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Catchup Advisory Board GK:
but first this word from the Catchup Advisory Board. (MUSIC) TR: These are the good years for me and Barb. I started a self-defense
class that's based on the art of withering insults. Our son auditioned
for a reality TV show, but he didn't get cast because he refused to eat
night crawlers. The neighbor kid, the one who was starting a garage band,
got some amplifier feedback that tore the fillings out of his teeth and
currently he is on very serious tranquilizers and watching the Golf Channel.
We should have been happy. Then late one night I found Barb sitting in
the kitchen with a collection of plastic bottles.-Honey, what's wrong? SS: Oh, Jim, you know me, I do everything I can to keep us in
good health --- the air-filtering machines, the ionizer, the vitamins,
the organic pillows, the acid-free napkins ---- TR: The new toothpaste with aloe vera. SS: Right. TR: The cruelty-free potpourri dishes. The radiation filter on
the TV screen. Which makes it like radio. But that's fine. SS: I'm just reading an article about bacteria ---- it says that
anti-bacterial soap just makes bacteria more resistant. By fighting the
bacteria, it makes the bacteria stronger. TR: Like the way I insult your brother, and he keeps showing up
for Thanksgiving SS: Our kitchen is probably crawling with deadly bacilli right
now. Bacilli that Lysol only energizes. And every time someone comes to
visit us, they introduce new strains of germs. TR: But we can't go through life fearing contact with other people.
Except for the Schumhofers, of course. TR: Why not go back to ordinary old bar soap, then? It was good
enough for our parents. They were fairly clean. My mother was. SS: We go back to ordinary soap and this bacteria that our anti-bacterial
soap has stimulated will swoop in here and ---- Oh, Jim. Every healthful
thing I do seems doomed to failure! TR: That's not true. Since we started drinking limeade, neither
one of us has had a problem with scurvy. SS: I guess you're right. TR: No problem with rickets. Thanks to ketchup. SS: It prevents rickets? TR: There's something in tomatoes that resists infection, Barb.
And ketchup's natural mellowing agents give a person a sense of well-being
that reduces anxieties that can weaken our immune systems. SS: Oh, Jim, you're so right
RD: These are the good years, the world is bright and green, GK: Ketchup
for the good times. RD: Ketchup
. Ketchup
. © Garrison Keillor 2002 |
Old Sweet Songs: A Prairie Home Companion 1974-1976
Lovingly selected from the earliest archives of A Prairie Home Companion, this heirloom collection represents the music from earliest years of the now legendary show: 1974–1976. With songs and tunes from jazz pianist Butch Thompson, mandolin maestro Peter Ostroushko, Dakota Dave Hull and the first house band, The Powdermilk Biscuit Band (Adam Granger, Bob Douglas and Mary DuShane).





