Diogenes9
Has anyone noticed Keillor's long-standing fascination (? obsession?) with death?
Frequently, in the program, or the monologue, there will be a mention of death, and very often, that mention is entirely gratuitous and unnecessary.
Keillor has a short radio segment that airs almost every day. The one that aired around 08/01/10 was about a poem, and lo and behold, the poem dealt with death.
Keillor was brought up in a fundamentalist household, and my experience with such folks is that they tend to be quite obsessed with death; a classic question one of them might ask another person is, "if you died right now, where would you go?"
Frequently, in the program, or the monologue, there will be a mention of death, and very often, that mention is entirely gratuitous and unnecessary.
Keillor has a short radio segment that airs almost every day. The one that aired around 08/01/10 was about a poem, and lo and behold, the poem dealt with death.
Keillor was brought up in a fundamentalist household, and my experience with such folks is that they tend to be quite obsessed with death; a classic question one of them might ask another person is, "if you died right now, where would you go?"