As a cartoonist, I cannot express how grateful I am to these stations for existing, as they provide a hands-free soundtrack to my life while I work. However, they've spoiled me, and the spoiled child always wants more. When I was in high school, I used to tune in Sunday nights to 91.1 because they'd air book readings and short stories, which I found extraordinarily relaxing. Way back then I began dreaming of another MPR station, one that would play 24 hours of people reading stuff. I know that books on tape exist, but I'd honestly much rather make someone else do the work of picking out and airing the readings. Plus, books on tape are so limited compared to the possibilities of a public radio station dedicated to reading: live poetry slams, authors reading their short stories, old scratchy recordings of Dylan Thomas and T. S. Eliot, ... etc.
I can't imagine that anything like this station would be able to get off the ground, but it's fun to think about. Here's my imaginary line-up for a typical weekday:
And of course, Garrison Keillor would pop in a few times a day to give us an update on authors' birthdays and remind us how important it is to turn the radio off once in a while and actually go to a library or bookstore.
4 comments:
That is a great idea, Kevin--can't you email that to NPR or MPR or wherever? They would be everlastingly grateful that someone clever thought up all of the programming for them!
Krista Tippet.....
...i HATE F-ing Krista Tippet!!!!!
And where would Ira Glass' "This Great American Novel" fit into the line-up?
Hmm... maybe Ira Glass and Sarah Vowel can have their own 24 hr station.
Krista Tippet sounds like everyone else on NPR. I think the world needs 24 hours of Fresh Air. Now there's a voice.
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