Today is Jonathan’s 39th birthday! How do I know? Because on the episode A World of Possibility, he reveals that his birthdate is 22. And in another episode – though I’m not sure which, he tells someone that his birthday month is August. And on Wikipedia, it says he was born in 1969…and…okay, just kidding I looked up his voting record from when he lived in Brooklyn.
He was born on Auguts 22, 1969. He is a male. There is some other information but none too interesting – except that he voted in the last presidential election, though I’d say he was probably living in Canada at the time. Sneaky, but we need all the help we can get.
Anyway, here’s to Jonathan Goldstein getting a little bit older and presumably a little bit wiser! In celebration, I suggest you go listen to his early work:
“It’s Not the Heat, It’s the Humility” from This American Life episode aired August 17, 2001.
Jonathan Goldstein heads into an environment that’s so hot that they people there believe that sweating — simply sweating — is getting something accomplished. Life in the Division Street Russian Bath turns out to follow a different — and superior — set of rules to life elsewhere. Jonathan’s the author of the novel Lenny Bruce is Dead. (14 minutes)
An audio diary from his road trip that spawned the Schmelvis book and movie, aired on CBC Dispatches on June 12, 2002.
We’re not saying Elvis is dead. But just visit his and you can see that if the fried peanut butter-and-banana sandwiches didn’t get him, the decor at Graceland surely did.
A lot of fans make that pilgrimage every summer on the anniversary of Elvis’s death — in a quest to recall the more innocent times, and the fundamental values he has come to embody.
This year is a big one — the 25th anniversary of the day The King died on the throne.
Two summers ago, Montreal writer Jonathan Goldstein hosted a CBC-Radio show called Road Dot Trip — and one of his trips was in a Winabego to Memphis, with a crew of Montreal filmmakers — during pilgrimage week.
Among the candlelight vigils, the souvenir shops and the Elvis impersonation contests, Jonathan unearthed some inner secrets of the soul of America, and its King.
And you can do some reading, too:
Jonathan’s contribution to Paul Tough’s Open Letters:
Paul Tough (who was interviewed by Howard in “Canadian Content” and “Helping Johnny“) actually mentioned the above Schmelvis piece in his intro to JG’s open letter:
More recently, he’s become a radio guy. This evening, in fact, the second episode of a new radio program he hosts will be aired on CBC radio. It’s called Road Dot Trip. The idea is that he’s going to spend the summer traveling across Canada, interviewing people and recounting adventures. Open Letters contributing editor Deirdre Dolan wrote about the show in the National Post; you can read her story, and see a picture of Jonathan looking tough, here.
Sadly, that link is broken. He also references an “unpublished” novel by Jonathan which, also sadly never saw the light of day (unless it eventually became Lenny Bruce is Dead). If so, then here’s some more Wiretap trivia: Jonathan Goldstein’s novel was originally titled “The Last Comedian.”
And then of course, there’s the Jonathan Goldstein Transom radio manifesto. Check it.