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*The song "[[You Don't Mess Around with Jim]]," performed by [[the Country Trio]] in ''[[The Perry Como Winter Show]]'', notes that "you don't tear the mask off that old Lone Ranger."
 
*The song "[[You Don't Mess Around with Jim]]," performed by [[the Country Trio]] in ''[[The Perry Como Winter Show]]'', notes that "you don't tear the mask off that old Lone Ranger."
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*In a ''[[Sesame Street]]'' sketch, [[Simon Soundman]] makes the noise of various forms of transportation. When he makes the sound of a horse, he is mistaken for a real one by a Lone Ranger-esque [[Anything Muppet]] who lassos him and refers to Simon as "Silver."
   
 
*The story "Hopalong Herbert Out West," included in ''[[The Sesame Street ABC Storybook]]'', has a masked horse surprising [[Herbert Birdsfoot]] by riding him and shouting "Hi, ho, Herbert! Away!"
 
*The story "Hopalong Herbert Out West," included in ''[[The Sesame Street ABC Storybook]]'', has a masked horse surprising [[Herbert Birdsfoot]] by riding him and shouting "Hi, ho, Herbert! Away!"

Revision as of 02:54, 9 March 2012

Lonerangermask

The fairy godmother holding that masked man's trademark

The Lone Ranger is a character who originated on the radio in the 1930s and went on to become one of the most iconic fictional cowboys. The Lone Ranger, a masked man who was the sole survivor of an ambush on his Texas Ranger troop, rides the range with a cloud of dust, his faithful Indian companion Tonto, silver bullets, and a hearty "Hi, ho, Silver!" to his trusty steed. The program debuted on Detroit station WXYZ in January 1933 and remained on the air until 1956. Its theme song, the strains of the "William Tell Overture," would become forever identified with the Lone Ranger, following him into movies, TV, and commercials.

The Ranger's adventures were black and white morality plays, thrilling but with unusually fastidious habits and a minimum of bloodshed and mayhem. The radio series, though broadcast regionally, gained national interest and, as other individual stations picked up the program, led to the formation of the Mutual Broadcasting System. The Lone Ranger was soon adapted for comic books, film serials, and a television series, as well as inspiring countless parodies and becoming an iconic symbol of the idealized Old West, a sterling knight amongst the sagebrush. As such, the Ranger has been the target of spoofs and joking asides, including several in the Muppet universe.

References

  • In Hey Cinderella!, when preparing for the costume ball, the Fairy Godmother pulls out a black mask which a nice man on a horse gave to her. He also tried to give her his faithful Indian companion.
  • In a Sesame Street sketch, Simon Soundman makes the noise of various forms of transportation. When he makes the sound of a horse, he is mistaken for a real one by a Lone Ranger-esque Anything Muppet who lassos him and refers to Simon as "Silver."
  • In episode 510 of The Muppet Show, The Pied Piper (Jean-Pierre Rampal) promises to rid the rat's town of children if the mayor will "cross his palm with silver." Another rat wonders why he would want the Lone Ranger's horse step over his hand.
  • A sixth season Muppet Babies episode is titled "The Green Ranger." Baby Kermit adopts that identity in a fantasy when his favorite show, The Range Rider, is canceled. However, the Range Rider bears a stronger resemblance to the likes of Roy Rogers and Gene Autry than to the famous masked man.
  • In Big Bird in Japan, Big Bird notices that the young Japanese woman helping them seems to come and go when they help. He hypothesizes that she's the Lone Ranger.
  • In Tales of a Sixth-Grade Muppet, when Danvers needs his best friend Pasquale's help, he calls him "kemo sabe" the term of endearment that Tonto would use for the Lone Ranger.

Trivia

Wikipedia has an article related to: