CALLER: Mega dittos from the land of the liberals in El Paso, Texas.
RUSH: Thank you, sir. I flew over El Paso the other day on the way to Los Angeles. It’s out there all by itself.
CALLER: Yes, sir. We’re way out.
RUSH: You’ve gotta be going there to get there.
CALLER: Yes, sir. I wanted to nominate you for an Oscar for your performance on the 1/2 Hour News Hour, after the dialogue you were having with Curt, the host. Was his name Curt?
RUSH: Yeah, this is the skit last night. That would be an Emmy because it’s television. An Oscar is for the big screen, and I don’t have a chance of ever being on the big screen, unless some liberal in a movie house throws me up against it, which won’t happen because I don’t go there. Let me play this. We’ve got the sound bite. We’ve got the audio sound bite of this. The audio will pretty much give you an idea of the skit, but there’s a lot of video in this. Obviously it’s a TV skit. You’ve gotta watch it. The whole thing is at RushLimbaugh.com via Windows Media Player, but this is the opening skit last night. I’m coming out of an elevator, and I’m very earnest. I’m really in a hurry coming out of the elevator, and the anchor of the show, Curt McNally, stops me and wants to talk to me, and I’m sort of a little impatient because I got somewhere to go. So that’s how it starts.
(Playing of 1/2 Hour News Hour skit.)
AUDIENCE: (wild applause)
RUSH: Now, after I leave Curt in the hallway outside the elevator, the camera follows me walking down a couple halls and into a doorway making sure nobody can see me, and the room in which I’m controlling the world is a television control room with just massive monitors all over the place. It was really done well. It took five hours to shoot that sketch. For those of you who have seen it, five hours! Nope. Five hours. Well, there’s a portion in that skit where I hit the R button on a computer keyboard, and that brings the whole board of monitors to life. Fourteen takes of my finger! They do everything, and then for every angle — like we had to do the conversation, Curt and I. (Curt Long is his real name.) The conversation took an hour. It took first a master take that’s right — they have two cameras — then they move the cameras, get close-ups on him and then they move the cameras and get close-ups on me, doing the whole thing over and over again. After an hour, they’ve got all kinds of possible angles, sometimes the lighting wasn’t working, audio battery went out, these things happen. Going in the doors, they had to shoot that. That probably took a half hour, because they had to have cameras inside the room walking in the door, had the cameras outside the room and it’s the same camera. So you finish one place, set ’em up, relight, and do all this stuff. It took five hours to shoot that thing, and then we did a second skit that took four hours.