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- So, which one of you is Click and which
one is Clack?
- Are you two married?
- Do you have kids?
- Do you guys have any pets?
- Are there other brothers or sisters?
- When do you actually broadcast the show? I've heard it at
different times in different cities.
- What do you look for in callers?
- What are my odds of actually getting on the show?
- Do you guys know in advance what questions you'll be getting?
- How do you prepare for the show?
- When did you first get interested in cars?
- Are your parents proud of what you do?
- Do you really run a garage?
- Do people ever come by the garage just to see if it really exists?
- Do you really work out of an office called Dewey, Cheetham and Howe?
- Where is Dewey, Cheetham and Howe?
- Does the "The Tasty" really exist? And, if it's for real, is it as
greasy as you make it sound?
- What do you do in your spare time?
- What kind of cars do you drive...really?
- What kind of scenery do you like?
- Do you wear boxers or briefs?
- I've seen pictures of Tom. Is that his real hair?
- Did you two really go to MIT?
- Did either of you serve in the Armed Forces?
- Tom often says things like "When I was in Kuala Lumpur," or "when
I was in Canberra...." He seems very widely travelled. Was he ever in the
CIA?
- How do I send you guys e-mail?
- Why did you guys start a web site?
- Do you plan to keep doing your NPR radio show
forever?
- I can't e-mail you a twenty dollar bill. What is the snail mail address I should use?
- What's your 800 call-in number?
FAQ #1: So, which one of you is Click and which one is Clack?
Tom: That's a state secret. Even our mother isn't sure.
Ray: A reporter from the New York Times once tried to find out through
the Freedom of Information Act, but all she got was a page with all this
blacked out information on it.
FAQ #2: Are you two married?
Ray: No, we're brothers.
Tom: Actually, yes. My brother has been happily married all his life, and
I've been happily married several times...currently to the most wonderful
woman in the universe....what's her name again?
Ray: That's what makes him such an expert on marital disputes. He's had
all of them.
FAQ #3: Do you have kids?
Tom: Of course we have kids. Who do you think takes out the garbage? I
have a married daughter, a 14 year old son, and a nine year old daughter.
Ray: And I have two boys, 20 and 12.
FAQ #4: Do you guys have any pets?
Tom: I thought we just answered that question! Actually, we have a Golden
Retriever named Harriet...Harry for short. She's sweet, but boy is she
dumb. Worse than my brother.
Ray: We have a dog and a cat. Our dog is ...what do you call that breed?
Tom: A mutt.
Ray: That's it. Part Border Collie and part something else. Her name is
Phillie, because she was a stray and we found her while watching one of my
younger son's little league games (his team was the Phillies). He also
named our cat Doug, after our producer Doug Berman. Needless to say, the
cat smells bad, sleeps a lot, and has an unpleasant personality when he is
awake.
FAQ #5: Are there other brothers or sisters?
Ray: Rumor has it there's a Tappet sister, but I've never met her.
Tom: Her name's Lucille. She's between us in age. She's the black sheep
of the family.
Ray: Right. She's likeable, well-mannered, and successful.
FAQ #6: When do you actually broadcast the show? I've heard it at
different times in different cities.
Ray: We're not allowed to divulge that information. We're in the Federal
Broadcaster Protection Program. The goverment gives us new identities and
moves us all over the country to hide us from irate former callers.
Tom: Actually, we use answering machines to be fair to people in all the
different time zones where Car Talk is broadcast. So anyone can call
anytime they like and leave a message for us. Every week, Ken Rogers and
his staff of lackies go through the messages and pick a variety to throw at
us when we go on the air.
FAQ: #7: What do you look for in callers?
Ray: We don't look for anything in callers. We're not allowed to
participate in caller selection, because they know we'd just pick all the
easy questions.
Tom: The staff tries to get a variety of callers on every week; people
from different parts of the country, with different kinds of cars,
different types of problems...some mechanical, some interpersonal, you
know. But there's no specific type of person or question we're looking
for. We just look for variety.
FAQ #8: What are my odds of actually getting on the show?
Tom: Take the unabomber's chances of getting a job with UPS when he gets
out of jail. Now quintuple that. We take about 10 calls every week from
about 10,000 we receive. What's that? One in 1000?
Ray: But your odds are just as good--or as bad as anyone elses. So it's
worth a try. Hey, someone has to be on the show every week!
FAQ #9 : Do you guys know in advance what questions you'll be getting?
Tom: As if that would help us! What good would knowing the questions be?
It's the ANSWERS we need!
Ray: We never, ever know what questions are going to be asked. That
would ruin the fun for us--plus it would be dishonest. And then we might
be expected to give the right answers, which would be too great a burden
for us.
Tom: Only Ken Rogers knows who's going to be on the show each week since
he calls people back. Well, maybe Mr. Gigi knows, too.
FAQ #10: How do you prepare for the show?
Tom: Pardon? "Prepare?"
Ray: Now there's a word with which we're completely unfamiliar. Does
sitting around a folding table eating Ho-Ho's count as preparation? If it
does, then we prepare extensively.
FAQ #11: When did you first get interested in cars?
Tom: Right after I ran my father's '32 Chevy out of oil.
Ray: I got interested watching him. He's 12 years older than I am. So
when I was four, he was already trying to do emergency repairs on dad's car
before the old man got home. I would stand around and watch...
Tom: ...and he'd point out mistakes I was making. That's when I knew I
was in trouble.
FAQ #12: Are your parents proud of what you do?
Ray: I don't think they care. Once they got Tommy to finally move out of
the house five years ago, they packed up and moved. We haven't heard from
them since. Actually, our father listens to every show. Always has.
Tom: And my mother calls and tells us my brother to stop ranting and raving
so much, and stop making fun of that nice boy, Doug Berman. But he never
listens.
FAQ #13: Do you really run a garage?
Tom: My brother still runs the garage every day. I don't work there
anymore. We opened the garage together. But after ten or fifteen years, I
got sick of making my fingers bleed and breathing exhaust fumes all day. I
decided I didn't want to work for a living anymore... so I went into
academia.
Ray: Now he goes in late and comes home early. In fact, one day he left
right after lunch and passed himself coming in!
FAQ #14: Do people ever come by the garage just to see if it really exists?
Ray: Oh, sure. We're probably the only garage in the country with an
unlisted number. But somehow, people find us anyway. We get a lot of
tourists in Boston on vacation, and they come by with their families and
poke their heads in and take a few pictures. I guess it's kind of like
going to "Greaseland."
Tom: And my brother's too nice a guy to throw them out... so the cars are
piling up and the customers are yelling and he's standing there, smiling,
having his picture taken with some family from Omaha.
FAQ #15: Do you really work out of an office called Dewey, Cheetham and Howe?
Tom: Please! Don't ever use the "w" word in my presence again.
Ray: We never say, "Tom is at work." We say, "He's at the office." And,
yes, to answer your question, there is a Dewey, Cheetham and Howe. It's the
company that produces "Car Talk; the radio show," "Car Talk; the newspaper
column," "Car Talk; the web site," and all its other variations. It's
also where Doug Berman sleeps during the day.
FAQ #16: Where is Dewey, Cheetham and Howe?
Tom: Right where we want it, about thirty five feet away from the Tasty.
Ray: It's in the middle of Harvard Square in Cambridge. If you're ever in
our fair city, go right to the middle of the square, look toward the corner
of Brattle Street and JFK, and you'll see DCH.
FAQ #17: Does the "The Tasty" really exist? And, if it's for real, is it as
greasy as you make it sound?
Ray: Well...it did, at least until Harvard Square got all gentrified on us.
You know what replaced it? Get this: Abercrombie and Fitch. Great. Like I need a $500
grunge crop-top sweater and wide-legged pants. The Tasty used to buy my used motor oil
in 55 gallon drums -- they used it to cook the french
fries. Now what am I going to do with it? Use it on Tommy's hair? If you want to know
more about the Tasty and its once-hallowed counter, check out our special feature
called Save The Tasty. As you've probably figured out by now, we
lost to the ruthless corporate schmoes at Cambridge Savings Bank.
FAQ #18: What do you do in your spare time?
Ray: I like gardening and woodworking. I can be found either puttering
around the house or asleep on the sofa in front of the TV with drool
running down my chin and the clicker in one hand.
Tom: I don't understand the concept of spare time. All my time is spare!
In fact, my son said to me recently "Dad, if you were on vacation, how
would you know?" Little wise ass.
FAQ #19: What kind of cars do you drive...really?
Tom: I drive a 1963 Dodge Dart convertible. No kidding. It's sleek,
it's black, and it's beautiful.
Ray: Until last fall, it was two-tone: snot green and rust colored. Then
one afternoon he sprayed it with a can of black Rustoleum.
Tom: I still think we should have taped up the windows first.
Ray: I, on the other hand, drive a thoroughly modern, fuel efficient 1987
Dodge Colt Vista.
Tom: That's better???
Ray: Are you kidding? The Colt Vista is a marvel of engineering.
Tom: Not to mention a study in ugliness.
Ray: I gave --or should I say foisted-- my '87 Dodge Dakota pickup on my
son, so I needed a car. And when a customer was about to junk this Colt
Vista, I bought it off her for $100. $3,000, two engine jobs, and a
catalytic converter later, I have a working car! It's also dirt brown, so
I never have to wash it.
FAQ #20: What kind of scenery do you like?
Ray: I love natural beauty. Maybe that's why I can't stand my brother.
I love the outdoors...the woods, the trees, the parks, the ocean....
Tom: ....the rabid racoons, the mosquitoes, the biting ants. I hate
nature. He's always trying to get me to go camping or cross country
skiing. Who in their right mind would want to cross the country on a pair
of skis??! Give me grit and grime. Give me people. Give me urban decay.
Give me a cup of coffee and a park bench and I'm happy.
Ray: Don't forget to give him some old newspapers so he can cover himself
and take a nap.
FAQ #21: Do you wear boxers or briefs?
Tom: I wear neither.
Ray: Right. His wife wraps him in an Ace bandage before he leaves the
house. I'm a "boxer" man myself.
FAQ #22: I've seen pictures of Tom. Is that his real hair?
Ray: Yes. He was the subject of some low level radioactive
experimentation in the 1950's, and that hair and his brain damage are the
two lasting legacies.
Tom: It actually is my hair. And the reason I'm usually late for morning
meetings is that I always have to wait for my hair to "stabilize."
FAQ #23: Did you two really go to MIT?
Ray: Oh, yeah. I remember it well. We went there once to deliver plants
to the lobby of the admissions office. They said "put 'em here," and we
left.
Tom: Actually, I graduated in 1958 with a degree in Chemical Engineering
and my brother barely graduated with a degree in General Science.
RAY: I was MIT class of '70, '71, and '72.
FAQ #24: Did either of you serve in the Armed Forces?
Ray: I didn't. I was a VISTA volunteer in San Antonio in the late 60's.
I was teaching poor kids to read and working on my mosquito swatting
skills.
Tom: I'm a product of the U.S. Army; Fort Dix, New Jersey. I-Company,
Fourth Training Regiment, October, 1959 until March, 1960. I'll never
forget the frequent words of my commanding officer, Seargent McNeely. He
had a southern drawl, and every Friday he would bellow: "Everybody will go
on pass this weekend except Prahh-vate Maaaaaaaglleeeeeohhhhzeeeee."
FAQ #25: Tom often says things like "When I was in Kuala Lumpur," or "when
I was in Canberra...." He seems very widely travelled. Was he ever in the
CIA?
Ray: He's widely travelled alright. When little kids see him on the
street, they travel around him as widely as they can and cry for their
mommies.
Tom: I was not only in the CIA, I was one of the founding fathers of the
Carburetor Institute of America. Oh, not that CIA? Actually I was a
consultant, and I was doing a lot of educational training overseas in the
1960's. It does sound like CIA work, doesn't it?
FAQ #26: How do I send you guys e-mail?
Tom: Every important department at Car Talk Plaza is linked directly via
e-mail to the "Talk to Car Talk E-Mail Center" here at cartalk.com.
Ray: So your e-mail is only one click away from sitting in a dead file
somewhere on our hard drive for the next three years.
FAQ #27: Why did you guys start a web site?
Ray: I was concerned about Tommy. I wanted to keep him out of trouble. You
know, he doesn't exactly have much to do with his time.
Tom: Plus, we found out our Barber had a web site, and we were jealous.
FAQ #28: Do you plan to keep doing your NPR radio show forever?
Tom: It hasn't been forever already?
Ray: It has to our listeners!
Tom: We'll do it as long as NPR wants us. We have a great time talking to
all those great people from all over the country.
Ray: Aside from having to sit next to my brother for an hour, it's the
highlight of my week.
FAQ #29: I can't e-mail you a twenty dollar bill. What is the snail mail address
I should use?
Tom: Until you can send fresh twenties as an attachment, use the following
address: Car Talk Plaza, Box 3500 Harvard Square, Cambridge, MA 02238.
Ray: If you're sending cash, be sure to highlight that fact on the envelope
so we remember to open it.
FAQ #30:What's your 800 call-in number?
Tom: Looking for your 15 minutes of fame? Give us a call at 888 CAR TALK (888-227-8255) to ask your car question.
For listeners outside the U.S., our number is (US Country Code) + 617-353-6350.
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