-girlsdoporn- 18 Years Old -episode 359- Sd --n... Apr 2026
Mira kept filming. Corky showed her a scrapbook. There was a photo of Buddy DeLuca—a sweaty, grinning colossus in a gold blazer—with his arm around twelve-year-old Corky. Buddy’s eyes were not looking at the camera. They were looking at his own reflection in a shiny piece of the cake’s cardboard frosting.
That last shot—sixty-seven-year-old Corky Lane, rhinestone glove catching the fluorescent light, finally laughing—became the closing frame of The Last Laugh .
Then he said, “You know what the problem is with the entertainment industry?”
She drove back to Vegas and gave Corky a hard drive with the final cut. He watched it on his laptop in the back of the storage locker, surrounded by the guts of a 1950s Wurlitzer. When the credits rolled, he didn’t speak for a long time. -GirlsDoPorn- 18 Years Old -Episode 359- SD --N...
Her breakthrough came in a Vegas storage locker, Unit 3B. Inside, she found a former child star named Corky Lane. Corky had been a fixture on The Buddy DeLuca Show —the kid who popped out of a giant prop birthday cake every Thursday. He was now sixty-seven, wore a rhinestone glove on one hand, and ran a small operation restoring antique jukeboxes.
The living legends refused. “Too soon,” said one geriatric producer who hadn’t had a credit since 1998. “I’ve already sold my memoir,” said another. So Mira went deeper. She chased the footnote. The sound guy. The cue card holder. The third assistant to the bandleader’s tailor.
“They put me in the cake,” Corky said, offering Mira a warm can of soda. “Buddy would tell a joke about his mother-in-law, the band would hit a sting, and I’d pop out. The audience laughed. Not at the joke. At the surprise of me. Like a jack-in-the-box with freckles.” Mira kept filming
She tracked down the parrot, too. Its name was Mr. Chuckles. He lived in a retirement aviary in Tucson, missing half his feathers, still whispering remnants of catchphrases in a gravelly mumble. “I like Ike,” he’d croak. Then, softer: “Where’s the kid?”
The film never got distribution. But once a year, Mira screens it in the storage locker. Attendance is by invitation only. Last year, the parrot showed up.
That became the film’s central image. The ghost Mira had been chasing wasn’t a person. It was the moment the industry stopped seeing a child and started seeing a prop. Buddy’s eyes were not looking at the camera
The documentary premiered at a small theater in Silver Lake. Twenty-three people attended. One of them was a development executive from a streaming giant who offered Mira seven figures to turn it into a six-part series with reenactments and a celebrity narrator.
“Too many people trying to be the cake,” Corky said. “Not enough people willing to be the kid who climbs inside.”
The director, Mira Kasai, had spent three years chasing ghosts. Her documentary, The Last Laugh , was supposed to be a definitive autopsy of the 1990s late-night talk show wars—the hairspray, the cocaine, the smeared lipstick on water glasses. But the ghosts she wanted wouldn't speak.
“What?” Mira asked.