The Chronic Rift Network Lucky Shot Productions
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- Society & Culture
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A series of pop culture podcasts attempting to find the culture in pop culture.
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Presenting the Transcription Feature 198: INFORMATION PLEASE & PHIL HARRIS-ALICE FAYE
We start off tonight with another episode of that great quiz show, “Information Please.” Are you up on babies and their guardians, military insignia, and devils in literature? Then, since it’s almost time for Easter, here’s the Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble of OTR: Phil Harris and Elliot Lewis. “The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show” starred actual married couple, Phil Harris, who was the band leader on “The Jack Benny Program,” and popular film star Alice Faye. Tonight, Phil and his band’s guitarist, Elliot, attempt to use a drugstore chemistry set to color Easter eggs. What could possibly go wrong?
Episodes
Information Please
March 13, 1944
“Guest: Quentin Reynolds”
2:11
The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show
April 5, 1953
"Coloring Easter Eggs Phil's Way”
32:46 -
Presenting the Transcription Feature 197: BOB HOPE & INFORMATION PLEASE
We start off tonight with an episode of “The Bob Hope Show.” It’s December of 1945, and the war is over. Hope had spent much of it broadcasting from military bases, but now he is back at the NBC studios in Hollywood. His guest, Jimmy Durante, promises to take Bob to a swanky party, but is Bob ready for Society, and vice-versa? Then, time for that excellent quiz show, “Information Please.” It’s an Armed Forces recording, which means the original was transcribed and then all the ads were taken out. Are you up on literary in-laws, animal gestation periods, and places to climb?
Episodes
The Bob Hope Show
December 4, 1945
“Guest: Jimmy Durante”
3:48
Information Please
April 24, 1944
“Guests: Deems Taylor and Irene Dunne”
35:02 -
Presenting the Transcription Feature 196: THE GHOST AND MRS. MUIR
For our New Year’s treat, here’s “The Lux Radio Theater” adaptation of the classic 1947 film “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir.” The film is an unconventional romance of sorts starring Rex Harrison and Gene Tierney as the title characters. She’s a vibrant young widow, and he’s the ghost of a rollicking sea captain. The captain isn’t French, so I’m not sure why they cast Charles Boyer in the role, except that he does have sonorous voice. Madeleine Carroll takes on Tierney’s role.
Episode
The Lux Radio Theater
December 1, 1947
“The Ghost and Mrs. Muir”
2:30 -
Presenting the Transcription Feature 195: AUTHOR'S PLAYHOUSE & JACK BENNY
More Christmas here on “Presenting the Transcription Feature.” “Author’s Playhouse” was an anthology radio drama that ran from 1941 to 1945 on various networks. It featured adaptations of popular short stories by authors like James Thurber, W.W. Jacobs, and, in this case, O. Henry. The story you are about to hear first appeared in his 1907 collection “Heart of the West,” a collection of western tales. Here, the setting is a mining town during the gold rush, and I love the incredibly ornate way the miners speak. Reminds me of “Guys and Dolls.” Then we finish off with “The Jack Benny Special Christmas Show,” a 40-minute-long special that Jack did in the mid-1950s. It’s got all the usual holiday high jinks plus some special guest stars.
Episodes
Author’s Playhouse
December 21, 1941
“Christmas By Injunction”
2:04
“The Jack Benny Special Christmas Show”
December 2, 1956
32:03 -
Presenting the Transcription Feature 194: BURNS AND ALLEN & THE GREAT GILDERSLEEVE
Welcome to December on “Presenting the Transcription Feature.” That means Christmas-themed episodes all month. We’ll start off with George Burns and Gracie Allen in the eponymous “The Burns and Allen Show.” Christmas is fast approaching, and George has no idea what to get his wife. Then “The Great Gildersleeve” himself is in a very good mood as he goes holiday shopping and plans a party for friends and family.
Episodes
The Burns and Allen Show
December 18, 1947
“Gracie’s Last Minute Christmas Gift”
2:32
The Great Gildersleeve
December 24, 1944
“Twas the Night Before Christmas”
34:05 -
Presenting the Transcription Feature 193: THE COUPLE NEXT DOOR & SAM SPADE
“The Couple Next Door” was one of the many 15-minutes-a day, five-days a week programs that used to fill the airwaves. It was, like “Vic and Sade” a show about “nothing.” It lacks the absurdism of “Vic and Sade,” and that may have made it easier for its audience to relate to. The show was the creation of one woman, Peg Lynch, who wrote and co-starred in every episode. Tonight, we present two representative episodes depicting late 1950s suburban American life. Then, who better to spend Thanksgiving with than the hard-boiled cast of “The Adventures of Sam Spade, Detective”? Someone is trying to kill a man -- a man named Tom Turkey.
Episodes
The Couple Next Door
January 27, 1958
“Is The Couple Married”
October 3, 1960
“Living Room Wired For Stereo”
4:10
The Adventures of Sam Spade, Detective
November 24, 1950
“The Terrified Turkey Caper”
33:35