Sunday, January 31, 2010

Americans in Paris

I just listened to Americans in Paris by Ira Glass and David Sedaris from This American Life. It's quite good, if you have some time, listen.

Here is the synopsis of the radio excerpt (taken from their website):

Many Americans have dreamy and romantic ideas about Paris, notions which probably trace back to the 1920s vision of Paris created by the expatriate Americans there. But what's actually like in Paris if you're an American, without rose-colored glasses?

Prologue: Host Ira Glass talks with writer David Sedaris at the Louvre in Paris. David's never set foot inside, though he lives just a few minutes away. He says most people go to Louvre because they think they should. Where he would take them if they wanted to see the city where he's lived for two years in very different.

Act I: David Sedaris takes Ira on a tour of his favorite spots in Paris. He moved to France with no special feelings for the place. His head wasn't full of Ernest Hemingway and Gertrude Stein and Sartre and Proust; he was a blank slate. And so the places he's found as his favorites tend to the places where the people aren't mean to him when he speaks French, or places where very unusual and fasinating objects are sold, or place that are unlike anywhere in the States. David describes his struggles with daily life in France in his book Me Talk Pretty One Day.

Song: "Si Tu Dois Partir" - Lloyd Cole

Act II: We hear two Americans who live in Paris about what it is that draws the people who love France so much

Song: "Comment Allez-Vous?" - Blossom Dearie

Act III: In Paris still the racially tolerant place that Richard Wright and James Baldwin discovered in the 1940s? Janet McDonald talks about whether African-Americans are still welcomed in Paris so warmly, even after a half century of African migration to the city. Also: why it's sometimes better for her to put on a bad American accent. She's the author of the book Project Girl and has lived in Paris since 1995.

Song: "Paradisiaque" - MC Solaar and "Au Revoir Paris" - Andy Williams

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