Dave’s Gone By #459 (2/22/2014): TUNA CASAROLE

click above to listen to the episode (audio only)

Here is the 459th episode of the long-running radio show/podcast, Dave’s Gone By, which aired on UNC Radio, Feb. 22, 2014. Info: davesgoneby.com.

Featuring: Rabbi Sol Solomon interviews musician Jack Casady. Plus: Dave’s dad, Philip Lefkowitz, Inside Broadway, Bob Dylan – Sooner & Later (Washington), Saturday Segues (George Harrison, Washington), Rabbi Sol on RadioShack.

Guests: musician Jack Casady, Dave’s wife Joyce, & Dave’s dad, Philip Lefkowitz

Note: Apologies for the hiss in the background during parts of the first hour

00:00:01 DAVE GOES IN w/ Joyce (sound machine, local news, movies-to-musicals)
00:53:30 SATURDAY SEGUE – George Harrison
01:23:30 Sponsors
01:27:30 INSIDE BROADWAY
01:53:30 GUEST: Rabbi Sol Solomon interviews Jack Casady
02:57:00 Sponsors
03:01:30 BOB DYLAN – Sooner & Later (Washington)
03:24:00 RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #93 (RadioShack)
03:31:30 Friends
03:44:00 GUEST: Philip Lefkowitz
03:58:00 SATURDAY SEGUE – Washington
04:18:00 Weather & Thanks
04:22:00 DAVE GOES OUT

Feb. 22, 2014 Playlist: “Don’t Bother Me” (00:54:00) & “The Inner Light” (01:10:30; The Beatles). “Try Some Buy Some” (00:56:30), “Behind That Locked Door” (01:00:30), “Awaiting on You All” ({live Bangladesh version}; 01:03:30) & “Stuck Inside a Cloud” (01:06:30; George Harrison). “Falling Into You” (01:47:00; The Bridges of Madison County (2014 Broadway cast w/ Steven Pasquale & Kelli O’Hara). “White Rabbit” (01:51:00), “Crown of Creation” (02:11:30) & “Somebody to Love” (02:50:30). “Things That Might Have Been” (02:01:00) & “Water Song” (02:41:00; Hot Tuna). “Voodoo Chile” (02:28:00; Jimi Hendrix). “Gypsy Lou” (03:02:30), “Hard Times in New York Town” (03:06:00), “The Ballad of Donald White” (03:08:00) & “Thunder on the Mountain” (03:12:30; Bob Dylan). “Men are Back in Style” (03:41:00; The Gold Brothers). “Washington Street” (03:58:00; Laurie Anderson). Otis & Marlena (04:02:30; Joni Mitchell). “Washington County” (04:06:30; Arlo Guthrie). “Lydia, the Tattooed Lady” (04:08:30; Groucho Marx). “Young Americans” (04:23:00; David Bowie).

Jack Casady
Jack Cassady, circa 1970
George Harrison
George Washington
Dave & Philip Lefkowitz

Dave’s Gone By Skit: RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #93 (2/23/2014): RadioShack

RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #93 (2/23/2014): RadioShack

(aired Feb. 22, 2014 on Dave’s Gone By. Watch on youtube: http://youtu.be/vwjERWIpR_8)

Shalom Dammit! This is Rabbi Sol Solomon with a Rabbinical Reflection for the week of February 23rd, 2014.

I can understand why some people like to bash Justin Bieber or Kim Kardashian, because they’re famous for being famous, and their lifestyles are flaunted before us on every webpage, magazine cover and police blotter in America. And I can understand why some folks hammer Barack Obama, because all Democrats are evil communists who don’t like country music. What I don’t understand is why are so many pundits kicking RadioShack while it’s down?

RadioShack: a place to buy wires and couplers and splitters – if you’re into that sort of thing. A local store where you can grab what you need to hook up a TV, solder your speakers, snag a flashlight or a flash drive, or pick up batteries or a clock radio or a spare mouse – in case your cat is bored. And yet people are taking schadenfreudic glee at the problems RadioShack has been having in the marketplace.

With everyone listening to music on iPods and Bose boxes, the public demand for transistor AM radios in perforated leather cases has been admittedly waning. And with televisions all hooked up to one giant cable oligopoly or other, nobody’s using rabbit ears except…rabbits. RadioShack also sells higher-ticket items, like TV’s and cell phones, but there they have to compete with Target and Wal-Mart, which, at this stage, is like little David going up against not just Goliath, but his friends, the Green Goblin and Mothra.

Media types have been laughing at RadioShack, especially their Super Bowl TV commercial, which was a nostalgic throwback to the 1980s. “Brilliant,” the pundits said, “You’re a store that consumers think hasn’t had new merchandise since 1983…and you’re making them think of 1983!” The stock price of RadioShack is so low, Mexican day laborers could buy a thousand shares and have money left over for pizza. And the truly tragic thing: 500 RadioShack stores will be closing by the end of 2014. That’s a lot of geeks out of work, so if you’re walking down a dark alley next year and find yourself being mugged by a 60-year-old with bad asthma and a pocket protector, you know where he used to work.

I have to say, my recent experiences at RadioShack have been most pleasant. I didn’t buy anything, but the employees were very nice, and I liked looking at the mini-tape recorders, the plugs, the iPhone cases, the hand-cranked victrolas… I’m kidding, and honestly, 8-track tape players took up only two shelves way in the back.

But seriously, cheering the downfall of RadioShack is like a guppy in a fish tank going, “Yay, the bubble-making clam broke.” The fish may still have a pirate treasure chest and a coral tower, but there’ll be one less item providing oxygen in his aquasphere. If Radio Shack goes the way of Loehmann’s, Robert Hall, the dodo and the American middle class, we’ll be one step closer to Wallyworld owning the world. Sure, you can buy everything on the interwebs now, but are we really at the point where you buy a TV or an iPad or a smartphone without ever actually seeing it first? Instead you just watch some homemade instruction video on youtube and hope for the best. Who knew that American enterprise would ultimately follow the same business model as mail-order brides?

For all the people who are mocking radio shack and scolding them for not changing with the times – what do you suggest they do? Sell cars? Put in a coffee nook? Hold singles nights by the walky-talky aisle? What good is changing your marketing when you’re moribund? I mean, Blockbuster could give away all the free popcorn in the world, it wasn’t gonna bring VCRs back.

Scuttlebutt is: the only way RadioShack can save itself is by going – not bigger, but smaller. Cater to a niche market of hobby people, folks who tinker with robots, electronics and 3-D printing. They’re your best bet to compete with Best Buy. Even in this day and age, when everything’s been thought of, patented and plugged in an infomercial, crackpot inventors are still out there, touching the red wire to the blue circuit while the hydrogen compound bubbles on the stove. Yes, that’s also the way to make Hot Pockets, but mainly, it’s how we became the greatest, most ambitious country in the world. Eggheads with messy garages; they still exist. Radio Shack just needs to rope them in – or at least sell their older brothers airplane glue, `cause with heroin getting such a bad rap, you know that stuff’ll come back.

This has been a Rabbinical Reflection from Rabbi Sol Solomon, Temple Sons of Bitches in Great Neck, New York.

(c) 2014 TotalTheater. All rights reserved.

–> https://davesgoneby.net/?p=27800