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"Some chuckles and wry smiles."

Animating Click and Clack for TV

BOSTON - Tom and Ray Magliozzi, a.k.a. Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers of NPR's

Car Talk

, are just two low-ego lugs. That's why - familiar self-deprecating shtick aside - the boys' ambivalence about their new public television series rings seriously true.

"I hope that people look at it mercifully," says the younger, stockier, talkier Ray (Clack) about

As the Wrench Turns

, a half-hour series that wraps social and environmental messages inside an animated sitcom.

Premiering at 8 p.m. July 9 on PBS, the show follows Click and Clack's exploits cohosting a nationally syndicated radio show and running a car repair shop that mirrors their real-life Good News Garage in Cambridge, Mass. The show will air in two-episode blocks for five weeks.

But will the humor of

As the Wrench Turns

compare to what we've come to expect from Tom and Ray's hugely popular radio franchise - the most listened-to entertainment program on NPR?

"It's lame enough that people will laugh at some of the lame stuff," Ray says between bites of lunch on the patio of radio station WBUR-FM in Boston, where the Magliozzis tape

Car Talk

. "There will be some chuckles and wry smiles," he says as brother Tom (Click) looks on, cigar-smoking and chortling gently.

Tom and Ray voice their animated selves in the TV series, executive-produced by Howard Grossman. But

As the Wrench Turns

deviates from

Car Talk

's successful format. No phone calls from distressed car owners, no long bouts of brotherly banter, no silly signature "Puzzler" or "Stump the Chump" jokes. Instead, the show plays out like a family-friendly

Family Guy

or

The Simpsons

.

Story lines include Click and Clack's loony fund-raising efforts for their bankrupt radio network - which involves their joint run for the White House - plus outsourcing their radio show to India and creating the first-ever pasta-fueled motor vehicle.

And unlike their NPR series, which is definitely a two-personality affair,

Wrench

turns on an expanded cast of characters, including oddball auto mechanics Crusty, Fidel and Stash; perky young radio producer Beth; and the brothers' chunky female garage receptionist and bookie, Sal.

The Magliozzis had never done voice-over work before. But they "were one-take wonders," Grossman says.

And animation seemed the perfect solution to another dilemma. Radio stars that they are, Tom and Ray are hardly Hollywood-suave. Like homely Garrison Keillor of

A Prairie Home Companion

, and Bob Elliott and Ray Goulding, the dry-witted radio duo who sporadically dipped their toes into television from the 1950s into the '80s, the Magliozzis do not have majorly telegenic mugs.

It's their voices - Ray's sharp Boston accent and Tom's rich laugh - that compel.

Still, despite their mugly countenances, Tom and Ray have done their share of live-action TV, from stints on

60 Minutes

and

20/20

to a gig discussing the car of the future on the PBS science series

Nova

.

"All of those, whether they're live or live-on-tape, are a pain," Ray says. "In our experience it takes eight times longer to do TV than it does radio. So this is not a career move," he says of

Wrench

. "We have no aspirations. Let me make that clear."