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WKXL - New Hampshire Talk Radio

NH Unscripted with Daniel Siletti

No pressure on my end, but, rumor has it that we have a new WKXL show starting up called “Soundtrack Cinema” and it will be hosted by Daniel Siletti and it has fallen on my shoulders to introduce him to our beautiful WKXL audience. The show’s basis be Daniel playing themes, soundtracks, and songs from silver and small screens as well as some fun games and bonuses at the end of episodes. He’s been crazy active on his YT channel https://www.youtube.com/@danielsiletti4618  paying tribute to some of the best films and franchises ever. Time for me to get all the deets and pump the young buck up!

Duration:
44m
Broadcast on:
26 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

(upbeat music) Welcome back to NH Unscripted. We are on the road again. I am. You're happy to be out of bed and host Ray Dudley. We are coming to you from the Taj Mahal like dates of the WKXL Studios in Concord. Don't be jealous. Nice and cool down here. It is a scorcher out there right now. You're out of the routine. Break out those transistor radios. Get out, you walkmen. Throw away those junky headsets. Fire it up to the AM/FM band. You will find us at 1450 AM, 103.9 FM. Those are both conquered based 101.9 FM for the beautiful, beautiful, beautiful Souls of Manchester. And yeah, as always, I gotta tell you, we got a URL, nhtalkradio.com, duh. That's the hangout for all the cool kids, you know that. We are, I'll give you a little bit more information about what goes on out at nhtalkradio.com, but I have to thank my sponsor, Lakes Regent Fence. Matt McGonagall and the folks up there in Guilford, lrfence.com is their URL. They do unbelievably incredible, beautiful work. I mean, really, it's like art. It's like fence art. I'm gonna park it there and say art. I've been known to call it something else. However, you can go out to lrfence.com. That's lrfence.com. There is a button out there where you can get a free estimate. We old folks like free. We like coupons, we like to go to Costco, get the little free sample food. Yep, we are into free, baby, free. lrfence.com, you can get a free estimate. Matt, we'll get back to you. They do everything, property lines. They do pool fences. Pickleball, are you into pickleball? I don't know. I don't know anything about it. Even though looking at me, you would think, oh, that man's a god. He must do sports. But you know what? I don't. lrfence.com, there are gigabytes. I was gonna say megabytes, but we're past that gigabytes and gigabytes and gigabytes of photos of the work they do out there, lfence.com. Give Lakes Region Fence a call or go to the URL. Get a free estimate. Come on, some of the time, get it done. Get your pool done. All right, all right. We have another one today that should be an award winning show. I expect the trophy any day now. In the studio with me is Daniel Saletti. Good morning, sir. Good morning, Ray. How you doing? Oh, as you can tell, well, I got my neighborhood jacket on. I got my bell bottom pants on. I am doing good. They look great. Thank you. I appreciate that very, very much. Daniel, why are you here today? What is happening in your life? Well, you know, if I'm not trying to, you know, solve the problems of the world, I'm actually the real reason I'm here. Someone is. I know. I'm here to basically give a little promotion for an upcoming show I'm gonna be doing here at your WKXL. Yes, yes, yes. Yes. All right, let's get into it. Now you kick the door open. I did. So why are you doing this show? Well, you know, I've lived in New Hampshire for going on, is it almost like 15? No, I don't know. I got lint older than that. I know. But, you know, I went to school for journalism and I did a radio show all about movies and TV shows at WK&H at Keene State. And then I transferred that to a television version of it at Concord TV, right here in Concord. And I said, I wanted to do another show about the music side of media, the soundtracks, the TV themes, the song sung by actors, written for films, movie musicals, all that stuff. And I said, you know, why not do it right here in Concord at a station right here and it can be broadcast to Concord, broadcast to Manchester. And it'll give people a new look on music. And it'll be something on radio that they've never heard before 'cause a lot of these songs you don't hear on the radio. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you haven't picked out a name yet? I have. It's gonna be called Soundtracks Cinema. Okay. And it is going to feature all those types of music that I mentioned, the soundtracks, the themes, the-- We talk like the big things like the Star Wars, the John Williams stuff, all that. John Williams, the King, All Hail. You know, we will be playing him. We'll be playing Alan Sylvesterie. We'll be playing your classic TV themes, your modern TV themes. And even like songs sung by actors that you wouldn't necessarily hear. I mean, you know, we'll be playing everything from, you know, Scott Bakula, from Quantum Leap and Star Trek Enterprise. He's a singer. And then yeah, we'll even play Pierce Brosnan from Mamma Mia. You know, he's not the best, but he did his best. Yeah, yeah. So, oh man, okay. I know. All right, let's back this up. Okay, you went to school for journalism. (laughing) Nice. There it is. Oh, you know, John Williams and Indiana Jones, don't let anybody say that Indiana Jones 5, Diala Destiny was bad, because it was a good send-off. Or was it? At least there's one of you who liked it. There we go. Andrew, you don't leave it to the pro. Great touch. Love that. Thank you. That's why he gets paid the big bucks, baby. Man behind the booth. Thank you, Andrew. Love that, thank you. You know, there are some things like that, right? You hear it, you instantly know what it's from, where you were, right? They just pull you back in time. They're like literal timestamps of your life. Absolutely. And you know, and the goal of this is also to educate people. You know, sometimes they hear a song and they don't know what it's from, or they think it's from something else, and that's all they think it is. Like, the one staple, believe it or not, I keep constantly hearing is that, oh, "Live and Let Die" by Paul McCartney and Wings is from Shrek 3. Wait, what? And I'm like, no, it's not. What? It's from the Bond film, "Live and Let Die." I would never have known it was even near Shrek. I neither did I, but it was featured in that. And that's, I've had people say that's what they think it's no, they know it's from. And it's not. It's not. It originated as Roger Moore's first theme. Man, that is crazy. You know, it's funny you mention it. I touch on a lot of older TV shows-- Sure. Songs and things here. And I was out looking for things. And I'm coming across like, "All in the Family." Oh, yeah. Laverne and Shirley. Yup. You know, there's a lot of those iconic shows that had songs or, you know, whatever. They pop into your head. Like, we were talking to someone and you and I, but get smart. Yes. You know, there are things that you hear it in your-- Boy, no way. [LAUGHTER] Dude, you are worth it. He is on it. See, you know, the thing about this song is that I'm afraid to play it because people are going to immediately turn off their radios because of poor Gene Stapleton singing. [LAUGHTER] I was going to do it when you were. That was-- there it is. [LAUGHTER] [INAUDIBLE] You are killing me back there, baby. You are killing me. Thank you, sir. I appreciate that. I need to do everything. Oh, my gosh. Yeah, so you start in journalism. Yes. How do you go from there to movies? Well, I've always had a love for movies and television. I initially went to Keen to do filmmaking, and I was going there as a transfer junior from NHTI, actually. And I said, you know, the stuff they want you to take for me to get out in two years is a lot. It is a lot. And I'm the type of movie guy who will watch a bunch of stuff, but I'm also like, OK, I don't necessarily need to watch all the weird type of movies, or the rated R stuff, or anything like that. So I said, well, journalism is something else I wanted to try. And I went to that, and I said, this is great. This gets me out, and I'm learning something. And the way I see it is that with doing the radio show there, and I did some news updates there as well, and now with the TV show at Concord TV, I'm still continuing with my journalism path, because I'm in media. I'm working with TV and radio, and that's the best part. But I still continue to enjoy movie making, because I actually do make movies. I'm a local filmmaker. Got you. So, oh, man, another I kicked open a different door. There's that door again. Which door am I going to open up here? All right. So, yeah. You did some radio in King State. Yes. What was that like? That was a great experience. It was-- Was it about film? It sounded again? Yeah, that was the show. The show was we picked a subject, and I would bring on some friends of mine, and we would discuss the topic. We did everything under the sun, everything from like Back to the Future to Psych, to Star Trek, to Star Wars, anything you could possibly think of. And we would discuss it and give our opinions of it, and then at the end of the show, I would play a little game with all them called Who Are You. I would play a clip from something. They didn't know what it was, and they had to tell me who it is and/or what it is from. And most of the time they got it wrong, which means they didn't get points, but the points don't matter. Dang, okay, that's pretty cool. Yeah, are you hoping to transfer that over to the show? And that is now the-- The template? That's the exact show I do at Concord TV. That is the exact same thing. We pick a subject, we discuss it, but now it's visual, so I can show the clips of whatever the topic is, and we can give our more opinions on it, and have a little bit more fun with it. But I intend to bring at least the Who Are You segment even onto soundtrack cinema, because it's a great way to hook the audience, I think, back into the next episode of the show. Okay, here's the answer from last week's show. But, yeah, no, doing this type of stuff between the show that I wanna do here, KXL. Oh, there we go. The KXL soundtrack cinema, and then also as the real turns, great stuff. Man, hey, won't you play another somebody done somebody wrong song? Yes, you will listen to NH Unscripted, and yes, I am your DJ Thomas like host Ray Dudley, and yes, we are coming to you from the YMCA-like digs of the WK, KXL Studios in Concord. 1450 AM, 103.9 FM, 101.9 FM in Manchester, and HtokReviews.com is our URL. Daniel Soletti's in the house. Hey there, we're talking business. Let's be right back. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (intense music) Mother of God. Oh man. Lori, we're gonna get back. Where? Back to the future. (laughing) Ooh, mama, you have the privilege of listening to NH Unscripted. Ooh, mama, I am Ray Dudley. You're so happy to be on a bed host. Mother of God, they let me out of the home to do this one today. We are so happy. 1450 AM, 103.9 FM in Concord, you Sony Walkman, Walkman, Walkman, Walkman. What the heck is the plural of that? And 101.9 FM for you folks in Manchester, NHtokReviews.com is our URL, and we are having more fun than I. I thought we were gonna be having this loaded. Daniel Soletti is in the house. Hey there. Daniel is going to have a new program here at NHtok Radio and WKXL, and it is going to be called Soundtrack Cinema. Soundtrack Cinema. Won't only deal with cinema, correct? Correct, correct. It'll have silver screen, small screen, movie musicals, anything you could possibly think of that had music connected to it and the screen. You know, I was over at Red River, maybe a week ago, a little bit more than that maybe, and they were having a short film festival over there. I could not believe the quality of the films that were being shown. They were like 14 of them. They were on 10, 15 minutes long, some of them, some of them animated, some of them just regular, and I'm like, wait, how is this happening? How did this go from somebody's mind conceptualizing this to the screen? First of all, I don't get animation. I mean, I don't get it. I just, it's brilliant. It's brilliant. I mean, anybody can film something nowadays with their don't know what that is. It's true, it's true. And make it look, and you can add music, but to make an actual like animated film, or even just to make a film where you've got an idea and you think, well, I don't know, I kind of like the concept here. I think it would translate good to film. Right. So you said you're an independent filmmaker, so travel down that road. How does all that happen? You know, it's all about the vision you have. I make this joke with some friends of mine saying like, all right, I have a vision, and then they immediately all walk away. But the-- My friends run. Yeah, it's all about having the idea of something, and when you say short films, I was actually in the high school version of that when I was in high school. We had a very small kind of dysfunctional film club, but we made films and produced them to the short film festival for high school, and we got in the final three times, and we got the audience award, or we tied for it the second year, which was loads of fun. And then, but those were more, those were more had had a restraint on them. They had to be a certain time limit, a certain type of thing. You really couldn't do any big originality parts. What I do is, is I always, when I watch a movie or a TV show, I always say like, I want to be part of that. Who doesn't want to be part of the blank? But I say like, okay, I don't look like James T. Kirk, or I don't look like James Bond, or something like that. I look like the Fonz. You do. You do. Those who don't know. Hey. But no, I always say I want to be part of those. So I say, okay, I will take that concept right in a completely original idea around it, and then make my own version of it. So you go to YouTube, you can type in Batman fan film, and you'll see 1,000 and two Batman fan films out there. Good ones too. Exactly. For me, I do other franchises. Like I do, every Halloween, I do a Halloween Twilight Zone film. I get together a whole bunch of other directors, and we make our own segments, and I put them all together, and I'll be, this year I'll be making my ninth one, which is amazing. What? Amazing stuff. Who have you been? Oh my God. I've been, I don't know where I've been. Honestly, stuck in my own head probably. Oh, I've had those L.O.S. teachers. Oh yeah. Oh, we'll have to scratch that. Scratch that part, yeah. But no, I did a James Bond parody film where it was a complete 180. We had James Bond's American cousin, Jane Bond, and she goes off on a mission of some sorts. And I've done like an adventure type of thing, kind of sort of like Indiana Jones, but not exactly. He's an adventuring linguist. He goes off and deciphers things. I did a series of, when COVID was high, I did a series of little cartoon shows where it was, I had cartoons walking around the house. That's your thing with animation. I got a whole bunch of green screen stuff, and I put the cartoons in my house. Like Tom and Jerry-- Tom and Jerry, Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse, Jessica Rabbit, anybody I could possibly think of. And then I'm finishing up my, I'm right in the finale right now. I've done my own Doctor Who show. I've, it's really silly, but it's called Doctor Who School Days, and it's about like a kind of a high school college age doctor who goes through a whole bunch of schools and defeats the classic villains and stuff like that. But I'm finishing up my, the season four finale, which I never thought I'd say 'cause it was supposed to be a one-off show, and that was it. But all this stuff, it's amazing, loads of fun to do. And then I also write fan fiction audio books too, and I record those and have loads of fun. "Mother of God." You are so, how do you, how do you have time for a radio show? Well, you know, it's not easy, it's not easy, but I, that-- It's not easy being green. There you go. It's not easy being green, that's right. But no, and with the chapters, especially, I intend to have a chapter of the show, of whatever book I decided at the end of the soundtrack cinema as another way to hook in the audience. You know, we wanna see what happens to the characters. And I have three different series. I have a James Bond series where it's James Bond and his American sidekick, Double O'Soletti, that's me. The Danny Wilcox Adventures, who is the supposed great grandson of Indiana Jones. We don't quite know though. And then I have a Harry Potter series where I took some friends of mine and I created characters around us and I threw us into Hogwarts and we're kinda like friends of Potter a little bit. So it's loads of fun. And doing those and then doing the movies as well, that all comes back to the point of where like, you know, we can't be Harry Potter, but maybe we can be a friend of Harry Potter. 'Cause I think there was like a comic book out there. Superman's pal, Jimmy Olsen. Okay, Jimmy Olsen can't be Superman, but you know, he can be his pal. Yeah, yeah, yeah, oh man. So are you, all right, do you have URL? I have it, yes, I have a YouTube channel. Okay, that's why I can give you, it's Daniel Saletti, D-A-N-I-E-L-S-I-L-E-T-T-I. Very simple to find me, just find the picture of James Bond, that's me. (laughing) - I have been out to your YouTube site. - Oh, well thank you. (upbeat music) Ah, there it is. - Perfect. - Nice, nice, nice, nice. Right, and again, people instantly know what that is. - Exactly. - Instantly know what that is. And there's 25 films out there with not only their title songs, but Soundtracks full of music. And I intend to play those Soundtracks on this show, because people only know Daniel Craig when it comes to Bond sometimes, and they don't know the other five guys that came over. - Mother of God. - I know, I know. - Dude, they need to be arrested. - They do, that cannot be, we cannot let that go. - On your YouTube channel, are you gonna do, so, hmm, how do I say this? - Yeah. - On your YouTube channel, you have a cohort, a buddy who tends to come in from time to time. Are you gonna be bringing him in? And you have other guests as well, but he tends to come in. - Yeah, from the TV show, from As The Real Turns, I have a whole bunch of cohorts and stuff like that. Both human and inanimate too. - Okay. - And I'll explain that. But yeah, no, I have loads of friends who would want to definitely stop in on the show, and then if you've watched As The Real Turns, I have this little, you'll see a thing at the beginning sometimes, where it's called an entertainment update, where we give little updates on things in the world. And if I don't have a guest reporter, I will sometimes use this puppet I have, and I thought, well, that'd be a fun co-host maybe, but I'm not even sure I'm not gonna do that. - It may not work on the radio. - Exactly, but you know what I mean. - Pro tip here. - Exactly, yeah. Yeah, no, I intend to bring, if they're willing to come on, for sure. I would love to have people to jump on the show, because as much as this is my Shatner ego coming out, as much as people want to hear the sound of my own voice, and I do, no kidding, it'd be nice to have someone to bounce off of, I'm sure, ever so often. - Well, yes, absolutely, so the great thing about watching your videos is, first of all, this is an incredible amount of work that has gone into those. I was very surprised by the volume of effort you must have gone through, because not only were you prepared, your guests were prepared. - Yeah. - I saw one where you did about something, it was an episode about all of cartoon characters that have been involved in TV shows. - Oh, yes. - And everyone was in there. From the Roadrunner to Yosemite Sam, you had Tom and Jerry, all right, hang on, they take notes. (laughs) We gotta put a pin right there. We are glad all over here at NH Unscripted. I am your Dave, Clark Five, like host, Rade Dudley. We are coming to you from the Hawaii Five O-like digs of the WK Excel Studios in Concord. 1450 AM, one of V.9 FM on your trains as the radios. 101.9 FM, those folks in Manchester because we love you, you know we do. NHTalkRadio.com is our URL, and you know we're not gonna get through all the info. Daniel and I got a hammer away though, we'll be right back. (upbeat music) - To the Batmobile, let's go. Atomic batteries to power, turbines to speed. Roger, ready to go down. (upbeat music) - Oh, welcome back, I'm ready to end NH Unscripted. Ooh, we are full of my classics out today. - Are we not, son of a gun? - Yes, we are NH Unscripted, and we are coming to you in the HR pub and stuff like conditions of the WK Excel Studios in Concord. Mano, mano, mano, mano. I am your Marty Croft, like host Ray Dudley. Whoo, mama, we're having fun. I don't even know where to begin half the time now. I'm 1450AL, 103.9 FM, those are Concord based on your Walkman 101.9 FM in Manchester for the beautiful, beautiful, beautiful folks down there, NHTalkRadio.com is the URL. You know it's funny you play that. I was looking at something the other day about Batman, it's funny you mention that, and it's amazing how many big stars were in that classic show. - Oh yeah. - I mean, I was Frank Gorshin, is that his last name? - Yeah, Frank Gorshin, yeah. - And he was an impressionist, too, at the time. And boy, he played the Riddler, my God. And then you had Burgess Meredith, and then you had-- - Caesar Romero. - Yes, oh, it was crazy. - I love it. - Earth a kid. - Yeah, one of three cat women, yeah. - Oh, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm, give me a star. (laughing) - But you know, it's funny. You're gonna have a wealth of information for your show, which is really funny. - I'm excited. I started to talk when we left the last segment here about, you did an excellent episode. I mean, I can't believe all the work that went into the one with you did all of the cartoon characters in various movies or TV, mainly movies. - Yeah. - You did Space Jam, you were doing Roger Rabbit. There were films there, I didn't even know existed, and there's like cartoon characters, ever. (laughing) - You are on it, I love it. - Nothing but the best here, let me tell you. You had 'em all in there though. - It's true, it's true. No, those live action cartoon hybrids were so interesting to me, and I love those, and I remember I did like an outdoor movie night with a whole bunch of friends of mine one time, and we showed Roger Rabbit, and one of them actually didn't come because they were afraid of that type of genre. I'm like, how can you be afraid of that? - You're afraid of like-- - Wait, I don't get that. - I know, neither did I, but no, I love those types of movies, and that was a fantastic episode, and that type of stuff is what brought me to do the thing I did at COVID, the quarantine with cartoons, 'cause I said, I always wanted to have Bugs Bunny next to me, I wanted to have Roger Rabbit next to me. So I did like 20 of these episodes, and you know, somewhere a lot easier to do than others, but because, you know, you're working with Green Screen here, and you have to play some Harvey stuff, like I think we talked about Harvey. - Yeah. - You have to talk to thin air. - Right. - So you have to pretend something was there, and that one, that series worked really, really well, and then the episode of "As The Real Turns" worked really, really well. The one that didn't work out so well is, I made a Pink Panther film a while ago now, and it's one of those things that I-- - Steve Martin version or the-- - The Peter Sellers. - Peter Sellers, thank you. - Well, it was neither of them. I was the detective, and I rarely say this, but I say, never don't ever watch that movie I made, because it was so bad, I tried to-- Ah, there it is. I tried to do the same thing, but a little bit more. I tried to have the Pink Panther, you know, steal the diamond himself. I tried to put him into the movie, and it just didn't work, but I'm willing to retry it another time. I went to make another Pink Panther film sometime, but-- - The Minky. The Minky. - Yes, yes, but no, that genre is so cool, and I'm so happy they're still making some of them. I'd forget what the latest one we talked about on that show was, and they might've been-- - We did do a Toy Story. - Yeah, we did, yeah, the latest episode of the show, I think was, the latest one was Mash, we talked Mash, and the guest I had kind of misled me a little bit, 'cause he said, "Oh yeah, I know Mash," and then he kind of was a little rocky on the whole episode, but it worked really, really well, and there's enough to talk about. - Talk about an iconic show. - I mean, everything from the movie to the show to the spin-offs that we have enough to talk about. - Yeah, well the show came because of the movie, right? - That's right, yeah, yeah, yeah. - One of those few instances, like-- - The reverse of the, so because he had a movie, and they decided to make an incredible TV-- - Incredible show, incredible show, but yeah, no, Mash was one of those things. Another example is Fame. Fame was a movie first, then came to a series. - Good connection. - Which is a guilty pleasure show of mine, I will admit, but-- - I'll bet every high school theater kid. - We did that, we did like a junior version of it in high school, and that was the first play I did, and it was so bad, but I said, "I gotta check out this television show first," and I said, "Okay, this saved it." But yeah, no, it's been known to happen. A movie comes first, and then a show. It's not always successful, but it's known to happen. - Yeah, so, oh my gosh, I got so much to ask. (laughing) - We gotta do a part two. - I know, I know, I know, I know. - So when you think of things that you want to talk about, obviously there are instantly things that come to the forefront of your own, because they're just famous or whatever. What are some of those? Like, I think of, when you say Star Trek, I instantly think of like the Wrath of Khan. - Oh, of course, right? - I mean, to me, that's just right. - Yeah, right, right, right. - So in the original Star Wars trilogy, you know, all of those, when you think about, okay, my first radio episode, here's what I'm gonna talk about, as like to kick it off, what comes to mind? - So, I'm gonna play stuff that, immediately stuff like that, you know, play stuff that's recognizable, play some Star Trek, play some John Williams, play some, you know, Alan Sylvester, you heard the Back to the Future there, but I also want to make people know that sometimes you can take a stretch, like, I want to have a segment where it's called, we're stretching it, where a song can be connected to something is not necessarily part of the soundtrack, but it's so synonymous with it that it might as well be. Like, there is a scene in the latest of Adam's family incarnation, Wednesday. There was a famous dance segment that became of like a viral thing, and the song that was played in that scene has become so synonymous with it that it's like, "Oh, well, it might as well be part of the soundtrack." - Is it an original, or is it a, like, it's a song called the Gugu Muck by the cramps, I think? - Rolls off the tongue. - I think, I think. - Never heard of it. - But it became so connected with it that, you know, it might as well be part of the soundtrack. And then I also want to have segments where, you know, they may not all have been good, but Elvis Presley was a big movie star. - Yes. - And all, he did a bunch of songs in his movies. - He was young to even know about him. - All, let me tell you something. - Great, great. - He had a whole bunch of songs in his movie, so I want to have an Elvis segment. And then, of course, like a lightning round. I feel like something, if a TV theme was pretty short, we can have like three themes in a row, and I'll give information. And I plan to give information about every movie or song that we talk about, either before or after the song. And that's, it all comes back to the idea of education. I want to educate people on these songs. - You know, I meant, I mean, I meant, you reminded me of something. When I watched your YouTube, a couple of your YouTube things, you did a really good thing, where at the bottom of the screen, while you're talking about a certain segment, you would have a little known factor. Did you know? - Yes, the did you know? - Yeah, the things that folks didn't know, I did not know. I'm looking at them like, what? That cannot be. - Yeah. - They were like little factoids. - Those are things that either, we forget to mention on the show, or little factoids I put in during the editing phase. And I've had people like say, oh, I'd listen to the show, this is great, or I'm gonna work on something while the show is playing, but I'd say like, no. When it comes to this TV show, when it comes to As Real Turns, you gotta watch it for those factoids, because there might be something in there that either you're saying, why didn't he mention that? Well, there it is, or here's something extra. - Yeah, yeah, it embellished it actually, on some of the points that you had actually made. - Right. - Tell me, because, and not just me, obviously the audience, there is a huge amount of work that goes into that. I mean, granted, radio's a little bit different. You have to come and prepare, there's nothing visual for the most part. But your YouTube videos that you do at CTV, it's a huge amount of editing there. You had to have clips, soundbites, your guests all had to be up on what you're talking about. - Oh yeah, I mean, there was a lot going on. - It's not easy, it's not, because you gotta make sure-- - Being green. - Being green, you gotta make sure that, yeah, every thing fits well enough, because especially when I add the clips, it will, the episodes of As Real Turns, usually end up being like, I don't know, anywhere from like an hour to hour 15, because there's so much talk about sometimes. And if it goes over, I really gotta, I have to say, oh, I gotta split this up into two parts or something like that, because there is so much talk about, especially in one subject, 'cause I know, like this summer, we're covering all of Star Trek, and we just-- - Is that even possible? - Well, I fit all 13 doctors in one show for Doctor Who One Time, it wasn't easy, but the first one we did, we did everything from the original series up to Enterprise, which is six shows, and I even said to myself, I said, oh man, I gotta split this up three and three, because there's-- - Wait, are you talking movies in? - Just the TV shows this time. Next time, hopefully we're gonna talk movies, but because we have so much, only so much time to talk about it, we're gonna, I told him, I guess, I said, okay, we're gonna play the trailer, which is what we usually do, we say, play the trailer, talk, favorite point, move on, favorite talk, move on, and so on. - Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, we're gonna talk about that when we come back. My mother of God, is it even possible? What is happening in my life? Ooh, we offer ever in blue jeans here at NH Unscripted. Ah, yes, I am your Neil Diamond like host, Ray Dudley. We are coming to you from a gong show like digs of the WKXL studios 1450 AM 103.9 FM. That's on your Sony Walkman, 'cause you're cool. 101.9 FM from beautiful folks in Manchester. NHknockradio.com is our URL. I give you some info on that when we come back. Daniel Saletti, a mother of God, we're talking business, we'll be right back. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) ♪ H.R. Puffin stuff ♪ ♪ Wish them when things get rough ♪ ♪ H.R. Puffin stuff ♪ ♪ You can't do anything 'cause you can't do enough ♪ ♪ Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh ♪ - In case you're having a senior moment, welcome back to NH Unscripted. - N.H.R. Puffin stuff on script. ♪ Where you are ♪ ♪ Comin place with me ♪ - Oh my God, we are coming to you from a fantasy, island-like digs of the WKXL studios, baby. ♪ I am the Lindy Blaine ♪ Oh, it's Ray Dudley, oh my God. Life is good, honest to goodness. 1450 AM 103.9 FM in Concord. 101.9 FM, shows like this today, just it's what life's about. 101.9 FM in Manchester. NH.Radio.com is our URL, by the way that we're all the cool kids hang out because there's a button out there where you can listen live. So let's say every Wednesday or Friday morning, nine o'clock, you're like, hey, isn't there an old guy on a radio somewhere I can listen to? Yeah, you can go out there, push the button. You'll hear this show every Wednesday, Friday, like I said, nine AM, plus all of the archives of this show and all of the other great shows that take place here, Daniel's show also will be archived out there. You'll find it, yes, yes, yes. All the archives are out there. Anyway, we are having a ball. A ball, let me say this live. Well, on the radio, I so appreciate Daniel and I so appreciate him to go back there because this is what-- 100% agree, yeah. This is what entertainment's about. You know, I love to get people in. I love to geek out about stuff. I was gonna ask you about what you used to edit and all that, we may get into that, maybe, maybe not. But you know what? It's just all about having fun, right? Life's too short, life's too short. I say that as a 70-year-old man. Anyway, Daniel-- Yes. When we were talking last, we were talking about the work that you and your guests have to do. Pre-show. Oh yeah, there's a lot. I mean, there's a lot. I mean, when I look at your videos, I'm like, there's no, how many hours have been spent? Look, just the Toy Story one. The Toy Story. I'm like, how's all I got to get? An hour later, I'm still watching and you're still pulling up clips and talking about Buzz Lightyear. Like, well, you know, it all started back in 1998. No kidding. So, well, you know-- I was in the balcony and I viewed, didn't it? It was, it-- It-- All right. It does take a lot of work, you're right. And sometimes, you had mentioned that things get flagged for on YouTube for copyright. Right. I've been there. I've been there a whole bunch of times. Not always for the movies and the other fun shows I make, but for this one, because I use the straight up clips. And if sometimes, you know, there's a scene where I need to show that, I'll try to find an alternate source or, you know, I will upload it to a different spot or something like that, something to maybe get it around it. But if it really does beg the beg that I have to get rid of it, I'll either show, like, a bunch of pictures of that scene or I will just completely cut it out. I don't want to, but-- Yeah. Andrew, I don't know if I told you, but this show gets flagged. If it's a soft copyright, every episode I've put up on YouTube has gotten flagged because I make a song reference. Oh, really? Yeah, or a TV show. Every single one, it's a copyright, but author, not offended or something like that. Yeah, if it's not offended or anything, or it's, like, partially blocked, then I leave it alone. Because, you know, if the people in, I don't know, Tanzania or something like that can't watch it, then I apologize to my Tanzanian fans, but, you know-- Both of them. In a way, that's why radio's easier than YouTube, anyway. Which is why I'm excited for this, because, you know, with this one, even if I get to-- even if I have someone with me or not-- what I get to do is I get to play the song I talk about, and then I give the little fact toy, and then we move on. Yeah. You know, it's easier. And it's song talk, song talk, chapter of book and game. But it's all in good fun. And that's why I'm really excited for soundtrack cinema, because it'll be something for me to enjoy, and it'll be something for the audience to enjoy, and just have a great time, because they'll turn-- and what I'm hoping is they'll tune their radio, and they'll hear something. Oh, I remember that theme, or I've never heard that actor sing, or something like that. Yeah, yeah, I'm with you on that. Have you thought at all about tying them all together? I know you do audio book, you do voice-over work, you do your video, you do not radio and film. Have you thought about creating a theme where, for one episode of something, all of those facets are tied together with the same idea or character? Yes and no. Like I know, I'm in the middle of production for a second Jane Bond film right now. And I plug double O'Soletti from the audiobooks and have him make an appearance in the movie. And I've had Danny Wilcox make appearance in the adventuring film. And so I cross the characters over every so often. And then the voice work, you know, who knows? I could be talking to something about Disney. And, you know, after the songs played, I could interview Mickey Mouse. I mean, you know, I don't think he's here right now, unfortunately, but I could bring him on. Right? Well, if he appeared, I would like so jump on him. (laughs) So, have you got a sponsor yet? I don't have a sponsor yet. That is the major roadblock that I'm at right now. I know some businesses had some interest, but then they were off and on. So I don't know why people haven't jumped out of their seats for this because, like I've always said, it's something new, but my major plea, I'm on my knees right here in the studio. If anyone can sponsor me, I would greatly appreciate it. I know, I hope there's somebody out there because it really, that would be so wonderful that this has to get on the air. I mean, there's to be somebody out there. Go on a r- Ah, my favorite-- Does he need a hero, basically? Oh, we do! If Christopher Reeve was here, I'd definitely like him to save me right now. Classic, right? I love this one. This is my all-time favorite John Williams theme. I'm a major Indiana Jones fan, I'm a Star Trek fan, but I love the Star Wars theme. Why this? Superman is Christopher Reeve. Let's see if that drum roll. Oh, god. It sounds so good. Christopher Reeve's Superman theme is the best because it's not heard all the time. I go to a John Williams concert, like they had one in Concord. I went to see that one. What, they did? They did. He wasn't there, but it was like a tribute to all his music. It sounds so good. And you just want to jump out of your seat and fly. That's what you want to do. Yeah. Right there, yes. But no, in all the medleys and stuff like that, you hear Indiana Jones, Star Wars, Harry Potter, blah, blah, blah. You never hear Superman, or in any movie medley, you hear, you know, back to the future, the three I mentioned, anything else. But you just don't hear the Superman one too often. And any, any opportunity that comes, I highly, I say nobody talk. I want to just listen to this song. And if you haven't, I mean, everyone knows the pre-recorded version that we heard. That's actually like a distributed version. Listen to the film version, which is the Prelude Plus main title march from the actual soundtrack. That's the one where there's a little bit of extra sounds in there, a little bit of extra horns. And it sounds so good. So good. How do you even know that stuff? Mommy, geez, I feel so stupid. So I want to get it out before we end up again. Your YouTube channel. The YouTube channel, yes. Daniel Saletti, D-A-N-I-E-L-S-I-L-E-T-T-I. Look for the picture, James Bond. And then you can explore the channel. And I think everything should be organized in playlists too. So that's an easier organization. - And they are, by the way. And the name of your radio show will be. - The name of the radio show is soundtrack cinema. If anyone out there, give me a sponsor. I'd love to have you. - It's perfect. Okay, I'm glad we get those back up. Ooh, I'm supposed to tell people about EPIL YACHI, dang it. Having in Pittsfield, July, in July 17th, 18th, I believe EPIL YACHI up in Pittsfield. You believe that? Opera in Pittsfield, opera. Yeah, just thought I threw that out there. Anyway, are there any genres that you're not comfortable with covering? - I will play-- - Or that you won't cover. - I will play pretty much anything. I will play everything from, like I've said, the soundtracks and themes to the actors and movie musicals. There's one song I, you'd have to twist my arm to play and it's over the rainbow. - The Wizard of Oz. - The Wizard of Oz soundtrack is perfectly fine. - I'm fine, I'm fine. - It's perfectly fine, but you know what? I, every time I watch something that, you know, and here's our musical guest. And America's Got Talent finalist hears her song or something like that. They always choose over the rainbow. I've heard this song so many times and I'm like, you know, okay. - He's so callous. - Judy's saying it fine. Leave her alone, we'll move on from there. - He's so callous. - But maybe, maybe, maybe I'll play it or, you know, if I'm really sick that day, I have a sub. It's like, oh now, welcome to Soundtrack Cinema. We're playing over the rainbow against Daniel's wheel or something. - It'll be the last time that sub is ever bad. - Oh yeah. - My goodness. - But no, I mean, I might play it. But in all seriousness, there's probably not too much, I would say no to. There are some songs within a soundtrack of a film where it's like, you know, the whole song just sounds like there it is. It all just sounds like bomb. That's all it is. But, you know, I wouldn't be opposed to a lot. - Yeah. - I'm from Spa. I think it's time to end the show. - End transmission. - That is crazy how we, is that the end there, baby? Oh my God. - It's time for your mission. - You are listening to the N-H unscripted. - To seek out new life. - Son of a civilization. - I am your Captain Kirklight Coast raid that night. - We are coming to you from the Star Trek like digs at the WKXL Studios in Concord. 1450 AM 103.9 FM on a 1.9 FM for that beautiful souls and man chest and Daniel Stolletti is in the house. - Man, thank you, sir. I appreciate it. - Thank you for having me. I am, this was a wonderful pleasure. - And anystockradio.com is our URL. - We are signing off from the bridge, baby. - We're outta here. - Absolutely. - I'm in Prosper. - Yes. - Thank you again. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) ♪ Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh ♪