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Firesign Theatre - All Things Firesign

The Eight Shoes reunited once again in 2002 for a series of short radio
comedy sketches airing weekly on National Public Radio's All Things
Considered from Independence Day through New Year's Eve. Phil Proctor,
David Ossman, Phil Austin and Peter Bergman revive such cracked classic
characters as private detective Nick Danger and the now-retired General
Curtis Goatheart to probe the post-9/11 national psyche through every
available orifice.

I'm not your typical Firesign Theatre fan; my friend (and occasional
theLogBook.com contributor) Shane Vaughn introduced me to them via 1972's
Dear Friends well over a decade ago, and I was instantly hooked -
and then had a slightly hard time realizing that most of the rest of their
output simply isn't in the same vein. Not that it isn't good, and not that
I haven't learned to love their utterly strange longform projects such as
Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers, but to me, the Firesigns
were always about Dear Friends. When I saw - long after the fact -
that the group was releasing their NPR sketches, I was enthusiastic. This
was a return to the short-sketch-comedy style that I had fallen in love
with.
Having heard it now, it must be said that All Things Firesign is
uneven. The war on terrorism is ripe for their unique style of comedy -
political but not partisan, reveling in the absurdity coming from both ends
of the political spectrum without just relentlessly slamming certain public
figures - but they seem to miss the mark as often as they hit it, sort of
the comedy equivalent of blowing up a cave three weeks after Osama Bin
Laden vacated it. There is good stuff here, though: It's Saddam
Shame! pokes fun at the fact that terrorist organizations suddenly have
media savvy, TIPs Hotline gives us a look at America's Most Wanted
as hosted by John Ashcroft instead of John Walsh, Bob Heeblehauser's
"Tacomasaur!" finds an inventive solution to the energy crisis, and
perhaps best of all, "No Jokes About America!" aims squarely at that
feeling that was still in effect circa 2002 that we had somehow lost the
right in this country to crack a smile about anything.
The media itself has always been a rich vein of material for Firesign
Theatre, and All Things Firesign is no exception. In a series of
sketches, self-proclaimed "prisoner of the 21st century" Hal Stark drones
on, Andy Rooney-style, about everything that's wrong with the modern world,
which turns out to mean everything except Hal Stark. Cooking and hunting
shows, cryptic Gulf War v1.0-style military press conferences and even
those DVD players that'll censor movies for you all wind up in the
Firesigns' sights.
This CD even features one sketch that NPR quickly turned down. And
admittedly, it's easy to feel your eyebrows raising higher and higher as
the Firesigns almost seem to be trying to find something to offend
everyone in "Thanksgiving, or Pass The Indian, Please!" - and
I was surprised too, because offending everyone isn't really what the
Firesigns are known for. They turn it around with an almost South
Park-style twist at the end (and I don't use the comparison lightly, for
I've come to regard South Park as perhaps the Firesign Theatre's only
spiritual successor in any medium), but...yeah, you can see where the NPR
producers might have been squirming in their seats on this one.
If you can't handle anything making sport of the present situation, skip
All Things Firesign. Those with no sense or humor, and no ability
to see that there is at least a little absurdity in every situation,
should steer clear. If you're up for something that does find the
absurdity in our soundbite-driven, slogan-ridden modern world, doesn't slam
the military and has a little well-observed fun at the expense of a few
high-profile figures on both sides of the war on terror, this is
right up your alley.
Reviewed by
Earl Green
theLogBook.com editor/webmaster

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