Saturday, July 29, 2017

Good News: My Relationship With NPR, Through Car Stereos, Has Resumed, After An Awkward, Abrupt 13 Month Break

Article first published as My Relationship Listening to NPR In My Car Resumes With A Special Hour on Blogcritics.
This may be a coincidence but I am going to take it as a sign - something to do with the power of National Public Radio.
About one year ago my car stereo was stolen, shortly after I moved to Austin. My locked truck was parked at a library at the time. NPR had run a report that day saying that the frequency of people stealing car stereos had dropped.
As I told people of my car stereo being stolen the majority of them noted the coincidence of the timing, most bringing up the NPR report before I even alluded to it.. I was less amused. I penned and submitted this letter for NPR to broadcast, essentially informing the car stereo robber that a) since it was no longer trendy to steal car stereos and b) I would miss that and other reports - not to mention the hoped-for reading of my letter - because of this crime.
NPR did not run the letter and the car stereo was never found.
I later penned this piece chronicling the affect of not having a car stereo had in my life, namely a dramatic reduction in my consumption in music, signaling a change in my relationship with music.
Sure I still had occasional moments with NPR, often as I woke in the morning but these were short affairs, nothing like the long drives we used to take together. I talked, in my interview with Lisa Phillips regarding her book about NPR personalities, about some of my favorites there and the fact I have missed some of them during this year away.
Over the weekend I came into possession (legally, for the record) of a used car which had two things going for it. At the time, the one that excited me the most was the fact the vehicle had air conditioning. As other Austinites including Blogcritics' own Dave Nalle can attest, living in Austin without air conditioning is a bit like being a politician with a fear of public speaking: possible but difficult. It also has a car stereo, albeit with cassette tape technology, but I immediately tuned in NPR.
So, today was the first day I was driving home from work in this car, listening to NPR. It was thrilling, frankly, to hear not one but two separate authors I have interviewed speaking within less than an hour period.
First, roving NPR reporter John Burnett, who I interviewed here, did a plug for the local NPR station.
I also heard a tease for an interview with Brad Meltzer about his new book, Heroes for My Son. I have interviewed Brad for his last few books and had already planned to submit for publication, in the next 24 hours, my interview with him about this one. (That interview is now up here)
I ended up driving for longer than I had planned just so I could listen to this interview, partially out of the curiosity of hearing the voice of someone I have corresponded with only through email, and also to see if there was anything he would say that I had missed in our interview.
Interview on NPR over, I parked the car, turned off the car stereo and thought, well, I may not have the pulse of America as a writer but I sure do seem to have the pulse of NPR.
 

No comments:

Post a Comment