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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 9:36:32 GMT -5
This week, we’re thrilled to be bringing you a classic from a visit to Wolf Trap on May 28, 2005. Joining us: Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, the phenomenal blues and folk singer ODETTA, Mari and Håkon Samuelsen, Peter Ostroushko, and Prudence Johnson. Plus the Royal Academy of Radio Acting and our Guy’s All-Star Shoe Band. Highlights include a beautiful duet version of “In My Life,” featuring Prudence Johnson; Peter Ostroushko playing with the Shoe Band on “Brasileirinho”; some fine picking from Pat Donohue on “Live It Up”; “You Gotta Dig Deeper” from Doyle Lawson; “You Gotta Know How” by Odetta; a truck-driving song from writer Russ Ringsak; plus a Norse script, a pants script, a Bush script, and the News from Lake Wobegon. www.prairiehome.org/shows/57325.html?
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 9:36:45 GMT -5
May 28, 2005
Segment 1 00:00:00 Logo 00:00:13 Tishomingo Blues, opening credits 00:02:56 GK talks about summer beginning, all the rain, school ending 00:03:56 "In My Life" - GK, Prudence, Shoe Band 00:10:11 GK introduces Doyle Lawson 00:10:39 "Heartbreak #9" - Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver 00:13:57 Doyle talks to the crowd, introduces band 00:15:50 "Four Walls" - Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver
Segment 2 00:18:36 SFX script 00:24:49 "Brasilierinho" - Peter Ostroushko and Shoe Band 00:26:35 GK intros Mari and Hakon Samuelsen 00:27:42 "Whoop-I-ti-yi-yo" - GK with Mari and Hakon Samuelsen 00:28:30 "Summertime" - GK with Mari and Hakon Samuelsen and live audience 00:31:31 Powdermilk Biscuit Break
Segment 3 00:33:05 "Jesus Gave Her Water" - Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver 00:35:13 Norse script 00:40:00 3 Cheers for Norwegian independence 00:40:50 "Mountain Vision" - Mari and Hakon Samuelsen 00:45:14 Bush script (with "All I Have to Do is Dream") 00:55:50 "Something Inside So Strong" - Odetta 01:00:50 Odetta introduces Seth Farber 01:01:19 "Can't Afford to Lose My Man" - Odetta, with Seth Farber and Shoe Band 01:03:45 Intermission/"Ain't She Sweet"
Segment 4 01:08:24 Welcome back to the second half, Pants script 01:11:13 Greetings 01:13:50 "Live It Up" - Pat Donohue and Shoe Band 01:17:15 "He Just Disappeared" - GK, Prudence, Shoe Band
Segment 5 01:21:24 The News from Lake Wobegon
Segment 6 01:37:20 "Don't It Make You Want To Go Home" - Prudence Johnson 01:41:00 "You Gotta Know How" - Odetta 01:44:56 GK intros Russ Ringsak 01:45:31 "A Little Over 29 Ton" - Russ Ringsak 01:47:16 GK talks with Mari and Hakon Samuelsen 01:47:55 "Passacaglia" - Mari and Hakon Samuelsen 01:53:38 Credits 01:54:30 "You Gotta Dig A Little Deeper" - Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver 01:57:11 More credits, "Will The Circle Be Unbroken"
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 9:46:35 GMT -5
As a youngster in East Tennessee, Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver could hardly wait for Saturday nights when he’d hear Bill Monroe on the Grand Ole Opry. At age 11, he taught himself to play the mandolin, and in his teens, he got a job playing banjo with Jimmy Martin. He started Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver in 1979. In 2006, Doyle Lawson received a National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, and in 2012, he was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame. He retired from live performances at the end of 2021.
One of the most celebrated figures in music, Odetta was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and began classical voice training after her family moved to Los Angeles. She found her way into the folk music scene in the early 1950s, singing at the Hungry i and the Tin Angel in San Francisco and the Blue Angel in New York. In the decades that followed, she released dozens of recordings. As a leading voice of social activism around the world, she participated in the Civil Rights marches in Selma, sang at the 1963 and ’83 marches on Washington, and played for President Kennedy and his cabinet on the nationally televised Civil Rights program Dinner with the President. In 1995, she was invited to Beijing, China, as an Elder to the International Women’s Conference. She was heaped with honors, including the National Medal of the Arts and Humanities, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Library of Congress, and the National Visionary Award from the Kennedy Center.
Mandolinist, composer, arranger Peter Ostroushko, who made his first Prairie Home Companion appearance in 1974, grew up listening to tunes played at family get-togethers in the Ukrainian community of northeast Minneapolis. It’s the music that provided the basis for many of his compositions — works that have been performed by the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Kremlin Chamber Orchestra, among others. Peter won an Emmy for the score of Minnesota: A History of the Land.
This Norwegian brother and sister duo, made up of violinist Mari and cellist Hakon Samuelsen, have forged an impressive international performing career. After growing up together in Hamar in Norway, the duo began performing together professionally in the 1990s. Christmas is very important to the duo, and they founded their very own annual festive show, A Christmas Concert from Norway in 2004 (the Klassisk Julekonsert). The duo's performing career has taken them to New York's Carnegie Hall, Berlin's Konzerthaus and the Concergebouw in Amsterdam. Mari currently plays on a G.B. Gudagnini violin made in 1777, while Hakon uses a Francesco Ruggiero cello made in 1687. Hakon & Mari are artistic directors of Yellow Lounge Norway, a classical club night based in Oslo. In 2014, they gave the world premiere of Oscar-winning composer James Horner's double concerto for violin and cello (entitled Pas de deux), with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and Vasily Petrenko.
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Post by BoatBabe on May 28, 2022 10:57:34 GMT -5
Nice work, DW! I hope to join all y'all today.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:01:24 GMT -5
Nice work, DW! I hope to join all y'all today. Would be nice to chat if you are able to make it!
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Post by jspnrvr on May 28, 2022 17:01:57 GMT -5
Good evening, all.
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Post by jspnrvr on May 28, 2022 17:03:29 GMT -5
Hey, dw. How's it going?
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 17:04:44 GMT -5
OK, I'm tuned in.
Hi!
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:06:03 GMT -5
Good evening Jay. Was just thinking about the Florida Folk Life Festival going on this week-end. Wish I had the opportunity to do everything there is to do!! This was the 70th Festival.. pretty wild. Garden is still producing a little bit at a time.. so no threat of having to sneak squash onto the neighbor's porches at night!
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:06:33 GMT -5
Welcome aboard Doc. How's your week been?
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 17:07:25 GMT -5
I never felt any sadness at the end of the school year, at least not due to lack of school. Since we usually moved in the summer, I was often sad to be leaving friends in one place to move to another.
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 17:10:16 GMT -5
Welcome aboard Doc. How's your week been? I quit my job! I had been thinking about it for a while after having Covid, and decided that I am too tired to work full-time. I haven't ruled out returning to some future assignment after a summer off, but I could also stay retired. We'll see.
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 17:12:02 GMT -5
I've always really liked this song "In My Life." This is a particularly nice duet.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:14:28 GMT -5
Welcome aboard Doc. How's your week been? I quit my job! I had been thinking about it for a while after having Covid, and decided that I am too tired to work full-time. I haven't ruled out returning to some future assignment after a summer off, but I could also stay retired. We'll see. So out of curiousity, what is the longest amount of time you have been unemployed since beginning your career?
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Post by jspnrvr on May 28, 2022 17:19:46 GMT -5
Yeah, dw, I was in touch with a friend up there. She said it's hot and they're expecting rain. The usual.
And doc, you're unemployed! I don't blame you; it's rough trying to jump back in after being ill. So feel better, kid! Do you have an exercise routine? It might help to bring you back out of the Covid slump.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:23:51 GMT -5
I am curious, if you are a "guest" reading this chat, are you:
listening to the program now or at another time than 6-8 pm Eastern Standard Time Wishing you could chat but have been unable to join the group even after submitting a member request oddly content to just read other's public conversations?
This proboard does not have an administrator at this time that can approve new members or make any changes. There are only 6 or so active members at this time. Unless ProBoards allows a new administrator to be designated, it is likely to die a slow death.
If you would like to try and get the ProBoard folks to help the group out, please send them messages on the appropriate help sites, emails, etc.
I'd love to hear from our guests... but am uncertain how best to communicate with you outside of the Message Board(s).
Enjoy the show!
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 17:29:37 GMT -5
//So out of curiousity, what is the longest amount of time you have been unemployed since beginning your career?//
Two times I was between jobs for 3 months, as I was moving cross-country or looking for the right job. Once I was out 6 months because I had thought I was "retired" but by 3 months I missed seeing patients so when someone made "an offer I couldn't refuse" I accepted.
//And doc, you're unemployed! I don't blame you; it's rough trying to jump back in after being ill. So feel better, kid! Do you have an exercise routine? It might help to bring you back out of the Covid slump.//
Right now I still desaturate too low on my oxygen to do anything more strenuous than go up and down the stairs, but I can walk maybe 80 yards OK. I'll start an exercise routine when I am reasonably capable - taking the dog for a short walk will be a good start when I can walk up the stairs (in the back yard) AND walk 100 yards.
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Post by jspnrvr on May 28, 2022 17:41:36 GMT -5
Right now I still desaturate too low on my oxygen to do anything more strenuous than go up and down the stairs, but I can walk maybe 80 yards OK. I'll start an exercise routine when I am reasonably capable - taking the dog for a short walk will be a good start when I can walk up the stairs (in the back yard) AND walk 100 yards. You're right. You have no business trying to pay attention to a job, especially a physician's job. It would just keep you more vulnerable, and slow to heal. So, you have some reasonable goals and expectations. Be careful.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:41:42 GMT -5
It came to my attention recently that from the time I started professional employment in December of 1984 until I retired at the end of March 2000 I never had any break in service. It has taken a while to get used to that!
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Post by jspnrvr on May 28, 2022 17:52:49 GMT -5
I should think so! Has it had any effect on your bio-rhythms?
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 17:55:37 GMT -5
In medicine, any gap in employment (often as short as more than 4 - 6 weeks due to illness or maternity leave) must be explained. All job and license applications will basically require an account of how you spent every day since high school graduation, and then prove it. A few job applications might ask only for an accounting for the past 10 years, though one still must prove college, medical school and residency training, all state licensures, and proof of board certification. That is why it may be a minimum of 3 months between jobs if you change organization/location.
Most states are beginning to require some sort of additional formal re-training if one is out of practice for more than one or two years, and if a license lapses for more than a year or two.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:55:40 GMT -5
I should think so! Has it had any effect on your bio-rhythms? I have discovered naps after lunch!
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 17:57:49 GMT -5
In medicine, any gap in employment (often as short as more than 4 - 6 weeks due to illness or maternity leave) must be explained. All job and license applications will basically require an account of how you spent every day since high school graduation, and then prove it. A few job applications might ask only for an accounting for the past 10 years, though one still must prove college, medical school and residency training, all state licensures, and proof of board certification. That is why it may be a minimum of 3 months between jobs if you change organization/location. Most states are beginning to require some sort of additional formal re-training if one is out of practice for more than one or two years, and if a license lapses for more than a year or two. I honestly do not understand how a general practitioner can possibly keep up with the constant flow of new information... which might explain why prescription drug companies become so influential in some cases... only so many hours in the day to catch up on reading the most recent info..
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Post by jspnrvr on May 28, 2022 18:00:18 GMT -5
I should think so! Has it had any effect on your bio-rhythms? I have discovered naps after lunch! There you go! They were around all the time and you never even knew it. Good deal!
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 18:03:58 GMT -5
Odetta passed away in December of 2008 from heart disease. There were plans for her to sing at President Obama's inauguration already being made but her health declined quickly.
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 18:11:55 GMT -5
I have read medical stuff at least one hour daily my entire practice life. Several times every day I care for patients, I look up a topic on UpToDate, an excellent subscription source for immediate "clinical information at the point of service." Because medical information has a short half-life I maintain a personal subscription that records every topic I look up. Then at the end of the day or over the weekend I go back and review in more detail the topics I looked up, especially if it has been over 3 months since I last reviewed that topic. Quite often a topic has been updated in the past 3 0 4 months and last week I looked up a topic and found a major revision had been made the day before.
In primary care we prescribe generic drugs almost exclusively, because the insurance companies will require a tedious "Prior Authorization" for any expensive brand name drug. Those are usually expensive and sophisticated new drugs used to treat unusual conditions anyway so they are prescribed by specialists. Pharmas aren't going to waste much time or money on primary care docs.
I do show my patients how to use an app like "GoodRx" so they can find the lowest cost of their medication at a pharmacy near them if they don't already know.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 18:17:01 GMT -5
I have read medical stuff at least one hour daily my entire practice life. Several times every day I care for patients, I look up a topic on UpToDate, an excellent subscription source for immediate "clinical information at the point of service." Because medical information has a short half-life I maintain a personal subscription that records every topic I look up. Then at the end of the day or over the weekend I go back and review in more detail the topics I looked up, especially if it has been over 3 months since I last reviewed that topic. Quite often a topic has been updated in the past 3 0 4 months and last week I looked up a topic and found a major revision had been made the day before. In primary care we prescribe generic drugs almost exclusively, because the insurance companies will require a tedious "Prior Authorization" for any expensive brand name drug. Those are usually expensive and sophisticated new drugs used to treat unusual conditions anyway so they are prescribed by specialists. Pharmas aren't going to waste much time or money on primary care docs. I do show my patients how to use an app like "GoodRx" so they can find the lowest cost of their medication at a pharmacy near them if they don't already know. In my current day to day existence, I deal with so many homeless folks that have medical issues that need medications, but they are not able for various reasons to get the meds, take the meds, etc. There are more trips to the emergency rooms than I can keep track of, and often it is because of failures to take meds. There is a specific medical clinic run by our County to try and address this issue, but there is no way for most to get there, navigate appointments, and remember to go back for more meds. One fellow I have been working with was given 5 days of meds after spending the night in the hospital, but was unable to secure an appointment with any provider before the meds ran out. I sometimes wonder how can we change the system ... so perhaps in your retirement days Doc, you can lead us in fixing the problems?
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 18:39:14 GMT -5
I have worked in health care policy reform "in my spare time" most of my career, specifically from 1985 through 2007, alternating between the state (CO, PA, WV, WA) and federal levels, including working for a whole year in DC in 2002 with Tommy Thompson when he was Secretary of HHS. There are many possible solutions but none that I know of that are possible in today's political situation. Obamacare (which was a federal version of the universal coverage put in place in Massachusetts while Mitt Romney was governor) and Medicaid expansion are as good as we are going to get nationally unless there are major structural changes though states can do a pretty good job in their own states if so inclined. Florida is not one of those states. And - it is time for a new generation to take the reins on the effort.
In one of my insurance company positions, I created a Quality Management/Case Management program that was profitable for patients and the company by saving $4 for every $1 spent on case management. But the situation you describe is common and difficult to resolve because it involves much more than "medical care."
Another position I held as a locums was dedicated full-time to seeing patients just being discharged from the hospital for timely PCP visits because the patients' real PCP's were booked out 6 weeks and way too busy to squeeze in a last minute addition to the schedule.
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Post by doctork on May 28, 2022 18:42:06 GMT -5
Another important point you make. At the time I created that Case Management program, 25% of all Medicare hospital admissions were related to incorrect use of prescribed medications! That is a huge chunk of change that could go a long way towards home delivery and monitoring programs for medications.
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Post by dwarnold on May 28, 2022 18:58:11 GMT -5
hope you get better this week Doc... Jay have a great week too... Remember those who made it possible for us to be here!
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