Where have you gone, Dave Barry, and why?

I miss the old days when newspapers used to publish humor columns, like Dave Barry’s — why did he go away? In Dave’s column, you learned things the New York Times didn’t print, stuff about exploding badgers or a man with a blade of grass growing out of his ear, or a story about the amount of methane created annually by dairy cows.

Dave pointed out the fact that men will never ask for directions and that this is a biological fact, which is why it takes several million sperm to find one female egg even though, compared to them, it is the size of Wisconsin. I laughed so hard at that, I almost coughed up a hairball.

Dave Barry once made fun of Grand Forks, North Dakota, for its tourism campaign, whereupon the city fathers invited Dave to Grand Forks, and Dave — this shows you what a classy guy he is — Dave flew to Grand Forks where he was feted and dined and taken to the dedication of a municipal sewage pump station named after him. The plaque reads “Dave Barry Lift Station No. 16.” Talk about a tourist attraction. (Who knew a small city needed so many lift stations?) You could go visit it if you were in Grand Forks.

Dave gave up writing a weekly column in 2005, and in 2019 we need him more than ever. Back in the day, humor was a relief from the serious, but now with our first preteen president, comedy has become the news itself. When the man twittered, “If Turkey does anything that I, in my great and unmatched wisdom, consider to be off limits, I will totally destroy and obliterate the Economy of Turkey (I’ve done before!),” this was taken up by somber opinionators though it was pure methane. The fact that a man is the Leader of the Free World is no guarantee against his making skid marks in his shorts. A serious journalist is unable to point this out.

Read the rest of the column >>>

PRE-ORDER Living with Limericks by Garrison Keillor

ALERT: Garrison has a brand-new book due out next month! If you pre-order before the sale date of November 15th, you will receive a copy that has been autographed by Garrison.

Radio personality and author Garrison Keillor delights and astounds in this hybrid memoir/poetry collection that combines anecdotes from his childhood and his "A Prairie Home Companion" years with literary limericks, darkly humorous limericks, extended limericks (aka limericks with porches), and so much more. 

Limericks are the poems that can be written in the empty spaces between life, Keillor posits, and this compact book illustrates the full range of the form's utility: thank-you notes to doctors, odes to "Prairie Home" performers, postcard greetings from exotic places, succinct biographies of favorite writers, and scribbles in the margins of Sunday church programs. Readers who have always pined for the perfect limerick hinging on the place name "Schenectady" will at long last be placated. Meanwhile, longtime Keillor fans will gain insight into a whole new side of the bestselling author, whose obsession with limericks goes all the way back to when the bespectacled, lanky youth wearing hand-me-down jeans (from his sister) recited to his Anoka High School class:

There was a young man of Anoka
Who tried to write a great limerick.
He tried and he tried
And some were not bad,
But something seemed to be missing.

Pre-order Living with Limericks >>>

The News from Lake Wobegon Archive Project

Many fans have been asking for new Lake Wobegon stories––thus the release of the new CD collection "A Year in Lake Wobegon"––but we wanted to take it one step further. We dusted off the archives and found some very early Lake Wobegon monologues that had never been made available to the public before, besides when they originally aired during live broadcasts of A Prairie Home Home Companion.

Prairie Home Productions is proud to release 13 of Garrison's earliest monologues representing episodes that aired between January and August of 1980. You'll notice that Garrison's voice is a little higher than it is today, and you'll love hearing the first-ever mentions of "Tomato Butt" and the long stalk of grass growing in the ear of the statue of the Unknown Norwegian.

A new collection of early monologues will be released digitally every other month. We hope you download and enjoy this first one!
 

Digital Download Outlets:
iTunes (use laptop/PC to open link) >>>
Amazon >>>

CD Baby >>>

As we continue to mark the 45th anniversary of the first A Prairie Home Companion broadcast, we will be introducing new items in our newsletters and adding special discounts to existing products, all as a way of saying: Thanks for listening to the show since 1974!

A Prairie Home Companion Long Sleeve Thermal

This favorite of many PHC staffers will keep you comfy and warm on any fall day! 

Like the women and men of Lake Wobegon, this comfy shirt is strong and good-looking. Long sleeve, slightly fitted thermal shirt has the official A Prairie Home Companion logo displayed across the front chest. The contrast stitching around the neck, armholes, sleeve cuffs, bottom hem and along the shoulders make it stand out a bit from your standard shirt. Available in sizes S-XXL. 60/40 cotton/poly blend.

                                   Get the shirt >>>

A Year in Lake Wobegon

Prairie Home Productions is proud to release the first new collection of Lake Wobegon stories in 3 years. "A Year in Lake Wobegon" gathers many of your favorite stories culled from live broadcasts of A Prairie Home Companion from 2014 to 2016.

These twelve "above-average" stories represent all the goings-on in Lake Wobegon over the course of one calendar year. Family gatherings, holiday celebrations, the predictable, the unexpected––it all happens in "the little town that time forgot and the decades could not improve."

Get the CDs >>>

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