102:
Roadtrip!
05.15.1998
With all the American movies and songs and books about the joy of the open road, it's hard for an American to take just a normal roadtrip, without huge expectations.

PROLOGUE.

With all the American movies and songs and books about the joy of the open road, it's hard for an American to take just a normal roadtrip, without huge expectations. Host Ira Glass talks with a guy who hit the road after his mother's death, hoping for some experience that would change him and shed light on what had just happened. This never happens to him, or to most of us. And yet, every Memorial Day we all head out on the roads. Hoping.

Act One. Busman's Holiday.

Dishwasher Pete, an itinerant dishwasher and publisher of the zine Dishwasher, loves taking the bus as he moves from city to city every few weeks. In this act, he takes a tape recorder with him, hoping to capture the stories he always hears from his fellow passengers. It completely ruins his feelings about the bus. (Note: Pete's zine Dishwasher is now on semi-permanent hiatus.) Song: "Greyhound Theme in E minor," Ian Lynam and Paul Iannotti

Act Two. Merci.

A roadtrip can be a profound test of any relationship. It can save a marriage or destroy it. We have this example of a roadtrip in Europe. Playwrights Candido Tirado and Carmen Rivera told the story at the Nuyorican Cafe in New York City, part of an evening of "traveling stories" organized by The Moth.

Act Three. Roadtrip in a Tuxedo.

What happens when being on the road is your job—and has been your job for decades? Reporter Margy Rochlin recalls a trip she took ten years ago with the 92-year-old George Burns and his tiny entourage.Act Four. Paw Paw for Jesus. What we want on the road—many of us—is adventure. And what is adventure but a moment you never could've predicted before you left home? Chicago writer Cheryl Trykv tells the story of one such moment. Songs: "Happy Trails" and "One More Mile," Dave Dudley.