For a while now, I've had the feeling
that Vinyl Cafe's audience is catered primariliy towards baby
boomers, and I think this episode all but confirms it, because it
focuses on the two things I assume boomers love: nostalgia and
national pride.
The national pride comes first, as
Stuart begins the program with a monologue describing why he thinks
Kingston, Ontario (the show this episode was taped in) is the most
quintessentially Canadian city in the country. It's my favourite part
of the show, and Stuart's description of this “Canadian” quality
is very sweet and almost poetic at times. At one point he describes
Kingston as a beautiful oil painting, and he compares a frozen river
to a rolling field of wheat. I can't it it justice, so go listen to
it if you haven't already! His monologue is also quite meta, since
Vinyl Cafe is broadcast from CBC Radio, the most quintessentially
Canadian Radio broadcaster, and it is performed at a time when the
Vinyl Cafe performing live shows in towns stretching across the
country.
He gives a few superficial reasons for
Kingston's Canadian-ness, like being the birthplace of Don Cherry
(boo), but his primary reasons have to do with Kingston's importance
in Canadian History and, of course, nostalgia. Its home to the oldest
hockey rivalry in Canada (Queen's vs. RMC, a game still played in an
old fashioned way, on a bay of frozen ice), five railroad companies
originated here (and are all sadly gone), and John A. MacDonald was
born here. He was also buried here, and Stuart recommends that
everyone sit by his grave for a while if they're ever in town. The
message here is plain: Kingston is quintessentially Canadian because
it's a reminder of where we, as Canadians, have come from. That's a message I can get
behind, but I think it resonates especially well with older folks,
hence my conclusion that this show is quite appealing to baby
boomers.
I don't have much to say about the
rest of the show this week, except that it helps to reinforce the
dual messages of Canadian pride and nostalgia. The story exchange
this week is about a trip to Canadian Tire on a weekend, i.e. the
most Canadian thing ever. The musical guest this week sings a
never-before-recorded song about pick-up hockey. The Dave story is
especially endearing this week, as his older next door neighbour
describes a time when he went on an exhilarating and dangerous
toboggan ride as a child. It ends with the two of them tobogganing
down the hill in the middle of the night, during a snowfall,
simultaneously joyous and terrified, remembering what it was like to
be young. Nostalgia, everybody!
Sadly, our grocery store streak comes to an end this week. Unless Canadian Tire counts as a grocery store.
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