PZ's Podcast
By PZ
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Podcast Description
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
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Episode 96 - Strack-Billerbeck | "Disputed Passage" (Lloyd C. Douglas) is what this podcast is not. There are any number of issues to talk about, yet so many are so particuar, and rally around themselves all kinds of differing opinions. I'd rather do -- that is, try to do in a small way -- something of what Claude Berri actually did in "Jean de Florette/Manon of the Spring" (1986), which was, in his own words, to scrape down to the universal: our human nature and suffering, in common -- the tie that binds. After this cast, I am taking a short break. But it's really just "pre-production" time, for the next season of, "Fireball XL 5". | 2/11/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 95 - Bedknobs and Broomsticks | Causes and activisms -- "Bedknobs and Broomsticks" -- look so promising. Yet why do they rarely satisfy, even in the day of victory? This episode concerns the percentage of life that is inward, and the susceptibility to being taken over by anger which horizontal self-transcendence exposes us to. It also talks about the body's message, when threatened with illness: that "what lies beneath" is, well, everything. I'm speaking here to poor 'Bill', the character in "Matinee" (1993), who's turning into an ant; and discovers, when it's too late, that "Life is no picnic". | 2/11/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Mini Podcast 94 - My New Program | Language changes, changes, changes. "Elle coule, coule, coule." Like a simple but undeviating "conversation" at the drive -through window of the bank. Or like the use of the word "program". "Program" doesn't mean a Lenten series anymore. It doesn't mean what it used to mean. It means something else now. So I need your help, to devise a more robust program than just another pot luck. | 2/3/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 93 - Falsification | "Falsification" is another word for compartmentalization. When we falsify reality -- as in "being untrue", either to a person or to convictions that we (otherwise) hold sincerely -- we get, well, what we deserve. The New Testament gets falsified all the time; and the obloquy which falsification, when found out, gets us, clouds everything -- not to mention the very goods we actually could give. Those goods are Reality and Mercy. This podcast goes from Cozzens (don't worry) to Christians to lawyers to "Perfidia" to "Band of Gold". But mainly, it goes out to ... me and you. | 2/3/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 92 - G-d | "Kuh-hay-tchuh-pek". It means 'God', or rather G-d, in Martian. You can find out all about "Kuh-hay-tchuh-pek" in the now Criterioned 1964 movie "Robinson Crusoe on Mars". "Kuh-hay-tchuh-pek" is God, and a very right and proper God, too. He is Divine Order, but He is also a Nice Guy. This podcast is about G-d. I hope you'll like Him. | 2/1/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 91 - Sequels | Sequels are strange: sometimes they're better than the original, most of the time they're worse. What makes a good sequel? "The Empire Strikes Back", for example; or "The Invisible Man Returns"; or "The Ghost of Frankenstein". Well, preaching -- I mean preaching in the formal sense, i.e., preaching in churches -- is a study in sequels. When you preach a sermon, you're in a long succession. It goes all the way back to the Sermon on the Mount. That was a good one. Most of its sequels, however, don't seem to have the same power. They tend to be soon forgotten. I want to learn from "The Invisible Man's Revenge", and "Ghost", and "Hand" (you know what I mean) in order to know what makes a good sequel. This is a podcast on the art and science of preaching. | 1/27/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 90 - "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life" | It's a great song: "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?" This podcast is about career, however, and not about the more important thing: romance. I want to say that the best profession you can choose -- and this would be true at the start of your career, or later on, when you want to make a change, or towards the end, when it's still not too late -- is that of a religious psychologist. A religious psychologist can be a doctor or a nurse; a minister, priest, or rabbi; a painter or writer -- a creative person of almost any stripe; a farmer or a baker or a gardener; a teacher or academic of several (though not all) passions. Probably not a seeker after material wealth, or political power, or the physical beauty of one's own charms. But the phrase does cover a lot of possibilities. Choose one. | 1/27/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 89 - Pacific Overtures | This is about a personal handicap -- a "manque" or lack -- by which predator drones seem to look different to me than to the 99% of one's friends and acquaintances whom I have failed to convince concerning them. Steven Spielberg's recent praise of a little movie (precious!) made in 1958, entitled "The Space Children", helped me understand, for the first time, that my handicap is an actual disability. Cozzens once wrote that "youth is an infirmity". This is what got me so off the track in relation to predator drones. I understand that now. | 1/22/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 88 - Tana and Tahrir | I don't believe in "reality", or rather, I believe what looks like reality is seldom reality. This can be easily proved by a quick viewing of ... "The Mummy Ghost" (1944). Once look at that wonderful movie is able to confer an accurate understanding of reality. This is because "The Mummy's Ghost" 's reality IS reality. Podcast 88 concerns Kharis, Tana Leaves, and the Arab Spring. P.S. From Kerouac: " 'Facts' are sophistries." | 1/20/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 87 - Bette Davis Eyes | They are all, like Ray Milland, "The Man with the X-Ray Eyes" -- these Huguenot heroes: Marot, Duplessis-Mornay, de Beze, de Coligny, de Rohan, d'Aubigne. That includes their English co-religionists, such as Whitgift and Abbott and Grindal. These are eyes of defeat, eyes that convey an end to self-reference, eyes of a markedly ego-less state. You simply have to undergo defeat, have to, in order to, well, become a little child. Old ancient wisdom. | 1/19/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 86 - Supermarionation II | This podcast tries to go a little deeper with Supermarionation. It is really about social class, and the kind of alliance that inevitably imperils a religion whose goal is emancipating the human race. We start with "It Happened One Night", then chart our way north, to an old surprising hymn. | 1/11/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 85 - Protestant Episcopalians in Supermarionation | Can the mind of man and woman conceive that the subject of Episcopal haberdashery in the movies might be interesting and meaningful? Well, yes, it might be, at least to me. This podcast surveys Protestant Episcopal clothing in the movies and television. We travel in our sound machine from "The Bishop's Wife" to "Family Plot" to "Night of the Iguana" to "The Sandpiper"; and we end up on British tv -- in Supermarionation. Maybe this is completely unimportant. Then again... I dedicate the cast to Fred Rogers, fellow pilgrim and dialogue partner. | 1/10/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 84 - Yvette Vickers (f. 4.27.11) | Yvette Vickers played supporting roles in two unforgettable 1950's science-fiction movies: "Attack of the 50 Foot Woman" and "Attack of the Giant Leeches". As far as I'm concerned, she stole the show both times. But, Yvette Vickers is now dead. Or rather, she was found dead, on the 27th of April last year (201l). The conditions under which she was found, and the conditions under which she apparently lived her life near the end of it, evoke floods of compassion. They simply have to. How could this have happened? How could Yvette Vickers, our once-and-future (saucy) flame, have ended that way? This podcast -- I wouldn't mind calling it pastoral -- is an attempt to understand. | 1/9/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 83 - I'm younger than that now | Why does Jacques Demy pump me up just now more than George Bell? Bell was a very great man -- probably the truest Anglican Christian of his half-century. But Demy -- he was untouched by "issues". The Sixties, as a cultural moment, seems to have passed him by.. Demy focussed on the family, and especially on the course of romantic love, in and out of families. He was also interested in Chance, and how decisive its role can be. (I would call this Providence, but "n'importe quoi".) Odd: Demy's intimacy means more, in my present moment, than Bell's great import. | 1/3/12 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 82 -- Speaking in Tongues | This is a theme with me -- the pros and cons (there aren't many cons) of learning foreign languages. Also, how does it actually work? Why is one language easier for a given person to learn than another? Also, what's the relatiion between learning a language to read, and learning a language to speak? And why is psychology so important, personal psychology, in the acquisition of a foreign 'tongue'? Here is 50 years' experience of pain and suffering (and altered states) rolled up into a single half hour. | 12/28/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 81 - Violette amoureuse | From our house to your house, at the Turning of the Year: a portrait of the dignity that is able to inhere within romantic love -- sometimes. The subject is a short scene, a musical number really, in a late Jacques Demy, "Une Chambre en Ville" (1982). You can YouTube it by typing in "Violette amoureuse". I have faith you will be richly repaid. Try to marry a 'Violette' if you possibly can -- or, if it's too late, tell your children about her. | 12/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 80 - I'll catch the sun | "Are you experienced?" (Hendrix) Or rather, Are you a sentimentalist? Well, I hope you are, at least deep down. This podcast includes two live-performances of Rod McKuen's impressive song of yore, entitled "I'll catch the sun". How could you not fall for it -- hate yourself or not ! -- hook, line and sinker? | 12/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 79 - Would you speak up, please? | Why am I "afraid to say what I really want to say" (Jack Kerouac)? That's a line from "Visions of Gerard", and many could echo it. This podcast is about changing mores, specifically the contrast between a sensational murder case of the 1930s and a sensational case of recent times. Then there's Ken Russell's "The Devils" (197), a charming little movie -- and the shifting sands of killing inquisition. Maybe I should quit while I'm ahead. | 12/16/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 78 - Under Satan's Sun | This is PZ's Christmas Podcast. | 12/11/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 77 - Canned Heat | What constitutes you, as a human being? What are the parts which make you the whole you are? A single sentence from Huxley's "After many a summer dies the swan" can help, together with Fritz Lang's "Woman in the Moon". It's not about the ego. I am so sorry that human education pumps up that flat tire. Is there another way to educate ... ourselves? | 12/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 76 - Lounge Crooner Classics | I'm shooting for quality today. In the spirit of earlier podcasts concerning Giant Crab Movies and Journey,this podcast concerns what might today be called "Lounge Crooner Classics". In their day, they were pop songs commissioned to be played over the credits of movies and then sold as singles. We're talking about "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea" by Frankie Avalon; "Journey to the 7th Planet" by Otto Brandenburg; "The Lost Continent" by The Peddlers; and "The Vengeance of She" by Robert Field. These are absurd performances of human art and commerce pitched to the highest possible degree. At least in my opinion. Moreover, they can help you with your anger! Few things do more to diminish anger than a feel for the absurd. This podcast is intended to help the speaker, and the listener, with his or her anger. "Come with me, And take a Voyage, To the Bottom, Of the Sea." | 11/26/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 75 -- KISS | Fiction, for me, communicates better than exposition. I used to not think that. I thought that straight exposition of ideas or principles clarified, whereas fiction, or parable, or story left things too open. The facts proved me wrong! To wit, when I would preach, it was usually the illustration, not my deathless and stirring summation of theological truth, that people remembered. Illustrations, in preaching, became the "heavy lifting", not the assertion, nor even the text itself in many cases. Recently, one saw this again -- I'm trying to sound like Aldous Huxley -- in connection with a comparison of two of his books. One is a novel, from 1944; and the other is a related compilation of quotations, from the same period. The novel is better than the compilation, and by a country mile. Why is this so? | 11/23/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 74 - "Please Come to Boston" | I tried to follow the invitation of that song recently. Saw a lot of things, found out a lot of things, remembered a lot of things, heard a couple of new things. It was a definite pilgrimage. I would like to tell you about it. | 11/22/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 73 - When I'm 64 | Can the "young" be instructed by the "old"? Can Nigel Kneale's "Planet People" be even saved by the over 70s? To put this another way, are there two messages to life: one for the first half and another for the second? Ultimately, no. There is one message. Alack! : It comes through suffering. Pump up the volume. | 11/3/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 72 - Making Plans for Nigel | Nigel Kneale (1922-2006) was absolute murder, in the Reggae sense. No writer of English science fiction thought more originally than Nigel Kneale, who mostly wrote teleplays for the BBC. His "Quatermass (pro. 'Kway-ter-mass') and the Pit" from 1959 attempted to explain the whole history of religion via Martians. It strangely works. Kneale's "Quatermass" (1979) showed how the "young" are unable to save themselves from generational self-slaughter. Only "seniors" can save 'em! There's a lot to Kneale, He's one other of those unusual humanists who understood about Original Sin. These rare birds -- they're all "murder" -- have much to tell us. | 10/31/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 71 - Removals Men II | Rejoicing at someone's execution, in "disturbing images", is hard enough to absorb. To add the unaccountable silence of Christians in relation to such joy is almost impossible to absorb. What's to love in this world, in this planetary race of not so human beings? We're hoping to get a little help today from Harnack and Huxley. (Wonder what would have happened if they'd ever met? I feel almost certain that Holl, Harnack's A student, would have liked Huxley.) | 10/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 70 - Removals Men | This is about the use of language to cover an uinpleasant reality. It's not just about the "removal" of an al awlaki or a "new chapter in the history of Libya" accomplished by means of the murder of a POW who was captured alive. It's about resigning yourself to something you cannot change. | 10/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 69 - Pipes of Pan | Arthur Machen meets St. Matthew's Gospel, Chapter 11, Verses 16-19. You can try to make your voice heard with an engaging, danceable tune, and it will pass like a shadow over the water.. (Think "Men Without Hats".) Or you can try it in a shrill, scratchy key, and it will still be forgotten, fast. (Thiink P.J. Proby .) Whether it flops or not, however, that's not the point . Someone will probably eventually hear it, and take it up. Think Joe Meek. | 10/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 68 - The Inward Voice, Pt. 2 | There is nothing quite like the Inward Voice of 'Mark Rutherford', the novelist whose real name was William Hale White. He wore a mask over a mask, and his six novels constitute a kind of ultimate Inward Voice within Victorian fiction. Today we look at his "Revolution in Tanner's Lane" (1890), which reveals the worst and also the best of the Romans 7 understanding of human nature. Cradled in this unique book -- "Revolution" -- is a message I think the world's gotta hear. I don't think it ever will, but STILL 'MarkRutherford' committed his Inward Voice to paper, and we know a lot more about ourselves because of him.. | 10/9/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 67 - The Inward Voice, Pt. 1 | Here is a two-parter concerning your inward voice: What is it, and how do you find it? From a Romans 7 point of view, the inward voice (and voices) is almost all that matters. Now get it down! Write it down! Put it on paper, or else it'll probably just "Fade Away" (Rolling Stones). This is personal archaeology, yours and mine, and it involves digging, and lifting. | 10/9/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 66 - Altars by the Roadside | Now here's a find: a passage in the novel "Revolution in Tanner's Lane" (1890) by 'Mark Rutherford' (aka William Hale White), in which the author answers the question I set in the previous cast. If there is a word from religion to the middle-aged and "mature" -- i.e., a word of humbled acquiescence to the disillusioned and shaken -- what is religion's word to the young? Can the same message of experienced wisdom and non-identification, which seems able to communicate with immediacy to the shattered, have something to say to the young and engaged, to the active members of this world, all "wishin' and hopin'" and working and fretting? The Rev. Thomas Bradshaw, the genuine-article preacher in Mark Rutherford's great book, offers a word to "My young friends" (p. 268) that is a mighty dart to the young but shot from an old man's quiver. In this cast, let me read you what Mr. Bradshaw has to say, then you tell me whether it answers the practical question. | 10/5/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 65 - One Message or Two? | Does life-wisdom offer the same message to the non-disillusioned, who are often on the younger side, as it does to the disillusioned, who are often over-50? It's a live issue for me, since a gospel of hope to the shattered can sound depressing to people who are working on wresting something like success from life. Interestingly, many religious pioneers, from Pachomius to Zwingli, from Clare to the "Little Flower", were young when they received a message of negation, but also a new and different theme of affirmation. Is there a philosophical link between "Build Me Up, Buttercup" (The Foundations) and "The Levee's Gonna Break" (Dylan)? That's the subject of this podcast. | 10/1/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 64 - My New Law Firm | My new law firm is called "Scrambling, Rattled, and Bracing, P.A.". It is a firm devoted to the project of complete control. It helps me "scramble" to contain unexpected problems; prevents me from getting "rattled" by unexpected threats; and gets me "braced" in anticipation of feared outcomes. In other words -- you guessed it -- my new law firm helps me get control of my life. I pay it to get me ready for every eventuality. Oddly, though, it hasn't worked as well as I had hoped. I'm still scrambling, I still get rattled, and I spend every weekend bracing for Monday. But hey ! : I've got hopes. If I can just get a little control ... | 9/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 63 - One Step Beyond | This ancient show, much of which is now richly available on YouTube, let alone DVD, understood something important. It understood about the "collective unconscious" and the nature of the Love that exists underneath human loves. The several great episodes in this terse ancient treasure, from 1959 to 1961, depict reality so unflinchingly that you can barely look --- and, the underlying reality of God. I actually think "One Step Beyond" is a profounder prototype for "Touched by an Angel". Plus, the music! -- especially Harry Lubin's theme entitled "Weird". Not his "Fear", which you've heard a hundred times; but his "Weird". And here's the 'Dean's Question' for this podcast: How did William James decide to define God? | 9/18/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 62 - What part of you isn't angry? | Anger -- it's everywhere. The question is, at whom or at what are you NOT angry? Well, you can't be angry at anyone or anything you love. Or rather, you can't be angry at that part of anyone or anything that you love. This podcast is about seismic anger -- into which the internet is just a current window. Every age has its window. This podcast hunts for an answer. | 9/10/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 61 - Sex isn't Everything | If you under-estimate the importance of sex, you'll fail to understand your own actions, let alone your thoughts. If you try to put some kind of 'paradigm' or interpretive framework over sex, it will catch you every time. This podcast is an attempt to "Shake me! Wake me!" (Four Tops) from a nightmare that bad religion can even make worse. | 9/4/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 60 - From a Whisper to a Scream | This was a hard cast to do. It's a crack at religion's Achilles Heel, the Conflict Structure that keeps breaking out and breaking out, forcing religious people to crash land, in plain sight. Not a pretty sight. Until we can rein in our Conflict Structure, I think Christians will flunk Witness! In this podcast God finds Himself in a human character of "The Green Pastures" (1936); then Andrew Osiander, the Protestant Reformer of Nuremberg, offers a rationale for it -- in the 1550's. Osiander, incidentally, was so abused for his attempt to find a subjective landing-place, in human beings, for the Good News of Grace, that he died of it. He literally died of wounds suffered at the hands of theological carnivores. Maybe Osiander must have been right , for preachers to hate him so. Up in Koenigsberg (i.e., modern Kaliningrad), they danced on his grave when he died. | 8/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 59 - Should I Stay or Should I Go? | Does one really want to get into all that again?: Offering the idea that forgiveness is always better than indictment? Talking about Original Compulsedness as a fixed limit on human freedom? Presenting detachment as an alternative to passionate caring, i.e., hovering and listening in on your children -- two to toothless - 24/7? Think i'd rather stop saying anything. You get such Yeatsian grief when you pipe up about Peace, Love, and Understanding. Think I'd rather "let this cup pass" and tarry beneath the Bodhi. Oder? | 8/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 58 - The Umbrellas of Cherbourg | This gorgeous 1964 film is everything people say it is, and makes you wonder sometimes whether its director and writer, Jacques Demy, was too good for this world. Let's also hear it for Michel Legrand, who wrote the score. What I wish to eyeball, and what this podcast is about, is its vision of romance, for "Umbrellas of Cherbourg" is about first love, lost love, best love, et enfin, true love. The hero's "Je crois que tu peux partir" ("It's time for you to go.") is so wonderfully masculine, and faithful, and cognizant but 'he's not buying', that I truly wish every woman in the world who has lost faith in men could see this movie. My podcast is about True Love. It is dedicated to Nick Greenwood. | 8/14/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 57 - Beyond the Time Barrier | Lord Buckley broke down a barrier that is exceptionally hard to break down. He broke down the barrier between the Sacred and the Profane. Several of his 'hipsemantic' monologues, once you begin to study them, are fascinating expressions of Christian ideas, but expressed in the terms of an offbeat and wacky nightclub personality. I don't know of anything like them. In this second and concluding podcast on a genuine comic genius, I read, sitting on my white azz, Lord Buckley's riff on "Quo Vadis", entitled "Nero". Once again, My Lords and Ladies of the Court, I give you Richard Myrle Buckley , together with his affecting 'familiar', OO-Bop-A-Lap. | 8/5/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 56 - Lord Buckley | Lord Buckley (aka Richard Myrle Buckley, l906-1960) was a "way out" nightclub comic and monologist, who created "hipsemantic" routines based on famous people -- very famous! -- and famous works of literature. Lord Buckley's most famous monologue was called "The Nazz" and is a "hipster" re-telling of three miracles of Our Savior, which was Lord Buckley's frequently invoked term for Christ. "The Nazz" is a homage to Jesus that exists in a class by itself. If anything you've ever heard or read breaks the barrier between the Sacred and the Profane, "The Nazz" does it. In this podcast, PZ gives a public reading of Lord Buckley's "The Nazz". The reading can't fail to be sort of an atrocity -- I almost entitled this cast "The Nazz and My White Azz" -- as the original was performed entirely in African-American iidiom. Nevertheless, this readng could do the alternate thing of getting down to what Buckley actually wrote and actually said, for his substance is sublime. PZ owes his appreciation of Lord Buckley to Bill Bowman. | 7/31/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 55 - Christian Meanings of "My Sharona" | Does religion figure in "My Sharona"? Is Jesus there? This podcast discerns the New Testament meaning in the theses I have written, the result of two years in a howling wilderness of the inward man. Call this: Grace in Practice 2011. | 7/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 54 - My Sharona | This is My Sharona of faith, a series of four theses, briefly explained, that express an approach to everyday living, and understanding. I hope you like them. | 7/9/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 53 - How to Tell the Future | It's possible to tell the future. It's actually pretty easy. You have to know about human nature, and you have to know about fashion. You have to know that human nature doesn't change, and you have to know that fashion changes all the time. It changes right to left, then left to right, then back again. Then the same, again. And again. "My Ever Changing Moods" (Style Council) You, too, can be a fortune teller. Here's how. | 7/2/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 52 -- "Don't Make Me Over" | Love of another person fails when it contains a plan for that person. To really be love, love has to void itself of the desire to transform, even the hope of transforming. This is for two reasons: First, such love is defining. It seeks to interpret what the other person needs. But you don't know! So it becomes about you rather than about "The Loved One" (E. Waugh). In other words, love with an agends becomes taxidermy. Second, love with an agenda -- any agenda of any kind -- is received that way by The Loved Man. She knows you have a 'plan for her life'. And she's not buyin' it. Therefore, love, in order to be love, has to give up the native urge to transform. Then it's love. As The Young Rascals sang so memorably in A.D. 2008, "Love is a Beautiful Thing. (It Makes my Heart to Sing.)" This podcast is dedicated to John Stamper. | 6/25/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Area 51 - William Inge | William Inge (1913-1973) wrote plays of restrained optimism concerning broken families in small Kansas towns of the 1920's and '30's.. He understood about the importance of sex in everyday life -- even in Protestant Middle-Western America during the Great Depression. He also understood about the Church and its disappointing failure to help people when the bottom fell out of their lives. Yet there a wistfulness to Inge. He seems to be saying, 'If only'. If only our religious tradition had not declined so from the teachings of Christ. This podcast talks about William Inge's perspective on the Church Defeated -- by itself ! He writes of sufferers with tender sympathy, with grace in practice. | 6/18/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 50- Human Nature | It just may be the worst thing about America today: our view of human nature. If you listen to almost any -- and I mean, any -- commentator, speechmaker, pundit, or spokesperson, of literally any and every organization, institution, medium, or government office, you are going to hear about taking charge, and imposing control -- of everything and everybody. (I hate that they'll now ticket you if you're caught smoking in New York City. That's insane! No more "Shake Shack" for us, I am dashed to say.) The pitiful thing is, their idea of human nature is not true. It is simply not true. We are being fed an understanding of human nature that is inaccurate. It is innacurate from stem to stern. Therefore there is no HOPE being offered. Everything is rooted in a fallacy. "Shallow Hal" This is Episode 50 of "PZ's Podcast". Philip Wylie's going to help us out again, but so is wonderful William Inge, and inspired Frenchman Jacques Demy. I'm going to let them take us there, to Strawberry Fields ... Forever. | 6/11/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 49 - "Unknown and yet well known" | Another one of those unknown authors. But he has so much to tell us, first about sex and then about Christianity. About the former, he puts first things first. About the latter, he puts Jesus on the "Enola Gay". Would that Philip Wylie were here today, to put Jesus on a predator drone, or on one of those Navy SEAL helicopters which flew into Pakistan recently. | 6/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 48 - The Disappearance | Philip Wylie was a prophet in the war between the sexes. His 1951 novel "The Disappearance", in which, through an unexplained 'cosmic blink', all the women disappear from the world of the men and all the men disappear from the world of the women, is so noble and so disturbing, so wrenching and so uplifting, so wise and so uncommonly religious, that it becomes required reading for everyone who is a man and everyone who is a woman. | 5/29/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 47 - Aaron Jastrow | Aaron Jastrow is the third and last character in this three-part series of podcasts on "War and Remembrance". The insight to be gained from Professor Jastrow, played first by John Houseman and then by Sir John Gielgud in the television mini-series, is a harrowing insight. At age 68 Jastrow gets one terrific "kick in the arse" (his phrase) in the Theresienstadt "paradise ghetto". Our man, who has been hiding out his whole life in a complacent, carping, selfish persona, is finally required to see life as it is: reality as it closes in, and not just in his head. He is, like Leslie Slote before him, transformed by seeing. It is a moving portrait of the death before physical death that is required of everyone in order to find happiness. Aaron Jastrow finally finds his happiness, at the gates of hell. | 5/21/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 46 - The Leslie Effect | Leslie Slote is one of the great redeemed preppies of contemporary literature. A failed whisteleblower in the Department of State, not Princeton nor pirvate school is sufficient to help him. Slote hits the brick wall of life, and has to "lay there". What he does find to do is moving and plausible. Learn from Leslie Slote! And listen to that terse piece of inspiration that becomes his last words to a best and far-away friend -- over a bad connection in the middle of WW II. | 5/14/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 45 - Duncan Burne-Wilke | Herman Wouk's 1985 novel "War and Remembrance" has a most prophetic minor character buried within its 1300 pages. This character is a philosophical and definitely sweet English aristocrat named Duncan Burne-Wilke, whom we meet in the "CBI" or "China Burma India" theater of the Second World War. Burne-Wilke envisages the end of Western colonialism on account of a massive disillusionment caused by the War. But he also thinks in religious terms concerning the future of America and England. He sees the future in terms of the "Bhagavad gita", and a "turning East" of which we are now aware and in relation to which the Christian churches are having to live, defensively. My podcast speaks of one small voice within a large contemporary epic. Burne-Wilke's disenchanted words are "crying to be heard" (Traffic), and also responded to. He haunts the bittersweet narrative of Wouk's marvelous book. | 5/7/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 44- The Razor's Edge | This is my favorite book. It's also Bill Murray's. It is called "The Razor's Edge" and was written by Somerset Maugham. It was published in 1944. It tells the story of some well-to-do Americans from Lake Forest, who all find what they're looking for in life. One of them, 'Larry Darrell', loses his life only to save it. He is the hero, and I think he could be yours. P.S. Who's "Ruysbroek"? | 4/30/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 43 - "The Green Pastures" | "The Green Pastures" is a 1930 American play, and 1936 Hollywood movie, that was once as famous as "Our Town". Now, for reasons of political correctness, it is rarely seen and seldom taught. Even the DVD has to carry a 'Warning' label. (Good Grief!) How dearly we have robbed ourselves of a pearl of truly great price. Marc Connelly's "The Green Pastures" deals theatrically with the transition in the Bible from Law to Grace. (It is not Marcionite!) Has God's Mercy, in relation to God's Law, ever been staged like this? I can't think of an example. You've got to see "The Green Pastures". The character 'Hezdrel', alone, will... blow... your... mind. | 4/17/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 42 - Bishop Bell - The Play | Bishop Bell appears as a main character in Rolf Hochhuth's 1967 play entitled "Soldiers". Bell confronts Churchill on the morality of murder from the air, especially when it involves the murder of civilians. Such a confrontation never actually took place, but the Bishop and the Prime Minister had the thoughts and stated them. The PM detested Bell. In Act Three of Hochhuth's play, Bell loses and Churchill wins. In the moral balance, Churchill lost and Bell won. "Soldiers" is a play about the massacre of this world that is repeatedly staged by Power. As in the case of un-manned drone aircraft today. Nobody seems to care. Nobody 'gives'. Yet one day... | 4/7/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 41 - Bishop Bell - The Speech | George K.A. Bell (1883-1958) was the Bishop of Chichester during World War II. He addressed the House of Lords on February 9, 1944, questioning the Government on the use of "carpet bombing" of German cities. Bishop Bell regarded this kind of bombing, which was intended to destroy German morale and bring the war to an end, as a war crime. At the time, Bell was the only person in Britain willing to say such a thing in a 'national' forum such as the Parliament. He was attacked all across the board as being 'pro-German' and almost a traitor. (He had, incidentally, been the first public figure in the country to criticize Hitler's anti-semitic legislation. He had done so in 1934.) Because of his speech in the Lords, Bishop Bell lost all chance of promotion in the Church of England. Today, however, he is almost canonized there, and certainly within the Church. This podcast is about Bell's speech. It also relates his theme to the current use of un-manned drone aircraft to commit targed assassination from the air -- or rather, from Las Vegas. | 3/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 40 - "No Popery" | Religious partisanship is normal, explicable, and terminal. It kills Christianity. Itt sure killed me. Or maybe it wised me up. This podcast concerns Charles Dickens' novel "Barnaby Rudge", which was published in 1841. Dickens' subject was the "No Popery" riots that took place in 1780 in London. They are also known as the "Gordon Riots". Dickens used this astonishing episode to observe the causes of theological hatred, and its consequences. Dickens was a conscious Protestant and heartfelt Christian, but he was upset by religious malice. "Barnaby Rudge" gets to the bottom of it, in 661 pages. This podcast gives you the Reader's Digest version in 36 minutes. | 3/19/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 39 - The Phoenix Club | Life in a Final Club! "The Social Network" has made it high profile all of a sudden. What it was, was fun, dellightful, blessedly un-serious in a way serious world, with a taste of Evelyn Waugh. We loved it. Why was the story never told? That's a story. Podcast 39 is published in loving memory of Page Farnsworth Grubb, '71. | 3/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 38 - Tanz der Vampire | This is the 1997 German-language musical version of Roman Polanski's odd 1966 movie entitled "The Fearless Vampire Killers". The movie is baroque and beautiful, and features Sharon Tate. The stage musical, with bewitching melodies by Jim Steinman, the 'Meatloaf' man, is one of the all-time greats -- as hypnotic a show as you've ever seen. But there's one problem: it makes you want to commit suicide. "Tanz der Vampire" is a unique exercise in evangelism, from the other side. Podcast 38 is dedicated to Ethan Magness. | 3/5/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 37- The Yardbirds | This is an impression of The Yardbirds, the first avant-garde band we ever knew. With Eric Clapton to start, then Jeff Beck, then Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, then Jimmy Page only, their music, especially the guitar breaks, lived on the edge of INSANITY. To this day, I still have Yardbirds days. They are wonderful. There was also a personal Close Encounter, with Friends. In this podcast I tell a story and try to give an impression, followed by a few, well, theological comments. Podcast 37 is dedicated to William Cox Bowman. | 2/27/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 36 - Unconventional Thought | If 'conventional though't is categorical and paradigmatic -- an imposition on reality, in other words -- then what is 'unconventional thought'? It must be an impression of unmediated (i.e., direct) reality -- the core of a thing. To quote an old hymn, unconventional thought must consist of "Nothing Between". Somerset Maugham's novel "Christmas Holiday" offers a vivid instance of the difference between conventional thought and unconventional thought. Dorothy Parker once said, "You can lead a w***e to water, but you can't make her think." Maugham disproves Parker's silly maxim. He gives us a woman who thinks! | 2/23/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 35 - Conventional Thought | This podcast is about thinking that takes place in categories, or what Alan Watts called "conventional thinking"; as distinct from thinking concretely about a thing, or what Watts called "unconventional thinking". Categorical thinking sees the world through paradigms and "narratives". I think it is flawed thinking, because it frames reality rather than viewing the world on its own terms. This touches on the ancient debate between Nominalism and Realism,. The debate affected Luther. It affects me! How can we think about things so we see them as they are -- and not through a batch of lenses, like in an eye exam? Reality hurts sometimes, to be sure, but it's the only starting point a person has. "Oder?" | 2/20/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 34 - Cosmo & The King's Speech | Cosmo's a heavy! At least in the movies. He plays against Lionel Logue, the hero speech-therapist in "The King's Speech"; and comes out badly. Cosmo Lang was Archbishop of Canterbury during the Abdication Crisis of 1936. Tho' he meant well, everything he did played the pharisee. He also had the idea that the Abdication Crisis should be a 'teaching moment'. Heard that before? Lang's crisis-management on behalf of the Church of England failed, and failed badly. Why? Why does the Religion of Grace keep coming out sounding like a religion of control? That is the subject of today's podcast. P.S. I would still kill, personally, to be called Cosmo. | 2/16/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 33 - "Mr." Priest | This podcast is about professional titles: the more reduced in circumstances an institution, the more high-flown its titles. Did you know that until about 1970 Episcopal clergy were always called 'Mr." ? (They were never called 'Father', except in one parish, max two, per city.) The later Cardinal Newman was 'Mr. Newman', and Edward Bouverie Pusey was 'Mr. Pusey'. But don't take my word for it. Read W. M. Thackerey, read E.M. Forster. See 'Showboat', the 1936 version. An interesting principle seems to be at work: when things are going great, the leader is just a regular person, like everybody else. He's 'Mr. Irwine', as in Eliot's "Adam Bede". But when things begin to go south, and the world gets against you, the leader becomes: The Most Metropolitical and Right Honorable Dr. of Sacred Letters Obadiah Slope. Anyway, I'd sure rather be Mr. Midshipman Easy! Listen to this, and you may want to work for the car wash down the street. Oh, and no one will believe you anyway. Maybe if you tell 'em, Father Paul told you. | 2/13/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 32 - Protestant Interiors II | Here's a little gazetteer of Episcopal Protestant interiors. They're nice. Delaware's is in the middle of nowhere, and Boston's finest is Unitarian. George Washington sat beneath a central pulpit in Alexandria and "Low Country'" farmers did the same. And don't forget the Motor City: I mean, Duanesburg, New York. But always remember this -- even if you are actually able to visit these places, no one will ever believe you when you get back home. They simply CAN'T exist! | 2/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 31 - Protestant Interiors | This one is about Protestant aesthetics as expressed in architecture and design. It is 'a tale told by an idiot', however, for no one ever believes you. Only Henny Penny says the Episcopal Church was once Protestant and 'Low' -- right up to the Disco Era. Memory being what it is, this is the tale of a forgotten 200 years. The Song Remains the Same in about 200 precious survivals in England, as well as 50 or so on the East Coast of the U.S.A. There, the glass is clear; the design, simple; and the message, unmediated. There, less is more. | 2/6/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 30 - Shock Theater | Late Saturday nights was a time for little boys to howl. "Shock Theater" came on around one! We learned every line of the 'original' "Dracula" (1931), memorized every release date of every Mummy movie from 1932 to 1945, and, most important, got married for life to: "The Bride of Frankenstein". This is the story of those late Saturday nights, which gave our mothers such trouble, since it was they who would have to ... wake us up for church. | 2/2/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 29 - The Circle | The Circle was a movie theater in downtown Washington where two boys discovered foreign film. Boris Karloff and James Whale became superceded by Sergei Eisenstein and Francois Truffaut. Or mostly. (We were only 13 years old, for crying out loud.) This podcast tells our Tales from the Circle. Every word is true. It is Part III of The Moviegoer and is dedicated to Lloyd Fonvielle. | 1/30/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 28 - Premature Burial | Part II of The Moviegoer, in which our ten-year-old hero discovers Edgar Allan Poe via Roger Corman in the downtown movie palaces of Loew's Capital, Loew's Palace, and R.K.O. Keith's. He comes face to face with a strange new Glynis Johns before encountering "The Vampire and the Ballerina" exactly one block from the White House. | 1/26/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 27 - The Crawling Eye | This is the story of a conversion. It happened in the Fall of 1959, and I've never looked back. It happened in connection with some mountaineering in the Swiss Alps. Like the man in "The Crawling Eye", I lost my head. Still haven't found it. | 1/23/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 26 - P.E. II | We're not finished yet. Cozzens cuts to the core of Anglo-Catholicism yet without throwing stones. He wants to understand. And his account of a hijacked P.E. funeral in "Eyes to See" is so close to home, well, that it makes you want to scream. | 1/19/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 25 - P.E. | "P.E." is for Protestant Episcopal. 35 years I've been ordained and it took Cozzens to teach me some sore lessons. For me they came late. But, "For you the living/This Mash was meant, too." "When you get to my house, Tell them 'Jimmy' sent you." | 1/15/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 24 - Here or Nowhere | The title quote is from Goethe "Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship". Thomas Cartyle picked it up and changed our world, here and in England and Scotland, in the 1830s. Cozzens opted for a Stoic view in "Guard of Honor" and "By Love Possessed", though without ideology. He observed the chances for a practical stoicism as an alternative to suicide. Is there something here for us? Well, yes, and no.: "Here or nowhere". | 1/9/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 23 - Inside Looking Out | What goes on inside a person's head as he or she processes daily interactions. A lot! Here I am trying to understand the inner dialogue of life -- with a little help from a friend. | 1/8/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 22 - Journey | -- | 1/2/11 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 21 - Plymouth Adventure | Dan Curtis went straight from Gothic Horror soap operas to the greatest epic ever made for television. His heart was always in his work, from "Dark Shadows" to "The Night Stalker" to... "The Winds of War". When it comes to his 29-hour genius production "War and Remembrance, Can't Touch This! Here is the story of an undepressed man. | 11/13/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 20 - I Learned to Yodel | Did you know meditation can make you a better Protestant? Here's why. | 10/26/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 19: The Gothic | New thoughts on 'the Gothic' in movies and literature -- from Irvin S. Cobb, whose Gothic story "Fishhead" was termed a "banefully effective tale" by H. P. Lovecraft; to Ray Russell, of "Sardonicus" fame; to Roger Corman, who brought the House down around Roderick Usher. Turns out it's all about bodily disintegration in an enclosed space, and the dead hand of the past upon the hopes of the present. The Gothic becomes a fascinating study in the quest for bookings on the Last Metro. | 10/20/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 18: Pollyanna | Who'd have thought Walt Disney's "Pollyanna", David Swift's bull's-eye adaptation of Eleanor Porter's novel for children, would deliver the goods on imputation? Who'd have thought Hayley Mills would show the world the way love works? For it turns out, the 'Glad Game' is true! Why it works, and how, is the subject of this podcast. | 10/13/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 17: The Hammer and the Cross | Hammer Horror is a beautiful thing -- everything movies should be, or almost everything. There is also this delightful religious dimension, in which the High Priest of Karnak prays in the language of the Book of Common Prayer and Peter Cushing is 'fighting evil every bit as much' as a Church of England entymologist/bishop in "Hound of the Baskervilles". Here is my little 'National Geographic Society lecture', on one of the nicest acres of filmdom and fandom. It was recorded at Constitution Hall in our Nation's Capital. | 9/29/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 16: Irvin S. Cobb | Irvin S. Cobb (1876-1944) was famous in his day, but is unread now. Ours is the loss! His "Judge Priest" stories are as parabolic of grace as it gets. They exude peace, love, and understanding. And what's so funny about that? Here's your chance to bone up on Irvin S. Cobb! By the way, John Ford liked Cobb so much that he made two movies out of his stories, and then put him in a third. In 1961 Ford made a personal pilgrimage to Cobb's grave at Paducah, Kentucky. Two weeks from tomorrow I hope to do the same. | 9/22/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 15: Hot August Night | The Jansenists never declined. They got wiped out good. Think "End of the Line" by the Traveling Wilburys. Pascal enters and exits, assisted by Roberto Rossellini's tv show (1971) and Jack Kerouac's bar game (1969). The 'Sun King' plays his cruel part, while Our Ladies of Port-Royal hold the line. They really hold the line! As Sainte-Beuve wrote of the Jansenists, "They were from Calvary". | 9/16/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode 14: Paris When It Sizzles | Jansenism was a religious movement in Seventeenth-Century France that threatened Church and State. Its apologists, including Blaise Pascal and Jean Racine, thought their movement, based on its re-discovery of the teachings of St. Augustine, could save Christianity from the Protestants. Its detractors thought Jansenism WAS Protestantism, but a Fifth Column of it, burrowing away within the Catholic Church. The two positions were irreconcilable. The Jansenists lost, and lost catastrophically. What an interesting lesson here in 'Church', and State. | 9/9/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Sneak Peek: "By Love Possessed" | "By Love Possessed" was hailed at first as the great novel of its decade. A few months later it was traduced as a symbol of Eisenhower-era 'middle-brow' complacency. The second verdict stuck. The problem was its message: it praised acquiescence rather than transformation. It is indeed a 'novel of resignation'. Is that a good thing? | 8/29/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Sunday Supplement: The Life of James Gould Cozzens | James Gould Cozzens (1903-1978) observed life accurately. in 1957 he told 'Time' Magazine that "most people get a raw deal from life, and life is what it is". His novels "By Love Possessed" and "Guard of Honor" are among the greatest of 20th Century novels. | 8/29/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Weekend BONUS: The Cinema of Erle C. Kenton | He directed four classics, including "The Ghost of Frankenstein" (1942), "House of Frankenstein" (1944), and "House of Dracula" (1945). Was he a Hollywood 'auteur'? And what about this religious Mad Scientist, Dr. Edelmann? And the hunchback nurse? | 8/27/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode Ten - Green Light, Part Two | It's Easter Sunday 1933. We're in Trinity Cathedral (Episcopal) in a Mid-Western American metropolis. Two unwilling visitors have been roped into going, but what they are going to find is not what they expect. Dr. Paige is about to have someone walk on his head and Professor Arlen is going to get 'bowled over' (her words). Two everyday people are about to enter... the Twilight Zone. | 8/25/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode Nine - Green Light, Part One | In 1935 the now unfashionable novelist Lloyd C. Douglas described a good church. He did it in a novel entitled "Green Light", portraying Trinity Cathedral (Episcopal) and its leader, Dean Harcourt. It's all I ever wanted in a church, and I wanna be there. This podcast is published in loving memory of Miss Mabel C. Shepherd. | 8/25/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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BONUS Episode!:Giant Crab Movies | In this amazing weekend bonus episode, our hero must claw his way through the history of giant-crab movies. Does he survive? You be the judge! | 8/20/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode Seven - "Man Gave Names to all the Animals" | "Man Gave Names to all the Animals" (Bob Dylan), meaning Eric Burdon and The Animals. Thoughts on true greatness, thoughts on Fun. | 8/18/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode Six - The Browning Version | From a perfect movie comes a Version of the 25th Chorus of "Mexico City Blues": Is my own, is your own, Is not Owned by Self-Owner but found by Self-Loser -- Old Ancient Teaching". This podcast is dedicated to David Browder. | 8/18/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Bohemian Rhapsody -- The Rite One | The subject is preaching, the Achilles Heel of American religion. We turn to Jack Kerouac's "List of Essentials" in spontaneous expression for help. Turns out it's the singer not the song. | 8/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Beatnik Beach | The title of a song by the Go-Go's sets the stage for this second cast on the preaching art. Once again, it's the singer not the song. Or at least, that's where we start. Welcome to Beatnik Beach! | 8/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode One - What's it all about, Alfie? | In which our hero introduces you to his search. "For you the living, this Mash was meant, too." | 8/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode Two - The Alcestiad, Act One | Our hero, incarnated as an ancient Greek princess, finds Love and Happiness, Thornton-Wilder style. | 8/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
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Episode Three - The Alcestiad, Act Three | Our hero, again incarnated as the Queen of Thessaly, heads south, only to still find happiness. | 8/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 96 Episodes |
Customer Reviews
Each episode is better than the last!
Such a great venue for an important voice. These are incredible podcasts! Sure to enlighten and oozing with grace (and ooze) ;)
PZ's podcast
Paul Zahl is a world class thought leader on the relationship of cultural media to the human condition, all viewed through a Christian lens.
Les Parapluies de Cherbourg
Amusing. Touching. Fanciful. Nice voice, too!
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