he brought Kermit with him.
My name is Kermit, and today I'm here to talk to you about the letter F.
For the next seven years, Jim Henson developed all these primetime specials
that would eventually lead to The Muppet Show.
Many of them were meant for adults.
In fact, one was called The Muppet Show Sex and Violence.
It opens with the words sex and violence written in stone.
Ladies and gentlemen, presenting the end of sex and violence on television.
And then the words are blown up by a character called Crazy Harry,
who would later appear on The Muppet Show, blowing up all sorts of things.
That's quite a journey from this innocent 1950s puppet show
to the 70s countercultural primetime special.
Eventually, they found a happy medium with the Muppet Show, but there was so much trial and
error. They had to figure out who the characters would be, what they'd look like, how they felt
about each other, and who would turn out to be the real stars. And I've wanted to know more about how that creative process played out. And then I learned that one of the original designers on The Muppet Show,
Bonnie Erickson, lives pretty close to me in Brooklyn. She is a lovely person, and I got to
record an interview with her at her home. Now, I had not recorded an interview in person since the pandemic, so it was also a thrill
for me to dust off my recording equipment and take it on the road again. And it was fitting,
because the first interview that I ever recorded for this podcast was with a puppeteer named
Stephanie DiBruzzo, who performed on Sesame Street and Avenue Q. But Bonnie Erickson is not a
performer, she's a designer. So she had a very
different perspective on the Muppets. In her hallway, there was a framed drawing of one of
the first designs that she ever did of Miss Piggy. This is one of my sketches for one of the bits
the pig had to do. Wait, when did you do this? Oh, I don't know. It must have been, it might even have been for Muppet Show.
I don't remember.
We were doing a chicken chorus and Miss Piggy was part of that.
She was the leader of the chorus.
So that was my drawing of the Glee Club with Miss Piggy in her outfit.
You see, she still has her hooves.
Right.
But I mean, her face is, it's Miss Piggy.
Yes, it is.
Even the attitude, the way that she has her head up and her eyelashes down.
Well, you know, a lot of us, when we were designing things, that was a big part of what we were doing.
That's part of what the job is.
After the first season of The Muppet Show, Bonnie and her husband, Wade Harrison, started their own company, designing puppets and other characters.
husband Wade Harrison started their own company designing puppets and other characters. They also designed a lot of sports mascots, like they created the Philly Fanatic for the Philadelphia Phillies.
Now, Bonnie didn't plan on going into puppetry. In the early 1970s, she was a costume designer
in New York. Someone told her that Jim Henson was looking to hire someone to work on a TV special called The Frog Prince.
She started working with him on a freelance basis.
I was curious, what was her first impression of Jim Henson?
He was very tall.
That's what I remember, tall and slender.
And it was funny because I didn't believe he really was going to hire anybody.
I thought it was a joke that people had sent me there and didn't believe them at first, but he was charming. He was low key. He was,
I don't know, very engaging. I think when I joined Jim, the staff was about seven people.
Wow.
We had a lot of people coming in freelance, doing specialty things, but I was shocked to see
how small it was because I only knew Jim at the time from all of the sort of abstract stuff he did
on the variety shows and things like that. So Sesame Street had been just aired and I hadn't
really seen it yet. So I had no idea about Sesame Street. So when I got there and saw the things that were in this workshop, I was blown away.
I was so happy.
It had every tool, every material that you could ever want and great people.
And I remember Jim, toward the end of my contract for the freelance work that I was doing on
Frog Prince, asking me to stay on. And actually,
he asked me if I would run the shop, which was scary as all get out, because here were these
really incredibly talented people, Carly Wilcox, John Lovelady, all these people who had worked
in puppetry, and I had not. But I think he thought I could keep a schedule.
So I know that he wanted to create
the Muppet Show, whether it was called the Muppet Show or not. He wanted a more sort of adults-ish
kind of primetime version of a Sesame Street characters, right? Is that something he wanted
to do at that point? I think he never wanted to do children's television or that was not his,
it wasn't that he didn't want to do it. It was that
that was not his goal. He became part of Sesame Street because he worked with John Stone,
who was the producer for Sesame Street. But they had done a special before that. Jim did a number
of specials that were satires on fairy tales, like Frog Prince was. I think it was John Stone who said,
if you're going to do puppets on this new children's show, you shouldn't even do them
unless you use Jim because Jim had this incredible sort of abstract thinking, this way of describing
things to people and doing things often without any words, which seemed to work very well for a
lot of things they did on Sesame Street. So when we started doing more adult things, he tried several times to convince the networks
that this was going to be something that could be a weekly show.
We did The Muppets and the Antisex and Violence.
We did another special, which was a Mia Farrow special.
Both of those were network shows, hoping on Jim's part that there would be some room for him in a weekly schedule.
None of them took.
It wasn't until we went to England because Lou Grade said,
Jim, I like what you do, and I'm going to back you if you'll do it at my studio.
Lou Grade was a big TV producer in the UK.
So The Muppet Show was actually made in Britain, and it aired simultaneously in the US and the UK.
One thing I always think is interesting is the trial and error.
You know, like even when you watch Sam and Friends, the early stuff, there is a Kermit puppet there.
And sometimes he is Kermit, and sometimes he's just somebody else. You know, it takes a while for them to realize, oh, is a Kermit puppet there. And sometimes he is Kermit,
and sometimes he's just somebody else. It takes a while for them to realize,
oh, this is Kermit's voice. This is Kermit as a character.
I'm honored to be in the studio with two very distinguished NBC newsmen.
And I'm going to chat with them a few minutes to learn something of their off-camera personalities.
I think Rolf started out as in dog food commercials.
Yes, he did.
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So how did the characters kind of, and it's such a classic Muppet thing,
like in terms of the Muppets getting like in the Muppet movie,
you know, they kind of slowly assemble them together.
How did they as personalities start to, like when you joined,
did you have an idea of, well, these are the characters I want to feature? How did they as personalities start to, like when you joined, did you have an
idea of, well, these are the characters I want to feature? How did they kind of develop?
I think one of the first things where they brought a lot of the characters in and the
characters that we'd built for the show was sex and violence. The wonderful thing about
The Muppet Show was that's five years of performers doing these characters where
their personal relationships, as well as the performing
ones, developed along the lines of those five years. And I think, I mean, I still look at them
and I know who they are, what kinds of funny things they've done to each other. They would
play jokes on each other in character. Even the designers would play pranks on each other.
Bonnie's mentor at the shop was a puppet builder named Don Saline.
He was instrumental in creating the look of the Muppets. He also had a very mischievous sense of humor. My first day at work there, Jim sat me at his table. Hello. And I could see he was checking
me out. He just, you know, wasn't sure this is a new person. And as head of the shop later on, I experienced
this with other people coming in. So I'm sitting there working, making sketches for Frog Prince
puppets and a little nervous because I had not done, you know, things for puppets before,
although I had a long background in costuming. And there was this big lump of foam at the end
of the table and it had feathers in it and it had holes in it.
It just really looked disgusting.
And every once in a while, I thought I saw it move.
I realized when I looked over, it wasn't moving now
and there was Donald sewing away.
But the third time, I just reached over and picked it up
and Don Selene had put an eye hook in the inside of that head, put a string on it, drilled a hole in the table, put the string through to the bottom and over to his shoe.
So that while he's sitting there and I see him working with both of his hands, he's pulling this thing with his foot to see what my reaction would be.
He's pulling this thing with his foot to see what my reaction would be.
I miss him a great deal.
And I think he just was a person who really brought Jim's ideas and the shapes and Friends, which wasn't really a frog yet, but made that frog, which is what we know as Kermit today.
How did he refine Kermit? I'm just curious. What did he do?
Well, Kermit originally had sort of knobby feet. He wasn't quite as elegant looking as he is now, so he became a frog with the frog feet that Don put on him.
He became a frog with the frog feet that Don put on him.
Also, I think the eyes changed a bit. He became, he's sort of lizard-like looking when you see the Salmon Friends character.
And he became a much more engaging character, I think, with the shapes that Donald, the differences Donald made in the shapes for Kermit.
I read something about the magic triangle was something that he developed. shapes that Donald, the differences Donald made in the shapes for Kermit.
I read something about the magic triangle was something that he developed.
It has to do with the eye focus, the whole face, facial features and how that changes with the placement of each of those.
But his main consideration for all of that was pupil focus so that when you're using a puppet,
you actually look at the person you're talking to or the puppet you're talking to.
I just want to stop for a second and talk about how cool this is.
The next time somebody is listening to you or talking to you, notice where their pupils are
in their eyes. They're probably not in the center. They might
actually be turning in more than you'd expect. A great designer can take a very simple visual
palette, like the face of a Muppet, and put those two dots in exactly the right spot in their eyes.
So it looks like the eyes of this Muppet are turned a little bit inward, looking at something.
And the placement of the pupils in relation to the nose gives the
Muppet a sense of personality. That is the magic triangle. Now there are some very well-designed
Muppets that don't use the magic triangle, but as they used to tell us in art school,
you have to know the rules before you can break them.
You're saying too how in those five years that the show is developing,
the relationships between the characters started to really develop. And that was,
how did that play out in certain characters or something like that?
Right. Well, Jerry Jewell started with all the scripts that we had for the initial,
the head writer for the Muppet Show. So he created sort of an environment,
but because he was there and
the performers were there and we all had production meetings together, everybody's feedback was really
important. So as Jerry was writing, he was getting feedback from the performers and everybody was
seeing what was done on the set. Some of the outtakes were very important in how those relationships developed and characterized
these puppets that they were performing. The longevity gave changes to a lot of characters.
Gonzo, for instance, got even crazier. Some of the characters fared better than others.
Nobody knew Miss Piggy in the first opening of the Muppet show,
shows her as a chorus girl. She's coming across the line in the opening of the show.
And then she was called on to do other roles until she finally hit on the Miss Piggy.
Bonnie first designed Miss Piggy for a sketch on the Sex and Violence special.
Well, Jim came and asked for three puppets, three pigs, because Jerry had written a piece
where they were doing a bit called Return to Beneath the Planet of the Pigs, if you believe
it or not. So I had created these three pigs all in space outfits.
Actually, when you look at the sketch, this is clearly the beginning of what will become
Pigs in Space, or as you of what will become Pigs in Space.
Or, as you might know it, PIGS IN SPACE!
And this is what her voice sounded like at first.
You're right! Let's take him to the great Dr. Naga!
Dr. Naga! Dr. Naga!
That was actually not the first TV appearance of Miss Piggy.
While they were in production on the Sex and Violence special,
the entertainer Herb Alpert asked them to create a diva character for a sketch on his variety show.
Bonnie redesigned the puppet to look like the Miss Piggy that we know.
She had very expressive eyes and a silver gown and long gloves.
The voice was still a work in progress.
This is for you, Herbie.
Hit it, boys.
I can't give you anything but love.
When The Muppet Show debuted, Piggy had the same look and the same attitude,
but she was a background character.
It took several episodes
for them to find her true voice. That's another case where characters evolved as they were used
in the show so that some became more popular than others. People have said, did you know that Piggy
was going to be so popular? And I said, I didn't, but she did. I had named her Piggy Lee, actually,
I had named her Piggy Lee, actually, because my mother from North Dakota had loved Piggy Lee, who was a North Dakotan.
I just thought she's sassy, she's brilliant, she's talented, and she's her own woman kind of thing when I was designing her and naming her.
But it was Frank who really caught that character that I love.
The Frank she's referring to is, of course, Frank Oz.
He performed a lot of Sesame Street characters like Grover and Cookie Monster,
and he did many characters in The Muppet Show, like Fozzie, Animal, and Rolf.
He also performed the character of Yoda in the Star Wars movies.
And on the first season of The Muppet Show, when he started working with the Miss Piggy puppet that Bonnie
had designed,
the rest was history.
Once that karate shop happened,
there wasn't a chance for
anybody else to take that role.
How do you know?
You never told me about this part.
Part this?
How do you know?
So I found, I mean, both websites and videos,
that they love looking at how the Muppets changed in really subtle ways,
which I never even noticed.
But there's one there, a time on Miss Piggy,
like the changes were so subtle, you know, from the beginning,
as we, by the time you get to the end of the 70s,
her snout sometimes is longer, sometimes it's shorter,
sometimes it's tilted up more,
sometimes the ears are slightly different, the eyes are tilted tilted a little bit the lids come down more or up
how do those subtle design changes affect how you view the puppet even before she starts to speak
um i'm not sure i think she's become she's had work let's let's face it she's had work
when i started out she was um i had just been experimenting a lot with carved foam,
which was not something that had been done before. Everything was pretty much covered with fleece.
So when I carved her, it was all done with a manicure scissor and belt sander to smooth it
out. So by its very nature, it was a little more rough than what you see today. And so as time went on and they realized
that having somebody hand carve it
was just not very efficient,
they started doing casting of very soft foam.
And I think as that happened,
each sculpt probably contributed a bit of a change to it.
The interesting thing to me is her eyes don't blink.
They never have, but you think she's coy. You think she's, you know, you imagine all these things because of the performance
of that character. I feel that she's gotten a little younger, hence the work. But I think
anybody who looks at her still goes, it's Miss Piggy. She is not going to be mistaken for anybody else. That's for sure.
Bonnie also designed Waldorf and Statler, the two old men who sit in the balcony
and give a very sarcastic running commentary while the Muppet show is in progress.
You think this show constitutes cruelty to animals? Not unless they're watching it.
Usually Jim would come with an idea of what he wanted done,
or he would have somebody draw something and we would build it.
But often we would have some ideas on our own.
This was one of those cases where Jim sent me home if I worked late in a taxi, the darling.
And I went around Grand Central Station.
And I would look into the windows of the university club
and I would see these portraits. And I had this imagination of these guys sitting there having
their cigars and their brandy. And I made a sketch of the two guys and I gave it to Jim
and he said, I really liked them, but we don't really have anything for them right now.
I really like them, but we don't really have anything for them right now.
So I'm not even sure how much time passed, but about maybe the next year, he said, I think we have something.
And that was sex and violence.
And what were they doing in that special?
We had a chair.
We had done a set.
So they had the actual chairs that looked like an old library with a club setting.
That was their first appearance.
You know, Waldorf, I've been thinking.
What's you been thinking?
About the younger generation.
What about them?
Don't know where they're going.
Did their design ever change?
I don't think so.
No, it's been pretty much the same.
I think that they did go to carved carve not carved foam but um cast foam but it seems to me they look very much the same as the original i did
but right now let's get things underway with our own dr teeth and electric mayhem
after the break bonnie helps kick off the mayhem gentlemen, we'd like to do for you an old favorite.
We like to think of our group as being able to play more than hard rock.
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On The Muppet Show, Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem Band were secondary characters to Kermit, Miss Piggy, Fozzie, and Gonzo. But in the 1975 special Sex and Violence,
the Electric Mayhem Band were the main draw. In fact, when Jim Henson went on The Tonight Show to promote that special,
he brought with him Dr. Teeth. Johnny Carson can't help but interview the puppet.
How would you describe your music? What is that? Is that rock or jazz? That's like catastrophe music.
It's a towering inferno with bongo drums.
Bonnie was part of the team which designed the band,
starting with Zoot, the saxophonist.
Forgive me, Charlie Parker, wherever you are.
I did Zoot because I had seen Gatto Barbieri at a jazz club, and I was fascinated.
I mean, I loved his work in Last Tango in Paris.
So we went to see him, and I did a sketch while we were there.
I built Janice from a sketch by Michael.
Michael Frith was one of the designers on the team.
The end is my romance.
He came with football on TV, really.
Why, he ain't took me anywhere since 1963.
But the funniest story I think I have of that is when we were doing Dr. T,
Jim had just been down and seen Dr. John.
This is Dr. John.
He was a legendary jazz and blues musician in New Orleans.
I've been in the right place But it must have been the wrong time
And when he came back, Dr. Teeth was on his mind.
And Mike Frith did a sketch.
And he showed the hat, all the moving parts. Don
Saline was brilliant in building that. And we felt he needed a voodoo something or other. So
I went to the Warlock Shop, which I think was in Brooklyn at the time.
What's the Warlock Shop?
Well, they did potions. And I had them make a little packet that had, I don't know, cat hair and
some herb, who knows what else they put in there. I said, it's got to be good luck. And I wore it.
In fact, there's a picture of Jim talking to me when I have the puppets and you can see that
thing hanging around my neck. I wore it until Dr. Teeth was ready to go. Oh, my God. I don't know if he still has it,
but I've looked at pictures
and he's got things that hang down over his jaw,
so I can't tell if it's still there,
but that was a big treat
to be able to put that on Dr. Teeth when he was ready.
I'm gonna light some dynamite
And blow open your heart.
So you didn't want, you were, you're only on the first season, right?
Yeah.
Why did you want to leave so early to start your own business?
One of the reasons was, as I said, I had a son and he was going to school in England
and I thought that was fine and it was sort of a treat.
But thinking about it over a long term,
I wasn't so happy about having him grow up with education there.
I don't know if I think that now, but I'm not sure.
But nonetheless, I want him to go to school in the U.S. So I knew that I'd done pretty much everything I could do for The Muppet Show.
Getting it started, we had a fantastic group of people
who were now able to do costumes,
puppets, characterizations, down and dirty stuff as you need to do when you're on set.
So I felt confident about leaving.
But I think when I told Jim I was leaving, I cried.
He said, don't worry, we won't lose track of each other.
And we didn't.
He became one of our first clients.
I went back to oversee the whole build for Fraggle Rock. I went back another time from my company to bring in new talent.
So what are the things when you started your own company that you learned from Jim that you wanted
to do yourself as you're now that you're your own boss? Keep the copyright and also treat the people you work with well.
I hope we did that.
We have a lot of friends that we made along the way that worked for us,
that came and went as they had jobs and other things to do
because we had a lot of freelance people and a very small staff.
And we had fun.
I mean, we had wedding parties for the mice that we kept in the studio.
So we tried to keep it light because we knew the work was pretty, it could be stressful when you're
working on deadlines. And I think that partly came from Jim too, who had a good relationship
with people he worked with. Once you came home, you know, certainly now you're watching the Muppet
show as a fan or you're watching the Muppets develop. Were there moments that you saw a Muppet character develop who you had never seen before that you thought, God, that's a great design who did that?
No.
Really?
Well, I'm sure there are.
There are a couple.
I can't remember the name of.
There's one blue Muppet that I do like very much.
But there were a few that I thought sort of missed
the mark. They also have a lot of new characters on Sesame Street, some of which I like very much,
but I miss some of the, I think the whimsy of some of the work that was done before.
I was going to ask you about that. I mean, without mentioning any characters by name.
I probably can't, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But in general, when you see a character
that you're like, oh, that misses the mark,
like how are they generally speaking missing the mark?
Hmm, I think they miss something.
We always wanted to do something with people
or characters that had motion
or an abstraction that was appealing.
It's like I was talking about Miss Piggy and her eyes.
They never move, but she expresses everything.
And I often find that, forgive me,
some of them look sort of dead-eyed
or not as, I guess, engaging is another word I've used a lot,
but it really is something that's important to
having a puppet. There has to be a contact with eyes. That triangle that Don talked about was a
very important part of it. And I think people tried to match it. The first thing that was done
by Disney, I think fell short of the mark. I think they've learned who the Muppets are now.
Yeah. It's funny because my first interview I ever did was with Stephanie DiBruzzo.
Right.
And we talked a lot about being a puppeteer and we're comparing it to CGI and sort of the big
question I was trying to understand is why are the Muppets believable? And I think the most we
kind of came up with was that they're physically there, you know, physically there with on TV,
with a performer, they're being lit, you know, you can with on TV, with a performer, they're being lit,
you know, you can interact with them. But I still, I still kind of don't understand why they are so
believable. They are so obviously puppets. And yet I have to try and force myself to not suspend my
disbelief when I watch the Muppets. The minute they're on, they are real to me. And I still
don't understand why. I get it because I
feel the same way. And I know they live in boxes. These are incredible characters. And I think part
of it is unlike CGI, these are live characters who respond to each other. These are characters
that work well with human beings. So you get an idea of the scale of what these characters are.
beings. So you get an idea of the scale of what these characters are. There's nothing like an immediate reaction from another character as the Muppets are performing that comes from a real
basis of a human reaction. It's not scripted necessarily. They have the script, but they know
what it means and they know who their character is and how they would behave. And it really makes
a difference in how you perceive them. I also believe, and this has never been done before,
that the designs are so good that you could show somebody who finds somebody probably not on earth,
who's never seen the Muppets, and give them the Muppets and say, what do you think these
characters are? Put this Muppet on your hand. What do you think the character is? And I bet
they would come up with something relatively similar to who they actually are because the designs the characters are so in the designs
i i think they are too but i think i probably owe you you know a few bucks for saying that
but yes i hope that's true i hope it's true um and i hope that um the look of miss piggy informed
frank in his brilliant performance of the character.
I mean, she's so self-assured in a way that's probably not very realistic,
but he's personified her. And I think of the pig, the diva, she's my girl.
Well, thank you. I mean, thank you for wonderful childhood memories.
You're very welcome. I'm really happy that that's what you got out of that.
So at this point, we were going to wrap up the interview.
The last thing I wanted to record was her showing me around her workshop.
All right, so this is a little hard to explain, but the way my tape recorder is set up,
there are two ports for external microphones.
That's what we use during the interview.
But there's also a microphone built in on top of the tape recorder.
And that's the mic I use when I'm walking around recording somebody.
But that mic that's built in on top of the recorder is very sensitive.
Before I use it, I have to pull a windscreen over it.
The windscreen is covered in black and gray artificial hair. And so many times in the past when I would pull that windscreen out,
the person that I was interviewing would say, hey, that thing looks like a Muppet.
Bonnie not only thought that it looked like a Muppet, she had an overwhelming desire to put
eyes on it. And I got a tiny glimpse into her creative process
and how far she would go in designing a character
before she handed it off to a performer.
We went into her studio.
Where are my buttons?
She rummaged through her drawers.
She got out some buttons, covered them in cloth.
She drew eyes on them with a magic marker.
Do you want, I have to sew it on.
Oh, okay.
She took out her needle and thread and.
Here you are.
Oh my God.
This is, this is so cute.
And he's, it's looking to the left.
Yes, he's, he's checking everything out.
I love, yeah, because we're talking about the eyes
in terms of the direction of the eyes.
Well, I wanted him to be suspicious.
Really? Why?
I just thought it was a good idea.
He's there on that microphone, wants to know who's speaking.
You started to create a personality for him?
Yes.
Yes, and he wants to be petted often.
See, I'm already petting him.
He's loving it.
Does he have a name?
Not yet.
I think you'll have to ask him later.
I did.
He told me his name is Furston.
That's it for this week.
Thank you for listening.
Special thanks to Bonnie Erickson
and Amy Knight,
who connected us with Bonnie. And thanks to Bonnie Erickson and Amy Knight, who connected us with
Bonnie. And thanks to listeners like Fred Chong Rutherford, who suggested this topic.
My assistant producer is Stephanie Billman. If you like the show, please give us a shout out
on social media or leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. That always helps people
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