Jun 182016
 

hedgehog-looks-binocularsFrom the New York Times I learned this week that Garrison Keillor hosted his last “A Prairie Home Companion” on May 21 and retired from the homespun Americana musical variety program he created in 1975; this time for real. If you’re not from the US, like me, you may well ask: “Garrison who?”, unless you’re familiar with his book “Lake Wobegon Days” he published in 1985. The book, and the ones that followed, is a collection of stories about the everyday life in a fictitious little town somewhere in Minnesota, resembling many small farm towns in the upper Midwest, and loosely based on his relatives, friends and neighbors of Scandinavian and German descent in the area he grew up in. To this foreigner these endearing and often humorous stories were a diorama of American country life.

It wasn’t until I traveled the Blue Ridge Parkway some 15 years ago and heard the radio broadcast of  A Prairie Home Companion, in which he rendered another story of “News from Lake Wobegon” with his unique and very recognizable voice, that I first realized Garrison Keillor was not only an author of books, but also a humorist, columnist, musician, satirist, and radio personality. Only much later I learned that the program was very popular, was broadcasted by nearly 600 radio stations across America and that Lake Wobegon had become a concept familiar to many Americans. It had even led “Professor David G Myers to coin ‘the Lake Wobegon effect’, a natural human tendency to overestimate one's capabilities. The characterization of the fictional location, where ‘all the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average,’ has been used to describe a real and pervasive human tendency to overestimate one's achievements and capabilities in relation to others. The Lake Wobegon effect, where all or nearly all of a group claim to be above average, has been observed in high school students' appraisal of their leadership, drivers' assessments of their driving skill, and cancer patients' expectations of survival.” (Wikipedia)

From: http://www.garrisonkeillor.com/pressclips/

“But why are you posting an article about Garrison Keillor on Politics Plus?” I hear you ask. Because in his mild satire on anything American he’s also written some columns and items for his program on the current political landscape and the candidates in the primary election. Let’s start with Bernie Sanders. In No fogies in the Oval Office, please (Pittsburg Post-Gazette, April 17, 2016) Keillor notes that all remaining candidates (Sanders, Clinton and Trump) are of his own age: “Young people are flocking to Bernie Sanders who, given two terms in office, would be Leader of the Free World until age 83, setting a new record — Ronald Reagan was just shy of 78. Where is that new generation of leadership we keep hearing about at college commencements?”  Keillor is very tongue-in-cheek about the age of the candidates and more so of Sanders who just as old as he is himself. But he does hint at Ronald Reagan’s dementia, which may have set in before he left the Oval Office, and which is worrying to Keillor. Although it’s clear he’s not a Sanders supporter, he builds up to tearing into his true and greatest dislike: Donald Trump and Republicans. In his last line it becomes apparent whom he supports: “Good luck to the candidates and may the best woman win. She’s 68, but women age more gracefully. Just ask your mother.”

Garrison Keillor isn’t one to question the political ideas of the Democratic candidates to be divisive. Instead he satirizes those thing that have little or nothing to do with political content but nevertheless play such a large role in the debates, such as age or gender. In “What will Bill Clinton be wearing?” (Chicago Tribune, May 17, 2016) he gently mocks Hillary Clinton turning the tables on her husband and Bill’s ability to accept his new position as first gentleman: “It's good to hear that Bill Clinton will be put in charge of revitalizing the economy in a Hillary administration and be sent to troubled areas such as Appalachian coal country and inner-city Detroit, and not just promote literacy or physical fitness, the usual first lady things. But I hope that at state dinners and other major White House events, we'll be able to read about what he's wearing.” But he can’t keep himself from pointing out what it would be like if her Republican opponent were to become president: “(If the Big Snapper is elected in November, [getting no credit for how he looks from the press] will change: He’ll be wearing his own labels and product placement will be very important in his administration, even huge.)”

Which brings me to the candidate which brings out real sarcasm in the normally cool and subdued Keillor: Donald Trump. In Think moving abroad will save you from Trump? Think again. (The Washington Post, March 16, 2016) all niceties are dropped: “If you want to escape from the Great White Turtle, you could move to New York. New Yorkers saw through this guy 20 years ago, a living, breathing cartoon of a tycoon, vulgarity on wheels, a man who was very lucky that his father was born before he was, and they have closed the book. So he takes his show on the road [ ], and so the intelligentsia is working ever harder, trying to figure him out. It’s like psychoanalyzing a toasted bagel. The guy paid $29 million for a 282-foot yacht, sailed on it once, got seasick, and never sailed again. He likes tall models with foreign accents. He dyes his hair. He likes to read about himself. What else do you want to know?”

But perhaps Keillor says it best when in his role as host of “A Prairie Home Companion” he skewers Trump in Poe’s classic poem “The Raven”:

https://youtu.be/oI46BSg444Y

Garrison Keillor retires from hosting his program, but I think he’s not done commenting on politics yet and will have more to say about the election, and especially about Donald Trump, in the coming months. At least I hope he does.

Share

  14 Responses to “As Seen From Afar 6/18/2016”

  1. Crosslinked with Care2. I'm sorry, I can't get this link to open in a new window, so please right-click to take care of that yourself.

  2. What a wonderfulo piece!

    Hew used the words I do with Trump:  Rump andf Dump.  And he quietly nailed Trump!!

  3. I've been fortunate enough to have enjoy Garrison Keillor & PHC Shows three times (back when I had hearig): Once in NYC, once in St. Paul at his home theater, and once in sweltering 100 degree heat at the outdoor Starlight Theater in KCMO on July 4th.  And each time with his iconic pair of red socks!

    A true American legend is leaving the stage.  I think the fact that he's had two recent seizures played a major role in his decision to sit back and rather than reporting on "all the news" just enjoy life at "… Lake Wobegon, where all the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average."

  4. [NOTE on hyperlinks: After you fill in the URL, hit the "Target" tab to the right, & in that window use the dropdown menu to scroll down to select "New Window (_blank)"]

    • I did exactly that about a dozen times, but it just wouldn't take, Nameless. I've never had this problem before, so I hope it's just a temporary thing.

    • I always do that and it never works in a comment.  In a post, yes.  TC has given me some samples and I am trying to figure out why.  Both computers, BTW, one running Windows 7, one rum=nning Windows 8.  Or it might be a browser thing.  [This is why I have started setting up the Care2 link first and then publishing, because I can get it to work in a post.  But that doesn't help my comments.  Yet.]

  5. Garrison Keillor is a much beloved figure. Heard his program many a Saturday evening, and I will miss this sweet, kind, funny and caring gentleman who shares stories on his “A Prairie Home Companion” radio shows.

    "Well, it's been a quiet week in Lake Wobegon, Minnesota, my hometown, out there on the edge of the prairie." GK

    Thank you, Lona for this great post.

  6. How nice to come home from coffee with a dear friend and find this waiting!  Love me some Garrison Keillor.  I own (on casette tape, OK, I've had it for a while) his "Songs of the Cat," featuring himself and Frederica von Stade, and be sure there is some politics even here ("There one was a Union Cat/Who on the table sat/At union talks, and for a box/She often used the boss's hat…")

    It was Gerrison Keillor who said what to me is the only sensible thing ever said about voting against one's own interests, and that is that voting against one's own interests may be an ethical imperative, which is why he was brought up a Democrat.

    He will certainly be missed.  Thank you for this loving tribute.

  7. I had classes in the studio he used to broadcast his first show and started my collection and have followed ever since.  Thanks Lona.

  8. Great roast of Drumpf!

  9. A great roast indeed! But, I will not eat of it, I'd rather have green eggs and ham!

    Sorry to hear of his siezures.  I have listened, on occasion, to be honest, to his show on the radio while driving.

    I occurs to me that the "Lake Wobegon Effect," is alive and well in the meme about the U.S. being "Exceptional!"  Well, okay, maybe we are "Exceptional," when one considers the way Rumpy has been able to, allowed to, become  the foremost blatherer of nonsense (literally, if you actually pay attention to the sentences he tries to construct) in the country.  

    I loved Garrison's take down of the Orange Clown, but he messed up, when he presented the idea that some of his GOP opponents had spoken in a reasonable, or rational manner!  This clown car was representative of some of the saddest bozos the GOPigs have put out there in a long time, with the possible exception of Paul Ryan, who would have fit right in!

  10. Thank you all.

    After Jon Stewart another satirist who skewers Drumpf so well retires. But although their humor may not be carried on the airwaves on a regular basis any longer, I'm sure we haven't heard the last of them on the presumptive Republican candidate.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.