I first heard this on the Yesterday USA radio station via my cable system in 1990, and it's still relevant today as it was when it was first broadcast in 1933.
One of these gentlemen is buried in Hot Springs Arkansas. His grave is in the Greenwood cemetery,I believe. My Dad told me about it years ago. I think I saw his grave. We lived on Greenwood for a while.
I love these guys. I was able to download dozens of episodes from the Internet Archive. My dad is 79, so he turned me on to a lot of this kind of thing. I've been enjoying OTR since I was a teenager.
This was the half-hour version of their traditional Christmas episode, as heard on their weekly Sunday night CBS series [10pm(et)] for General Motors' Frigidaire division...
the world needs more things like this, more love less hate
they were great still love listening to them
This is the first time I've heard an audience with this show and so many different actors. Great show!
Interesting. Will look into why that would be. Thanks for letting me know.
I first heard this on the Yesterday USA radio station via my cable system in 1990, and it's still relevant today as it was when it was first broadcast in 1933.
Holiday episodes just seem to have more to enjoy in them! Great to get a perspective of how it must have been back then!
One of these gentlemen is buried in Hot Springs Arkansas. His grave is in the Greenwood cemetery,I believe. My Dad told me about it years ago. I think I saw his grave. We lived on Greenwood for a while.
Thanks For Listening!
I love these guys. I was able to download dozens of episodes from the Internet Archive. My dad is 79, so he turned me on to a lot of this kind of thing. I've been enjoying OTR since I was a teenager.
This was the half-hour version of their traditional Christmas episode, as heard on their weekly Sunday night CBS series [10pm(et)] for General Motors' Frigidaire division...
Grew up listening to reruns in the morning on WHUB AM 1400
thanks thanx thankyou
So True!