Here's a question for everyone, it's a bit hard to explain. I was wondering how many appreciate Jack mostly as a facet of a time period they're interested in, or generally are interested in other music, comedy, literature, food, furniture, etc. of Jack's peak period, say late '20s through the 1940s.
I fully confess to having a good chunk of my entertainment and aesthetic preferences in the past, but largely they're post-WWII and pre-Vietnam era things, a generation or so after Jack's peak of radio creativity and popularity. So a lot of the guest stars, movies, etc. that are referenced or appear on Jack's show are a little outside my interests. I don't have anything against them, I'm just not as familiar with them as later stuff. Even my often-professed liking for Burns & Allen on these boards is mostly centered around their '50s TV show rather than the radio program. And strangely, loving the Benny show doesn't make me want to pursue that era a whole lot further!
For me, what strikes me about the Benny show is how incredibly fresh and modern it seems overall. The pacing, the gags, and the performances, I think, could compete easily with anything being offered up today.
So how many just like Jack because it's great, timeless stuff, and how many are into the show or Jack's work in a broader sense of nostalgia for the period - and by "nostalgia" I don't mean you necessarily literally remember the period fondly yourself, you just love the era? I'm sure there is overlap, but does anyone else just like Jack's show, and not necessarily the period it comes from? Or am I odd man out on this one?