
Iโm one of those oddballs who regularly listens to Car Talk despite not owning a car. We all know the showโs about much more than cars, though! Its hosts Tom Magliozzi, who died Monday, and his brother Ray doled out advice on dozens of subjects in the hours they spent with their 4 million listeners. The warmth and clever puns of โClick and Clack the Tappet Brothersโ quickly win you over, no matter whether you can distinguish a carburetor from a hub cap or not.
And they were early hackers! My own appreciation for them grew immensely when I learned that they were not just a couple of jokers on National Public Radio (NPR), but working mechanics, with a shop called the โGood News Garageโ in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where they were both born and schooled all the way through to MIT.
Did you know the brothers built one of the first community makerspaces within their garage? Their auto mechanicsโ shop began as a den of DIY called Hackerโs Haven. There, they shared tools and tips with all sorts of hands-on hippies who hauled in their hopeless heaps from throughout the greater Boston area.
You can hear Tom describe Hackerโs Haven in the brothersโ appearance on Fresh Air, much of which was rebroadcast Tuesday on a special memorial episode. Do go listen to that interview, as Tomโs delivery is great, but hereโs how Ray described Hackerโs Haven on the Car Talk website, and itโs a good insight to keep in mind for anyone starting a space for do-it-yourself anything.
We decided to open Hackerโs Haven to save Tommy from a life of vagrancy. This was the time when everyone was working on his own car, so we thought, and our idea was to open a garage where people could do their own work and weโd rent space and tools to them.
We knew our idea was brilliant and thought weโd have wheelbarrows full of money to show for it. Of course, the do-it-yourselfers who came in were such klutzes that we felt sorry for them, and weโd end up working on their cars for $2.50 an hour, which is what they were paying to supposedly do their own work. So we ended up fixing all the cars that came in. I mean, if some poor chump is spending all day trying to change his spark plugs, you canโt help but give him a hand. Consequently, we ended up helping everyone all the time, and we made no money at all. We started hiring people to help out, and eventually the place just sort of evolved into what is now, Rayโs Garage. It was fun, though. We had some incredible laughs and we met some great people. We also met some weirdos, dingbats and screwballs. We somehow managed to attract the most incredible mix of characters to Hackerโs Haven. This was Cambridge in the early โ70s, and there were some real wacked-out people around then (still are, for that matter).
If you miss Tom Magliozzi already, as I do, you may also want to give a read of the transcript of the brothersโ typically hilarious 1999 MIT Commencement Address, in which they describe how they used the schoolโs motto โNon impediti ratione cogitatonisโ (they translate this from the Latin as โUnencumbered by the thought processโ) as a mantra throughout their lives. The basic message: donโt make yourself miserable in a pre-planned life that you donโt enjoy. (Tom had this epiphany while nearly being killed in his MG on his way to work, and when he got there he promptly quit.) Make your own way, and whether or not that leads you to any kind of โsuccessโ, at least take this cue from Tom Magliozzi โ the best and most worthwhile thing you can do is to make us laugh.
(And, of course, whatever you do, donโt drive like his brother.)
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