Difference between revisions of "Chris Meyers' Magical Rainbow Hour"

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The show's first guests were actors famous in Japan, such as [[David Hasselhoff]], [[Rob|Rob Stern]], and [[Chuck Norris]]. For some reason, the show degenerated over its year-long run, with the last shows guests consisting of [[Chris Meyers' Left Hand]], The Color Blue, and the starting line-up of the 1923 [[Brooklyn Dodgers]]. Conjecture suggests that this was the result of a combination between poor ventilation and the glue used to construct the set.
 
The show's first guests were actors famous in Japan, such as [[David Hasselhoff]], [[Rob|Rob Stern]], and [[Chuck Norris]]. For some reason, the show degenerated over its year-long run, with the last shows guests consisting of [[Chris Meyers' Left Hand]], The Color Blue, and the starting line-up of the 1923 [[Brooklyn Dodgers]]. Conjecture suggests that this was the result of a combination between poor ventilation and the glue used to construct the set.
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===The Controversy==
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Some people say that the show was not really cancelled because of a lack of [[pedophilia|Anime]], but because Chris Meyers never really existed.

Revision as of 12:04, 25 April 2006

The Show

Chris Meyers' Magical Rainbow Hour is a talk and variety show, hosted by Chris Meyers that aired for one season in Japan. After it's first run, it was pulled from its slot because it did not feature enough Anime, which the Japanese are obsessed with. The show was written in Japanese, translated to English for the stars to read off of teleprompters, and consequently dubbed over in Japanese for air. This resulted in an experience often equated with PCP, LSD, and Dimmetapp, paradoxically much lauded by its critics.

This image comes from a vairiety segement on the show. The various costumed characters represent the various stages of Freud's Psycho-social development, while Chris Meyers remains caught in the middle. It has been argued that this kind of humor does not 'translate well to an English-speaking audience.

The show's first guests were actors famous in Japan, such as David Hasselhoff, Rob Stern, and Chuck Norris. For some reason, the show degenerated over its year-long run, with the last shows guests consisting of Chris Meyers' Left Hand, The Color Blue, and the starting line-up of the 1923 Brooklyn Dodgers. Conjecture suggests that this was the result of a combination between poor ventilation and the glue used to construct the set.

=The Controversy

Some people say that the show was not really cancelled because of a lack of Anime, but because Chris Meyers never really existed.

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