Fri, 26 January 2007 ![]() Comments[1] |
Fri, 26 January 2007 Christine finds out her secretary has a blog. And she's in it. Comments[17] |
Fri, 26 January 2007 In which Nat takes up interpretive canoeing Comments[0] |
Fri, 26 January 2007 Christine tries to train Nat using dog training techniques. Or, why women do more than men. Comments[0] |
Thu, 25 January 2007 Rick reads the libertarian blogs from the Greenhouse Cafe, drug den of choice for the libertarian conference in Amsterdam, and decides to run for office himself. Comments[0] |
Thu, 25 January 2007 Hurricanes, terrorist attacks, what's a family to do? Why prepare for any kind of disaster, of course. Comments[0] |
Thu, 25 January 2007 In which the entire family tells Elena how to write a personal's ad. Comments[0] |
Thu, 25 January 2007 Social commentary in the form of a radio comic strip about the RFID tracking technology being embedded in common household products. Comments[0] |
Thu, 25 January 2007 Elena hires a dating service and is rewarded with Rat Man, and a small claims court suit.
Wait Wait Don't Tell Me host Peter Sagal is in this episode. Comments[0] |
Wed, 24 January 2007 11 Central Ave the radio comic strip Comments[2] |
Wed, 24 January 2007 11 Central Ave is a weekly four minute radio comic strip.
...It's what Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne might be hotly debating as they walk into the studio -- just before they get on mic.
That's what you'll hear on "11 Central Ave," Chicago Public Radio's new comic strip, airing on WBEZ, WBUR, and WUSM.
This three-and-a-half minute radiostrip plays out in the kitchen of 11 Central Ave, the home of an extended family where a hodgepodge of other characters regularly drops in. As they rush around in the morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, looking for their shoes, they're talking about everything from the most compelling topics of our time (the Supreme Court nominee and his views on abortion) to the most ridiculous (mommy blogging), and everything in between -- covenant marriage, teens hooking up, the next pandemic, the fog of internet dating.
It's a wry look at America's zeitgeist in three-and-a-half minutes. Come hear something new "11 Central Ave" - the radio comic strip. Comments[0] |
Wed, 24 January 2007 11 Central Ave. The radio comic strip.
...It's what Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne might be hotly debating as they walk into the studio -- just before they get on mic.
That's what you'll hear on "11 Central Ave," Chicago Public Radio's new comic strip, airing on WBEZ, WBUR, and WUSM.
This three-and-a-half minute radiostrip plays out in the kitchen of 11 Central Ave, the home of an extended family where a hodgepodge of other characters regularly drops in. As they rush around in the morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, looking for their shoes, they're talking about everything from the most compelling topics of our time (the Supreme Court nominee and his views on abortion) to the most ridiculous (mommy blogging), and everything in between -- covenant marriage, teens hooking up, the next pandemic, the fog of internet dating.
It's a wry look at America's zeitgeist in three-and-a-half minutes. Come hear something new "11 Central Ave" - the radio comic strip. Comments[0] |
Wed, 24 January 2007 This is a four minute weekly radio comic strip airing on WBEZ in Chicago and WBUR in Boston.
...It's what Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne might be hotly debating as they walk into the studio -- just before they get on mic.
That's what you'll hear on "11 Central Ave," Chicago Public Radio's new comic strip, airing on WBEZ, WBUR, and WUSM.
This three-and-a-half minute radiostrip plays out in the kitchen of 11 Central Ave, the home of an extended family where a hodgepodge of other characters regularly drops in. As they rush around in the morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, looking for their shoes, they're talking about everything from the most compelling topics of our time (the Supreme Court nominee and his views on abortion) to the most ridiculous (mommy blogging), and everything in between -- covenant marriage, teens hooking up, the next pandemic, the fog of internet dating.
It's a wry look at America's zeitgeist in three-and-a-half minutes. Come hear something new "11 Central Ave" - the radio comic strip. Comments[0] |


11 Central Ave. The radio comic strip.
...It's what Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne might be hotly debating as they walk into the studio -- just before they get on mic.
That's what you'll hear on "11 Central Ave," Chicago Public Radio's new comic strip, airing on WBEZ, WBUR, and WUSM.
This three-and-a-half minute radiostrip plays out in the kitchen of 11 Central Ave, the home of an extended family where a hodgepodge of other characters regularly drops in. As they rush around in the morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, looking for their shoes, they're talking about everything from the most compelling topics of our time (the Supreme Court nominee and his views on abortion) to the most ridiculous (mommy blogging), and everything in between -- covenant marriage, teens hooking up, the next pandemic, the fog of internet dating.
It's a wry look at America's zeitgeist in three-and-a-half minutes. Come hear something new "11 Central Ave" - the radio comic strip.
This is a four minute weekly radio comic strip airing on WBEZ in Chicago and WBUR in Boston.
...It's what Steve Inskeep and Renee Montagne might be hotly debating as they walk into the studio -- just before they get on mic.
That's what you'll hear on "11 Central Ave," Chicago Public Radio's new comic strip, airing on WBEZ, WBUR, and WUSM.
This three-and-a-half minute radiostrip plays out in the kitchen of 11 Central Ave, the home of an extended family where a hodgepodge of other characters regularly drops in. As they rush around in the morning drinking coffee, reading the paper, looking for their shoes, they're talking about everything from the most compelling topics of our time (the Supreme Court nominee and his views on abortion) to the most ridiculous (mommy blogging), and everything in between -- covenant marriage, teens hooking up, the next pandemic, the fog of internet dating.
It's a wry look at America's zeitgeist in three-and-a-half minutes. Come hear something new "11 Central Ave" - the radio comic strip.