An old man's winter night
Garrison Keillor's Podcast
Prairie Home Productions
4.8 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 7 February 2026
⏱️ 7 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | A story in the New York Times reporting that college students in a writing course do better when they go offline for a month |
| 0:20.0 | makes perfect sense to me. Same as if you say a writer does |
| 0:26.5 | better at a laptop in the public library than schnockered on a sailboat in a storm. But the idea of persuading |
| 0:36.7 | students to go offline strikes me as quixotic, like Amish evangelism, |
| 0:46.3 | or banning the use of chairs. The internet is here, and we're all caught up in it. |
| 0:55.5 | I was in my 50s when the World Wide Web came in, and its advent was not a big event to me. |
| 1:03.6 | I was still working on a manual Underwood typewriter. |
| 1:07.4 | I have a clearer memory of seeing Albert Walson, the last living Civil War veteran, |
| 1:13.6 | in a parade in downtown Minneapolis. |
| 1:15.6 | I remember my Uncle Jim farming with horses in Fibber McGee and Molly on the radio, |
| 1:22.6 | and I remember boredom, which has mostly disappeared in America, |
| 1:29.7 | except perhaps among lighthouse keepers or attendance in parking ramps |
| 1:35.4 | or felons in solitary confinement. |
| 1:38.4 | And maybe imprisonment offline would be considered cruel and inhumane in a court of law. |
| 1:46.1 | Now, growing up pre-Google in a small Midwestern town among taciturn people, I experienced |
| 1:54.9 | boredom intensely, and it led to reading and in due course to writing. |
| 2:04.1 | I took up writing haiku, three blackbirds shrieking as my old black cat calmly squats in the sandpile. |
| 2:25.2 | This was enough to amuse me way back then. And because I could write a 17-syllable haiku and I had good handwriting and I spoke in complete sentences, I was considered gifted. |
| 2:35.5 | I considered becoming a poet, but I wanted to earn money and not live up over my parents' garage, |
| 2:42.4 | so I went into public radio instead, where thank goodness the audience was made up of reference librarians caregivers bird watchers organic |
| 2:54.7 | gardeners people who were spiritual but not religious people who enjoyed the |
| 3:00.2 | animatic more than actual entertainment i shouldn't brag but i can be more enigmatic than anybody I know. |
... |
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