A Prairie Home Companion streaming weekly

Each week, we are presenting a special encore viewing of a classic A Prairie Home Companion episode while we are hunkered down at home. Each week's show will only be available for 7 days (due to copyright concerns for the songs we cover). We could use your help to spread the word that these are available, so please share the YouTube link with your friends! Thanks so much for listening and watching along with us! 

A Prairie Home Companion: May 23, 2015
Originally broadcast from Vienna, Virginia at the Filene Center at Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts. Sara Watkins, Sarah Jarosz, and Aoife O'Donovan debut their knockout I'm With Her trio stateside after a much-lauded barnstorming tour through Europe. The crack instrumentalists of the United States Navy Band join us to boost the public radio esprit de corps and kick off the Memorial Day weekend with a few marches, patriotic selections, and orchestral features. Plus, our Royal Academy of Radio Actors, Tim Russell, Sue Scott, and Fred Newman, lend their voices to some over-the-air theater; and music director and pianist Rich Dworsky leads The Wolves of Rhythm (Bernie Dresel on drums, bassist Larry Kohut, Richard Kriehn on mandolin and fiddle, and guitarist Chris Siebold) on some hot jazz and rock 'n' roll favorites. All that and the latest News from Lake Wobegon, and you have the perfect recipe for the start of summer (or something like it). 

Watch the show >>>

A few words while I wait for her to come in

I married a perfectionist and am glad for it especially during this pandemonium or pandora or veranda or whatever it is we’re going through these days, even my dream life is clearer, more detailed than in normal times, which now are only a memory, those evenings when we ate dinner in a crowded restaurant and sat in the tenth row of a theater and packed into a crowded train to go home.

She is a violinist, dedicated since her teen years to perfection, practicing many hours a day so that she could play in a string section and not stand out as an individual. I am a struggling writer for whom individual identity is crucial. She sat in an orchestra wearing black like all the others, suppressing the urge to wear a tiara with flashing red and green pulsating lights. I sat in a café, in a red T-shirt, corduroy jacket, jeans, boots, smoking a Gauloise, a Panama hat on the table, writing on a yellow legal pad, something original. It was a café (actually a cafeteria) patronized by engineering students and I was the only Gauloise/Panama person there. The others lived in a world of correct answers and I lived in a forest of wild surmise.

Had I not married the violinist, I’d be in a hospital, trying to breathe, having refused to self-isolate because I hate the term, I prefer the term “drift.” But thanks to her attention to detail, we live with our daughter in a clean apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and haven’t ventured outdoors, except to step out on the balcony, for two months. She is more sociable than I — most musicians are, having a common exclusive language — and so she misses the street life more than I do, but she studied up on the situation — a strange and dangerous contagion, an elderly and careless husband — and saw what needed to be done. And so I find myself in a quiet room with an empty schedule, an ideal life for a writer.

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Wobegon Boy: A Novel

Have you been missing the News from Lake Wobegon? Wobegon Boy magically weaves together the story of John Tollefson, who long ago escaped Lake Wobegon and moved to upstate New York to manage a radio station. After some life-changing news, he finds he must return home to Lake Wobegon, where the reader finds comedy and some universal truths. Here, an excerpt from Wobegon Boy by Garrison Keillor:
 

John Tollefson awoke to the clanging of the clock downstairs, and rose from bed, took out the plastic mouthpiece he wore to keep from grinding his teeth, did his deep knee bends and pushups, and touched his toes. His feet looked gnarly, with shoe marks on them. He definitely was getting a gut on him. He stepped out of his blue pajamas and looked at himself in the mirror on the bedroom-closet door. A middle-aged guy should check himself out every day and assess the devastation, he thought. The flab around the waist, the wobble under the chin. And he needed to practice smiling at himself in the mirror. Young guys can get away with being sullen; it even looks good on them. But on an older guy, gloominess looks like indigestion. People think you had too much knackwurst for lunch. 

An older guy has to lighten up and keep himself looking fresh. Smile at people. Keep his sense of humor. Even if he feels lonely as a barn owl. The world is interested, up to a point, in the sorrows of women, but it doesn't give a hoot about the problems of a middle-aged Norwegian bachelor––and why should it? So don't bother being unhappy; it only makes you look like a creep.

             
Continue reading >>>
Listen to an audio sample >>>
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Live from the Hollywood Bowl

The most recent professional recording from A Prairie Home Companion commemorates Garrison Keillor's final show as host after 43 seasons. This 2-CD collection captures all the duets, stories, songs, and remembrances, plus a few words from former president Barack Obama! Remember one of the best live shows from the program's rich history. Over 2 hours on 2 CDs. 

Watch the "Last Show" sketch >>>
 Buy the CD collection >>>

POEM Shirts

Anyone that has listened to A Prairie Home Companion knows that P.O.E.M. is an acronym for The Professional Organization of English Majors, our most literate sponsor! Show your literary pride with a shirt that comes in both short-sleeved and long-sleeved styles.

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