Le Show

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Le Show is a weekly syndicated public radio show hosted by satirist Harry Shearer and carried on many National Public Radio and other public radio stations throughout the US. It is also available internationally on NPR Worldwide and shortwave radio, as well as on XM Public Radio on satellite radio in the US and Canada. The show is also available as streaming audio from Harry Shearer's website and as free downloadable files from Audible.com [1]. The show has also been made available as a podcast on iTunes, along with other KCRW programs.

The show began in 1983 and ran under various titles for several months before Le Show was selected from the results of a listener contest.

The program is a bit of a hodgepodge -- satirical news commentary, music, and sketch comedy. Shearer, an impressionist who is probably best known for his voice work on The Simpsons, writes the sketches and performs all the voices.

Harry Shearer recording Le Show at KCRW (taken from the studio webcam).
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Harry Shearer recording Le Show at KCRW (taken from the studio webcam).

Recurring features include:

  • Apologies of the Week
  • Bad Day at Black Rock (behind-the-scenes parody of CBS news)
  • Extra Access Tonight (lampoon of various entertainment news shows)
  • Los Angeles Dog Trainer Corrections (Harry reads out the extensive and often unusual LA Times errata)
  • News From Outside the Bubble
  • Strictly from Blackwell (Mr. Blackwell presents a show from Beverly Hills)
  • Tales of Airport Security (sent in by listeners)
  • The Trades (Harry reads trade magazines)
  • News of the Warm (Harry reads news on Global warming)

Among the presidential and political parodies are:

Le Show usually originates live on Sunday mornings from "The Le Show Dome" at KCRW in Santa Monica ("The city known around the world," Shearer says in his signoff, "as the homeā€¦ of the homeless."), but is occasionally recorded at or broadcast from other NPR and public stations when Shearer is on the road.

On July 2, 2006, Wisconsin Public Radio canceled Le Show as part of a revamp of the network's programming. On the July 16 edition of the program, Shearer claimed WPR was dissatisfied with the program's political content. [2] WPR Director of Radio Phil Corriveau told the Wisconsin State Journal that the program's political content was a minor factor and the decision had to do with Le Show's consistency: "Sometimes he's brilliant; sometimes he tends to ramble on and it gets kind of boring." [3]


[edit] External links

(Includes a RealAudio archive of Le Show dating back to 1995)