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[ NNSquad ] What would Allan Sherman sing about Network Neutrality?


A bit more on the lighter side -- I think we all need it these days.

You're probably familiar with Allan Sherman's Grammy winning novelty
song "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh (A Letter from Camp)" -- to the tune
of Ponchielli's "Dance of the Hours."  Sherman was actually an exec for
game show production team Goodson and Todman.  Sherman co-created
"I've Got a Secret" and became its producer.  His singing career
took off as an accidental "cocktail party" sideline.  

He peaked in the early-60s, but the Kennedy assassination put a damper
on novelty humor, and Sherman was found, alone in an apartment here in
L.A. at age 48, dead from obesity and emphysema, only a decade after
"Hello Muddah's" fame.

OK, the backstory isn't funny.  But this next part is ...

Sherman's songs covered a much broader range than most contemporary
observers might realize, including some "technical" topics of the day.

One of his songs that seems particularly appropriate now came during
the transition from old-style prefix dialing (Murray Hill 5-9975) to
all digit dialing as we know it today.  This was considered to be
quite controversial at the time, much like the arguments about overlay
area codes vs. area code splits currently (I'm a big fan of overlays.
Splits usually suck -- to use a technical term.)

But I digress.  Sherman expressed his dissatisfaction with the monopoly
status of AT&T and the forced move to "digit dialing" with one of
his perhaps least known songs.

If he were alive today, his take on the current state of the Internet
and Network Neutrality might be amusing indeed.

But for now, it's time to sing:

"The Let's All Call Up AT&T and Protest to the President March"

http://media.imeem.com/m/EVjg2gATPa

--Lauren--
NNSquad Moderator