Early to Bed, Early to Rise
I spent my early years in East Cambridge (Our Fair City). I was the
quiet little brother, and for as long as I can remember Tom was 12
years older than me. In fact, he still is. Tom and our sister, Lucille,
to this day say they didn't notice me until I was about five years old.
Mom claimed one morning Tom came into the kitchen and said, "Hey, who's
this little kid who's always following me around?"
I can't say that I remember much from my early childhood, except it was wonderful. I had everything a kid could want: two square meals a day and a basket to sleep in and an imaginary dog. I do remember one thing, however. Mom always had us in bed at 7:00. If I were any kind of a person today, I'd
be working this out in therapy. I never got to watch TV or do any of
those fun things the other kids did. I'd lie in bed, and wafting
through the window I would hear the sounds of my playmates outside.
Talk about breaking a kid's heart. I was all tucked in with my blankie
on a warm summer night, and they were frolicking in the streets. I
think Tommy had to do the same thing too; I'm not sure. As a result of
this, Tommy and I refuse to go to bed. When it's time to go to bed, you
won't find us anywhere near a bed or under the covers. Sofas, chairs,
kitchen table, you name itanywhere but under the covers.
Grandma Pockets the Dough
I got my start in show business when I was four or five. My grandmother
(Mom's mom) lived with us, and Grandma's job was the shopping. Every day she and I would make the rounds to the bakery, the butcher shop, the
grocery store, etc., and at each stop it was up to me, little Raymie, to get
out there and sing and dance for all the other grandmothersall in
Italian. Yep, I'd sing these songs from the Old Country, and all the
old ladies would go nuts. They would throw all this money at me. Of
course, my grandmother would pretend that I was getting it all. Then
when everyone left, she'd pocket most of it. She would keep 90 percent and
give me 10 percent. She didn't understand the agent-talent relationship. All
that change probably paid for that Lincoln Continental she bought.
I was a chunky little tyke. Mom says that Dad always wanted to call me
Chunky, but there was already a candy bar with that name so they settled
on Chucky, which is what I've been called, it seems, forever. I have cousins
who to this day don't know my real name. No kidding.
Taking Things Apart
For as long as I can remember, I've loved to take things apart to see
how they work, and as a kid I'd take things apart and put them back
together again over and over. That was my hobby. Take it apart; put it
back together again. We were lucky the Museum of Science was right down
the street from where we used to live, and Dad and I would go there
almost every weekend. I got interested in becoming a scientist.
Overall, I was pretty quiet as a kid, and my childhood consisted of
standing around and watching Tommy take his car apart and then watching
him desperately trying to put it back together again. Tommy owned a
number of cars while we were growing up, all of which, as you might suspect, were complete junkboxes, veritable heaps of automotive refuse. Some things never change.
Hide and Seek on the Mean Streets
When I wasn't hanging out with Tommy, I was playing all the regular
school-kid games. We didn't have a park or playground to play in, and
we certainly didn't have any grass. Our park was the street. We played
hide-and-seek and tag and stickball and, later on, spin the bottle.
That was my favorite. Well, actually, playing doctor was my real
favorite.
But our neighborhood was great because we had a million kids. I could
literally walk out the door and there would be kids everywhere to play
with. It was great. The city was a lot of fun. You had the nice kids,
the jerks, the weirdos, the tough kidsand I really got a lesson on how
to deal with all kinds of kids. This may be the single most important
thing that kids don't get if they grow up in the suburbs, where everyone is
pretty much the same.
In the city you have to deal with everyone. There were some mean kids,
and there were some really nice ones too. One of the first kids I met
was from Italy. This occurred during one of my many years in
kindergarten. This young fellow didn't speak any English, and he wore
these funny clothes and little sandalsa lot like Tommy dresses today,
come to think of it. I spoke a little Italian from all those songs I
had to learn to buy Grandma that Lincoln. So we became fast friends
until I moved away from Cambridge in fifth grade. One day, 20 years
later, he came into the garage to fix his car, and, of course, I
recognized him immediately. He was still wearing those stupid little
sandals. It was nice to get reacquainted. We're now best of friends
again, and of course his English is much better.
Heartbreak: A Different Alice Hughes
I went to the Gannett School for seven years. It was right around the
corner from our house. It was a four-room schoolhouse, kindergarten
through third grade. You do the mathone teacher for each grade. By
the way, my siblings and our mother went to the same school, and I think
we all had the same teachers. Anyway, my favorite teacher of all time
was Alice Hughes. I had her for second grade and again for third grade,
or maybe I was in second grade twice; I don't remember. Anyway, many
years later at the garage, a customer named Mark Hughes came in and
said, "My mother would like to bring her car in." So I say, "Sure, what's
her name?" He says, "Alice. She's a retired schoolteacher. She used to
teach right here in Cambridge a long time ago." And I thought, This must
be the Alice Hughes that I loved. So one day this little old lady comes
into the garage, and I introduce myself. "Mrs. Hughes? Hi, I'm Ray
Magliozzi. I think I had you as a teacher." She took one look at me
and said, "No, I don't think so, sonny." Ah, it was a different Alice
Hughes. I was positively heartbroken. I had been all prepared to cry
in her arms and tell her about my pathetic little life. What a bummer.
The Third Brother: My Sister
My sister Lucille was a complete blank as far as I was concerned. I
barely remember her. She was never home. I do recall very vividly, however, that she and Mom used to fight all the time. You see, Sis was a
slob. And I remember many times when my mother would open up Lucille's
bedroom window and throw all of her stuff onto the street. Her room was
a mess, though, and I honestly can't say that she didn't deserve it.
Remember those pictures of the houses in Florida that got hit by
Hurricane Andrew? That's what Lucille's room used to look like all the
time stuff all over the place. Every once in a while, Mom would get
sick of it and toss everything out onto the street. Lucille would come
home and see all her clothes and books and stuff strewn about the
neighborhood, and then it was her turn to rant and rave. What a circus.
When I wasn't being amused by this, I would spend my time with Tommy,
and even though I was just the little kid brother, he used to take me
everywhere. He didn't always bring me back; he just took me places.
He'd leave me there and I'd have to find my way home. By the time I
was seven, I had learned all the bus and subway routes in the entire
city.
Now, I know this is my bio, but I'm going to include something
that should have been in Tommy's bio which I'm sure he forgot to
include. When my brother graduated from college, he joined the army for
six months. I think they call it the reserves. Then for the next seven
years he was supposed to go to summer camp. Well, one year he reported
to Camp Drum in New York, and they didn't have his papers. They didn't
know who he was or where he was supposed to be. So he got in his car
and he came home. They never called him back. Now that this tidbit of
military intelligence is out, the Department of Defense is certainly
going to come looking for him. "Magliozzi, you owe us seven years of
summer camp." I can't wait.

Anyway, because my brother went to MIT, I guess it was predetermined
that I would go there too. I had no choice. And while I was there I
studied everything and really learned nothing, and I eventually
graduated from MIT in 1972. I ended up with a degree in humanities and
science. MIT is known for its humanities program. After all, with a
name like Massachusetts Institute of Technology, you know they must have
a splendid humanities department.
Sophomore Year "Abroad"
I took a year off in the middle of my MIT education and joined VISTA,
the Volunteers in Service to America program. It was my sophomore year
abroad, except I didn't go abroad; I went to Texas. And we did things
like organize high school equivalency programs for adults, and some community organizing. It was pretty enlightening, all in allbasically we were radicals causing trouble.
Most importantly, it was where I met my future wife, Monique. Actually,
we met in Norman, Oklahoma. We were doing all these little VISTA training games together. We met rappelling off a mountainside. I kid you not. I (cleverly) asked her to marry me while I was holding her safety line. She accepted, of course. We came back to Cambridge and got married, and Monique worked my way through a couple of senior years at MIT.
A Magliozzi in the North Woods
After college, I decided I wanted to try teaching. Why? Well, I knew I
could do a better job than most of my teachers had done. So I got a job
teaching science to unsuspecting kids in Bennington, Vermont.
We froze our butts off. We couldn't wait to get out of there. Between
the snow, the mud season, and the black flies, it was too much for us to
handle. I will admit that I really did enjoy the fall. Fall in Vermont
is awesome, all two weeks of it. But, man, winter sure comes on quickly
and with a fury, and it stays a long time. My Mediterranean heritage
just wouldn't allow it. What made matters worse was that Vermonters
really weren't very friendly. I think you have to have a few
generations buried there before they'll really accept you. It's
probably different now, but we were definitely considered to be
interlopers back then. Not only did we come from "someplace else," but
we had funny-sounding last names and I had this Cuban-looking dark
skin. They probably thought I was smuggling cigars from Havana. So
they didn't like me.
How I Saved Thomas from a Life of Indolence and Vagrancy
So there we were, Monique and I, in Bennington, Vermont, freezing all of
our appendages off. At about the same time, Tom became self-unemployed. He was basically a bum, and he spent his days hanging out in Harvard Square drinking coffee. I knew the best way to keep him
out of trouble was to get him working, and Mom called me every day,
begging me to rescue him. We decided to open Hacker's 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 we'd rent space and tools to
them.
We knew our idea was brilliant and thought we'd 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 we'd 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 can't 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 Ray's 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 Hacker's Haven. This was Cambridge in the early '70s, and there were some real wacked-out people around then (still are, for that matter).
I'll never forget this one guy, Joe Schram. We had this huge coffeepot that held 75 cups, and I swear he must have had 40 cups of coffee from that thing each time he was there. As you might imagine, by the end of the day he was flying. I mean really flying. The longer he stayed, the faster he worked. Then one day Joe told us that he had to finish his car that day because he had to leave the state. Why? Well, he was being pursued by space aliens. Sure
enough, he worked on that car all day, drinking coffee with one hand,
turning the wrenches with the other. Amazingly, the thing started up.
We watched as he drove his car out the door, stepped on the brake pedal,
and crashed that wreck into the building across the street. I'm sure
those aliens caught up with him, because we never saw him again.
Monique, Andrew, Louie, Philly and a Cat Named Doug.
Monique and I have two kids: Andrew's 23 and Louie's 32. Lou is married with two young boys of his own -- Lucas and, yes, another Raymond. He is also the proud owner of a health food store not far from Our Fair City. Drew is still a bachelor (we are getting the pork chop ready!) but has demonstrated some un-Magliozzi-like competence by starting his own Boston-based tutoring company.
Our most successful offspring is Scout, our border collie. Under Monique's diligent coaching, Scout has been making a name for herself among the elite of the doggy-agility world. Sadly, our other pet, Dougie the cat, named by Drew after our esteemed Producer, recently went to the litter box in the sky.
These days I pretty much run the garage and work on Car Talk. The garage
is still very much a full-time job. I get there at 8:00 in the morning
or so and don't leave until, oh, maybe 9:00 in the morning. (Just
kidding. I'm there all day). I have four guys working at the garage,
if you count both humans and subhumans. I'm still very much involved,
and I still enjoy taking things apart and putting them back together
again. Except now I can do it and actually charge for it. And I've
gotten better at it over the years. Every time I do a job I have fewer
and fewer parts left over. What a great feeling! And, of course,
there's Car Talk too. That consists of doing the show, driving all the
new cars that come out, and trying frantically to come up with a mediocre
new Puzzler each week. I spend most of my time avoiding memos from Dougie. He's always trying to professionalize
us. If you've heard the show recently, you know he hasn't had a whole
lot of luck, and I'm doing my best at avoiding his advice.

Ray Magliozzi