Since WBUR is in Boston and Our Fair City is close enough to be affected (Harvard was shut down), I don't see how the brothers can avoid mentioning recent events tomorrow.
vchimpanzee said:Since WBUR is in Boston and Our Fair City is close enough to be affected (Harvard was shut down), I don't see how the brothers can avoid mentioning recent events tomorrow.
On the XM side of the Sirius/XM platform; Car Talk is still being broadcast on what I jokingly refer to as the Bob Edwards channel - channel 121. I don't know if the Sirius channel line up includes channel 121 or not.Gregg said:I notice Sirius/XM no longer runs Car Talk on their NPR 122 line up. That's too bad. Let's hope local NPR stations continue to run "Best of Car Talk" for years to come.
At least they are different episodes!Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:Grandma thought Castor Oil was a good medicine once or twice a year.
Through the years I thought Car Talk once a week was good medicine. But FOUR HOURS A DAY? Heaven help us!
I thought they stopped doing new shows and they are only running repeats.
I was listening to that On Point show as well last week and like you, I was surprised that there was no mention of the program no longer being current.dyeingeye said:On Point had Ray Magliozzi to talk about the Maraton Bombings. He was introduced as a host of Car Talk. There is no indication that the weekly show are now compilations of past shows. The show should be more open about its status. I don't believe the casual listener knows that he/she is listening to repeats.
The show should be more open about its status. I don't believe the casual listener knows that he/she is listening to repeats.
aaronread said:The show should be more open about its status. I don't believe the casual listener knows that he/she is listening to repeats.
That's rather the point, isn't it?
I hear what you're saying, but Car Talk is an entertainment show, not news. And it's not even about the news like Wait Wait Don't Tell Me is. Car Talk has always run several weeks of repeats every year even when they were technically producing new shows, and rarely made any direct (or even indirect) reference to it. The listeners don't care. And there's precedent; some public radios continue in repeats for YEARS after a host frickin' dies, much less retires.
If this is true, I feel sorry for the poor callers who thought they were going to be on the air and weren't.aaronread said:The show should be more open about its status. I don't believe the casual listener knows that he/she is listening to repeats.
That's rather the point, isn't it?
I hear what you're saying, but Car Talk is an entertainment show, not news. And it's not even about the news like Wait Wait Don't Tell Me is. Car Talk has always run several weeks of repeats every year even when they were technically producing new shows, and rarely made any direct (or even indirect) reference to it. The listeners don't care. And there's precedent; some public radios continue in repeats for YEARS after a host frickin' dies, much less retires.
Also, AS HAS BEEN DISCUSSED AD NAUSEUM EARLIER IN THE THREAD, these are technically "new" shows in that most, if not all, the material has never been broadcast before. Back when they did regular production, they would tape for three hours, sometimes a little more, every Wednesday in Studio 4 at WBUR...and then edit it down at DCH's offices to 59 minutes, less breaks. So there's GOBS of material that got edited out in the decades of regular production, but that they still have on tape. So they're picking the best of the stuff that didn't make the cut the first time (which is still pretty good stuff) and making new shows from that.
Yeah, they're all the time telling us we can.drt said:(assuming Car Talk is even available on a podcast);
But they're doing everything they can to convince us they're not.FredLeonard said:vchimpanzee said:Since WBUR is in Boston and Our Fair City is close enough to be affected (Harvard was shut down), I don't see how the brothers can avoid mentioning recent events tomorrow.
I thought they stopped doing new shows and they are only running repeats.
vchimpanzee said:I think most people called in just to ask them questions about cars and maybe talk to someone famous. Not necessarily to be on the air. Not like you can typically parlay a call-in into anything bigger.aaronread said:If this is true, I feel sorry for the poor callers who thought they were going to be on the air and weren't.
They're not trying to convince anyone of anything. You're only noticing it because you expect things to be the way you expect them to be. When they're not: firestorm of synaptic misfiring.vchimpanzee said:But they're doing everything they can to convince us they're not.FredLeonard said:vchimpanzee said:Since WBUR is in Boston and Our Fair City is close enough to be affected (Harvard was shut down), I don't see how the brothers can avoid mentioning recent events tomorrow.
I thought they stopped doing new shows and they are only running repeats.
Although the bombings were never mentioned.
If this is true, I feel sorry for the poor callers who thought they were going to be on the air and weren't.
No, I'm not expecting anything except to be entertained, maybe learn a few things about cars, and maybe learn how to solve a puzzler. They're achieving that. In fact, I'm listening to the entire show now, something I used to not do.quadraphonic said:They're not trying to convince anyone of anything. You're only noticing it because you expect things to be the way you expect them to be. When they're not: firestorm of synaptic misfiring.vchimpanzee said:But they're doing everything they can to convince us they're not.FredLeonard said:vchimpanzee said:Since WBUR is in Boston and Our Fair City is close enough to be affected (Harvard was shut down), I don't see how the brothers can avoid mentioning recent events tomorrow.
I thought they stopped doing new shows and they are only running repeats.
Although the bombings were never mentioned.
You're expecting: show retires....it should fall off the earth. In this case, it was more like 'hosts retire...show continues for a while.'
Most people are just satisfied to go along with it, either way.
Bill McLaughlin may be living, but the show he hosted is not. McLaughlin stopped producing new episodes of "St. Paul Sunday" years ago, maybe 2008, although APM continues to distribute reruns of show.Mark Jeffries said:He technically isn't public radio, but Karl Haas is a great example. Aren't there classical format stations still airing "Adventures in Good Music" when they could be airing the alive Bill McLaughlin show instead?