Fond Farewell-Garrison Keillor's 'Prairie Home'
Create Post
Results 1 to 3 of 3
  1. #1
    Marine Free Member m14ed's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Chaos, Massachusetts
    Posts
    5,196
    Credits
    113,187
    Savings
    0

    Fond Farewell-Garrison Keillor's 'Prairie Home'

    http://www.npr.org/2016/07/02/484403...s-prairie-home A Fond Farewell To Garrison Keillor's 'Prairie Home Companion' 2:44 July 2, 20168:38 AM ET Commentary heard on Weekend Edition Saturday


    It somehow just seems right the last A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor will be heard tonight, on this weekend of flags, parades, and lemonade stands. The show was recorded last night at the Hollywood Bowl. The first Prairie Home Companion was in 1974, and all of us who share this sliver on the radio spectrum know we wouldn't be in business if Garrison Keillor hadn't made a new thing called public radio truly sing. The idea must have sounded a little dubious even back in the brash 1970s, a weekly radio show with folkies, fiddles and drawn-out stories with no apparent punch-line, set in a small town that comes into being for just a few minutes each week. "Thank goodness Minnesota Public Radio was too poor to afford good advice," Garrison Keillor once recollected. "We only did it because we knew it would be fun to do. It was a dumb idea. I wish I knew how to be that dumb again." I wish I did, too. Prairie Home Companion, PowderMilk Biscuits, the Whippets, Bertha's Kitty Boutique, Norwegian bachelor farmers, and the News from Lake Wobegon have always seemed to me to be pretty sharp and sophisticated comedy, cloaked in small-town manners. The Lake Wobegon that Garrison Keillor has brought to life and built word by word, in millions of imaginations, is not a rustic refuge from the modern world. It has been gentle, but edgy, midwestern, but not middlebrow, calm but scarcely dull. People get sick, grow scared, pass through, and pass away in Lake Wobegon, to live on in stories. "For me, the monologue was the favorite thing," Garrison once said. "It was based on writing, but in the end it was radio, it was standing up and leaning forward into the dark and talking, letting words come out of you." Maybe because his monologues played with words, mind, and voice, they reminded us that life is a fleeting flicker of light in that darkness, and the only real legacy we'll have is in memories. For 42 years, Prairie Home Companion and Garrison Keillor's monologues have turned radio from a medium some considered to be faintly old-fashioned into a new form—an art, I'll even dare to say—of telling a story that a new generation downloads today. In a line of work that always looks for what's flashy and new, Garrison Keillor created a rare thing out of the radio waves that skip through the air and disappear into the night: something that endures.
    .................................................. .. .................................................. ..
    Gimme' couple glasses of RotGutWhiskey

    one of the better PBS broadcasts that can be listened to by everyone with a small vocabulary, a quick witt, and an open mind.

    Similar Threads:

  2. #2
    Marine Free Member The DUKE's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    binghamton
    Posts
    1,207
    Credits
    30,652
    Savings
    0
    Images
    3
    Amen brother, I loved it, still love it and always will, people are always saying there aren't any more Mozart's or Picasso's well you're just not looking and listening in the right places in this electronic light speed , throw away flash in the pan gotta have it right now or else society we've fostered and encourag3d to our ultimate doom I fear, I'm so damn glad that I had this kind of thing to raise my kids on and show them and teach them that all that glitters is not gold, amen brother , amen...


  3. #3
    Marine Free Member m14ed's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    Chaos, Massachusetts
    Posts
    5,196
    Credits
    113,187
    Savings
    0
    http://bluegrasscountry.org/

    seems PBS/WashingtonDC is dumping
    this service also -

    Great COMPUTER/internet station
    for listening to Bluegrass
    with some C & W on the edges -


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not Create Posts
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts