Can somebody please explain a prairie home compani
Gary
3,982 Posts
A prairie home companion.Sometimes I am in the car and then this comes on the radio. I have tried listening to it quite a few times and find it to be, uh, not to my taste.who is the target audience of this product?I just don't get it.And what is the show even about? Is it just a variety show?I don't get it.I really don't get it.Who listens to this stuff?
Comments
You sound non-lutheran and younger than 50 and like you have never eaten a jello dish with fruit and vegetables in it.
This show is constantly sold out at the fitzgerald theater in st. paul. He does have some sweet bluegrass/gospel acts on once in a while and the annual yo mama joke off helps get material for talking to children of christian parents and grandparents.
Soul Strut & Black Culture.
I am white as an imported egg and Prairie Home Companion makes me throw up.
Actual LOL.
Me too. But I have to imagine that the audience for this show is somewhere in the range of 90% white.
http://www.wbur.org/npr/125364838
This.
Yet they're like the most banjo friendly show on radio! Embrace, don't hate.
I was baffled when the first issues showed up. I couldn't imagine who the target audience of this would be. The next issue was better, I actually read quite a bit of it before the toddler destroyed it. So I'm curious to see what the 3rd issue will be like. After trying to read the 1st one I actually googled "who reads harpers magazine?" just to try to figure out what it was all supposed to mean.
It all comes back to The Wire
I do kind of miss not getting The Economist anymore but 1) it's expensive and 2) I wasn't reading everything I got in so...
However, that doesn't mean I ride for it. I went to a broadcast with my family when we visited them in Madison, WI, and the show was visiting there. It was entertaining enough, decent, tho forgettable, musical guests, and lots of low-key corny jokes about Lutherans and DFL'ers, etc. I made the best of it, it wasn't so bad....and I find myself not turning it off when I fire up NPR on a Sunday morning, unless the Bluegrass is too obnoxious. But the thing that drives me most nuts is Keillor's delivery, which sounds like he is barely off a ventilator and about to suffocate. I never understood why people outside the Midwest liked the whole thing, until my wife said how much she enjoyed the Madison show. It then dawned on me, if you were raised in DC in the 80s, Prairie Home Companion is pretty foreign and exotic, and pure imaginary escapism. But I still have weird like/hate relationship to the whole deal.
Once a summer, my station has a bus trip to the Berkshires for all the old folks who want to see a live broadcast of APHC. I usually go along as staff. Once the folks are in their seats, I cut out to the wine stand and grab myself a bottle, which I then drink far from earshot of the whole affair while getting paid overtime to do it. I think of it as making the best of an APHC performance.
I just wish Keillor wear his tie at a sensible length. It's always dangling around his private area and it always bright red. Think he also wears red New Balances with his suit, which is sort of an odd look. Letting the tie break at his belt would go a long way, I think. I once tried reading his Lake Wobegon book but didn't make it past the first few pages. Robert Altman's film version of the show and his last movie ever was interesting but don't think I'd revisit that anytime soon.
I do like that Guy Noir dude. Admittedly stupid hard-boiled send-ups will find me leaving the radio dial alone for at least the duration of the skit.
The book was pretty funny if you've grown up in a small rural town with traditional values. Not sure that you have to be Lutheran, Norwegian or white to appreciate it. He wrote it 25 years ago and it was the last good thing he did.
I will probably give it another go -- I still have my thrift store paperback somewhere. Didn't really give it much of a shot, and being Catholic, Bohemian and white, I am pretty close to the sweet spot of the demographics.