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Garrison Keillor Turns Out the Lights on Lake Wobegon

119 pointsby msm23almost 9 years ago

15 comments

pjmorrisalmost 9 years ago
I came to NPR and to Prairie Home Companion in college, after a childhood filled with moves, losses, and failures. I greatly enjoyed the music and the stories, to the point where I once had a Powdermilk Biscuits t-shirt, and still have a PHC tie. However, the dedications they read at intermission really made the show for me; in the notes people wrote to each other celebrating their various graduations, anniversaries, relationships, and communities, I saw a real-world analog to Lake Wobegon's strong women, good looking men and above average children. I think believing something like that was out there, somewhere, helped me reshape my life to transmute the moves, losses, and failures into relationship. community, and hope. I find Lake Wobegon to be sentimental, but in a way that matched my sentimentality. I'm really grateful for the part Mr. Keillor's show has played in my ife.
jswrennalmost 9 years ago
My friends and I all grew up listening to Garrison Keillor, raised by parents who themselves grew up listening to Garrison Keillor. Keillor&#x27;s retirement has very much felt like abruptly losing contact with many old friends at once.<p>I just hope Lake Wobegon is doing alright without us.
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CPLXalmost 9 years ago
I found PHC style humor completely insufferable and unlistenable, but members of my family (who grew up in the Midwest in the 50s and 60s) just love it, and there&#x27;s no accounting for taste of course.<p>I always thought the show stood as sort of the perfect archetype for what you&#x27;d call &quot;white&quot; American culture. Which I&#x27;m pretty sure is what David Simon was trying to say in this classic clip from The Wire:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=i6EpfCzdMoY" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=i6EpfCzdMoY</a>
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cjensenalmost 9 years ago
It&#x27;s long saddened me that you can&#x27;t get Prairie Home Companion as a podcast: there&#x27;s too many songs from too many authors so they don&#x27;t even try to acquire the rights. Our copyright regime still needs to adapt to the modern world.
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criddellalmost 9 years ago
One of the things Keillor handled so well in his story telling was the mostly insignificant but somehow important differences between Lutherans, Catholics, and the other denominations and religions. I grew up in a very small town in Ontario and it often felt like he had borrowed characters from my past (and then softened them and made them more likable).
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harvestmoonalmost 9 years ago
Personally, I am a huge fan of Guy Noir. I wonder if he ever found out the secrets that the city was trying to keep from him - or if he found the answers to life&#x27;s persistent questions... Guy Noir, Private Eye.
ianbickingalmost 9 years ago
The News From Lake Wobegon is available in a podcast, with a very long archive: <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;prairiehome.org&#x2F;listen&#x2F;podcast&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;prairiehome.org&#x2F;listen&#x2F;podcast&#x2F;</a> - and really it&#x27;s better as a podcast
keanealmost 9 years ago
<i>From <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;twitter.com&#x2F;sacca&#x2F;status&#x2F;749260339762442240" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;twitter.com&#x2F;sacca&#x2F;status&#x2F;749260339762442240</a>, Garrison Keillor gave the following letter to each attendee of his last A Prairie Home Companion:</i><p>Dear Friends,<p>I come from serious taciturn people and grew up in a separatist religious sect that believed that every word and deed should be to the glory of God and here I am winding up forty-two years of talking my head off, much of it silliness, and portraying a private eye and a cowboy. This was not supposed to happen. As Robert Frost did not write:<p><pre><code> Two roads diverged in a yellow wood And, sorry I could not travel both, I chose the one with the galloping hooves and the barking spiders And now I’m trying to figure out why. </code></pre> I am a writer who got tangled up with Minnesota Public Radio and A Prairie Home Companion and not because I was ambitious or had aptitude, but simply through a series of coincidences. I was like a kid in Port-au-Prince who’s never seen ice and whose family is too poor to travel but he reads a book about Antarctica and is fascinated and eventually becomes captain of the Haitian Olympic hockey team. He’s not a great player but he’s pretty good for a Haitian. That’s my story. And now, as retirement nears, it’s a revelation to be accosted by people who want to say: Your show has meant a lot to me. Some of them have been tuned in for most of their lives. It’s very sweet. Also confusing, since I never was a big fan of the show myself. I enjoyed doing the show — it was the only social life I had — but the show was never as good as I wanted it to be, and that’s just a fact.<p>I’m 73, in good shape for a writer, working on a memoir and a Lake Wobegon screenplay, writing a weekly column for <i>The Washington Post</i>, planning to take brisk walks and start reading books again and rediscover the pleasures of the Weekend. Meanwhile, I am grateful beyond grateful for the people I’ve met along the way, Richard Dworsky, Tim and Sue and Fred, the ladies I’m singing with, Sara and Sarah and Aoife and Heather, and Suzanne Weil who was the first person to ever put me on a stage. She is here tonight and it is all her fault, every bit of it. Had it not been for Suzanne, I would be preaching every night at the Union Gospel Mission on Skid Row and all my friends would be old drunks. Millions of people would never know about Lake Wobegon or Powdermilk Biscuits or the power of rhubarb to ease shame and humiliation. But in the course of fifty years of preaching, I would’ve brought three, possibly four, men to eternal salvation. I will have to make peace with this myself. Meanwhile, thank you for listening to the show.<p>–Garrison Keillor
fencepostalmost 9 years ago
This isn&#x27;t the only long - term show to end - Whad&#x27;ya Know (notmuch.com) wrapped up a 30+ year run the last weekend in June though it was ended due to declining numbers and being expensive to produce (live audience, traveling shows, etc.).
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drdeadringeralmost 9 years ago
I&#x27;ll never forget when he brought his show to my hometown. I got one of the last seats in the house, literally way back against the wall. Good times.
robotjoshalmost 9 years ago
This loss stings because its not possible for the NPR of today to come out with shows like car talk and phc anymore.
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steveaxalmost 9 years ago
I&#x27;ll miss Tom Keith and Fred Newman the live foley artists. Those guys are amazing.
solipsismalmost 9 years ago
I grew up listening to Garrison Keillor and stories from Lake Wobegon. Listening to it as an adult, I have to say, it&#x27;s not very good quality. I guess it&#x27;s impossible to keep up a high level of quality week after week for so many years. But when I listen to it I hear a man rambling almost incoherently. There&#x27;s not even a reasonable arc most weeks, he just babbles until time is up and Garrison abruptly says &quot;.. and that&#x27;s the news from Lake Wobegon&quot;.
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GCA10almost 9 years ago
I&#x27;m amazed he sustained this as long as he did. It was a charming concept when he got started ... but its frozen-in-time quality lost me after a while.<p>Doing a show about a weird little slice of Americana will never grow old. It&#x27;s just that the slice needs to keep changing every 5-10 years.
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rhapsodicalmost 9 years ago
I&#x27;m kind of with the Simpsons when it comes to Prairie Home Companion:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=tmkq7yylRkU" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=tmkq7yylRkU</a>