It may be hard to believe, but it was, in fact, 50 years ago that Arlo Guthrie recorded the famous lovably circuitous ramble about a Thanksgiving mishap. To commemorate the 50th anniversary, PBS stations across the country will simultaneously air a special concert at 8 p.m. locally on Thanksgiving night, November 26. Rhode Island PBS will encore the show on Saturday, November 28 at 10:30 p.m.
From Andrew Gilbert of KQED in California:
And to think it all started with a littering offense.
Five decades ago, Arlo Guthrie and a few friends thought they were doing their Thanksgiving host a favor by loading up the back of a VW Microbus and disposing of a load of trash. Finding the city dump closed for the holiday, and spying a pile of trash at the bottom of a nearby cliff, “we decided that one big pile is better than two little piles, and rather than bring that one up we decided to throw ours down.”
The shaggy dog tale of woe unleashed by this botched good deed, recounted in meandering detail on Guthrie’s 18-minute talking blues “Alice’s Restaurant Massacree,” led to an underground FM radio hit, a beloved Thanksgiving tradition whereby entire families recite the epic story along with Guthrie, and even the 1969 Arthur Penn-directed film Alice’s Restaurant (it still holds up reasonably well).
Always undaunted by the shadow of his late, legendary father - the songwriter, folksinger and tribune of the people Woody Guthrie - Arlo carved out his particular niche with “Alice’s Restaurant” as a sly, self-deprecating and lightly toasted observer of the American scene.
He celebrates five decades of good service and institutional stupidity with the ‘Alice’s Restaurant: 50th Anniversary Tour,’ which includes four stops in Northern California [earlier this year in April 2015] With drummer Terry Hall, guitarist Bobby Sweet, bassist Darren Todd, and Arlo’s son Abe Guthrie on keyboards, the multimedia production features songs drawn from all of Arlo’s albums, previously unseen photos from the Guthrie archives, and a light show designed specifically for the tour.
While it all might sound like a hippiepalooza, Guthrie has always resisted easy pigeonholing. An ardent libertarian in recent decades who supported Ron Paul’s 2008 campaign for the GOP presidential nomination, he’s got a keen eye for absurdity and a soft spot for the underdog. After all, as he recounts in the course of “Alice’s Restaurant,” the littering conviction ends up saving him from the draft, while the charge of creating a public nuisance gave him the street cred to hang with the hardened criminals on the Group W bench.
All together now: You can get anything you want at Alice’s Restaurant (excepting Alice)...
On Friday after Thanksgiving, when dinner is over and savory leftovers are on the menu, relax with WSBE and delve into the intrigue on the estate...
Join us at 5 P.M. for a 6-hour marathon of Downton Abbey. We're airing all of the episodes back-to-back in anticipation of the brand new series of episodes premiering in January. (It's a golden DVR opportunity if ever there was one!)
The Downton Abbey estate stands a splendid example of confidence and mettle, its family enduring for generations and its staff a well-oiled machine of propriety. But change is afoot at Downton — change far surpassing the new electric lights and telephone. A crisis of inheritance threatens to displace the resident Crawley family, in spite of the best efforts of the noble and compassionate Earl, Robert Crawley (Hugh Bonneville, Miss Austen Regrets); his American heiress wife, Cora (Elizabeth McGovern); his comically implacable, opinionated mother, Violet (Maggie Smith, David Copperfield); and his beautiful, eldest daughter, Mary, intent on charting her own course. Reluctantly, the family is forced to welcome its heir apparent, the self-made and proudly modern Matthew Crawley (Dan Stevens), himself none too happy about the new arrangements. As Matthew's bristly relationship with Mary begins to crackle with electricity, hope for the future of Downton's dynasty takes shape. But when petty jealousies and ambitions grow among the family and the staff, scheming and secrets — both delicious and dangerous — threaten to derail the scramble to preserve Downton Abbey. Created and written by Oscar-winner Julian Fellowes (Gosford Park), Downton Abbey offers a spot-on portrait of a vanishing way of life.
Here's a short preview of the new season of Downton Abbey from PBS. (Please note: We will soon announce our premiere date, which may not be January 8. )
Tomorrow morning, WSBE is the child-safe place for your children to be - where they will be entertained and out from under your feet while the adults prepare dinner.
Starting at 7 A.M., we'll air two back-to-back specials: Curious George: Follow That Monkey, and Curious George: A Very Monkey Christmas. The marvelous multiple monkeyshines will be repeated Friday morning starting at 8:30 A.M.
Video Preview of Curious George: Follow That Monkey - George escorts Kayla, a blue elephant lonely for her family, from coast to coast. (Please disregard the date at the end of the video; we're airing the movie on Thanksgiving morning and Friday, too.)
Then, it's Curious George: A Very Monkey Christmas at 8:30 A.M., the heartwarming story of George and the Man with the Yellow Hat as they celebrate the season together.
Before, between, and after all of the meeting, greeting, heating, seating, and eating you may be planning for Thanksgiving Day, WSBE Rhode Island PBS has ideal family entertainment. We're ready when you are!
Wednesday, November 25
8 P.M. AMERICAN MASTERS Carol Burnett: A Woman of Character
(Re-broadcast on Thanksgiving Day at 3:30 P.M.)
9:30 P.M. James Stewart: A Wonderful Life
(re-broadcast on Thanksgiving Day at 2 P.M.)
The program salutes one of Hollywood's best-loved actors. Stewart, who started his career as a magician and accordionist, rose to stardom portraying ordinary men who called on their interior strengths to accomplish extraordinary things. Produced and directed by David Heeley and hosted by Johnny Carson, James Stewart: A Wonderful Life features interviews with Hollywood luminaries and visits to the sets of Stewart's most popular films, creating a moving tribute to a truly unforgettable actor.
Thursday, November 26 (Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!)
2 P.M. Re-broadcast of James Stewart: A Wonderful Life
3:30 P.M. Re-broadcast of AMERICAN MASTERS Carol Burnett: A Woman of Character
1 - 6 P.M. Wishbone marathon.
#201 “Halloween Hound: The Legend of the Creepy Collars" The Legend of Sleepy Hollow Part 1
#202 "Halloween Hound" Part 2
#203 “The Prince of Wags” Henry IV
#204 “Groomed for Greatness” Great Expectations
#205 “A Bone of Contention” The Courtship of Miles Standish
#206 “War of the Noses” The Black Arrow
#207 “Moonbone” The Moonstone
#208 “Barking at Buddha” Monkey
#209 “Pup Fiction” Northanger Abbey
#210 “The Roamin’ Nose” The Aeneid
8:30 P.M.MASTERPIECE CLASSIC Wuthering Heights
The Earnshaw children expect gifts from their father when he returns to Wuthering Heights after a trip, but are instead greeted with the arrival of Heathcliff, a young Gypsy boy who has come to live with them. Quiet and mysterious, Heathcliff is befriended by Cathy Earnshaw, and the two become inseparable. In adulthood, their bond deepens to love, but a forced absence opens Cathy to the affections of a different suitor — Edgar Linton. Given the choice between a life of comfort and a profound love, Cathy's actions have repercussions for multiple generations in this haunting story of turbulent passion and revenge. Tom Hardy (Oliver Twist) stars as Heathcliff, with newcomer Charlotte Riley as Cathy. Watch behind-the-scenes video here.