Tag Car Talk

Wait, Wait..

Back when I was a regular listener of NPR, I used to really enjoy the news quiz show “Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me…”. In fact, I almost got to be one of the call-in contestants on the show one time; I submitted my name and got a call from the producer who sets up the calls, but I wasn’t able to be available during their taping that week, and there was no chance to be rescheduled for a different week. Oh,well.

A couple of years after that let-down, our paths crossed again when the show came to Boston to do a live production of an episode. It was held in some auditorium at Boston University, since the local NPR station WBUR is still somewhat affiliated with the school, and the place was packed. People tend to think of NPR as being sort of a niche thing that’s only listened to by a few people, but whenver we’ve attended a live taping of a public radio program (and we’ve been to a number of them), there’s always a big crowd. I’ll grant you that in a place like Boston there’s probably a higher perecentage of radio listeners who tune in to NPR than some other more typical American metropolis, but still…Anyway, that evening was a lot of fun. Carl Kasell was there in person (he usually does his part in the show from Washington), and they had the Car Talk Guys as their special guests. In between taping segments of the show, Peter Sagal, the host, talked about his years in Boston as a Harvard student and about working at a neighborhood grocery in Cambridge that his aunt and uncle used to own. They were much more interactive with the crowd than the “This American Life” cast were when we saw them a couple of years after that.

Yesterday, linky-blog Mental Floss had an interview with Peter Sagal, wherein he talks about how he got the hosting job and how they put the show together each week. He’s also apparently plugging a new book he’s written, although it seems to have nothing whatsoever to do with the radio show…PLUS he tells the story of how he is responsible for that paragon of cinematic excellence, “Dirty Dancing 2″.

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National Podcast Radio

I have been an iPod owner for almost three years, and since I started listening to it in the car, I have largely stopped listening to radio. Since sometime in the late 1980s, though, I had always been a devotee of public radio — not just the news programs, but also many of their other regular weekly shows from “Car Talk” to “Wait, Wait Don’t Tell Me”.

Very honestly, I needed a break from “Morning Edition” and “All Things Considered”, and so I don’t miss those shows at all. But all those other programs still appeal to me. There’s no reason I *can’t* listen to them on the radio, I just don’t. A lot of them are aired on Saturdays in our area, and I’m not in the car at those times like I used to be in the Time Before Charlotte.

Ditto for streaming radio. Both of the two major public radio stations in Boston offer live streams, but it’s just not meant to be for me.

So enter the podcasts. It’s old news to a lot of people, I’m sure, but NPR makes a ton of their programming available in downloadable form and has a comprehensive listing of them at their website. Their listing includes many programs produced by local public radio stations that are intended mostly for their own listening area, such as Maine Public Radio’s “Maine Things Considered” or KQED’s “The California Report”.

Skimming through the listings the other day, I was tickled to find that several of my favorites offer their entire weekly broadcast in podcast format, such as the news quiz “Wait, Wait Don’t Tell Me”, Fresh Air and “This American Life” (you can get the current week’s show as a free podcast, but you have to pay $0.95 per episode to download older shows…or go find them via BitTorrent…shhhh).

Others only give you snippets: While you can listen to “A Prairie Home Companion” as streaming audio on the show’s own site, the podcasts are limited to Keillor’s “Lake Wobegon” monologues from the previous Saturday night’s show. And the Car Talk guys only post their “favorite question” of the week.

My biggest disappointment, though, was to discover that “Says You”, which is a word quiz panel show produced here in Boston, is only available via Audible.com, and they charge four bucks an episode if you’re not an Audible member ($2.95 if you are a member). Sorry, but that’s way too much per episode when other national-caliber programming is available for free.

If you’ve never listened to a podcast, don’t be intimidated by the “pod” part. You don’t have to have an iPod or any other music player to listen to them. You can just download the files to your computer and listen to them that way. If you’re really clever, you can even fiddle around with an RSS feeder to automatically download the latest ones for you, so you don’t even have to be bothered to remember to do it (although you do need to remember to LISTEN to them…).

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