Help Keep Our Podcast Free
This American Life on iTunes
Episode Archive Need Help?

Episode Archive

Free Podcast

Find Your Station

Our Favorites


2010
2009|2008|2007|2006|2005|2004|2003|2002|2001|2000
1999|1998|1997|1996|1995
2006      Jan|Feb |Mar |Apr |May |Jun |Jul |Aug |Sep |Oct |Nov |Dec
01.20.2006

Originally aired 01.21.2005

Full Episode
  Email to a Friend
  Permalink
281: My Big Break

Sometimes, getting your big break isn't all it's cracked up to be. A comedy duo lands the gig that can make them famous—the Ed Sullivan Show at the height of Sullivan's popularity—and they bomb. A third-grader gets his big chance to please his mother and push his drunken father out of the picture. And other stories.

Prologue.

Host Ira Glass tells the story of Marisela and Yadira, who were honors students in high school. They wanted to go to the best colleges, but they couldn't get federally-funded scholarships because they weren't U.S. citizens; they had come from Mexico when they were little. Through a series of fortunate breaks, they manage to scrape together enough money to go to college. Still, because of their illegal status, they have no idea if their education will get them anywhere in America. Helen Thorpe, a reporter in Denver, interviewed the students. (7 minutes)

Act One. Take My Break, Please.

Charlie Brill and Mitzi McCall were a comedy duo back in the mid-1960s, playing clubs around Los Angeles, when their agent called to tell them he'd landed them the gig of a lifetime: They were going to be on The Ed Sullivan Show. The only problem was that their performance was a total fiasco, for a bunch of reasons, including one they never saw coming. David Segal of The New York Times reports. (18 minutes)

Act Two. What Happens in Baghdad, Stays in Baghdad.

Two young men, Jeff Neumann and Ray Lemoine, decide it'd be interesting to be part of the rebuilding of Iraq. So they take a bus to Baghdad during the war and the bombings and the kidnappings and try to make their mark. Jen Banbury, who wrote for Salon.com from Baghdad, met Jeff and Ray there. She tells the story. (11 minutes)

Act Three. Oedipus Hex.

Shalom Auslander reads his true story, "The Blessing Bee." It's about the time when, as a third-grader at an Orthodox Jewish school, Shalom saw his chance to both make his mom proud, and push his drunken father out of the picture. Part of his scheme involved winning the school's bee on the complicated Hebrew blessings you say before eating certain foods. The other part of the scheme: sinning. Shalom's book of short stories is called Beware of God. "The Blessing Bee" will be published in his upcoming memoir. (19 minutes)

Song: "Who Will Pray for Me," Conway Twitty




FAQ   |   Press   |   Contact Us   |   Facebook   |   MySpace   |   YouTube    Copyright © 2008, Chicago Public Radio and Ira Glass