The Al Franken Show was the flagship
talk show of
Air America Radio. Hosted by
Al Franken, it featured
commentary and
interviews arguing for
progressive positions on the issues of the day, and
comically poking fun at the
George W. Bush Administration. The show began as
The O'Franken Factor on
March 31,
2004. Between
January 3,
2006, and
February 14,
2007, the show was recorded and broadcast from the 28th floor of the historic
Foshay Tower in downtown
Minneapolis, Minnesota. Prior to that date it was based in
New York City. The final show was broadcast on
February 14,
2007.
Franken is a comedian and satirist who is well known for his books, including the 2004 Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right, and his earlier role as a writer and performer on Saturday Night Live, where he usually teamed with fellow writer/performer Tom Davis (comedian).
History
From the show's inception in
March 2004 until
October 7,
2005, the show was co-hosted by experienced journalist
Katherine Lanpher. Lanpher left the show to write
Leap Days, a memoir about her experiences moving to
New York City. Lanpher did not rejoin the show because she did not wish to move again when Franken relocated to Minnesota. In November, Franken told an audience in Berkeley, California that he would not seek a replacement for Lanpher. Her departure did not reduce the primarily issue and current events commentary content of the show.
When the show began, Franken signed a one-year contract. "I'm doing this because I want to use my energies to get Bush unelected. I'd be happy if the election of a Democrat ended the show", he said in an interview with The New York Times. Bush won a second term on November 2, 2004, but Franken stated that the show would continue whether a Democrat or a Republican was in office.
Beginning on September 7, 2004, Sundance Channel broadcast a one-hour televised version of the show on weekdays. The show aired its last episode in November 2004. The channel inked a new contract with Franken and aired a second season of the show from June 6, 2005 until early November 2005.
On November 15 2006, Air America affiliate KQKE (The Quake) in San Francisco stated that Al Franken would leave Air America on December 10, as indicated by an audio clip posted on Whatamockery.com. After December 10, though Franken was at the time still on Air America, KQKE began airing the Thom Hartmann Program in place of the Al Franken show.
On his January 29, 2007 show, Franken announced that Valentine's Day 2007 would be his last show on Air America Radio. Affiliates who carried the Franken show carried Thom Hartmann after that date, while XM Satellite Radio now carries Ed Schultz in that timeslot. At the end of his final show, Franken announced his intention to run for the United States Senate from Minnesota.
The O'Franken Factor
Until
July 12, 2004 the name of the show was
The O'Franken Factor. That name was a jibe at
Bill O'Reilly and his
The O'Reilly Factor. O'Reilly is widely thought to have instigated
Fox News Channel's lawsuit against Franken for using their trademarked phrase "fair and balanced", which was thrown out of court in
summary judgment, but ended up giving publicity to Franken and his book
Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them. Franken said that he chose the title to "annoy and bait" O'Reilly into suing him again, thus generating publicity. That lawsuit never came, and on
July 12,
2004, the program was renamed
The Al Franken Show.
Franken described his show as taking place in a "Zero Spin Zone" where Franken pledges to tell the truth and there is "no spinning allowed." This is a parody of O'Reilly's characterization of the O'Reilly Factor as a "No Spin Zone."
Regular guests
The show's regular guests included respected,
progressive issues and current events analysts:
Jonathan Alter,
David Brock,
Joe Conason,
James Fallows,
Howard Fineman,
Christy Harvey,
Paul Krugman,
Thomas Oliphant,
Norman Ornstein,
George Packer,
Melanie Sloan,
David Sirota, and
Lawrence O'Donnell Jr.
Regular features
In addition to general political discussion, the show featured several recurring comic relief segments. These included: Wait Wait… Don't Lie To Me! : Every Friday afternoon, Franken hosted a mini-game show with fellow judge Joe Conason. The contestant listened to a series of audio clips from earlier in the week, and was asked to identify whether each statement made is the truth, a lie, or a "weasel" (defined as "a statement that is technically true, but intended to mislead"). The title was based on the
National Public Radio show
Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! Contestants received a copy of
The Al Franken Show Party Album regardless of their performance, though Franken referred to the CD as both the prize for winning and consolation prize for losing. In the spirit of the lying theme, Franken frequently stated that the game won ever increasing numbers of
Peabody Awards — over one hundred by the end of the show — which itself was a humorous dig at Bill O'Reilly, who incorrectly boasted that his former show,
Inside Edition, won two Peabodies. Hate Email of the Day : Franken picked his favorite hate email and read it on the air, often noting spelling and grammatical errors, and usually concluding with "We take your criticisms very seriously." Boring Correction : Taking great pride in the veracity of the information cited by his program, Franken invited his audience to bring any factual errors to his attention so they could be addressed. Franken would then issue a live on-air "Boring Correction" where, to a jaunty tune and the sound of typewriter in the background, he corrected the error. Most of the time, the "boring correction" addressed a hypertechnicality rather than a substantive error. "Resident Dittohead" Mark Luther : The show regularly featured a segment with Mark Luther, Franken's childhood friend and self-proclaimed
dittohead. Franken would play a clip by
Rush Limbaugh, take issue with Limbaugh's facts or logic, and argue about it with Luther. Good Ribbin' : A correspondent would travel to some of the best southern
barbecue hot spots in the country, to talk with people who love barbecue and hate Franken's show. Patrons were invited to tell the audience what they're eating and then argue with Franken. The Fifteen Second Debunk : An audio clip was played, and then debunked by another audio clip from the same person. Although the two clips were usually less than fifteen seconds, they were preceded by very lengthy introduction and followed by a lengthy outro. Nigel Chestley : Franken played a BBC correspondent who sometimes reported on international news, and other times simply provided an update on the
Queen's long running
drum solo. Senior Moment : Franken played Enid Davenport, a crotchety old woman who offered an extremely confused perspective on the news (she preferred to call the segment "A piece of my mind"). This character was somewhat reminiscent of
Gilda Radner's
Emily Litella from
Saturday Night Live. The Slide Whistle : Franken played a slide whistle along with the highs and lows of President Bush's approval rating since taking office. The whistle started with a moderate note, raised to a high note to reflect the time period following 9/11, then steadily sunk to lower notes as Bush's popularity decreased (with occasional blips of higher notes in between). This was a popular segment surrounding
State of the Union addresses.
Some other skits no longer occurred regularly after Katherine Lanpher left the show. These included:
- The Oy Yoy Yoy Show, in which Franken played "old Al" and responded to a litany of depressing news items by saying "Oy", along with a constant expression of concern for Israel
- Mastication Theater, in which Franken and Lanpher would perform a skit while stuffing their mouths with food
Swing State Tour
In the runup to the
2004 U.S. presidential election, the show went on a "
Swing State Tour" that included stops in
Music
- Theme: Grateful Dead - "Terrapin Station" (live)
- Grateful Dead - "Sugaree" (live)
- Commercial Bumpers: Grateful Dead "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad" (live)
- The Klezmatics
- "N.Y. Psycho Freylekhs" (used for "The Oy Yoy Yoy Show" segment)
- many original compositions of Adam Albright-Hanna, including the phone number song, "866-303-2270"
- Dire Straits - Sultans of Swing (Plays this song until that "note", after commercials)
- Jerry Garcia - "The Wheel" Garcia
- Fleetwood Mac - Little Lies (the theme song to "Wait Wait... Don't Lie To Me!")
- Henry Mancini - "Baby Elephant Walk" (to introduce Tom Oliphant)
- The Knack - "My Sharona" (to introduce David Sirota)
- Queen - "We Will Rock You" (to introduce David Brock)
- Kansas - "Carry On Wayward Son" (to introduce Joe Conason)
Staff
The staff of The Al Franken Show:

- Host: Al Franken
- Executive Producer: Billy Kimball
- Producer: J.R. Norton
- Associate Producer: Joel Meyer
- Engineer and Researcher: Andy 'Scooter' Barr
- Webwriter and Researcher: Eric Hananoki
- Researcher: Miranda Wilson
- Administrative Assistant: Kathy Kostohryz
References
External links