As a regular listener of the Jack Benny programs, I sometimes almost feel like it's all actually taking place today (or perhaps that I've been transported back then). I realize that I'm getting a much larger dose of Jack than the audiences of his day ever did because I usually listen to a program going to or coming home from work - I don't think they had syndicated reruns back then. But there is a bit of a time warp quality when the regular guests stars you hear and laugh with are long dead (and sometimes long forgotten) and when current references are made to entertainers like Al Jolson and Laurel and Hardy, and to political figures like Roosevelt and Churchill. The mere mention of Fred Allen will bring a smile to my face when, just a few months back, I had barely heard of Allen. In my progression through the Benny program, I'm up to mid-1943 and I find myself getting familiar with government food rationing, coupons, victory gardens, scrap metal collections, the progress of the war, and other aspects of WWII America in a way that I never quite had before. Much earlier, during Jack's Chevrolet days in the early 1930s, I found that I actually paid attention to the weekly car sales figures that the pre-Don announcer spoke of because he made you feel you were a part of Chevy's and America's recovery from the Depression.
I guess it's either the magic of radio or maybe I'm just listening a little too much to these old programs.