Tom and Ray Magliozzi, who’ve mixed humor with practical advice for car owners, have decided to park NPR’s most popular show. Public Radio will use clips to piece together new offerings for syndication. As you might expect, Click and Clack — as they call themselves — want to leave with a laugh. Here’s their release:
June 8, 2012; Our Fair City – Tom and Ray Magliozzi, aka Click and Clack the Tappet Brothers, the famous comedian mechanics who host NPR’s Car Talk, told their listeners this afternoon that as of this fall, they’ll no longer record new programs, but that the weekly call-in series will continue to be distributed by NPR drawing on material from their 25 years of show archives. The note from the Magliozzis to their listeners is in full at cartalk.com: www.cartalk.com/content/time-get-even-lazier
“My brother has always been ‘work-averse,’” says Ray, 63. “Now, apparently, even the one hour a week is killing him!”
“It’s brutal!” adds Tom, 74.
“My brother has always said, ‘Don’t be afraid of work. Make work afraid of you.’ And he’s done it. Work has successfully avoided him all his life,” says Ray.
The brothers have been taping Car Talk at WBUR in Boston for 35 years, and the show has been a staple on NPR Member stations for the last 25 years. With older brother Tom turning 75 this year, the guys decided it was time to “stop and smell the cappuccino.”
“We’ve managed to avoid getting thrown off NPR for 25 years, given tens of thousands of wrong answers and had a hell of a time every week talking to callers,” says Ray. “The stuff in our archives still makes us laugh. So we figured, why keep slaving over a hot microphone?”
NPR will continue to distribute the weekly show, an enormously powerful program in public radio, to stations across the country. Beginning in October, the Car Talk production team will actively produce new shows built from the best of its 25 years of material – more than 1,200 shows – with some updates from the brothers. The guys will also still write their twice weekly Dear Tom and Ray column, and put their feet in their mouths in surprising new ways on the web and Facebook.
“Tom and Ray have become icons to millions of fans, including me, over the last 25 years,” says NPR President & CEO Gary Knell. “I’m thrilled that they will continue to entertain and engage today’s fans and future fans for many years to come.”
Eric Nuzum, Vice President for NPR Programming, adds: “We’re certainly disappointed that they’re not going to do this forever. But despite their protestations about work, they’ve earned this. And they’re leaving us an incredible body of work that ranks up there with some combination of the Marx Brothers, Mark Twain, and Mr. Goodwrench. The work they did five and 10 years ago is just as funny now as it was then.”
Asked if they would consider coming back at some point and recording more new Car Talk shows, or doing something else on NPR, the brothers engaged in the type of back-and-forth that listeners know well:
RAY: “It’s possible. You never know.”
TOM: “Absolutely not. My brother can go chase himself.”
RAY: “Well, what’re you going to do with yourself?”
TOM: “I’m retiring.”
RAY: “If you retired…how would you know??”
The brothers will mark their 25th anniversary on the air this fall, and then put the series in the hands of their producers, who will continue to produce the show.
Tom and Ray ended their note to listeners with this: “Thank you for giving us far more of your time than we ever deserved. We love you. And know that starting this fall, for the first time, we’ll be able to sit at home, laughing at Car Talk along with you guys on Saturday mornings.”



I’ll miss them, but the bigger issue is how NPR will re-invent itself once Tom&Ray AND Garrison Keillor leave the scene. These shows *are* the brand, mostly.
Car Talk and Prairie Home Companion are part of an older NPR, with Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me bridging the gap to the newer shows like This American Life and RadioLab. There is no issue of how NPR will continue on or re-invent itself.
Except Radiolab and This American Life aren’t NPR (and neither is A Prairie Home Companion for that matter).
Susan Stamberg has an anecdote in her memoir. Apparently, when Car Talk was being considered by the powers at NPR, they weren’t sure that people would like it, and were going to pass, when Stamberg said “I have three words for you ‘Prarie Home Companion’”. They took on the show.
I’m sure they’ve kicked themselves any number of times about PHC.
Love those guys!
So long guys. I’ve heard them since their beginning on air back east. They’ve long devolved into self-parody – but, at least they were in on the joke unlike others who just THINK they are! Always good for a 10 minute spin on the radio once in a great while, even I couldn’t imagine sitting down listening to a full episode (let alone on a weekly basis).
Love those guys. Good luck boys! Interested in seeing more radio news here, but then again I guess it may not quite the website for it.
You will sorely be missed. I have been a fan since my days stationed in the navy at Naval Air Station, Brunswick, Maine in the early 80′s.
Have fun in retirement. Hopefully you will continue your web-site for the rest of us shady car mechanics. It has been a great ride. Thanks
It is November 17, and I am listening to Car Talk here in Honolulu. As far as I can tell, the program is live. Have Click and Clack decided not to retire, or is this program so well put together I can’t tell that it is not live?
Sure hope so. My wife and I have had a Saturday night date for many, many years listing to Car Talk at 5:00 Saturday night, followed by Prairie Home Companion at 6:00. We very, very seldom miss these programs.
I just heard last week from a friend visiting us in Florida that he had heard Tom and Ray were hanging up the Microphone. My response was No! Can’t be..not them it’s my favorite NPR show! So check the CarTalk website and sure enough they have been off since last fall and I did not even realize. So the re-mix idea is working! Although, I wish no one had told me that they had retired. I guess I just thought they would keep doing the show until you know they couldn’t fix their car to get into the studio. Many thanks Tom and Ray for 25 years of listening enjoyment! It truly has been a pleasure!
Best Regards,
Will
Osprey, FL