We are playing with the "This American Life" tour at the famous and
beautiful Chicago Theater. It is beautiful. Last night, we played an
equally incredible theater in Minneapolis. The whole time we were in
Minnesota, all anyone could talk about was the four feet of snow
expected to start that evening, which would supposedly lead to our
being stranded there and having to cancel the Chicago show. I asked Ira
Glass what he would have done if no other performers had made it
through the snow. He simply replied, "I would have done the show by
myself."

(Jason and me in the Chicago Theater)
The authors on this tour are now my favorites. They are all a little
older and more experienced than I am, and they all have the social gift
of restraint and quick wit. I, on the other hand, blab until (with
luck) something interesting comes out. Dan Savage is funny and sweet
and has given us parenting advice (he says to have a second baby soon).
He notices pretty architecture even though he has a near-broken leg
from snowboarding. David Rakoff is the most friendly. He's also highly
intelligent and I hope he never catches me reading People.
David even carried my heavy bag one night when we all walked from the
venue to the hotel and we talked about how musty-smelling thrift stores
make people like myself have to uh . . . use the bathroom. I'm tempted
to tell him I love him. Sarah Vowell is quiet, but I love her dry wit.
When I do hear her talk, she always has something witty and memorable
to say. On the first page of her book Assassination Vacation, she talks
about the assassination of Abe Lincoln by the slave-lovin' John Wilkes
Booth. I am actually related to John Wilkes Booth. Seriously. My Gramma
studied our geneology and, along with the guy who invented Morse Code,
we are in the same family tree as Lincoln 's murderer. I considered
mentioning this to Sarah in hopes of sparking a conversation, but then
I realized that it might be what people call a skeleton in the closet.
Jonathan Goldstein is laid-back. He's off the tour now, but I feel like
if he were still here, we'd be friends by now. I liked him. Oh, and
Chris Wilcha rules. I think that guy is the most like us. He's the
producer of This American Life, the TV show. He's nervous,
too, to be in front of this audience. But his work is brilliant and he
has a daughter a year younger than Magnolia. (Could he be a Mate-ster?) He mentioned he'd like to do a video for us and we about wet ourselves.
Eventually, this tour will make us feel smarter. It's like playing
soccer against a better team; you play better defense and you are more
calculated in your offense because the stakes have been raised. We feel
like we will make better music and perhaps tell better stories.
I am backstage and I just got off the phone with Magnolia. Here is our conversation:
"HI Mommy. What are you doing?
"I'm getting ready to play music. What are you doing?"
"I'm playing with Beat. (Beat is her aunt, my sister Kristin, who has a slightly small head and was nicknamed Beetlejuice and then Beat for short)."
"What are you playing?
"ARE YOU THERE, MOMMY??" (She likes imitating the cellphone generation and shrieking, "Can you hear me now?")
"Yes, I'm here. Can you hear me?"
"Yes I can hear you. I was just checking if you were still there. ARE YOU STILL THERE, MOMMY?"
"Yes, I'm still here."
"Oh, actually I'm hungry and I"m gonna go eat right now."
"What are you gonna eat for dinner?"
"Um, spaghetti and then Beat will give me some candy . . .
"Oh, you must have been a good girl."
"No, I'm a good boy. Say I'm a good boy, Mommy"
"Good boy. I miss you."
"I miss you too. ARE YOU THERE, MOMMY?"
"Yes. I'm here still. Do you want to say hi to Daddy?"
"Yes. I want to talk to Daddy now."
"I love you. I will see you tomorrow."
"LOOOVE YOOOOOUUUU. SEE YOU TOMOOOORROW!"
Then she had the exact same conversation with Jason.
Next time: we pose (naked) for PETA!

(David Rakoff, Jason, Dan Savage, Chris
Wilcha, Jane Feltes and me (looking fat, I might add) on the "This
American Life" tour)
See this post in its original format here.