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This week, we celebrate the legacy of Lorraine Hansberry with J. Nicole Brooks, Natalie Y. Moore, and Ericka Ratcliff. This conversation originally took place August 22, 2024 and was recorded live at the American Writers Museum.This program is presented in partnership with the Lorraine Hansberry Initiative, which was created by The Lillys (conceived by Lynn Nottage and Julia Jordan) to honor Lorraine Hansberry's legacy through the tour and permanent placement of a figurative sculpture of the playwright, while investing in those following in her footsteps through the creation of a fellowship which supports the living expenses of women and non-binary writers of color during their pursuit of graduate degrees.AWM PODCAST NETWORK HOMEAbout the panelists:J. NICOLE BROOKS is an actor, author and director. Selected acting credits include Lottery Day (Goodman Theatre, New Stages Festival), Beyond Caring, Death Tax, and RACE (Lookingglass Theatre Company), Immediate Family (Center Theatre Group) and House Home (Shanghai Dramatic Arts Centre, China). Directing credits include Mr. Rickey Calls A Meeting, Thaddeus & Slocum: A Vaudeville Adventure and Black Diamond: The Years the Locusts Have Eaten. Brooks is author of HeLa, Fedra Queen of Haiti, Black Diamond, and 3 Weeks With Her Honor Jane Byrne. Television credits including recurring roles on Showtime's The Chi and Comedy Central's South Side. She is a multi-award winning artist honored by 3Arts, TCG Fox Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Black Ensemble Theatre Playwright of the Year, LA Ovation and Black Theatre Alliance. She is an ensemble member of Lookingglass Theatre Company.NATALIE Y. MOORE is an award-winning journalist based in Chicago, whose reporting tackles race, housing, economic development, food injustice and violence. Natalie's acclaimed book The South Side: A Portrait of Chicago and American Segregation received the 2016 Chicago Review of Books award for nonfiction and was Buzzfeed's best nonfiction book of 2016. She is the author of the play The Billboard, set in Chicago. She is also co-author of The Almighty Black P Stone Nation: The Rise, Fall and Resurgence of an American Gang and Deconstructing Tyrone: A New Look at Black Masculinity in the Hip-Hop Generation.ERICKA RATCLIFF works to amplify the mission of Congo Square by celebrating the complexities of Black life and culture on stage. She is a member of The Chicago Women In Philanthropy, Women's Leadership Mentoring Program (WLMP), the 2023 Points of Light Conference Host Committee, and artEquity's BIPOC Leadership Circle. Ericka is a nominee for Broadway World Chicago's 2022 Regional Awards for “Best Direction of a Play” for her work on What To Send Up When It Goes Down and was recently featured in NewCity Magazine for her accomplished work in theatre. She is an artistic associate with Lookingglass Theater and was a recipient of the Chicago 3Arts Make A Wave Award in 2017.
This week, author and theater critic Patti Hartigan discusses her recent book August Wilson: A Life, the first authoritative biography of iconic playwright August Wilson. Hartigan is joined by actor and playwright J. Nicole Brooks. This conversation originally took place October 30, 2023 and was recorded live via Zoom. This episode is presented alongside our special exhibit Dark Testament: A Century of Black Writers on Justice, currently on display at the American Writers Museum. AWM PODCAST NETWORK HOME More about August Wilson: A Life August Wilson wrote a series of ten plays celebrating African American life in the 20th century, one play for each decade. No other American playwright has completed such an ambitious oeuvre. Two of the plays became successful films, Fences, starring Denzel Washington and Viola Davis; and Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, starring Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman. Fences and The Piano Lesson won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama; Fences won the Tony Award for Best Play, and years after Wilson's death in 2005, Jitney earned a Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play. Through his brilliant use of vernacular speech, Wilson developed unforgettable characters who epitomized the trials and triumphs of the African American experience. He said that he didn't research his plays but wrote from "the blood's memory," a sense of racial history that he believed African Americans shared. Author and theater critic Patti Hartigan traced his ancestry back to slavery, and his plays echo with uncanny similarities to the history of his ancestors. She interviewed Wilson many times before his death and traces his life from his childhood in Pittsburgh (where nine of the plays take place) to Broadway. She also interviewed scores of friends, theater colleagues and family members, and conducted extensive research to tell the story of a writer who left an indelible imprint on American theater and opened the door for future playwrights of color. PATTI HARTIGAN is an award-winning theater critic and arts reporter who spent many years on the staff of The Boston Globe. She divides her time between the Boston area and Charlottesville, VA. J. NICOLE BROOKS is an actor, author and director. Selected acting credits include Lottery Day (Goodman Theatre, New Stages Festival), Beyond Caring, Death Tax, and RACE (Lookingglass Theatre Company), Immediate Family (Center Theatre Group) and House Home (Shanghai Dramatic Arts Centre, China). Directing credits include Mr. Rickey Calls A Meeting, Thaddeus & Slocum: A Vaudeville Adventure and Black Diamond: The Years the Locusts Have Eaten. Brooks is author of HeLa, Fedra Queen of Haiti, Black Diamond, and 3 Weeks With Her Honor Jane Byrne. Television credits including recurring roles on Showtime's The Chi and Comedy Central's South Side. She is a mutli-award winning artist honored by 3Arts, TCG Fox Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Black Ensemble Theatre Playwright of the Year, LA Ovation and Black Theatre Alliance. She is an ensemble member of Lookingglass Theatre Company.
In this episode of PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf, Sasha and photographer, Paul Graham discuss his self-taught beginnings in photography and what it's like to see your work become historical with the passage of time. Paul and Sasha talk about Paul's more recent, and more personal, work and Paul shares his thoughts on the ethics of photographing outside of one's own community. They discuss these topics and many more in this season ending episode of the podcast. https://www.paulgrahamarchive.com https://www.mackbooks.us/search?q=Graham%2C+Paul&type=product Paul Graham has played an essential role in dissolving the barriers between the worlds of documentary and fine art photography. Starting in the early 1980s, Graham's use of color in the role traditionally occupied by black-and-white documentary was a radical challenge to the unwritten rules of engaged photography. Troubled Land (on the Northern Ireland conflict) and Beyond Caring (addressing unemployment in the time of Margaret Thatcher) shifted the debate on how such issues could be visually articulated. With an extraordinarily long and active career of four decades, Graham has published eighteen monographs and three survey books. He moved to New York in 2002, and has worked in the United States since then. Most notably, a shimmer of possibility was published as a set of twelve books and presented as a solo exhibition at MoMA, New York. He is represented by Pace Gallery in the United States, and galleries in London and Berlin. Find out more at https://photowork.pinecast.co
Behrendt, Barbarawww.deutschlandfunk.de, Kultur heuteDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Behrendt, Barbarawww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, FazitDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Chad and Zach take the X-Men adjacent team, Alpha Flight and break down their most iconic members, casting them with actors and actresses as though a Marvel Cinematic Universe film or Disney+ series was being made about them! Special guest, from the podcast, Beyond Caring, former Drunken Trivia champion, Adam Brinker!
Der britische Regisseur Alexander Zeldin zeigt an der Berliner Schaubühne erstmals eine deutschsprachige Version seines Stücks „Beyond Caring“, das fünf Putzkräfte in einer nächtlichen Fleischfabrik begleitet. Zeldin wird für den harten Realismus und die humanistische Würde seiner Inszenierungen gefeiert – und ist fasziniert von Bertolt Brecht.Zeldin, Alexanderwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Rang 1Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
Chad and Zach are joined by Beyond Caring's own, Adam Brinker to review the latest product of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Spider-Man: No Way Home. Did the MCU knock it out of the park? Tune in to find out!THIS EPISODE IS SPOILER-FILLED! Fair warning!
We're not dead yet, just really bad and following through on our commitments. Recorded at the end of March, this show was an attempt to catch up and actually focus on a topic. If you look at the length of this episode, you can see how well that actually worked. Ada(m) discovers that there's a … Continue reading Episode 110 – Desert Island Laserdiscs →
We're not dead yet, just really bad and following through on our commitments. Recorded at the end of March, this show was an attempt to catch up and actually focus on a topic. If you look at the length of this episode, you can see how well that actually worked. Ada(m) discovers that there's a … Continue reading Episode 110 – Desert Island Laserdiscs →
In this episode of PhotoWork with Sasha Wolf, Sasha and photographer-curator, Paul Graham discuss the exhibition, "But Still, It Turns: Recent Photography from the World" which Paul curated for the International Center of Photography. Paul explains why he wanted to create a showcase for the type of lyrical or post- documentary photography that he feels passionately about. They discuss the way the show came together and the 9 artists included. https://www.paulgrahamarchive.com Paul Graham has played an essential role in dissolving the barriers between the worlds of documentary and fine art photography. Starting in the early 1980s, Graham's use of color in the role traditionally occupied by black-and-white documentary was a radical challenge to the unwritten rules of engaged photography. Troubled Land (on the Northern Ireland conflict) and Beyond Caring (addressing unemployment in the time of Margaret Thatcher) shifted the debate on how such issues could be visually articulated. With an extraordinarily long and active career of four decades, Graham has published eighteen monographs and three survey books. He moved to New York in 2002, and has worked in the United States since then. Most notably, a shimmer of possibility was published as a set of twelve books and presented as a solo exhibition at MoMA, New York. He is represented by Pace Gallery in the United States, and galleries in London and Berlin. Find out more at https://photowork.pinecast.co
Ladies Night continues as the Beyond Caring ladies panel dives into online dating safety. Brinker didn't think anything about safety in his dating experience, because of course he didn't, but we assure you the ladies all did. Safety first, people. When is it time to bring up your relationship goals when meeting a new person? … Continue reading The Joy of Dating – Episode 6 – Ladies Night Special: Part 2 – Red Flags and Safety Issues →
Ladies Night continues as the Beyond Caring ladies panel dives into online dating safety. Brinker didn't think anything about safety in his dating experience, because of course he didn't, but we assure you the ladies all did. Safety first, people. When is it time to bring up your relationship goals when meeting a new person? … Continue reading The Joy of Dating – Episode 6 – Ladies Night Special: Part 2 – Red Flags and Safety Issues →
Surprise! The Joy of Dating returns! No, Brinker didn't return to the online scene. Surprising our hosts, Brinker's girlfriend, Mary, asked that he convene a panel of the ladies of Beyond Caring to give the female perspective on online dating. Grab a free Cosmo and hang out with us – it's Ladies Night on the … Continue reading The Joy of Dating – Episode 5 – Ladies Night Special: Part 1 – Why we're online dating and why it's exhausting →
Surprise! The Joy of Dating returns! No, Brinker didn't return to the online scene. Surprising our hosts, Brinker's girlfriend, Mary, asked that he convene a panel of the ladies of Beyond Caring to give the female perspective on online dating. Grab a free Cosmo and hang out with us – it's Ladies Night on the … Continue reading The Joy of Dating – Episode 5 – Ladies Night Special: Part 1 – Why we're online dating and why it's exhausting →
Influential English photographer Paul Graham has published three survey monographs, along with 17 other publications. In 1981, he completed his first body of work, A1 - The Great North Road, which he later self-published as a book, re-printed in 2020 by Mack. The series of colour photographs captured life along England’s ageing arterial road, the A1, from the city of London to Edinburgh’s main post office. The pioneering series went on to receive critical acclaim, and was followed by Beyond Caring, a visual record of unemployment in Britain under Margaret Thatcher, and Troubled Land, which depicted landscapes in Northern Ireland during the years of the Troubles. Paul’s use of colour film in the early 1980s, at a time when British photography was dominated by traditional black-and-white social documentary, had a revolutionising effect on the genre.Paul has since gone on to produce over 12 further bodies of work, incuding New Europe, hailed in Martin Parr and Gerry Badger’s influential reference The Photobook: A History as “a key work of the new European photography”, and perhaps his most celebrated series, the twelve-volume collection entitled A Shimmer of Possibility, created in collaboration with steidlMACK, which summarizes Paul's interest in calling attention to overlooked activities or places. The book won the 2011 Paris Photo Book Prize for the most important photography book published in the past 15 years. The work was included as part of a 2015 survey of Paul’s trilogy of series’ from America, entitiled The Whiteness of the Whale, which was exhibited at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.Paul’s work has been the subject of more than eighty international solo exhibitions and has been shown in the Italian Pavilion of the 49th Venice Biennale, Switzerland's national Fotomuseum Winterthur and at New York City's Museum of Modern Art. He was included in Tate's Cruel and Tender survey exhibition of 20th century photography, and a European mid career survey exhibition at Museum Folkwang, Essen, which toured to the Deichtorhallen, Germany, and Whitechapel Gallery, London. Paul has been awarded the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize, the Hasselblad Award, the W. Eugene Smith Grant, received a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Royal Photographic Society Award. In the early 2000s he moved to New York City where he settled and still lives with his partner and their son. On episode 149, Paul discusses, among other things:But, Still It Turns, the current ICP show he curated, with a tie-in book published by Mack.)Having shows shut down due to Covid.Discovering photography.His first book project, A1 - The Great North Road.The radical nature of shooting colour at the time.The ‘dance with the world’, as the highest calling of the medium.Beyond Caring and Troubled Land.New Europe.A Shimmer of Possibility.His optimism for photography’s future.Referenced:William EgglestonThe Americans (Robert Frank)Garry WinograndStephen ShoreLisette ModelCindy ShermanJeff WallThomas DemandGregory CrewsdonGalileo GalileiLee FriedlanderPaul StrandWalker EvansDiane ArbusRobert AdamsPaul HillRay MooreMartin ParrAnna FoxPaul ReasRichard BillinghamNick WaplingtonMichael SchmidtLewis BaltzJohn GossageJulian GermainBill OwensWebsite “You don’t need to be a photographer seeking out the spectacular, the amazing prize-winning moments. There is a power to the every day and an insight can be gained through gently looking at it.”
Pandemic depression is real, but Ada(m) explains their plans and strategizes around working through the haze. Ada(m) wonders why the theaters haven’t just rolled over and went out of business yet. Crypto and telework have made money worthless, so guess who bought a flight stick? Ada(m) continues to deep dive into Hades. The 2nd half … Continue reading Episode 109 – You Guys Are Insufferable →
Ada(m) continues to be upset about how people are handling the pandemic, and Ada(m) is upset about bullshit surrounding CyberPunk 2077; this was somehow recorded in October of 2020 and not just last week like you would think; I think we might be in trouble, you guys. Ada(m) started Hades and Ada(m) is keen to … Continue reading Episode 108 – Get In The Robot Joss →
This episode was recorded when it was still warm enough to watch movies outside without freezing to death. Ada(m) is optimistic for a vaccine, but Ada(m) doesn’t believe we’re getting out of this hell anytime soon, (scary how right they are, but for the wrong reasons!) Ada(m) has a mid-life crisis over Doom Eternal and … Continue reading Episode 107 – Well That Took A Turn →
Recorded in the somehow less-dark times of late July of 2020, Ada(m) is taking the advice of the many fine upstanding people of Central PA and “being careful.” The long hairs then try to get started talking about literal systemic racism, but are then paged by their respective dayjobs, (in Ada(m)’s case, this becomes a … Continue reading Episode 106 – Furry Fornication for Cottagecore Wish Fulfillment →
This week as a special holiday treat Zach and Chad sit down with Beyond Caring's Adam Brinker (via Mumble) to come up with three ideas of how Marvel should cast the first family of Marvel, the Fantastic Four!
Ada(m) and Ada(m) are joined by fellow Beyond Caring Podcast Network hosts Brad and Rick, who are themselves joined by significant others Maleah and Grace. The crew is here to rank all 18 episodes of Netflix’s 2019 show Love, Death & Robots, determine which is best, call out the ones that are utter trash (sometimes … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 105 – Where Are My Fucking Robots? →
Ada(m) and Ada(m) are joined by fellow Beyond Caring Podcast Network hosts Brad and Rick, who are themselves joined by significant others Maleah and Grace. The crew is here to rank all 18 episodes of Netflix’s 2019 show Love, Death & Robots, determine which is best, call out the ones that are utter trash (sometimes … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 105 – Where Are My Fucking Robots? →
Beyond Caring returns with more aimless quarantine ramblings. Ada(m) watched the Cats movie this week with some of the ManchilD crew and the takes are very spicy. Then, in an incredibly on brand diversion, our hosts revisit the Marvel and DC films briefly before talking about what a year without new blockbuster films is going … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 104 – Getting Onboard For The Gay Witch Coven →
Beyond Caring returns with more aimless quarantine ramblings. Ada(m) watched the Cats movie this week with some of the ManchilD crew and the takes are very spicy. Then, in an incredibly on brand diversion, our hosts revisit the Marvel and DC films briefly before talking about what a year without new blockbuster films is going … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 104 – Getting Onboard For The Gay Witch Coven →
In a masterful return to Podcasting form, Ada(m) and (Ada(m) self-indulge in a massive 3 hour episode touching on the missed connections and disappointments that the film industry gave us in the 2010s, though Ada(m) still has 100 movies on their watch list. Laced throughout this episode is more talk about working from home, Ada(m) … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 103 – Asking Your Wife About John Galt →
In a masterful return to Podcasting form, Ada(m) and (Ada(m) self-indulge in a massive 3 hour episode touching on the missed connections and disappointments that the film industry gave us in the 2010s, though Ada(m) still has 100 movies on their watch list. Laced throughout this episode is more talk about working from home, Ada(m) … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 103 – Asking Your Wife About John Galt →
The apocalypse has started up, so let’s see where we are on a scale of Clockwork Orange to Soylent Green. The longhairs find their podcasting legs again: Ada(m) thinks that all trans people should have grenade launchers, talk of the new Beyong Caring Media Network dating miniseries spins off into remembering that time MtG champion … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 102 – Hong Kong Heat →
The apocalypse has started up, so let’s see where we are on a scale of Clockwork Orange to Soylent Green. The longhairs find their podcasting legs again: Ada(m) thinks that all trans people should have grenade launchers, talk of the new Beyong Caring Media Network dating miniseries spins off into remembering that time MtG champion … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 102 – Hong Kong Heat →
Zach is joined by Beyond Caring's, Adam Brinker to discuss all the latest gossip. Topics such as Vin Diesel dropping movie exclusives on Thor: Love and Thunder and The Last Witch Hunter during press junkets, new characters rumored to debut soon in the MCU, who DC allegedly wants to play Lady Blackhawk, who Warner Bros. wants to be the face of the DCEU, what Universal is doing to get their movies seen during quarantine situations, and yet more woes for The New Mutants.
Recorded in late 2019, our cohosts start off with the logistics of getting free drinks from your local bar and/or liquor store, how going blonde has a very mixed response from the public at large, and the culture of drinking in Tucson, AZ. Ada(m) gets the chance to weigh in on Control and that spins … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 101 – Bombarded With Japanese Sex Perversions →
Recorded in late 2019, our cohosts start off with the logistics of getting free drinks from your local bar and/or liquor store, how going blonde has a very mixed response from the public at large, and the culture of drinking in Tucson, AZ. Ada(m) gets the chance to weigh in on Control and that spins … Continue reading Beyond Caring – Episode 101 – Bombarded With Japanese Sex Perversions →
On this special holiday episode Zach leads the way through a one-shot adventure of the tabletop role-playing game, Everyone is John, where the voices in one man's head lead him to do outlandish and often ridiculous things! Special guests include previous show guests Dan Barton, Jesse Cashman and Beyond Caring's own, Adam Brinker!
They said it couldn’t be done. They said we’d be offline in 2 weeks. They were wrong. This show starts with a “how far would you go” discussion on time travel for money and how much you’d be willing to lose to put with backwards assholes; (spoilers: one of us has a much lower bar … Continue reading Episode 100 – Never Stop To Ask If You Should →
(Update: now with fixed URLS!) We reconvene with our hosts talking beer and liquor. We find out that Ada(m)’s tenant pays them via Venmo, which they refuse to link to a bank account, because: security. Then server updates come in so Ada(m) can teach everyone how to dodge ads. Ada(m) then tries to pitch the … Continue reading Episode 99: We’re Still Talking About This Shit? →
In what eventually became a 2 part episode Ada(m) and Ada(m) try to catch up on super hero films and it turns into a 4 hour sprawling digression because of course that’s what would happen here. Things kick off with a quick trashing on Venom before Captain Marvel manages to finally land a blow against … Continue reading Episode 98 – Everyones A Little Bit Racist Sometimes →
In the final Boston episode before Ada’s transition, Ada(m) and Ada(m) meet up once more for another metal show, talk about Necrovist (who Ada(m) emphatically wants you to know they do not support), and then start to ask the hard hitting questions: Why am I shit at fighting games now? The fighting game talk goes … Continue reading Episode 97 – This Episode Brought To You By Beyond Caring Gin →
In the final Boston episode before Ada’s transition, Ada(m) and Ada(m) meet up once more for another metal show, talk about Necrovist (who Ada(m) emphatically wants you to know they do not support), and then start to ask the hard hitting questions: Why am I shit at fighting games now? The fighting game talk goes … Continue reading Episode 97 – This Episode Brought To You By Beyond Caring Gin →
Note: This episode was recorded before the Ada swap, just so you don’t think Brinker is being a dick and misgendering her. Ada(m) and Ada(m) talk about a concert that happened last year! Ada(m) picked the show, but Ada(m) had such a good time they put it in their top 5; comparisons to Rob Halford … Continue reading Episode 96 – All Riled Up About Phones →
Beyond Caring returns from its long hiatus and the absence is explained. Both of our hosts have made some big life changes, and we spend the first chunk of the episode discussing those before we dive right back into the metal with a trip report from a recent concert. bcp095.mp3
Beyond Caring returns from its long hiatus and the absence is explained. Both of our hosts have made some big life changes, and we spend the first chunk of the episode discussing those before we dive right back into the metal with a trip report from a recent concert. bcp095.mp3
With the retirement of Rick from BC Trivia, we enter a new age of trivia where the loser isn’t a foregone conclusion. In this episode Sam and Tom throw down to see who will take ownership of the Golden Starscream and who will live in shame until Trivia 5. In this episode, the peanut gallery … Continue reading Episode 94 – Beyond Caring Trivia 4 →
With the retirement of Rick from BC Trivia, we enter a new age of trivia where the loser isn’t a foregone conclusion. In this episode Sam and Tom throw down to see who will take ownership of the Golden Starscream and who will live in shame until Trivia 5. In this episode, the peanut gallery … Continue reading Episode 94 – Beyond Caring Trivia 4 →
Adam just saw the new, (at the time,) Ant Man movie, so Adam opens up by going through the upcoming movie releases for the year. Adam brings up the Chinese film market again and Adam deals out harsh numbers on the reality of Avatar 2. Adam also is watching all of the Mission Impossible movies … Continue reading Episode 93 – The Iron Is No Longer Hot →
Adam and Adam forget how to plan a podcast and then dive straight into the E3 games that actually have release dates, and both of the Adams are glooming and dooming. Adam doesn’t trust Adam to play fair on assembling top X lists, so Adam pretends to care about football as vengeance. Adam is interested … Continue reading Episode 92 – Save Your Shitty Ammunition →
Update: Adam said he fixed this episode, but then Adam found out that was false and had to fix it himself. Thank Adam. Adam: Episode is cut (it was a mess) it’s in Podomatic, but I can’t get it to publish – so all you. I’d say I’d take another crack tomorrow after work, but … Continue reading Episode 91 – Delete This File For The True Ending →
Update: Now with fixed sync! The Adams are back to talk beer and bad weather. Somewhere in the middle there is talk of tattoos, Kirby, and some other random bullshit. But it all comes around to Net Neutrality at the end. Fun fact, Net Neutrality still existed when this podcast was recorded. Hopefully you don’t … Continue reading Episode 90 – Hating Comcast is a Bipartisan Issue →
Thanks to Mumble’s shitty stable branch code, editing has become a giant pain in the ass, so Adam doesn’t have time to be descriptive. In this episode, Adam explains synthwave to Adam, the hot new Tenacious D single is mentioned, rumblings of metal occur, then the Adams talk Infinity War. Adam thinks it was pretty … Continue reading Episode 89 – Kirby Moments →
Just to preface, Adam’s software is breaking again, so pardon the static; his house is under active construction too, (foreshadowing.) Adam would kill to have Stringer Bell as a job applicant and Adam’s gainfully employed now! Soon into reminiscing about the first Mass Effect, a surprise Cashman appears and Adam won’t shut up about Synthwave. … Continue reading Episode 88 – Femshep Rocking The Cradle →
Time to talk –oh wait we forgot a digression? Beyond Caring is all over that. Time to talk indie theaters and Moviepass, and oh wait? Talk about a movie you say? Alright, time for Pacific Rim II: Kaiju Boogaloo. Adam and Adam may have a consensus on their favorite new giant robot, but Adam is … Continue reading Episode 87 – You’ve Unleashed The Demon →