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Post to the HostComments from the week of 05.05.24
GK, Opposed, sir. That’s my opinion. If you want a better opinion, google “Balls and strikes, what should call? App or ump?” GK Mr. Keillor, Biff, you’re a hero to have done this and I admire your calm as you approached Security and made it safely through. That’s why I do shows rather than attend them; I come in through the stage door and I seldom even have to show an ID. Sometimes they even have a dressing room with my name on it. There’s free coffee backstage and sometimes a lunch is provided. An easy life compared to what you went through. GK Mr. Keillor, I would like to thank you for many happy Sunday afternoons. I lived in a little wide spot in the road named Possum Trot in the foothills of the North Carolina mountains. When I first started listening to A Prairie Home Companion it only was available to me on a weak AM station. I found if I went up US21 to the Lookout, a paved area for trucks to cool their brakes, which had a great view of Traphill, Pumpkin Center, and Pea Ridge (real places), I could listen to your show clearly for the whole show. I could also get your broadcast driving on the Blue Ridge Parkway that was a couple of miles from the Lookout. I would slowly cruise along enjoying your show and the views from the ridges and think about the week before and plan the week ahead. I anchored myself to those two hours every week and used it like a reset point. I took up dirt racing and really enjoyed it, but the races were held on Saturday night. That means I missed your show during racing season. I finally discovered that WFDD did a rebroadcast on Sunday at 2 p.m. It was wonderful; I could go to the races and listen to you too, my version of having my cake and eating it too. I want to thank you so much for A Prairie Home Companion. It brought me much joy over the years, not to mention the mental reset you were part of every week. When you went off the air, it’s almost like they took away Christmas. You were like a good friend, and I sure do miss you. Thank you for being a part of my life. Thanks again. Thank you for the post. I never imagined a dirt track driver would tune in to the show. I figured the audience was all stuck-up English majors like me and it’s very satisfying to imagine a PHC listener who can drive a souped-up car and throw it into a controlled skid around the turns. I miss dirt track racing. It used to be a part of the Minnesota State Fair and then they paved the track and then racing ended and the grandstand was only used for shows, including PHC. I did several shows with the audience in the grandstand and on the straightaway and I walked out in the crowd and we all sang “My country, ’tis of thee” and the U of M fight song and “Amazing Grace” and “In My Life.” But to me it was still the old dirt track. Exciting. GK Hi, Mister Christian Man. Let’s not be making fun of rosary-reciters on their deathbeds. The rosary is not mindless repetition; it is a Gospel prayer, and each decade is a Gospel event on which one meditates while praying. For example, the First Joyful Mystery is the Annunciation (what is God asking me to do today?) and the Third Luminous Mystery is the Wedding Feast at Cana (what do we need to ask from God today?) and the Second Glorious Mystery is the Descent of the Holy Spirit (how can we invite God in today?) and the Fourth Sorrowful Mystery is the Carrying of the Cross (what’s our cross and do we accept it?) It’s also better than Ambien for inducing sleep, and if you doze off before you finish your rosary, your Guardian Angel finishes it for you. Not a bad way to go out. Your Catholic friend, Maria in DeKalb, Illinois Maria, I’m sorry you mistook my joke. The joke is that I, a Prot, die and go to paradise and discover that they’re all Catholics and so I need to learn to say the rosary. Nothing about mindless repetition. GK Hello, Mr. Keillor. I am writing to you to reiterate my thanks to you for coming this past weekend to Wisconsin and attending our Wisconsin grassroots network festival in Appleton. You were a delight, and although our audience was much smaller than we would have liked, I know all the attendees enjoyed your stories. I did just buy your recent memoir and wish I had purchased it before the festival so that I could have asked you to sign it for my grandson, Keillor. Keep up the good work! I enjoyed talking to that handful of people, Sue, and was glad to meet you. I’m afraid your grandson will get tired of telling people how to pronounce his name and will have to endure boys who’ll call him “Killer,” as I did, and he may want to change it to Kyle or Cullan or maybe Buddy. Hope you enjoy the memoir. I intend to read it myself someday. GK I love Garrison and have for many decades, but oh how I wish he’d stop saying that people now can “choose their gender” and using the concept of being transgender for comedic effect. I assure you there is nothing funny about being transgender. I have a transgender son, always a shy person who hates attention, who finally at 25 allowed himself to accept the truth and live as a man, and I assure you this was NOT A CHOICE. He wakes up every day wishing it weren’t the life he now must live. He’s depressed, angry at God, and hates himself. And his father and I worry constantly that he’ll decide that since he was miserable trying to live as a female and is now miserable as a transgender man, that he’ll simply decide not to live. The world is very, very cruel toward the transgender community. Here in the U.S., the Republican Party has made the transgender community, a small group just trying to live their lives and wishing to be left alone to do so, a scapegoat — a focus for their fear of the other vitriol — spreading vicious lies suggesting they are perverts and pedophiles, etc. They also push the idea that being transgender is something these folks have chosen to be. For a voice as revered and wide reaching as Garrison’s to support the GOP’s dangerous propaganda that transgender people “choose” to be transgender is irresponsible. I can’t believe someone like Garrison would want to be complicit in the harm being done to an already suffering community of people. Thank you for your thoughtful letter and consider the joke discarded. Always glad to be corrected. GK Hi, Garrison. I confess that I was kidding when I said I drank olive oil to fend off dementia. I only put olive oil on a salad or on pasta. As for agriculture, in my old age I’m no longer in contact with farms and farmers. My dad grew up on a small rundown farm, poor soil, farmed with horses, and he was glad to escape to the city during the Great Depression. He passed on no sentimental attachment to it. I lead a small life on the 12th floor of a co-op on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. My cousin Wayne was a gardener who opened up a greenhouse that is now quite immense and successful, and many of my relatives work there, and I leave these issues for them to work out. GK Garrison, Even English majors who grew up on the prairie can recognize an inflection point in history and today’s resemblance to 1930s Germany. When the highest Court in the land gives serious consideration to whether the President can indeed have his rivals murdered, the stench of danger is in the air. And most 80-year-old men had kin who came back from WW2 and didn’t talk about it, or some who died on those battlefields. Whistling past the graveyard and singing the praises of olive oil is too easy. We cannot ignore the clear and present danger that the orange Jesus poses to our country and to the world. Another Hitler is poised to take power. I wish you’d speak out. You have a platform. Use it. Clay Blasdel Buffalo What people need to do is to read the transcripts of the man’s speeches that are easily available online. Nothing I can say could be near as convincing as to read the man’s words themselves. I am here to try to provide some lightness of spirit. Hundreds of other people are far better at analysis of contemporary political culture. I stay away from it for the same reason I don’t build houses or practice dentistry. GK Dear Mr. Keillor, Just a heartfelt thank you for your columns. They always bring a smile to my face and make me a better husband and senior citizen. Life is good; keep up the awesome work, you definitely make a difference. Sincerely, Pierre Pierre, talk to Clay, please. GK Drinking coffee on the go? Drink it out of this wonderful mug that features a quote from Garrison Keillor’s book Leaving Home: “Nothing you do for children is ever wasted.”CLICK HERE to buy now!You’re on the free list for Garrison Keillor and Friends newsletter and Garrison Keillor’s Podcast. For the full experience, become a paying subscriber and receive The Back Room newsletter, which includes monologues, photos, archived articles, videos, and much more, including a discount at our store on the website. Questions: admin@garrisonkeillor.com |
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