I don't know why I've decided to do a radio show about needles. These things happen. I am not & never have been an IV drug user. In fact, when I am at a doctor's office, & I have to have my blood drawn, I tell the phlebotomist to let me lie down, look the other way, & not talk about what he or she is doing; otherwise I may faint. My addiction to heroin would be doomed from the start.
As well, I don't sew. Occasionally, I think about taking it up. Recently, wanting to mend a hole in a pair of shorts, I looked up "how to sew" on the webs. It turns out it's a little more complicated than threading a needle & looking at an online chart. I pretty much decided at that point that I'd probably never really learn how to sew.
The only thing that comes close is a turntable needle - & I confess I don't use the old turntable as much as I used to. I've probably mentioned this before: I miss vinyl. I miss the size of records, the feel, the album art, the giant lyric sheets. Aesthetically, they're the best. The shitty CD booklet & the sterile little compact disc will never compare favorably.
It's just - it's complicated to play vinyl. Digital music is so much more convenient. I've digitized a lot of my vinyl - a time-intensive process that's not too much fun - & it's made it easier for me to "carry" it up to do radio shows. (It's also tarnished me in the eyes of vinyl lovers - when I deejayed an outdoor thing at RFL a couple of years ago, one of the directors there said, "Deejaying from a laptop - yuck." But the station doesn't own a deejay kit with CDs - it's either vinyl, or a laptop or iPod.)
The show will celebrate needles, but I'm not someone who thinks about needles in a celebratory way. But hey! When I think about doing a show about needles, I immediately think about the sample from "Pump Up The Volume" that goes, Put the needle on the record. So maybe vinyl was the inspiration after all.
It's happening tomorrow morning from 7 to 9am on 88.1 fm WRFL in Lexington, & online at wrfl dot fm. I hope I haven't been needling you too much with all this needle talk - but - it's appropriate.
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