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The Lives of the Cowboys (WESTERN THEME) SS: THE LIVES OF THE COWBOYS....brought to you by Trailblazer Table Napkins...use
em as napkins (SMOOSH OF GREASE)....as hankies (NOSE HONK)....or use em
to tie up guys' wrists and gag em (GAGGING) and now, here's today's exciting
adventure..... GK: Beautiful evening, Dusty. TR: Yep. GK: Smell that air. TR: All I smell is cattle and cattle by-products. Where are the
cattle, by the way? GK: I'm watching em right here on the screen. Those little blips, those
are our cattle. TR: Man, cowboying sure ain't like it used to be. GK: Thanks to this laptop and those chips they taped to the cows rear
ends, we just (BEEPS) punch in the Locate Herd program and there they
are. Transponder thing, this COWCHIP. Stands for Cowboy Out With Cows
Hiding In the Prairie. Nifty thing. TR: Using a screen to herd cattle??? It's an insult to any cowboy
with a lick of self respect. GK: Helps you do your job. TR: I miss back when we were regular cowboys, riding for the Lazy
B. GK: Well, the Lazy B was bought up by Beefex. Now we're corporate cowboys
with cell phones in our holsters. TR: Don't remind me. (HAWKS AND SPITS. DISTANT MOO) Oh shuddup!
(DISTANT MOO) Go to sleep! (RING) Sounds like the golderned fax machine. GK: (OFF) Yep, I think you're right. (PHONE RING) (WHINNY) Easy, big
girl. It's just a fax coming in. (FAX) TR: Probably another one of those idiot memos from the Beefex
vice-president for corporate branding telling us how to tell the rear
end of a cow from the front. GK: Nope. They want us to count the cows again. The computer says we
got 160 cows, not 40. TR: We got forty head! GK: Well, you know that and I know that, but---- TR: Well, the computer is wrong. It counted all their legs and
forgot to divide by four. Doggone it, Lefty, this goldanged corporate
cowboy life is just plain not for me. (HE PACES OFF AND TURNS) I gotta
be a free range cowboy! (HAWKS AND SPITS) GK: Relax. Tomorrow we'll be in Kansas City. Deliver our cows to the
stockyard and I'll go and look up Miss Evelyn Beebalo. TR: You still carrying a torch for her? She must be fifty, by
now. GK: Some flowers never lose their fragrance. She hasn't forgotten
me. She sent me an e-mail out on the trail, she said, "Are you coming
to Kansas City soon?" TR: Don't sound like a romantic proposition to me. (STRUMS) TR: Would you mind not doing that? GK: (STRUMS. TUNES LAST STRING A LITTLE SHARP. STRUMS AGAIN.) When a
man has strong feelings, he must express himself through music, Dusty.
TR: I've got pretty strong feelings about your music, but never
mind. GK: She is in love with me, Dusty. (TUNES AND STRUMS) Longing for the
day when our paths converge and I'll be able to quit this lonely filthy
cowboy life and find happiness with her in a little cottage in the golden
West. TR: She is planning how to get out of town before you arrive.
GK: I'm not even listening to you. (SINGS AS HE STRUMS) When men ride hosses, You're the words of my mantra, I've got to say, dear, You're the zip in my zipper, TR: Spare me the yodel, Lefty. GK: Yodeladiyodeladi---- TR: Ahh. It feels so good when it's over. So how you planning
to find Miss Beebalo? GK: Go to the Nelson-Atkins Art Museum. TR: Art Museum???? (HAWKS AND SPITS) GK: That's where I met her ten years ago. Looking at the French paintings.
The Monets and Manets and the Renoir. TR: I prefer Remington myself. Made good razors and made good
paintings. Of cowboys. GK: Yeah, but it's around the French ones where you meet a higher class
of women. You stand looking at a painting and sorta tilting your head
and holding up a thumb and a pretty woman walks up and stands there and
you say something like, "I love his vocabulary of shadow. And the
brushwork is so ---- neoclassical." And she agrees, and before you
know it, you're sitting down to a cappuccino with an intelligent woman
who smells good, and has the capability of supporting you financially
if you play your cards right. (HAWKS, SPITS) TR: I'd rather just walk up to a dance hall floozy and say, "Here's
a dollar. Let's dance." GK: Those were the old days ----(PHONE RING) ---- is that you or me?
(PHONE RING) TR: Sounds like it's you. GK: Excuse me. ---- Hello---- this is Lefty, how can I help? SS (ON PHONE): It's Evelyn, Lefty. Evelyn Beebalo We met at the museum.
You were explaining to me about brush strokes. TR: Probably another one of those idiots at Beefex. GK: Well, it's wonderful to hear you say that, Evelyn. I feel the same
way. TR: Oh, it's her. SS (ON PHONE): You sure knew a lot about the Post-Impressionists. GK: Well, a cowboy knows that a post had better make an impression, otherwise
it's not going to stay in the ground, is it? SS (ON PHONE): I called to tell you something. GK: Yeah? SS (ON PHONE): I'm married, Lefty. Married a computer programmer. SS (ON PHONE): So I won't be able to see you while you're in town, Lefty.
GK: Well, I feel the same way about you, Evelyn. SS (ON PHONE): Bye, Lefty. Have a nice life. (CLICK) GK: Well, I'm glad you feel that way, Evelyn, and I'll be looking forward
to lunch tomorrow. Bye, sweetheart. Love you a whole bunch. Bye. (KISSES)
TR: Guess that's not somebody from Beefex, huh? GK: It was Evelyn. She's still wild about me. Wanted to see me today.
I put her off until tomorrow. Best to keep a woman waiting, I say. Helps
build interest. TR: (BEEPER) Doggone it. GK: Somebody's beepin' ya, pardner. TR: Let em go beep somebody else for a change. GK: It's only a pager. TR: I'm gonna ignore it. (BEEP) GK: They're not gonna quit till you answer it. TR: We'll see about that. (BEEP) GK: Maybe it's about something important. TR: That'd be a first. (BEEP) That does it. (HE FUMES AND FULMINATES)
GK: What you doin, Dusty? TR: I'll show you. (TOSSES PAGER IN AIR. THEN WHIPS GUN FROM HOLSTER,
FOUR SHOTS) GK: Pretty darn good shootin, pal. I believe that pager has been terminated. GK: Hey! Hey! Take it easy. SS: I'm mad at you guys! I hear that you're from Beefex. TR: What'd we do? We ain't done nothing to you. SS: Who else am I goin to be angry at? Ain't nobody else around here
for miles. You're my only opportunity. (SHE DISMOUNTS. HORSE WHINNY) Whoa.
(FOOTSTEPS) Did you read this in the paper yesterday? GK: What's this? TR: (READING) Nabisco Investigated by Govt. for Shredding Wheat.
SS: Not that one. The other one. GK: What do you mean, "Oh well?" TR: Don't affect us. Just the stockholders. Is something wrong?
---- Huh? What is it? Oh no. Tell me it ain't true. Tell me you didn't.
You didn't. You couldn't have. GK: I did. TR: You agreed that we'd get paid in the form of stock options.
GK: Right. TR: So we got nothing, essentially. Flat broke. The old story. GK: About what we started out with. TR: I'm goin' to town, pardner. Get me some rotgut. Look up a
floozy or two. (WHINNY) Giddup. (HORSE HOOVES, AWAY) GK: You had your supper yet, Miss-----? GK: Got some right here. Brie and sesame seed, okay? SS: Mighty fine. GK: I bought em for a gal who it appears I'm not going to be seeing after
all. SS: Well, I'm sure you'll find someone. You're a pretty good looking
guy. GK: You think so? SS: I think you're pretty attractive. I daresay most women would. GK: Well, I'm not taking a poll or anything. SS: Even as I come riding in here shooting off my pistol in blind rage,
I did think in the back of my mind, hey, I wouldn't mind if that fellow
there brought me my orange juice in the morning. GK: Well, the moment you came riding in, I started to think of a song.
SS: Is that right? GK: (STRUM) It ain't finished yet, but it starts out something like this. You're the cream in my coffee GK: It's coming eventually. (THEME) TR: THE LIVES OF THE COWBOYS......brought to you by La Casa Grande
Brand Placemats for the Trail. Why set your grub down in the dirt when
you can use a handsome place mat from La Casa Grande? Your choice of six
patterns: Manhattan At Night, Tropical Fish, Butterflies, Poker Hands,
Presidents of the United States, or the Christian Science Monitor Swimsuit
Calendar. (WHINNY) (MUSIC OUT) © Garrison Keillor 2002 |
Now Available:
A Christmas Blizzard
GK's New Holiday Story
A comic novella about a Hawaii-bound holiday traveler who ends up stranded in his North Dakota hometown.
Audio edition also available»
The Prairie Home cruise has become legendary on two of the Seven Seas and now is setting sail on a third, a weeklong spring break cruise of the western Caribbean along the Mexican coast, and it leaves March 14 from Tampa.
Stories of a Wobegon romance far from home, all delivered with Garrison Keillor's trademark humor.
Read the first chapter»Signed Copies Available»
The latest collection of Lake Wobegon short stories gathered from live broadcasts include Confirmation Sunday, the church directory photos, Pastor Ingqvist's leather bound sermons along with song lyrics and the "95 Theses," among others. Companion audio also available.
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