PZ's Podcast
Summary: From "Telstar" to "Vault of Horror", from Rattigan to Kerouac, from the Village of Bray to the Village of Midwich, help PZ link old ancient news and pop culture. I think I can see him, "Crawling from the Wreckage". Will he find his way? This show is brought to you by Mockingbird! www.mbird.com
Podcasts:
Had to do this one. Victor Hugo is great. "Victor Hugo" the Phenomenon seems like another turn of Journey's "Wheel". (Listen and you'll find out why.) Nevertheless, I had fun doing this and hope you like it. Karen Carpenter (R.I.P.) helped me. Mr. Leitch, too.
This is an experiment. It's a true story, from the true-life adventures, tho' I truly wish it never happened. Is PZ trying for a James Agee moment? Maybe so. Podcast 129 is dedicated to Adrienne Parks.
This is an experiment. It's a true story, from the true-life adventures, tho' I truly wish it never happened. Is PZ trying for a James Agee moment? Maybe so. Podcast 129 is dedicated to Adrienne Parks.
This podcast is not just about another movie, the 1973 musical version of "Lost Horizon". It's about Reflections of yourself, the divine Approach when "I Come to You", and the Things I Will Not Miss. The movie's an incongruous knockout. This is because it's about Life.
This podcast is not just about another movie, the 1973 musical version of "Lost Horizon". It's about Reflections of yourself, the divine Approach when "I Come to You", and the Things I Will Not Miss. The movie's an incongruous knockout. This is because it's about Life.
Look within yourself, look inside the Black Cauldron. If you take the time to Drag the Line, you'll almost definitely find your hope, even joy. Let the bells ring, and let's Listen to the Music.
Look within yourself, look inside the Black Cauldron. If you take the time to Drag the Line, you'll almost definitely find your hope, even joy. Let the bells ring, and let's Listen to the Music.
So what are you DOING with the rest of your life? Does a satisfactory answer exist to the question? Johnny Mathis (and Michel Legrand) can give us an assist here; as well as the Man himself, direct from "Christmas Island".
Suffering, Transitoriness, and Insubstantiality: three marks of being that seem beyond dispute, at least from the perspective of experience. To be sure, the last, insubstantiality, takes some unpacking. Podcast 126 drinks some Matthew's Southern Comfort, and makes common cause with The Peanut Butter Conspiracy.
Suffering, Transitoriness, and Insubstantiality: three marks of being that seem beyond dispute, at least from the perspective of experience. To be sure, the last, insubstantiality, takes some unpacking. Podcast 126 drinks some Matthew's Southern Comfort, and makes common cause with The Peanut Butter Conspiracy.
In the spirit of the J. Geils Band, 'Sinuhe the Egyptian' spent his entire life looking for it. A proto-hippie, an inspired near-mad man (not across the water), gave Sinuhe the answer. The result was elation, and courage, and even creation. And for me. And for you?
In the spirit of the J. Geils Band, 'Sinuhe the Egyptian' spent his entire life looking for it. A proto-hippie, an inspired near-mad man (not across the water), gave Sinuhe the answer. The result was elation, and courage, and even creation. And for me. And for you?
Here's a Sixth Sense! Galsworthy sheds light -- but where did it come from? -- and jump-starts us "Going Up The Country".
Here's a Sixth Sense! Galsworthy sheds light -- but where did it come from? -- and jump-starts us "Going Up The Country".
John Galsworthy's play "A Bit O'Love" (1915) and his novel "Saint's Progress" (1919) diagnose the problem and also the possibility inherent in parish ministry, and especially within parish clergy. Galsworthy gives his readers a shattering exercise but also a hopeful one. So we just want to say: Goodbye, Columbus !