GENERAL NUISANCES is the BOOBS IN ARMS location.
I also enjoyed watching them on a "Trivia" level...Looking to see if I recognize the sets, outside locations...
The Columbia Ranch backlot on Hollywood Way in Burbank. Columbia bought that lot in 1936, and it was in constant use for Columbia's shorts, features and television productions for decades. Those particular buildings from BOOBS IN ARMS and GENERAL NUISANCE were profiled in one of Jim Pauley's
Three Stooges Journal location articles, # 113 Spring 2005 issue,
http://threestooges.net/journal.php?action=view&id=113.
Warner Bros. now owns that lot, the "Warner Ranch," and right up to today you can find bits and pieces of Stooge film locations showing up on network TV. The lagoon/pond from SOME MORE OF SAMOA still exists, and is used on INVASION (ABC). Rarely a week goes by that the park from SO LONG MR. CHUMPS, FUELIN' AROUND, others, isn't seen on some WB production. One example from this past Sunday night (March 12), the park was used extensively in THE WEST WING; as camera angles changed, you could prominently see the Boston brownstone facades from MUTTS TO YOU, TERMITES OF 1938, and THE OUTLAWS IS COMING.
I've never seen most of the non-Stooges Columbia shorts, but according to the Columbia Shorts book, The Andy Clyde series was the most consistent in terms of being good films. Does Andy have any name recognition that may merit an official release if Buster's does well?
Andy Clyde has name recognition, but not the kind that Sony would likely find marketable. In addition to his 1935 - 1955 Columbia short subject series, Andy was Hopalong Cassidy's (William Boyd) sidekick in a series of features made at Paramount in the 1940s.
But to baby-boomers he's mostly recognized (more by face, than name) for costarring on the TV series LASSIE (1958 - 1965) and THE REAL McCOYS (1958 - 1964). He's also well-known for one episode of THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, as 'Frank Myers' in "Mayberry Goes Bankrupt."
I'm quessing that Shemp's solo Columbia series would probably be the next release in terms of name recognition.
IF sales on the Buster Keaton set incents Sony to consider other non-Three Stooges short subject collections, my guess would be Charley Chase as the most marketable choice. Kino has a fairly successful single-disc collection of some Chase silent era shorts at Hal Roach Studios, and Milestone has a similar two-disc set planned for the near future.
Harry Langdon also did a handful shorts for Columbia... a Chase/Langdon set is a nice wish list. Although overshadowed by Keaton, Chaplin and Lloyd, Chase and Langdon are regarded as two of the silent era's great clowns.
A Stooge-solo set would be great for my pov, packaging Columbia solo shorts with Shemp, Besser and DeRita, and capitalizing on The Three Stooges name to promote it. I doubt if Sony would consider a "Shemp" set by itself; he only had a few starring solos from 1944 - 1946, only playing support in the "Clyde" and "Gloveslingers" series during 1939 - 1940.
The only way Andy Clyde would probably/realistically get DVD treatment is as the star of Shemp solos, e.g., BOOBS IN THE WOODS and MONEY SQUAWKS. Or, if Sony ever considered a "sampler" set of its other short subject stars... El Brendel, Hugh Herbert, Sterling Holloway, Vera Vague, Gus Schilling & Richard Lane, Harry Langdon, etc.
But all this is wishful thinking and 100% supposition.