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00000181-fa79-da89-a38d-fb7f2bb00002KUOW was established in 1952, when Seattle benefactor Dorothy Bullitt donated a radio frequency to the University of Washington.It was a training ground for students to learn about broadcast techniques and technology, on the air for only 8-10 hours each day.We’ve come a long way! Celebrate our anniversary with us all year long. We’ll be throwing events big and small, curating a monthly podcast filled with classic, archived interviews and stories, and giving you lots of ways to be a part of the fun!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ngu000y5do

1990: Why Kurt Vonnegut prefers laughter

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_Vonnegut#/media/File:Kurt_Vonnegut_1972.jpg
Kurt Vonnegut 1972

 

Kurt Vonnegut (1922-2007) was grim about the future in a hilarious way.

When Ross Reynolds  interviewed him September 13, 1990, Vonnegut's tweflth novel Hocus Pocus had just been published. He was 67.

Vonnegut published magazine short stories, novels, plays and non-fiction. But he is best known for his darkly satirical best selling novel "Slaughterhouse-Five."  

In this interview Vonnegut talks about his favorite novel, his reaction to the film version of "Slaughterhouse-Five,"  the craft of writing ("If you open the window and make love to the world, nobody's going to be interested, because the only way you get that unity and that high energy is with one person in mind"). And he recalls hanging out with Rodney Dangerfield on the set of "Back to School", a film in which he had a cameo role.