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Conference misery::feline_v1

Title:Meower Power is Valuing Differences
Notice:FELINE_V1 is moving 1/11/94 5pm PST to MISERY
Moderator:MISERY::VANZUYLEN_RO
Created:Sun Feb 09 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jan 11 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5089
Total number of notes:60366

2968.0. "Bertha's Kitty Boutique" by SASE::GRAY () Fri Oct 20 1989 15:59

    Do many FELINE noters listen to A Prairie Home Companion on the
    radio?   If you do, and you shop at "Bertha's Kitty Boutique," post your 
    favorite Bertha's Kitty Boutique items here (or, make up your own).
    
    Here's two for starters: 
    	Bertha's Kitty Grounder kit
    		long rubber device that attaches to kitty's tail to
    		prevent too many shocks from dry, static air
        Kitty Hair Net
    		for kitties that shed too much
    
    
    Debbie
    
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
2968.1SQUEKE::WARDJust pay me in CHOCOLATEFri Oct 20 1989 17:165
    It's been awhile since I listened to that program, but I always
    loved the commercials.  I have the Bertha's Kitty Boutique T-shirt
    and am always being told how "cute" it is.  
    
    Bernice
2968.2CRUISE::NDCNancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it allFri Oct 20 1989 17:243
    I've never even heard of it.  When and where would I find this
    show?
    
2968.3ASABET::CUNNIFFSat Oct 21 1989 14:009
    Isn't it on Saturday (or Sunday) afternoons on NPR (national public
    radio)? 
    
    (I thought I heard something a year or so ago about Garrison Keillor
    not doing the show anymore...)
    
    jack
    (whos_as_confused_as_nancy!)
    
2968.4SASE::GRAYMon Oct 23 1989 11:5118
    A Prairie Home Companion is a wonderful live-radio show that is
    modelled after the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville -- there's lots of
    music, storytelling, gentle humor.  The host, Garrison Keillor,
    "retired" after about 10 years of doing the show, but I understand
    that he's going to start doing it again in November.  Briefly, Garrison
    is a gentle-voiced teller of tales about his mythical home town
    of Lake Wobegon, Minnesota.  He tells about numerous characters
    in this "mythical" town, and listeners get to tune into their lives
    once a week (the show is currently doing reruns, Sat. night 6:00(?)
    on NPR).  He also tells about the numerous businesses
    in town, including Bertha's Kitty Boutique, Ralph's Pretty Good
    Groceries ("if you can't find it at Ralph's, you can probably get
    along without it"); sometimes he talks about Lake Wobegone's Toast
    and Jelly Days celebrations, and so on.  It's a very sweet show.
    
    Garrison Keillor has also written a couple of best-selling books,
    "Lake Wobegone Days" and "Happy to be Here" are two, written much
    in the style of his storytelling.
2968.5CRUISE::NDCNancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it allMon Oct 23 1989 12:404
    ah - that explains it.  "Grand ole opry" as in Country & Western.
    We don't "do" Country and Western - tho my sister LOVES it.
      Nancy DC who's a Classic Rocker!
    
2968.6HABS11::MASONExplaining is not understandingMon Oct 23 1989 12:518
    No, no, no, no, no....
    
    Format is what was being referred to.  The content is midwestern
    homespun (with a Scandinavian flavor, considering where they are).
    There are occasional "country" type musical spots, but give it a 
    try and see for yourself.
    
    Gary
2968.7Great ShowHPSTEK::TBOWENMon Oct 23 1989 12:5316
    The show is not specifically country and western, or folk or anything
    else. There is a variety of music, though it leans toward folk both
    native and European, skits using guests and their own cast, readings
    from novels and poems and some of the funniest fictitous ads you've
    ever heard. The talks Garrison does about Lake Woebegone have become
    classics and most are available on cassette as are a number of items from
    a catalog that I still get. Unfortunatly, the shows currently on are
    indeed repeats as already mentioned and Garrison himself admitted a
    while back that he really didn't know what form the new show, to start
    in November, will take. He was sure however that it wouldn't be the
    same.
    
    While all the ads for Bertha's Kitty Boutique were worth remembering, my
    favorite one is for the heater cats that snuggle up to you on cold
    nights to keep you warm. That's what my two Maine Coons do at my house
    in Vermont.
2968.8please postDNEAST::FIRTH_CATHYowlMon Oct 23 1989 14:146
    For us (read me) untutored folks .... when the show starts could you
    post time, day, and what number the station is (ex:95.7 fm).  I used
    to only listed to the radio to and from work (1.9 miles), but might
    widen my scope for something like this.
    
    Cathy
2968.9HPSTEK::TBOWENTue Oct 24 1989 10:484
    It's on Saturday nights from 6:00 to 8:00. Just about all National
    Public Radio stations carry it, such as WGBH in the Boston area.
    
    
2968.10CRUISE::NDCNancy Diettrich-Cunniff-I wanted it allTue Oct 24 1989 11:232
    Think I'll have to record that.  It interfears with Star Trek TNG.
    
2968.11It could be worseMOSAIC::TARBETSama budu zabyvat'Tue Nov 07 1989 14:1617
    As others have pointed out, PHC was a "variety show":  there was no
    fixed format and about the only constants were that most of the music
    was acoustic and Garrison always did a "News from Lake Wobegon" monolog.  
    
    He gets bored with what he's doing after awhile.  He used to do a
    morning radio show on KSJN (the PBS station at St. John's College in
    Northfield, easily heard in the Twin Cities) with some of the same
    flavor.  We found out he was tired of it when one morning he played
    "Help Me Rhonda" by the Beach Boys.  Over and over and over and over
    and over...for the whole two-hour show, drove everyone mad.  The next
    day he was gone.
    
    Strange guy, *very* talented.
    
    						=maggie-who-grew-up-
                                                not-all-that-far-from-
                                                Lake-Wobegon