Le Show
Le Show is a weekly syndicated public radio show hosted by satirist Harry Shearer.
The program is a hodgepodge of satirical news commentary, music, and sketch comedy. Shearer, an impressionist known for his voice work on The Simpsons, writes the sketches and usually performs all the voices.
History
The show first aired on December 3, 1983, and ran under various titles for several months before Le Show at the suggestion of a long-time friend of the host. A satire of a popular marketing trend at the time to add "Le" to product names such as the Renault 5 which was heavily promoted in the US as Le Car.Until April 14, 2013, for almost 30 years, Le Show usually originated live on Sunday mornings from "The Le Show Dome" at KCRW in Santa Monica. It is also frequently recorded at or broadcast from other NPR and public stations when Shearer is on the road. After the KCRW broadcast on April 14, 2013, KCRW moved the program from broadcast to webcast only. While the show continues to air on numerous other sources, primarily public radio stations, Shearer expressed dismay over losing his home base radio broadcast, without any notice or being allowed to say goodbye on the air. Shearer has since ended each program by stating that Le Show originated from the "'Change is Hard' Radio Network", referring to a press statement from KCRW announcing the show's departure from its lineup. At the beginning of the July 14, 2013 episode, Shearer announced that the program is now airing on KCSN, bringing the show back to the Southern California airwaves roughly three months after it was taken off the air at KCRW. While KCSN provides live streaming of the show as well as the archives thereof, WWNO in New Orleans has taken over hosting its broadcast and podcast feeds. In Shearer's eyes, this prompted the change to the "'Change is Easy' Radio Network".
Several shows a year are broadcast from New Orleans, where Shearer has a residence. The New Orleans shows usually feature very prominent local musicians.
Availability
The program is carried on many NPR and other public radio stations throughout the US and abroad. It is also available internationally on NPR Worldwide, NPR Berlin, the American Forces Radio Network, :ja:USEN440|USEN440 in Japan and over shortwave radio via WBCQ The Planet. Since the merger of the XM and Sirius satellite radio services, the program is no longer available on either; on which Shearer commented, "because I guess, you know, mergers are good".The show is also available as podcasts of previous episodes from Shearer's website and as free downloadable files from Audible.com, The show is also available as a podcast on iTunes along with other KCRW programs, although KCRW no longer broadcasts the show. The podcasts differ from the broadcast and streaming versions, in that they generally include only a few seconds of the music Shearer spins for the show. Exceptions are musical parodies and original songs written and performed by Shearer.
News segments
The show features a number of recurring news segments, each referred to by Shearer as "a copyrighted feature of this broadcast". Currently many episodes include the following:- Apologies of the Week
- News From Outside the Bubble
- News of the Warm
- The Trades
- News of Inspectors General
- News of the Olympic Movement
- Burying the Lede
- News of the Atom
- News of the Godly
- F is for FEMA
- Found Object Department
- Leak of the Week
- Let's Get Scared
- Los Angeles Dog Trainer Corrections
- News from the Digital Wonderland
- Sos of the Week
- Tales of Airport Security
- News of News Corp.
- *On the October 16, 2011 episode, Shearer renamed the segment News of Nice Corp. "... because it's not anymore misleading than..."
- News of Secrets Started on March 16, 2014 as News of Secret Stuff, renamed April 13, Shearer discusses material governments try to keep from public view.
- News of Transparency Backhanded compliments, failed examples of how the Obama Administration lives up to its announced goal of being the most transparent administration in history.
- The Year in Rebuke
Comedy segments
Continental Public Radio
Shearer often parodies the other programming found on public radio, often as part of a fictional "Continental Public Radio". These are populated with such personalities as host Aviva Schlorman, reporter Ira Zipkin, political editor Jonathan Ziziks and others, all voiced by Shearer. Recurring parodies include:- All in All "CPR's weekly attempt to bring what's behind the news in front of the news and leave it there"
- At Loggerheads "Dichotomous dialogue from both sides of the rhetorical divide"
- Book Bag
- The Edible Table
- Karzai Talk In 2014 Shearer promoted Karzai Talk T-shirts.
- Media Nation "CPR's weekly look into the world of the media and the media of the world"
- More Than You Know "The weekly public radio series that focuses on events and personalities outside your ken", host: Jacob Kitzle
- Mouth to Mouth "An audio encounter with a personality in or out of the news"
- News from Lake Reverie
- Up To Here "A daily once-over not so lightly on the story at the top, of what's behind, today's news", hosted by Milton Getzler
- What Up, Dog? "News blogozine for the young and the newsless"; host: Cody Outscoop
Presidential or political parodies
- Alternative Scenario Playhouse "Duelling dramatizations from radio's premiere venue of bifurcated possibilities"
- Clintonsomething Retired at the end of the Clinton administration, reprised as Clintonsomething: The State Department Years with the appointment of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State
- Dick Cheney: Confidential
- Father Knows Best
- 41 calls 43
- The Gore Room
- Hellcats Of The White House
- Newt Gingrich calls his mom
- Nixon in Heaven
Other sketches
- Bad Day at Black Rock
- Extra Access Tonight
- Entrepod
- Health File
- Larry King Live
- Mind Your Own Business
- The O'Reilly Factor
- Strictly from Blackwell. Retired after Blackwell's death.
- Super Bugs
Comedy interviews
- Tony Bellalaqua
- Lyle Condit
- David Feldman
- Yvonne Della Femina
- John Walker Lindh
- Elvis Presley
- Ira Rifleman
- Tyler Michael Tucker
- David Manning
- Ralph the Talking Computer
- Barry Saint-Martin aka Barry Saint-Michael
- Shabshab
Interview segments
A few times each year the show will feature Shearer conducting a serious interview as a major segment of the program, often with a musician who will play music as well. Sometimes these interviews will comprise the bulk of the program, other times they will be interspersed with the usual mix of other segments.Musician interviews
Musicians are often pianists associated with New Orleans and will appear on one of the programs Shearer records in that city. They have included:- Marcia Ball
- Henry Butler
- Evan Christopher
- Jon Cleary
- Joe Krown
- Phillip Manuel
- Tom McDermott
- Judith Owen
- David Torkanowsky
- Allen Toussaint
Other interviews
- John M. Barry on the levees in New Orleans and SLFPA
- on levee failures in New Orleans during Katrina
- Bill Black on the bank mortgage fraud and foreclosure crisis
- Dan Cameron on the biennial art project
- Lolis Eric Elie on reporting about New Orleans
- Ivor van Heerden on the Katrina disaster in New Orleans
- Stephanie Kelton, Economist
- Jane Mayer on her book The Dark Side
- Mort Sahl on his career as an American satirist
- Scott Simon on reporting at the political conventions
- Yves Smith on the bank mortgage fraud and foreclosure crisis with
Music segments
Aside from the musicians already mentioned, tracks played frequently include such acts as
Johnny Adams,
Astral Project,
Marcia Ball,
The Beach Boys,
The Beatles,
The Bobs,
Bonerama,
Charles Brown,
Oscar Brown, Jr.,
Henry Butler,
Jon Cleary,
Nat King Cole,
Shawn Colvin,
Ry Cooder,
Elvis Costello,
Dr. John,
Dave Edmunds,
Eliane Elias,
Georgie Fame,
Finn Brothers,
Ella Fitzgerald,
John Fogerty,
Fountains of Wayne,
Michael Franks,
Marvin Gaye,
Gilberto Gil,
The Hi-Lo's,
Dan Hicks,
Dick Hyman,
Jamiroquai,
Louis Jordan,
Keb' Mo',
Sonny Landreth,
Lenine,
Los Lobos,
Lyle Lovett,
Phillip Manuel,
Peter Martin,
Paul McCartney,
The Meters,
Van Morrison,
Mr. Scruff,
Randy Newman,
Rosa Passos,
Nicholas Payton,
Alan Price,
Brian Protheroe,
The Quantic Soul Orchestra,
The Radiators,
Bonnie Raitt,
Marcus Roberts,
Smokey Robinson,
Shorty Rogers,
The Rolling Stones, Kermit Ruffins,
Alice Russell,
Frank Sinatra,
Jill Sobule,
Steely Dan,
They Might Be Giants,
Irma Thomas,
Richard Thompson,
Mel Tormé,
The Whitlams,
The Who,
Brian Wilson,
Charlie Wood & the New Memphis Underground,
XTC and many others.
When a notable musician has died, the next aired program will often feature mostly or only that artist's work during the music segments. People so featured have included George Harrison, Ray Charles, Oscar Brown, Jr., Blossom Dearie, Les Paul, Robert Kirby, Gerry Rafferty, Jerry Ragovoy, B.B. King, and Prince.
Segment theme music
- The show opens with an archival recording of Ben Grauer saying "Here it is". For years, this was followed by Shearer saying, "From deep inside your radio..." over a fragment of classical music, a parody of the American Public Radio/Public Radio International/Minnesota Public Radio intro featuring the Brandenburg Concerto No. 6, 3rd movement by Bach. The opener was modified starting with December 13, 2015 episode with Shearer saying "From deep inside your audio device of choice..." over a fragment of contemporary electronic music.
- A looped sample of "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey" by Paul McCartney is used for Apologies of the Week, with emphasis on McCartney saying "sorry".
- Glenn Yarbrough singing the Rod McKuen song "Listen to the Warm" is used for News of the Warm.
- Joe Satriani playing "Summer Song" is the theme for Extra Access Tonight
- The Beatles instrumental "Flying" is the theme for Tales of Airport Security
- The segments F is for FEMA, Los Angeles Dog Trainer Corrections, Let's Get Scared, News from the Digital Wonderland, News of Inspectors General and Clean, Safe, Too Cheap to Meter use original music recorded and sung by Shearer.
- Clintonsomething uses the original theme music from the TV series thirtysomething.
- The Trades uses "Rut" by Carla Bley, from the CD "Nightglo" on ECM
- News of Transparency uses a Shearer produced version of another Beatles song I'm Looking Through You
- News of Clowns at first used an instrumental version of Be a Clown, but switched to The Tears of a Clown by Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
Criticism