Is Maggie and the Ferocious Beast really quite popular where you live harmy or are you just a keen 28-year-old fan. This isn’t meant to be a pitting or anything because heck, I watch it with my lil bro. But really, I need to know…
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I’ve never heard of it.
I’ve been using that phrase since about middle school when I used to draw these weird cow characters I called Moogles.
Upon Googleing Maggie and the Ferocious Beast I recognize the character from my nieces coloring books.
Is harmless going to have to bitch-slap a lawsuit on these people for stealing my phrase? :dubious:
If only I’d known about copyrights in the 6th grade.
If you’re serious though, that is wayyyyy too much of a coincidence. They may have bugged you, I suggest going on the run with an ex-CIA agent gone rogue. It may involve car chases and gun battles so pack accordingly.
Didn’t Edison beat someone to the patent office by like 2 hours with the patent for the telephone?
Not saying “googly moogly” is as great an invention as the telephone…
If I could dig up any of my middle school homework, I could scan one in.
They were just cheesy cow characters, but they went on a lot of my papers before turning them in.
Just had to be different.
Somehow, I doubts it.
Even if it did go wide spread it proceeds me on the boards, anyways.
The first instance I can find is this thread from 1999.
True, I’ve been saying it since…how long ago was 6th grade?
Like 1988?
This site traces the origins of “googlie mooglie” to the phrase “googamooga,” which is dated to the '50s, and gives the first appearance of “googlie mooglie” as the 1961 Howling Wolf song already cited. In any case, it was a tolerably well-known phrase long before Maggie & The Ferocious Beast came out nor harmless started posting on the SDMB.
Your source is referring to the same song as mine. The artist was Howling Wolf, the name of the song was “Going Down Slow.” It was from 1961; I assume the “Chess single 1813” is a reference to the label and the catalogue number of the single release of that song. Zappa’s use of “googly moogly” in seventy-something is assumed to be a nod to Howling Wolf’s use of it in the '61 song.
“The instant that Bihari heard the Jay Hawks’ “Stranded in the Jungle”, a rough and ragged original that had been waxed first, then heard the version done by his own act, the Cadets, while in the studio, he knew that his group’s was far superior. He quickly pressed up copies and got them to radio stations in strong regional markets across the country and into stores in those areas, before the Jay Hawks’ even had a chance to make a move themselves. Released in June of 1956, the song shot up the charts, to #4 R&B / #15 pop. What would prove to be Prentice Moreland’s only Cadets/Jacks recording session provided the group with a catch phrase of their own; he delivered the line “Great googly-moogly, let me outta here”, on “Stranded in the Jungle”; it was a line he had picked up from a Cincinnati DJ.”
Whoops! Sorry, racinchikki, I just checked out the link you included, and it plays a sample of “Stranded in the Jungle”, and you’re right, it’s definitely “Great Googamooga”, not “Great Googly-Moogly.”
I guess I can’t believe everything I read on the Internet, huh? :smack: