Peter Sagal's guest contestant on Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me! is Hannah Kearney, Olympic Gold Medalist in hot dog skiing, officially referred to as "freestyle." One of the leading mogul skiers in the event, she's won two Olympic medals in addition to her 43 World Cup medals. Because her sport is so...well, offbeat, the panelists jump in with far more bewildered questions than usual -- and because she's so self-effacing and charming, the interview is especially funny. In particular, keep an ear open for their discussion about the Olympic Village. Also, when they get to the answer to the first question, for the first time that I can recall, the two incorrect answers are actually real quotes and host Sagal gives their gobsmacking attribution. All in all, this is a hoot.
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I was going to post a Media Alert here today about a town hall meeting that Sen. Al Franken was doing on Sirius/XM radio, for those of you who subscribed to the service. Unfortunately, I screwed up the day (and even time), and it was actually broadcast on Wednesday. This is a bad news / good news tale. That's the bad news. The good news is that it turns out that the entire event was recorded on video, and here it is below! So not only can everyone hear it, but you can all watch it. (If you choose to, of course...) I believe that the correct response is -- O huzzah! It runs about 51 minutes and is hosted by Julie Mason, host of “The Press Pool” on SiriusXM’s POTUS Politics channel, and Bob Cusack, editor in chief of The Hill. The event is all quite enjoyable, and often pretty funny. It is largely serious, but even at that Franken is an engaging conversationalist -- however, there are also some light questions. (As he notes, because he only won his first election by just 312 votes, he felt it important to show the people of Minnesota that he was a "work horse, not a show horse," and stuck to being a very serious during his first term. Having won his re-election by a much more comfortable margin, he says here that while he remains a hard worker, it's allowed him to let his humorous side out more.) Again, this isn't a comedy monologue, it's a serious discussion. It's just a very enjoyable one. And it's at its best, for my taste, when the floor is opened up to questions from the audience around what seemed to be the 25-minute mark. Since I've been posting a audio segments of Peter Sagal's radio show, Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me! regularly for a while, I thought this was appropriate. Plus it will likely make Nell Minow happy. So, it's a twofer. And it's an especially good day when you can make Nell Minow happy.
This is, apparently, the very first "video" that OK GO -- the most-favorite group of Ms. Minow -- ever made. It's not a stand-alone video per so, but was taped on a local public access music TV show in Chicago in 1999. What's additionally fun about it is that the aforementioned Peter Sagal is playing "fake bass" in the video. And if you're a fan of the NPR show, This American Life, its host Ira Glass is playing "fake drums." In fact, all the fake musicians are NPR hosts. Unfortunately, I can't embed it here, but if click this link, you can read an article by Peter Sagal about the whole, and the video is embedded there. This week, host Peter Sagal's guest contestant for the "Not My Job" segment of the NPR comedy-quiz show Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me! is the great singer-songwriter John Prine. There's a nice bit of connection here, since the show is done is Chicago, and Chicago is where John Prine came to fame -- and even started as a mailman. (He talks about that here, although leaves out the story about how he occasionally would lock himself in a mailbox for the privacy so that he could write there.) There's no discussion of his close friend Steve Goodman, but he does talk about folk singer Ed Holstein, who's still performing, and with his brother Fred -- a folksinger, as well -- owned the prominent club Holsteins, which was the center of the folk scene in Chicago. And Prine also tells the story about how he got his start thanks to, of all people, Roger Ebert. It's a very affectionate and funny chat.
I had a somewhat unexpected occurrence yesterday, but much-appreciated because it helped assuage an awkward feeling I had.
I don't think it's really possible for most people, if anyone to adequate the feelings one has when a tragic massacre happens like that in Manchester. You can use the same cliched words because the feeling in universal, but that's about as far as one can go. And you turn on the television to get some coverage of what happened. But for me, that generally tends to last about 20 minutes, because at that point in the news no one has anything more to report. It's just the same words over and over, the same videos, the same experts and nothing new is being said. I understand the need that many feel for a sense of community, but I still want news, and if there isn't anything different to say, then I don't want it said over and over, for five hours. That's me. When there's news to report, report it. But there is other news happening, and I want to know it, to not only keep informed, but to keep it all in perspective. And the day after -- yesterday -- there was even more of the same, still going on, nothing new, but still being reported. Though as the day progressed, there finally was something new, with the investigation leading to an arrest. But mostly, the same things were being repeated. Out of curiosity, and with that sense of perspective, because I was in my car that has Sirius/XM Radio, I decided to put on the BBC World Service. If I was going to hear news about Manchester, I at least wanted to hear it from England. And to my surprise -- unlike in the U.S. on television...the story they were covering wasn't about Manchester! Nor was the next one! They did address it with the third story, but then I had reached my destination and left for lunch. When I got back an hour later, I put the BBC back on -- and again, they were covering something else. The next story was about the attack, but from a completely different angle than anything I'd heard on American TV -- it was a report on how to deal with children at such times. It was interesting and profoundly low-key. And then when that was over -- They went to a program about technology! And did a story on government innovation. There, in the middle of the storm, life was going on. The story was being covered. And being covered well. And in detail. But it was being covered when they had something to report and talk about. And done in a mature, thoughtful way that respected the listener. Yes, I know, this was "the Beeb," and that's their style, even during a tragic bombing in their country. But they covered it as Really Important News -- not the only news. And it was done wonderfully. This week on the NPR game show, Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me!, host Peter Sagal's guest contestant is movie director Guy Ritchie, who among his many films has directed the current King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, both recent Sherlock Holmes films, Swept Away, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and came to fame with the well-regarded independent Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Yes, I know he's promoting his film, but it's one thing to do promotion, and it's another thing for the British Guy Ritchie of all people to so-unexpectedly appear on a radio popular culture game show. And for all his tough-guy movies, and tough early life, he comes across as quite charming and thoroughly self-effacing. And funny.
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AuthorRobert J. Elisberg is a political commentator, screenwriter, novelist, tech writer and also some other things that I just tend to keep forgetting. Feedspot Badge of Honor
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