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Mike should have seen the Tokens live. They werenât the first to tackle The Lion Sleeps Tonight (the Weavers, the Kingston Trio and a few others did before them). But the Tokens continued to play live regularly on the west coast into the early years of the 21st century, and the late Mitch Margo could still hit that falsetto with a vengeance at that point.
The song was written by South African Solomon Linda and recorded by him with the title âMbubeâ. Pete Seeger misheard the lyrics as âwimowehâ and introduced it here thinking it was a native folk song and thus Linda got no royalties. When Seeger learned his error he made sure Linda got the credit and royalties from the Weavers version and tried to make that happen universally, but Disney used it in Lion King and refused to pay anything to Lindaâs family, resulting in a lawsuit. Thereâs a very moving documentary on this called âThe Lionâs Share.â
This one is best done acapella ⊠https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RnhVDTks3g
Hey, itâs Monday! Letâs go out there and have a good day! If thereâs no one around, give those vocal cords a good workout. My Honey says, my singing keeps the mice away.
I wrote a parody of this song aft er a guy in my dorm got drunk and peed on my door at 4 am one night. I caught him and thought it was funny but my roommate was pretty roasted. I better not say the drunk kidâs name.
I do not know how my mom (and the rest of my family) kept with my Techno music back in the day, even the neighbors listened to it (even if they did not like it)!
Funny, just a little while back I mentioned that I like this song by the Tokens. Right after I finished reading todayâs comic, I hear the song being played on KTUC. Now I have an all-day earworm.
It could have been gospel music or âO Canadaâ, and Elly would still be angry with her son. It was not the issue what was played, but rather he had it full blast. Michael was oblivious to the fact he is a part of a family. Michael was also clueless to the fact that he lives in a house that his parents paid for.
Africa: A place where children would be happy to eat whatever meals Elly makes.
.Baby: How Michael, Elizabeth and April will always be seen by Elly, regardless of their actual age.
Grown Up: An ambiguous term that applies when Michael and Elizabeth need to take on more responsibilities and do better in schoolâŠbut not when they ask for more privileges.
Noise: Any piece of music composed after 1949.
Perfect: Ellyâs life growing up in the 1950s.
Respect: What Elly always gave her parents, the high and mighty Greatest Generation.
Sixteen: The number of miles John had to walk to school.
I can remember an evening when our son was a âtweenâ and this song came on the radio. The three of us lip-synced the whole thing. Hubby was the lead singer, son was the âweemawaysâ and I did the high âah-ah-ah-ahâsâ. We laughed so hard when we were done. Itâs a great memory.
Oh sorry, Helly Patterson. Mike mustâve forgot that your loud bâ-hing is the only thing allowed to shake the whole house. Maybe he turned it up because he couldnât hear the radio over YOU!
My mother worked more night shifts than I can remember as a nurse. When she woke up early in the day, she was far worse than Ellie could be. Woe be tide that person who woke her from her slumber. They would get clobbered by her and the rest of us siblings would add to that personâs misery!
Loud music has always been the bane of my existence. My father would crank the stereo at 7 a.m. because he thought we should be awake, even though because I was in high school, and had to work evenings on weekends, I didnât get to bed until 3:30 a.m.That carried over to my military time⊠rather than the expensive stereo, I bought a simple clock radio. If I was in my barracks room writing letters home, I would have the door open for the cross breeze, and my radio was on, but, you could stand in the doorway to my room, and barely hear it.
Good for Elly. If she did not confront him about this music he might become a racist and/or start shooting heroin. She yelled at him for reading a pornographic magazine; if she hadnât then one day in the future he would sexually harass women.
Cactus-Pete about 2 years ago
Except that lions live on the savanna not in the jungle.
MichaelAxelFleming about 2 years ago
My band opened for The Tokens. They saved that tune until the end of their set and made a very long production of it.
Asharah about 2 years ago
Mike likes oldies?
Johnny Q Premium Member about 2 years ago
At least heâs blasting classic songsâŠ
Last Rose Of Summer Premium Member about 2 years ago
How many of you just sang that out loud? LOL
emiesty Premium Member about 2 years ago
Is that paper from a dot-matrix printer? With perforated sides?
GirlGeek Premium Member about 2 years ago
And so it begins
Daniel Verburg about 2 years ago
This shoots me half a century back !
BlitzMcD about 2 years ago
Mike should have seen the Tokens live. They werenât the first to tackle The Lion Sleeps Tonight (the Weavers, the Kingston Trio and a few others did before them). But the Tokens continued to play live regularly on the west coast into the early years of the 21st century, and the late Mitch Margo could still hit that falsetto with a vengeance at that point.
dlkrueger33 about 2 years ago
Youâd think Ellie would be pleased that Mike prefers THIS to 90âs music. Thought she might jump in and sing along.
rmercer Premium Member about 2 years ago
âBaweemawop Baweemawop Baweemawop Baweemawop âŠ.â Well somebody has to do the background!
Johnnyrico about 2 years ago
St. Michael of Flithead
goboboyd about 2 years ago
Worse than poking the bear?
e.groves about 2 years ago
That is on my list of songs that I canât stand. Itâll be stuck in my head all day. Drat!
Snolep about 2 years ago
The song was written by South African Solomon Linda and recorded by him with the title âMbubeâ. Pete Seeger misheard the lyrics as âwimowehâ and introduced it here thinking it was a native folk song and thus Linda got no royalties. When Seeger learned his error he made sure Linda got the credit and royalties from the Weavers version and tried to make that happen universally, but Disney used it in Lion King and refused to pay anything to Lindaâs family, resulting in a lawsuit. Thereâs a very moving documentary on this called âThe Lionâs Share.â
DawnMcCandless about 2 years ago
Yup stuck in the head now. But thanks to the internet I have a visual of the 2 cops in the golf cart
johnjoyce about 2 years ago
I donât remember this strip from the first time it ran. It made me chuckle this morning. (And Iâll probably get an earworm today, too.)
Redd Panda about 2 years ago
This one is best done acapella ⊠https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RnhVDTks3g
Hey, itâs Monday! Letâs go out there and have a good day! If thereâs no one around, give those vocal cords a good workout. My Honey says, my singing keeps the mice away.
DanielPatternson about 2 years ago
Boy, Elly sure is a moody cow lately
Mumblix Premium Member about 2 years ago
Lynnâs Comments:
Changing this to a modern song would mean changing the punch line. Some things you have to leave as they are!
Source: https://fborfw.com/strip_fix/monday-february-20-2023
Diat60 about 2 years ago
Excuse me, I have to go in the kitchen and ask Alexa to play this for me. Itâs a great song.
ladykat Premium Member about 2 years ago
Never wake the mama lion. She is fierce!
rushfan200 about 2 years ago
I wrote a parody of this song aft er a guy in my dorm got drunk and peed on my door at 4 am one night. I caught him and thought it was funny but my roommate was pretty roasted. I better not say the drunk kidâs name.
MuddyUSA Premium Member about 2 years ago
I love it!!!
paranormal about 2 years ago
My mother had that record when I was a kid back in the â60s. Kids today donât know what a music record isâŠ
dcandmx about 2 years ago
Maybe the urge to listen to it is just a whim away, a whim away, a whim away âŠ.
temoc about 2 years ago
I do not know how my mom (and the rest of my family) kept with my Techno music back in the day, even the neighbors listened to it (even if they did not like it)!
paulscon about 2 years ago
How old is this strip? I remember that song from circa 1960?
cactusbob333 about 2 years ago
Funny, just a little while back I mentioned that I like this song by the Tokens. Right after I finished reading todayâs comic, I hear the song being played on KTUC. Now I have an all-day earworm.
John Jorgensen about 2 years ago
Thereâs something deliciously absurd about this being the song Mike is blasting.
USN1977 about 2 years ago
It could have been gospel music or âO Canadaâ, and Elly would still be angry with her son. It was not the issue what was played, but rather he had it full blast. Michael was oblivious to the fact he is a part of a family. Michael was also clueless to the fact that he lives in a house that his parents paid for.
kamoolah about 2 years ago
The Patterson Dictionary:
Africa: A place where children would be happy to eat whatever meals Elly makes.
.Baby: How Michael, Elizabeth and April will always be seen by Elly, regardless of their actual age.
Grown Up: An ambiguous term that applies when Michael and Elizabeth need to take on more responsibilities and do better in schoolâŠbut not when they ask for more privileges.
Noise: Any piece of music composed after 1949.
Perfect: Ellyâs life growing up in the 1950s.
Respect: What Elly always gave her parents, the high and mighty Greatest Generation.
Sixteen: The number of miles John had to walk to school.
Spacetech about 2 years ago
Mom needs a Chill-Pill or Lithium or âŠ
JanLC about 2 years ago
I can remember an evening when our son was a âtweenâ and this song came on the radio. The three of us lip-synced the whole thing. Hubby was the lead singer, son was the âweemawaysâ and I did the high âah-ah-ah-ahâsâ. We laughed so hard when we were done. Itâs a great memory.
daleandkristen about 2 years ago
Hush my darlingâŠâŠ
Foob about 2 years ago
What does she mean, âshaking the whole houseâ? That song isnât exactly known for its beat.
Robert Nowall Premium Member about 2 years ago
Yâknow, thatâs a lullabyâŠ
Slatsmagee I about 2 years ago
My Old Man used to say, âdonât poke the bearââŠ
stillfickled Premium Member about 2 years ago
What are the real lyrics to Louie, Louie?
Templo S.U.D. about 2 years ago
correction: Michael woke the lioness
T... about 2 years ago
Earphones, dummyâŠ
Katsuro Premium Member about 2 years ago
Whatâs the paper for?
jandaloft about 2 years ago
A Whim A Way!
CoreyTaylor1 about 2 years ago
Oh sorry, Helly Patterson. Mike mustâve forgot that your loud bâ-hing is the only thing allowed to shake the whole house. Maybe he turned it up because he couldnât hear the radio over YOU!
Angry Indeed Premium Member about 2 years ago
My mother worked more night shifts than I can remember as a nurse. When she woke up early in the day, she was far worse than Ellie could be. Woe be tide that person who woke her from her slumber. They would get clobbered by her and the rest of us siblings would add to that personâs misery!
tinstar about 2 years ago
Loud music has always been the bane of my existence. My father would crank the stereo at 7 a.m. because he thought we should be awake, even though because I was in high school, and had to work evenings on weekends, I didnât get to bed until 3:30 a.m.That carried over to my military time⊠rather than the expensive stereo, I bought a simple clock radio. If I was in my barracks room writing letters home, I would have the door open for the cross breeze, and my radio was on, but, you could stand in the doorway to my room, and barely hear it.
The Great_Black President about 2 years ago
Good for Elly. If she did not confront him about this music he might become a racist and/or start shooting heroin. She yelled at him for reading a pornographic magazine; if she hadnât then one day in the future he would sexually harass women.
jbruins84341 almost 2 years ago
I have always hated that song.