ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
It's time now for your letters. On Friday, we told you about a 60-year-old Japanese man who, as a baby, was accidentally sent home from the hospital with the wrong family. His biological parents were wealthy. And the boy who went home with them went on to be president of a real estate company. Meanwhile, their true son went home with a poor working-class family and he spent most of his childhood living in a tiny apartment being raised by a single mother. And we said he wound up just being a truck driver.
Well, that word, just, angered a few of you, including Bob Smith of Winter Haven, Florida, himself a truck driver. He writes this: I have millions of safe miles behind the wheel of my truck. I'm very proud of what I do for a living. I haul food all over North America. We feed a hungry nation, Canada and Mexico, too. I am not just a truck driver.
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MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:
Last week, John Mayer stopped by our studio to play some new songs and to chat with guest host Ari Shapiro. Mayer has had some huge hits but, he said, he's also tried to find a balance between those hits in much smaller, riskier projects.
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BLOCK: Vickie Wolfe of Butler, Tennessee, writes: I've heard a lot of musician interviews in my time, but that was the most real one I've ever heard. It was stellar. It felt like Mayer and Shapiro were in the room with me.
SIEGEL: And Kathy Tully of Carmel, Indiana writes this: I'm not sure why I never cared about John Mayer as an artist or a singer until I heard his live interview tonight, coming home from Thanksgiving dinner. He was so engaging, reminded me of a younger Dylan. His hums and strums at the end of his songs were such a wonderful surprise. I am now a huge fan.
BLOCK: Well, whether you're huge fans of us or want to sound off about something you heard, we do want to hear from you. You can write to us by visiting NPR.org. Just click on contact at the very bottom of the page.
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SIEGEL: This is NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.