Kinky Friedman: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:Kinky friedman 2013.jpg|thumb|300px|Kinky Friedman performing at the 2013 Texas Book Festival. Photo by Larry D. Moore, used under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 license.]]
Musician, author and would-be politician [[Kinky Friedman]] is the former leader of the band [[The Texas Jewboys]]. He has written several murder mysteries about a musician, author and would-be politician named [[Author Avatar|Kinky Friedman]], who also dabbles in private detection. While most of the books are set in New York City, one or two are set in Texas.
Musician, author and would-be politician, [[Kinky Friedman]] is the former leader of the band [[The Texas Jewboys]]. A friend of radio personality [[Don Imus]], he was a frequent guest on the ''Imus in the Morning'' program starting in the 1970s. He has written several murder mysteries about a musician, author and would-be politician named [[Author Avatar|Kinky Friedman]], who also dabbles in private detection. While most of the books are set in New York City, one or two are set in Texas.


{{bibliography}}
This is a partial list of his novels:
* ''A Case of Lone Star''
* ''A Case of Lone Star''
* ''Armandillos and Old Lace''
* ''Armandillos and Old Lace''
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* [[Our Product Sucks]]: Friedman's campaign slogans for his 2006 campaign for Texas governor included "Why The Hell Not?" and "How Hard Could It Be?"
* [[Our Product Sucks]]: Friedman's campaign slogans for his 2006 campaign for Texas governor included "Why The Hell Not?" and "How Hard Could It Be?"
* [[Refuge in Audacity]]: In the mid-90s, he was invited to the White House and handed a Cuban cigar to [[Bill Clinton]] right in front of a bunch of reporters with the words "Don't think of it as supporting their economy, think of it as burning their crops."
* [[Refuge in Audacity]]: In the mid-90s, he was invited to the White House and handed a Cuban cigar to [[Bill Clinton]] right in front of a bunch of reporters with the words "Don't think of it as supporting their economy, think of it as burning their crops."
* [[Third Person Person]]: Friedman is known for referring to himself in the third person, though it's tongue-in-cheek on his part.
* [[Third-Person Person]]: Friedman is known for referring to himself in the third person, though it's tongue-in-cheek on his part.
* [[Uncle Pennybags]]
* [[Uncle Pennybags]]
* [[Write Who You Know]]
* [[Write Who You Know]]

Latest revision as of 20:45, 9 August 2019

/wiki/Kinky Friedmancreator
Kinky Friedman performing at the 2013 Texas Book Festival. Photo by Larry D. Moore, used under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 license.

Musician, author and would-be politician, Kinky Friedman is the former leader of the band The Texas Jewboys. A friend of radio personality Don Imus, he was a frequent guest on the Imus in the Morning program starting in the 1970s. He has written several murder mysteries about a musician, author and would-be politician named Kinky Friedman, who also dabbles in private detection. While most of the books are set in New York City, one or two are set in Texas.

Works written by Kinky Friedman include:
  • A Case of Lone Star
  • Armandillos and Old Lace
  • Blast From The Past
  • Elvis, Jesus and Coca-Cola
  • Frequent Flyer
  • God Bless John Wayne
  • Greenwich Killing Time
  • The Love Song Of J. Edgar Hoover
  • Musical Chairs
  • Roadkill
  • When the Cat's Away

Kinky Friedman provides examples of the following tropes:
  • Big Applesauce
  • Drink Order: Jameson's.
    • The Vodka McGovern: Vodka, the juice of a freshly squeezed orange, topped with soda water.
  • Dual-Meaning Chorus: In the song "We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service To You," the narrator is denied entrance to a cafe with the title words, as he looks like a Communist and a Jew.
    • In the next verse, the rabbi at the synagogue tells him that because he doesn't have a ticket and tie, "We reserve the right to refuse services to you."
    • The next verse takes a more serious anti-war tone as the narrator wishes he could refuse military service to U.S. troops in South Asia.
    • Finally, the narrator fears that when he tries to get into heaven, he'll be told, "Our quota's filled for this year / On singing Texas Jews, / We reserve the right to refuse service to you."
    • The same goes for "They Ain't Makin' Jews Like Jesus Anymore", which starts off with an anti-semite accosting Kinky in a bar with the title phrase, and ends with Kinky punching him out with the words

They ain't makin' Jews like Jesus anymore
We don't turn the other cheek like we done before
You could hear that honky holler as he hit the hardwood floor
Lord, they ain't makin' Jews like Jesus anymore!