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Live from Shock City Studios! (http://shockcitystudios.com - @ShockCityMusic) John and Kane are LIVE Monday thru Friday at 10a CT on INDIO RADIO...It's The John and Kane Show - It's another DOWNLOADABLE SHOW! It’s Friday and we kick off the show with our sex therapist: Lindsay Walden! (@SexyThoughts7) we talk about the adult toys you can play with - and win discounts with fun games - it'll pay to connect with Lindsay! It's always great having Lindsay in - and she is great with depression, anxiety - couples and even sex therapy, so make sure to connect with Lindsay here: http://LindsayWalden.com - @SexyThoughts7 - or call: 314-485-9189 - then we bring in Author in STL: Chris Andoe! The Book is "Delusions of Grandeur" - some say it's controversial, but I know that it's a lot of fun when John and Kane do dramatic readings...oh, it happened - and Chris committed to his dramatic reading too - a MUST HEAR! Follow him on Twitter: @EmperorAndoe and tell him you heard him on The John And Kane Show ...and of course, we learn what we learned on the show...Follow @JohnAndKaneShow, @JohnLaun1 and @INDIO_RADIO on Twitter - Catch up on the show here: http://RadioKane.PodOmatic.com - Check out the new YouTube channel: http://YouTube.com/IndioRadioOnScreen - LIKE The John And Kane Show on FB here: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-John-and-Kane-Show-Indio-Radio/252503951553118 - The show is on 10a and replayed at 5p (Central Time) - Listen via @TuneIn, download our app on @GooglePlay or link up here: http://IndioRadio.com - Get more info and LIKE us here: http://Facebook.com/IndioRadio - On PodOmatic, and NOW ON iTunes, Spreaker and Stitcher! Just search 'Indio Radio Podcast!' or Google 'John And Kane Show' to get caught up!
On this week's exciting Episode, number 114... Art Forum's Anthony Elms and Bad at Sports' Duncan MacKenzie interrogate Carol Jackson about her dynamite exhibition at Gallery 400, and Terri Griffith and Joanna MacKenzie take apart John Andoe's "Jubilee City: A Memoir at Full Speed". It doesn't get any better then this.Also, to the person who scrawled "I MISS RICHARD" in lipstick on the mirror of the men's bathroom at BAS HQ, we know who you are and this is unacceptable behavior.From Gallery 400:Carol Jackson’s signs, sculptures, gouaches and drawings use common, everyday “signatureless? styles to let loose the grandiose morality within the picturesque languages and visuals of advertising. Her work is a bitterly humorous send up of the demands and promises commercial representations make for goods, be they detergent, food, or real estate. Long focusing on a series of meticulously hand-tooled leather reworkings of both store advertising and real estate development signage, Jackson replaces the found text with disdainful, mistrustful and self-depreciating thoughts that sales language represses. What remains is the epic longing and promissory nature of the address.From Publishers Weekly:n this charming memoir, Andoe narrates his journey from his Tulsa childhood through redneck, hard-partying teen years to a highly successful career as a (hard-partying redneck) painter in New York City. While Andoe may not be a professional writer, his humor and offbeat artistic sensibility make up for any lack of prose-writing chops. Through discrete anecdotes that seldom run longer than two pages, Andoe assembles vivid portraits of his family and friends and of the various environments he inhabited—the working-class Tulsa neighborhoods of the 1960s, the high school and college drug culture at the end of the hippie era, and the New York art scene of the 1980s. Andoe rarely said No to drugs, and the marginal characters and dangerous encounters of the lowlife provide the book with a great deal of energy and pathos; at times his memoir reads like a more amateur version of Denis Johnson's Jesus' Son. Yet whenever the gonzo stories verge on tedium, Andoe modulates his tone and shows himself as the stay-at-home dad, the outdoorsman, the artist. While Andoe has an occasional tendency to settle scores (his ex-wife receives particularly brutal treatment) or trumpet his status as an outsider, for the most part his wide-eyed sense of wonder and keen observations make the everyday strange and fresh. (Aug.)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Enjoy.