Sure, we have A Prairie Home Companion,This American Life, and Car Talk, — uniquely entertaining, all — but in large part these days, radio is merely what happens in the car once the CD player conks out.But if you set the dial to WMPG (90.9 or 104.1 FM) on December 30 at 10 pm, you’ll be tuning in to a feisty programming reason to pull the chairs up close to the speakers: The satirical bonanza of Instant Comedy’s new radio show A Beautiful Day in the Fourth Reich — a cabaret-style collection of political spoofs on songs, ads, and other forms of social persuasion.
Written and directed by Dan Bernard, produced by Michael Townsend, and starring the members of Instant Comedy along with some special guests, Fourth Reich follows on the heels of the pre-war but prescient The Search for Bin Laden and The War Chest of Kim Chee. Some of the material of Fourth Reich has already been staged, as part of the Portland Short Order Comedy Co.’s Political Follies (which will continue in the new year, at the St. Lawrence). Its scripted "propaganda" encourages folks to consider becoming "Repubmocrats" in the imagined Fourth Reich, in which the Pentagon has a weapons blowout sale, and gasoline is worth its high costs by virtue of being scented, just like high-end coffees or bath salts. Listeners will also encounter plenty of song take-offs — including "Deport the Troops" to the tune of "Because the Night;" "Mice and Men" to "Us and Them;" "Sunni" to "Sunny" by Bobby Hebb; and "The Nuclear Bomb Song" to "The Banana Boat Song." There is also a spot for the "George Bush No-Support Bra."
I recently heard wise old Studs Terkel say on the radio that American politics had become "a burlesque," but without the funny part. Instant Comedy and WMPG offer a little relief, with lots of funny parts, on Friday night. So put your feet up, get out that neglected knitting or whittling project, and get ready to laugh as you get piqued.
Related:
The nanny state, In the footsteps of the devil, A tragicomedy of errors, More
- The nanny state
Assaults on liberty promoted by right-wing authoritarians, such as President George W. Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney, may be difficult to combat, but they are easy to recognize.
- In the footsteps of the devil
On top of everything else that day, there was this.
- A tragicomedy of errors
It was not until after George W. Bush and Dick Cheney were narrowly re-elected that many Americans began to realize that the Iraq War represented a dangerous moment in American history.
- Iran: the next crisis
All politics are local, so said the late Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill.
- Booked up
Summertime, and the reading is easy.
- Interview: John Cusack sounds off on War, Inc.
Most filmgoers recognize John Cusack as a brooding sexy, sometimes sardonic leading man.
- Faithless Rendition
It’s ironic, and probably auspicious for its box office, that Rendition comes out a week after the Supreme Court refused to hear the case of Khaled el-Masri.
- After Pennsylvania
Hillary Clinton’s 10-point win in Pennsylvania means the Democratic battle for the presidential nomination will continue.
- Justice DeLayed
The worm turns. Former Republican House Majority leader Tom DeLay is resigning his seat in Congress.
- The wrong stuff
You can’t blame Democrats for feeling optimistic. In 2005, George W. Bush staggered through as rough a stretch as any modern president has experienced.
- Hit the brakes
New York senator Hillary and former president Bill Clinton, who not too long ago were seen as America’s pre-eminent and prototypical power couple, have recast themselves as a coed Thelma and Louise.
- Less

Topics:
This Just In
, George W. Bush, Media, Radio, More
, George W. Bush, Media, Radio, Osama bin Laden, Studs Terkel, Michael Townsend, Bobby Hebb, Less