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T Dea Dea Robertson-Gutierrez's avatar

Dear GK,

In all my careers, as an engineer, a lawyer, and last as a truck driver, I enjoyed driving the most. Four days a week going back and forth from the SF Bay Area to Reno traveling 7000 feet over Donner Summit. But what made this monotonous journey palatable was listening to PHC segments that I bought from Audio.Com. A performance would get me over my trips much quicker than without them. The good music, laughter, and many great stories I listened to are sorely missed. Now I am retired and living the good life in Isleton, in the heart of the Sacramento Delta. Then one day, it occurred to me. The reason you have probably never been here is no one had ever invited you for tea and a slice of strawberry rhubarb pie. You must have heard of our town. Pat Morita was born here. In fact, Locke, which is a few hamlets up the river from us, is still a quaint Asian-inspired built town. And pontoon boats! We have oodles of them if you want to do a nostalgic river run. Either way, this is an open invitation for lunch at The Point. I'll buy. See you soon.

Your forever fan,

Dea

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Annie Cross's avatar

It seems to me that your responses to most of the people who make comments to your Post to the Host pieces are contrarian. If someone remarks on what you've written about, say, a night of lost sleep due to ruminating about regrets and such, you tell that person the piece was about the morning after that night and attending church. If someone offers a kind reply with a Wendell Berry poem (that they say YOU made them aware of) and they offer it to you and other readers as a kind of balm for anxiety and worry, you tell them you hate the poem and that its ideas are lies. If someone recalls with great appreciation and fondness a joke or a song or a moment with you or your PHC program, you often say you don't remember it or you dismiss it in other ways. You seem to be wanting people to leave you alone, to not try to understand your material or pretend you and they have anything in common - except when it comes to buying merchandise or tickets.

When our 'child' decided to marry a man who is a verifiable genius, we learned that he did not like you or your radio program; we wondered if we could ever become fond of someone with such ideas. As it has turned out though, we have come to think his opinion may be correct. That all or almost all of your fans seem to adore you and take comfort and humor from everything you write or say might cause you to think twice before brushing them off like so many annoyances.

Being raised in a particular religion or in a certain area of the country or being old or whatever other characteristics lead to cliches and stereotypes no longer seems to be that funny anymore. Reckon I've gotten old, too, or maybe younger in some ways.

Honestly, methinks you doth protest too much because you really don't seem cheerful at all. I do love the music you brought to all of us radio-lovers though, over the many years of PHC. I wrote to you some months ago to suggest that, if you don't already, that you include the singing of rounds with your audiences. Rounds sung with a large group, a capella, can be beautiful and also funny if people lose their "line." I sent some suggestions for songs but my note didn't appear in your Post to the Host and there was no response. I suggest it again.

I wish you well. It makes me a little bit sad to apparently have fallen somewhat out of love with your work because it brought our family such joy and delight for so long. Seems like grieving a little bit.

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