I love those dear hearts and gentle people,
Who live in my home town.
Because those dear hearts and gentle people
Will never ever let you down.
—Bob Hilliard and Sammy Fain
Like a lot of people, I don’t listen to “A Prairie Home Companion” very much any more. I don’t have to; I already know what’s going to happen—or not happen. After 35 years on the airwaves, PHC holds few surprises for anyone. Clarence and Clint Bunsen are still working out their complex sibling rivalry; Bertha’s Kitty Boutique is still meeting every cat lover’s needs; conversations in the Chatterbox Café and the Sidetrack Tap still fall into the monosyllabic Upper Midwestern mold; Pastor David Ingqvist and parishioner Val Tollefson still agree to disagree about how long a sermon needs to be. And the sometimes acerbic host who peoples this imaginary world still keeps his listeners guessing about what he really thinks of small-town America, with its risk aversion and its pinched moralism.
Gary Edward “Garrison” Keillor is no rube. He got his start writing for The New Yorker, after all, and he continues to nail the claustrophobia of Lake Wobegon and all the other flyspeck burgs from Texas on up to Maine. Keillor himself was raised in suburban Anoka, Minnesota, but he still struggled to escape his parents’ Plymouth Brethren austerity. One can imagine (and he often hints at this) what it was like for him to breathe the bracing heterodox air of the University of Minnesota when he arrived there in 1962.
I am thus interested to know why the cosmopolitan Keillor can’t quite let go of his Lutherans. No simple sentimentalist, he strikes me as a rather complex elegist. That is, he sees this solid but limited small-town world fading fast; and he sees that for all of its faults and limitations it deserves a last loving look before we all plunge into the unsettling social and psychological space that, following sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, we might call “liquid modernity.”
Liquid modernity is a post-Enlightenment space in several key respects: solid Newtonian physics has been supplanted by unknown fields of force; Kantian philosophical rigor has given way to a Babel of contending discourses; and (most significantly for Bauman) the relatively stable meanings that we used to be able to give to work, wealth, and personal identity have all been colonized by powerful economic forces that we can barely comprehend. Even our most intimate thoughts are about to be absorbed into the “cloud” that Google has prepared for us.
In Bauman’s critique of post-Berlin Wall modernity, freedom is everywhere legally victorious but is imperiled at every turn by powerful compulsions to choose a “lifestyle” of private consumption and to choose “success” by working faster and living harder in ways that keep us from seeing the spiritual death entailed in such hard living. What Bauman sees collapsing in consequence of this (literally) idiotic individualism is any deep sense of personal agency or any wondering sense of one’s own immortality. We work continuously but we form few worthy bonds or partnerships through our work, in part because work itself is no longer about producing anything. Producers in the vanishing real economy cooperate, but the virtuosos of monetized hyperspace have no real need to cooperate: they can and do often fly solo. Thus the master image for the emerging society (if it can even be called that any longer) has once again become the menacing labyrinth.
I doubt that Garrison Keillor has read much Zygmunt Bauman, but I will wager that he would instantly recognize the existential crisis that Bauman evokes so well: the weightlessness of living in a world in which we struggle heroically to stay in the race—though we’re not exactly sure why. Of living in a world in which some people grow unbelievably rich (and render others progressively more wretched) by using proprietary algorithms and by creating invisible “black pools” rather than public markets in which to trade exotic financial “instruments” that only they understand.
Frank Rich wrote recently in the Times about the mind-numbing extent to which we live in a world that Goldman Sachs owns and operates, whereas we merely rent our little enclaves within it. Rich quotes Rolling Stone writer Matt Taibbi memorably describing Goldman as a “great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.” Rich’s point was that thanks to Goldman’s many friends inside the Obama administration, the chances are nil that our government will do anything at all to shut down the casino economy or will even bother to find out who was really to blame for the financial trauma we’ve been living through. The government will certainly not force big banks that took in all of that taxpayer money to do anything to support the real economy or the millions of jobless and downsized workers who are hurting so badly.
‘Labyrinth’ is as good a word as any for our emerging dystopia. Only the people whom Lewis Lapham calls “achievatrons” seem to be getting ahead, though one also has to wonder what they’re really getting for their efforts. That thing we should all want from society, at least from a good-enough society—namely, an easy and cooperative sociability—seems to have gone missing. Whatever social networking means, it definitely does not mean hanging out with your friends at the Chatterbox Café. And we don’t know when or if it will ever end.
For this reason smalltown values and smalltown verities can begin to look kind of sweet as we plunge farther into the great unknown. Or more precisely, sweet smalltown verities minus the racism and the homophobia: some significant markers that Keillor has so far left unexplored, to our loss and to his.
I grew up about a mile away from a real-life Lake Wobegon in rural Wisconsin. People living in our nearby hamlet were nosy and narrow and only getting more so. Even as a very young boy I knew that I needed to get out of there as soon as I possibly could. But looking back, and even despite the mostly unconscious racism, I can see that it wasn’t all bad. People did real work, and when their work was done they rested. They got to know each other. Their employers had roots in the local community and felt some degree of accountability. It was an imperfect world in many, many respects but it was at least a solid world.
The same on the religious side. It could not be clearer that there is no going back to the simple faith of another time. Even David Ingqvist understands this. Indeed, Pastor Ingqvist’s witty creator has migrated from the stringent Plymouth Brethen to the latitudinarian life of an Episcopalian. Yet his deep hunger and his need for something more solid remains. Why else would he always be inviting his live audience to join him in singing all those old-time hymns and gospel tunes?
So yes, tell me the story of Jesus—write on my heart every word! And while you are at it, tell me that I don’t have to join Facebook, that I will be able to retire in something more than a threadbare condition, and that Goldman Sachs has not totally taken over the management of the last best hope of Earth. Tell me!
Tags: frank rich, garrison keillor, goldman sachs, lake wobegon, liquid modernity, matt taibbi, prairie home companion, rolling stone, social networking, zygmunt bauman





to relish that small town ambience, however fictionally improved. He made a deliberate choice to return to that when he gave up the New York show, a show which proved he had other talents. There is nothing missing here except your own nostalgia.
I felt like I had a better understanding of Garrison Keillor's radio show after watching the movie. Many of the characters from the show including Keillor himself seemed to come to life and be dealing with real human issues.
Maybe this reveals my ignorance, but I'm hard-pressed to think of any other major media program which attempts to portray or talk about small-town life in America (much less the Upper Midwest). For all its faults, Prairie Home Companion does at least contribute to some sense of what life in “flyover country” might be like.
Of course the show doesn't dig into the racism, homophobia, xenophobia, rigid gender stereotypes, religious and political extremist views, etc. present in small-town and rural (among other parts of) America. That Keillor's radio show - unabashed entertainment - doesn't offer profound sociological and political critiques shouldn't be a surprise. The premise and perhaps the success of the show is built on presenting this small-town Midwestern world in a positive, if idealized and somewhat exotic, light.
And might it be a bit hasty to declare all of the pleasantries and endearing idiosyncracies of this idealized world as just "nostalgia?" Of course small-town and rural life is changing rapidly, despite what some residents might wish. But ought we conclude that rural folk all have suddenly plunged into full-blown postmodern vertigo, fighting against liquid modernity, and only enjoy a sense of community in retrospect? Such a view takes the realities of rural America even less seriously than Keillor’s romantic, idealized depiction. Might there be something of a regional, educational or social bias going on here? Or, leaving various elitisms aside, at least it seems that Laarman's perspective reflects his complicated relationship with his own rural roots. (I may be projecting here - I too grew up in and quickly moved out of rural Wisconsin, although I keep going back.)
So why can't Keillor let go of his Lutherans? Cynically, I’d say that he’s made a rather nice career out of laughing at and with them; it’s not in his best interest financially. But more seriously - and maybe I’m being too idealistic here - I wonder if Keillor has chosen to focus on small-town America with a sympathetic and caring eye, without snarkiness or (too much) condescension. And maybe he holds on to his Lutherans, “oldtime hymns and gospel tunes” simply because he likes them, and they are to some extent a part of himself and some of his audience members. Furthermore, having spent a good bit of time around small-town Lutherans myself, I've observed that his radio show and public speaking engagements have prompted at least some of these people to laugh at themselves more and open their minds. To write off Keillor's show as just nostalgia both views the matter too superficially and abandons this segment of America too quickly to the idealizations of other programs on the rural American radio dial.
We are clearly doomed. First, Goldman Sachs took all our jobs - except those in rural and small-town America which haven't taken as big a hit because they weren't major participants in mall-fever and did actually produce things instead of buying into the real estate bubble. But that's a different story, one actually dealing with substance.
Now Google is taking away our sociability. Even now I feel it sucking at my soul, but is it the Google cloud, the Borg collective, or the Flying Spaghetti monster I can sense coming for me?
I hear that in the future, like the year 2000 (ht Conan O'Brien), small town denizens will begin to text and listen to Hillsongs and stop off for lattes after church. At that time the seventh seal will be broken and doom will be upon us.
For those who would attribute racism, homophobia, religious and political extremism, gender stereotypes and all other forms of intolerance to rural lands, might I suggest you visit the major metropolitan areas of Southern California?
Folks are folks, no matter where you go. Rural vs. urban is yet another mythical and manufactured divide. Although it does suit those of us who miss our rural roots when we're raging at the concrete (yanno, just like we used to rage at all the open space and green fields).
You don't have to join Facebook.
Retirement, threadbare or otherwise depends more on you than I'm guessing you want it to. It may be a Wobegoneism, but "Waste not want not" still works. And, watch Goldie with both eyes. Those brothers will pick your pocket while your looking.
But, you want some kind of certainty, right? Here ya go. Death and Taxes.
Oh, and one more thing." Be as wise as a serpent and harmless as a dove." Now, go forth and take your chances like the rest of us.
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