Bletch was then shown getting ready to go to a drug deal meeting at the golf course. Just as he was about to leave, he was stopped by a little fish named Guppy, who tells him that he's been waiting to see him all day because he wanted to audition for him. Bletch pretended to be interested and, using a desk lamp, shined a small spotlight on him. Before singing, Guppy notes that the song is called "Glad to be a Guppy" and that it's one of his own compositions. Bletch, however, doesn't enjoy the song as he is heard groaning through the first few verses. Guppy asked Bletch if something was the matter, and the big walrus lies by saying he has a cavity in one of his rear molars. He then asks if he could take a look inside his mouth and the fish was happy to help. As Guppy stuck his head in Bletch's mouth, the poor fish suddenly got eaten by the walrus, who said, "That went down a treat all right," and laughed evilly.
At the golf course, they both met up with their partners in the drug-running business, Cedric and his agent, Louie. While talking about the next shipment of drugs, they also had a quick game of golf. It was also shown that they hid their money and drugs in their golf bags (possibly so no one would notice). After Barry gave a quick inspection of Cedric's supply, Bletch asked when to expect the delivery. Cedric told them to meet Louie in the alleyway of the theater at 6:00, and they all went back to their game of golf. When it was Bletch's turn, Cedric tried to distract him by pretending to cough and sneeze. Of course, this causes him to miss the hole as Cedric apologizes as if he didn't do it on purpose. In return, when it was Cedric's turn, Bletch distracted him by throwing up behind his back. This made Cedric hit the ball so hard it landed in a sandpit. Bletch then apologized by saying he had a bone stuck in his throat (as the poor, almost-digested Guppy lay in the middle of his vomit, asking if he passed the audition before he died).
Meet the Feebles was director Peter Jackson's second feature film. He describes the film as "a kind of Rodger Rabbit meets Brazil". Says Jackson, "I decided from the outset to make exactly the sort of puppet film that I would enjoy. It was a challenge to make myself laugh, and since I still chuckle whenever I see Meet the Feebles, I guess I succeeded."
Originally released in New Zealand during 1989, Peter Jackson's cult hit Meet the Feeblesis only now receiving its official United States "tour", opening for short runs in select art housesacross the country over a six month period. Those not specifically on the lookout for this film willprobably miss meeting the Feebles, which may be a good thing, considering the potentially-horrified reaction of someone who unwittingly walks into a theater showing this feature.
Those last ones are plentiful: Kermit winkingly refers to meeting his new pig girlfriend Denise at a cross-promotional synergy meeting where they "ended up cross-promoting." Animal, now the house band drummer, laments how he can longer go on tour: "Too many women," he says, shaking his head. "Too many towns." In the second episode, Miss Piggy is dating singer Josh Groban, and the Swedish chef jokes about her "groping" him (get it?). There are other adult themes as well. Sax-playing Muppet Zoot reveals he attends AA meetings in the first episode; there's a marijuana-legalization gag in the second. Comedian Fozzie the Bear is dating a human, setting the stage for a Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? riff with her parents where they make insensitive comments about him peeing in the woods and eating salmon.
"It's important to figure out what's going on here because the accretion of matter onto these black holes is one of the most fundamental processes governing the evolution of galaxies," said Li, who presented these results at the 216th meeting of the American Astronomical Society meeting in Miami, FL.