Readers of a certain vintage might be familiar with comedy
albums, commercials of Stan Freberg. His spoofs of Lawrence Welk,
Dragnet and
Harry Belafonte’s “Banana Boat” are
still funny more than half a century after they came to light. At
86, Freberg is still active in the entertainment industry.
Freberg is also well known for his satire as demonstrated in his
1961 album The United States of America: Volume 1: The Early
Years. Much of it is an indictment of the McCarthy Era as can
be heard when
Thomas Jefferson tries to convince Benjamin Franklin to sign The
Declaration of Independence. Freberg would later become a vocal
opponent of the Vietnam War as illustrated by this appearance on
The Dick Cavett Show.
But in 1980, late in the Carter years, Freberg set his sights on
the federal budget. The result was a PBS special called Stan
Freberg’s Federal Budget Revue which you can see here, here and here.
The program features appearances by the recently departed Ray
Bradbury (who describes the federal budget as “the greatest science
fiction I’ve ever read.”) and David Ogden Stiers (who is best
remembered for playing Major Winchester on M*A*S*H). It’s
mostly a musical. There’s one song called “The Great Bureaucracy”
which opens with this verse:
Make way for the great bureaucracy
Stand by for a War on Poverty
And though it’s possible you’re not poor, it’s true
You may be eligible before we’re through
Well, now that we’re a country that puts more people on Social
Security Disability Insurance than into jobs, Freberg’s words have
come to pass.
Back then the federal budget was $600 billion. Today, that
doesn’t even represent all the money President Obama has cut from
Medicare.
I wonder if Paul Ryan saw this on TV when he was 10-years
old.
Anyway, it’s well worth your time. If it doesn’t make you cry,
it’ll make you laugh.