Jb 1936 06 21 Last Show Of The Season Vacation Plans
# The Jack Benny Program: June 21, 1936 - Last Show of the Season
As the mercury climbs and America looks toward summer relief, Jack Benny bids farewell to his eager listeners with a rollicking final broadcast of the season. Picture the NBC studio alive with anticipation—Jack at the microphone, his impeccable timing ready to deliver, while the orchestra warms up for what promises to be a raucous celebration of vacations, travel mishaps, and Jack's characteristically stingy plans for beating the heat without spending a dime. Will he actually take Mary Livingstone anywhere, or will she spend the summer fuming in his shadow? What ridiculous economy measures will he propose? The tension builds as the show opens—you can practically hear the studio audience leaning forward in their seats, ready to roar with laughter. This is appointment radio at its finest, the culmination of months of weekly entertainment before the summer doldrums arrive.
By 1936, *The Jack Benny Program* had become the gold standard of American comedy, a show that could make the nation laugh in unison during lean economic times. Jack's deadpan delivery and his carefully constructed persona—the vain, perpetually thirty-nine-year-old cheapskate—offered audiences a mirror to their own struggles while delivering pure comedic relief. The supporting cast had gelled into perfection: Mary Livingstone as his long-suffering romantic interest, Don Wilson as the proud announcer, and the musicians who doubled as comedic foils. In 1936, as Depression-era America cautiously entertained hopes for recovery, Jack Benny's show represented a reliable escape into sophisticated, intelligent humor.
Don't let this treasure slip away! Tune in now and experience the charm that made radio comedy legendary, hearing Jack's unmistakable voice and the roar of a studio audience experiencing live comedy gold.