Wednesday afternoon The AIR brings you a special new episodes of Curtain Call and Beatles Blast, both of which are the first halves of two-part specials! You can tune in at the website, or if you’re on a laptop or desktop, you could just stay right here and listen to the convenient embedded radio player lurking elsewhere on this page.
At 2 PM Beatles Blast presents a themed show that, when I first thought of it, I thought was a dumb idea and there wouldn’t be enough songs to fill out an hour. I had the silly idea of doing an hour of Beatles songs (group and solo) about animals, or at least that mention an animal in the title. The Beatles were all animal lovers, so I figured it might be worth a shot.
Then I started compiling tracks for the show, and discovered that it’s going to be a two-parter. They had more animal songs than I realized. So come back next week for part two. Check out the playlist for part one below. I damn-near had enough songs about birds to give them a show of their own, but I decided to mix it up a bit.
Beatles Blast 087
The Beatles “Martha My Dear”
George Harrison “Baltimore Oriole”
John Lennon “Surprise, Surprise (Sweet Bird of Paradox)”
Ringo Starr “Bye Bye, Blackbird”
Paul McCartney “Long Tailed Winter Bird”
The Beatles “Free As A Bird”
Paul McCartney “All You Horse Riders”
George Harrison “Fish On The Sand”
John Lennon “Cold Turkey”
Ringo Starr “A Mouse Like Me”
The Beatles “Piggies”
The Beatles “Hey Bulldog”
Paul McCartney “Ram On (unreleased reprise)”
John Lennon “Hound Dog”
The Beatles “Blackbird”
Beatles Blast can be heard every Wednesday at 2 PM, with replays Thursday at 11 PM, Friday at 1 PM, and Saturday afternoon.
At 3 PM on Curtain Call, Mel Larch salutes 25 years since the Broadway debut of the musical based on E. L. Doctorow’s Ragtime. Mel also want to pay her respects to Frank Galati, who directed the show, and who passed away on January 2.
Galati was a beloved director, writer, and actor. He was a member of Steppenwolf Theatre Company and an associate director at Goodman Theatre. He taught at Northwestern University for many years.
Ragtime featured music by Stephen Flaherty, lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, and a book by Terrence McNally.
Set in the late-period gilded age of the early 20th century, Ragtime tells the story of three groups in the United States: African Americans, represented by Coalhouse Walker Jr., a Harlem musician; upper-class suburbanites, represented by Mother, the matriarch of a white upper-class family in New Rochelle, New York; and Eastern European immigrants, represented by Tateh, a Jewish immigrant from Latvia.
The show also incorporates historical figures such as Harry Houdini, Evelyn Nesbit, Booker T. Washington, J. P. Morgan, Henry Ford, Stanford White, Harry Kendall Thaw, and Admiral Peary, an weaves its narrative around some of the true-life scandals and events of the day.
It’s a great show, and also a long one. Rather than just bring you highlights, Mel decided to spread Ragtime over two episodes of Curtain Call, so like Beatles Blast, you get to come back next week for part two.
Curtain Call can be heard on The AIR Wednesday at 3 PM, with replays Thursday at 8 AM, Friday at 10 AM, Saturday at 8 PM and Monday at 9 AM. A six-hour marathon of classic episodes can be heard Sunday evening starting at 6 PM, and an all-night marathon of Curtain Call episodes can be heard Wednesday nights, beginning at Midnight.
Also on The AIR, Wednesday at 11 PM, The Comedy Vault gears up a new episode for the new year. This time you get a solid hour of the weirdly comical music of Barnes & Barnes. The Comedy Vault can be heard every Wednesday at 11 PM, with the featured episodes replayed the following Monday at 8 PM.
It’s Tuesday on
At 3 PM we have a new hour of The Swing Shift that’s loaded with classic Big Band Era artists, mixed in with newer stuff and even a track from The Yardbirds to pay tribute to Jeff Beck. Check out this playlist…
Herman Linte’s Prognosis hits a massive, epic and bombastic milestone Monday, as the show hit’s its 100th episode.
The big deal Monday starts at 3 PM. On a very special Prognosis, Herman Linte presents two full hours of epic Progressive Rock, and to mark the 100th episode, Herman Linte has loaded this program with ALL NEW MUSIC. Every track you hear in this show was released less than six weeks ago.
It’s been a real kick having Herman and the rest of the Haversham Recording Institute crew making these programs of theirs, true labors of love, for the last six and a half years, and it’ll be cool to see what they have in store for us in the future. If you’ve been scoring at home, you may realize that, if Prognosis has hit one-hundred episodes, then that means that on Friday, so will Sydney Fileen, and Sydney’s Big Electric Cat. You won’t want to miss that.


The PopCulteer
So I’m not put off by the idea of a reboot. And I’m not bothered by the new diverse cast, or the adult-humor aspect of Velma.
And even that would be forgiveable if the damned thing was remotely funny. The real sin of Velma is that it’s imitation cutting-edge. Every joke in the show has been done better, usually a decade or more ago, on The Venture Brothers, Harvey Birdman: Attorney At Law, Robot Chicken or Rick and Morty.

The PopCult Toybox
One other thing about Super Joe that didn’t help matters any is that Super Joe was one of the most fragile action figures ever made. His body was basically a scaled-down version of Hasbro’s “Muscle











We are smack dab in the middle of Winter but there’s plenty of STUFF TO DO in Charleston and the surrounding area this weekend.







It’s hard to believe we’re already well into 2023, so I guess we all have to start dressing like Zardoz now.
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