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Donald Drumpf Theatre Vol. 174 You Don't Need a Test (Audio)
May 13, 2020
Produced by Tom Roe.
Donald Drumpf Theatre Vol. 173 You Don't Need a Test. This week our hero says he has tests for everyone.
Thanks this week for the songs from Lucinda Williams ("Man Without a Soul"); Swedemason, Nooruddean Choudry, Matt Sayward, and Joe Gilmore ("Losing My Civilians"); and Golden Earring ("Twilight Zone"). Clips and excerpts from Rod Serling; Rudy Giuliani; Cartman; Richard Nixon; Anthony Fauci; Steve Schmidt; J.L. Cauvin; Brian Williams; Stephen Colbert; Chuck Todd; Kevin Hassett; Peter Alexander; Kayleigh McEnany; Seth Meyers; Wilhuff Tarkin, Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker, and Han Solo from "Star Wars;" Philip Rucker; Weijia Jiang; and Kaitlan Collins. An original radio theatre show each week, with most sounds culled from the previous week, about a fictional, theatrical presidency. Contradictions tell the story, with songs, skits, and clips from political news shows and late-night comedy routines. The definition of "radio theatre" is stretched here, with an updated Dickie Goodman and/or Richard Foreman-meets-mashup style sometimes, and a more straightforward take other weeks. Currently airing on 30 or 40 stations around the world, the network has ordered another 11 months of episodes. Anyone who would like to work on a production, or have their work air in this timeslot, should contact info@wgxc.org.
Thanks this week for the songs from Lucinda Williams ("Man Without a Soul"); Swedemason, Nooruddean Choudry, Matt Sayward, and Joe Gilmore ("Losing My Civilians"); and Golden Earring ("Twilight Zone"). Clips and excerpts from Rod Serling; Rudy Giuliani; Cartman; Richard Nixon; Anthony Fauci; Steve Schmidt; J.L. Cauvin; Brian Williams; Stephen Colbert; Chuck Todd; Kevin Hassett; Peter Alexander; Kayleigh McEnany; Seth Meyers; Wilhuff Tarkin, Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker, and Han Solo from "Star Wars;" Philip Rucker; Weijia Jiang; and Kaitlan Collins. An original radio theatre show each week, with most sounds culled from the previous week, about a fictional, theatrical presidency. Contradictions tell the story, with songs, skits, and clips from political news shows and late-night comedy routines. The definition of "radio theatre" is stretched here, with an updated Dickie Goodman and/or Richard Foreman-meets-mashup style sometimes, and a more straightforward take other weeks. Currently airing on 30 or 40 stations around the world, the network has ordered another 11 months of episodes. Anyone who would like to work on a production, or have their work air in this timeslot, should contact info@wgxc.org.