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With DEATH TRIP: A Post-Holocaust Psychedelic Memoir (Spiral Path Collective Press), Seth Lorinczi explores how trauma can be transmitted over generations, and how an ancient (& new) form of treatment can help overcome it. We talk about finding his family's story of the Holocaust, trying to understand why so much of it stayed hidden, how badly it warped his life, and how he & his wife found answers in psychedelic medicine (MDMA, ayahuasca, toad (!)). We get into the long-term damage of unmetabolized trauma and untouched grief, how psychedelics allowed him to recognize patterns in his life, family history, and the universe, the challenges of researching his family's Holocaust experience in Hungary, how his experiences led to a memoir (& a saved marriage), why Death Trip is a series of surrenders, how his close and distant relatives responded to the book, and why he thinks I should leapfrog therapy and try psychedelics first. We also discuss growing up in the punk scene of Washington, DC (and writing his next book about that), how coincidence becomes important after psychedelic experiences, how some married couples take up salsa dancing but he & his wife took up ayahuasca, how his daughter responded to all this, whether a person can change, how once you get the message you should put down the phone, and a lot more. Follow Seth on Instagram and subscribe to his Dispatches From The Fringe newsletter • More info at our site • Support The Virtual Memories Show via Stripe, Patreon, or Paypal, and subscribe to our e-newsletter
Bee and Chic talk about the last trip they'd take before they die. Chic's near death experience. Bee's new hobby is taking form. Does anyone live an exciting life?
"American death trip" aux éditions Rivages. Rencontre enregistrée en 2001.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
In part 6 of my Necrophagia retrospective I take a look at their 2011 album "Death trip 69"
Our mom got severely bitten by her own cat, soooo...US health care - portals, paying medical bills with JP Morgan gift cards. ALSO: Marketing myths about whiskey lead to tourists drowning in the Cumberland. Every bar should have their own ambulance. PLUS: 550 miles of formica, Can Do Cold Brew and PF Sloan!! Jimmy Webb - "PF Sloan": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uEWbc2wPdYCold Brew Patreon: Patreon.com/chriscroftonChannel Nonfiction (Greg's website): Channelnonfiction.comCan Do Cold Brew: Candocoldbrew.com
In today's episode, Mike is joined by Zack Barna, Founder and CEO of BoomPromo, follower of “The Death Trip” and an expert in building a successful brand to help grow your business. Zack discusses the importance of strategic partnerships and leveraging generosity to strengthen brands. He shares examples of sending thoughtful gifts to potential clients, emphasizing the value of transparency, starting with generosity, and building trust with potential clients. The conversation then transitions to the significance of fitness in Zack's life. He talks about prioritizing daily workouts as a form of stress relief, sharing tips for maintaining personal balance, and avoiding conflicts at the gym. Zack also reflects on his own near-death experience, leading him to embark on a transformative "death trip" journey, exploring the importance of preparedness and leaving a meaningful legacy for loved ones. Throughout the episode, Mike and Zack explore the emotional and spiritual aspects of facing death, expressing gratitude for life's precious moments, and finding peace through acceptance. They share personal anecdotes, reflections on personal growth, and the impact of embracing gratitude. Tune in to this inspiring episode of the GSD show to gain valuable insights on branding, parenthood, and fitness, and learn how to create a life filled with purpose, generosity, and gratitude. GYM OWNERS Schedule your FREE strategy call with us today!: https://www.loudrumor/info
It is always good when I finally get to interview a local/regional band that's been on the radar for a while. Familiar With Failure is one of those bands for me. This 4 piece hailing from La Grange, Tx came up to The Fieldhouse in Cedar Park to sit down with me and have a chat about everything FWF. We chat about everything from how they started to the "it" moment they knew playing music as a band was their future. We also dive into why MySpace was so cool and dearly missed to the state of the scene in terms of promotion (or lack thereof) for shows. We had a great time and I hope you enjoy this as much as we did. "Death Trip" is out now on all streaming platforms. Here is a short message from the band: “The best way to support us is to follow us @fwftx on Instagram and Facebook. We post promotion posts about live shows we will be playing all the time. Also go listen to Death Trip (feat. Alec Torres) 100 times on Spotify or Apple Music.”Episode Info:YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCG50kY5O_uHEhMLCa5pM27AFB: https://www.facebook.com/fwftx/IG: https://www.instagram.com/fwftx/Merch: https://familiarwithfailuremerch.bigcartel.com/Intro track: "Common Flow" by ArborennaFeatured track: "Death trip" feat. Alec Torres by Familiar With Failure ATXMP Website: https://www.atxmp.com/Dead Reflections Podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/deadreflectionspodcast/Sponsors:Come and Take It Productions: https://www.comeandtakeitproductions.com/Come and Take It Live: https://www.comeandtakeitlive.com/Bumperactive: https://www.bumperactive.com/Titan Audio Productions: https://titanaudioproductions.com/Texas Metal United: https://www.facebook.com/TexasMetalUnitedThe Fieldhouse at The Crossover: https://www.thefieldhousetexas.com/
This week, Them Nudy Boyz weather the storm (literally) to discuss the 1999 debut album from STATIC-X, 'Wisconsin Death Trip'! We discuss how well the album is regarded in the NüMetal community, Wayne Static's appearance, the band's 'evil disco' musical style, a kickass Japanese Edition bonus track & more! —————————————————————— Subscribe on your favorite podcast app & if you like the show, share it with your friends! Check out the NuDis Colony Playlist on Spotify & follow along on our journey through NuMetal: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4JpmdS16YoAtPwVargXxgn Email NuDis Colony: nudispod@gmail.com Follow NuDis Colony on social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/NuDisPod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nudispod/ "NuDis Colony" logo by Ross Lickteig with help from Jack Franklin. Follow Jack on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/milkywaymaps/
While the Legionnaires are off on their own adventures, find out what everyone else is up to! Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers Patron. It will help ensure The Major Spoilers Podcast continues far into the future! Join our Discord server and chat with fellow Spoilerites! (https://discord.gg/jWF9BbF) TALES OF THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #316 "Meanwhile..." October 1984 w: Keith Giffen & Paul Levitz a: Terry Shoemaker After the war with the LSV, the Legion begins to rebuild... TALES OF THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #317 "Death Trip!" November 1984 w: Keith Giffen & Paul Levitz a: Terry Shoemaker What is the secret of the Invisible Kid? "Once A Hero..." November 1984 w: Paul Levitz (plot), Mindy Newell (dialogue) a: George Tuska How can Duplicate Boy get his confidence back?
While the Legionnaires are off on their own adventures, find out what everyone else is up to! Show your thanks to Major Spoilers for this episode by becoming a Major Spoilers Patron. It will help ensure The Major Spoilers Podcast continues far into the future! Join our Discord server and chat with fellow Spoilerites! (https://discord.gg/jWF9BbF) TALES OF THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #316 "Meanwhile..." October 1984 w: Keith Giffen & Paul Levitz a: Terry Shoemaker After the war with the LSV, the Legion begins to rebuild... TALES OF THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #317 "Death Trip!" November 1984 w: Keith Giffen & Paul Levitz a: Terry Shoemaker What is the secret of the Invisible Kid? "Once A Hero..." November 1984 w: Paul Levitz (plot), Mindy Newell (dialogue) a: George Tuska How can Duplicate Boy get his confidence back?
“How to Appreciate Life” How to Appreciate Life Part 2” “Change Cannot Come Soon Enough with Josh Kimbrell” “Jim's Near Death Trip to Heaven”
Djang00 Nudo and Smut Peddler moan (as usual) about Roku's uselessness, but celebrate a productive Berlin Film Festival, with plenty of films in the proverbial bag. They then parachute into the theme week of Euro Spy films, also known as Spaghetti Spy films.These are film produced by 1964 and 1968, mainly in Italy, in response to the success of the first James Bond films. More than 50 of these were made, though few as good as Bond. There are two trailer compilation films: "Operation: Secret Agents, Spies & Thighs" (1965) and "The Late Late Late Show" (1965). These are perfect backgrounds for almost any party. There are three 'Kommissar X' films: "Kiss Kiss, Kill Kill" (1965), "Death is Nimble, Death is Quick" (1966) and "Death Trip" (1967), based on the popular German novels. Christa Linder, star of Swedish erotic film "Bel Ami" (1976), pops up in two of them. "Operation Atlantis" (1965) is a perfectly spy caper right until the (spoiler) science fiction ending. "Last Plane to Baalbeck" (1964) is a labyrinthian mini epic, with Yoko Tani (French-Japanese) and George Sanders in one of his last roles. "Baraka X77" (1966) was called "Baraka X13" in the original, but was mauybe too unlucky in this scientist-secret-formula-fuel caper. "Passport to Hell" (1965) has karate chops, lots of bad karate chops, with sound effects to compensate. Much better is the music by Piero Umiliani, who composed the 'Manah-manah' song form "Sweden Heaven and Hell" (1968). "The Beckett Affair" (1966) stars Lang Jeffries and features 'shapely lesbian heroin addicts' - what more do you need? "Desperate Mission" (1965) is Yoko Tani again, paired with German Cobos of Spaghetti Western fame, but British colonial Hong Kong is the real star of this film.Ridiculously titled "Man on the Spying Trapeze" (1967) has false teeth containing micro cameras with nuclear secrets. Play Euro Spy key word bingo with that one. "The Narco Men" (1968) is a surprisingly grim and fatalistic Euro spy film, but with "hippie" nightclubs. Remember those? No? "Operation White Shark" (1966) stars Janine Reynaud who was in many Euro spy and also Jess Franco films, whose husband Michel Lemoine will be an erotic film theme week this spring. "Password: Kill Agent Gordon" (1966) is an unusual spy film in that the VietCong are the bad guys, trying to obtain a mysterious stolen cigarette lighter. There are x77 swinging Euro Spy songs on this week's Spotify playlist to listen and sip your martini to.
En este episodio, conversamos sobre "Raw Power" de Iggy And The Stooges, revisando aspectos como su sonido, la situación de la banda durante su creación, detalles de la producción, legado, entre muchos otros temas.
Vancouver is currently facing a fentanyl epidemic. The new wave of opiod addiction is a core part of daily life in Vancouver's downtown east side. When seeing this with his own two eyes director Dominic Streeter of Hied and Seek Films knew he had to shed some light on this and ask some very important questions. In his Netflix documentary "Ten Dollar Death Trip" Dom and the team spend time with the people who live in Vancouver's "drug ghetto by design". He speaks with current addicts, former addicts, the people doing the work to keep people safe in this environment that is rife with overdoses and even a very candid interview with one of the dealers. It is a hard hitting documentary but I believe more than anything else it shows the humanity, the care, the compassion and the community of those affected. In fact Dom even goes as far as to say there is a greater sense of community there, than anywhere back home. In this interview we get into his motives for being a director, for choosing this topic and much more.
It's (almost) the end of the year, so I decided to turn my annual year-end "favourite local albums" list into a podcast!Here's part one -- numbers six through 15 of my overall top 15 -- in an overstuffed episode that includes clips from interviews with a number of artists who made the list, and much more. Part two, my top five, will be out next episode. Part one includes releases by artists like Turn the Gun, Well Sister, Ultra Mega, Jocelyn Gould, The Secret Beach, JayWood, Death Trip, Antonio Mazza, Claire Therese and the Lockdown, and Bicycle Face. As mentioned in the intro, I'm sure I've missed some great stuff, both on this episode and the next, and there are also a lot of albums I didn't consider for 2022 -- mainly stuff that came out too late this year for me to fully absorb. Records that came out on streaming this year but have physical copies in 2023 count as "2023" releases as well. This episode brought to you by our pals at Devine Shirt Company, who have brand new Witchpolice merch in the works! Watch for that! Huge thanks to everyone who supports the podcast on Patreon! You can help out for as little as $1 a month if you like the show and want to throw some change in the guitar case! You can also throw a one-time tip via Buymeacoffee. As always, if you like the podcast, please tell a friend or 20! Rate and review on your podcast player of choice! Word of mouth is still the main way Witchpolice Radio reaches new ears.
We learn about the book Wisconsin Death Trip and new research that criticizes how it portrayed small town America. We learn some tips about how talk to your kids about Santa Claus. We look at some restaurants that have closed and new ones that are opening in the Milwaukee-area. Plus, learn why holiday movies remain so popular.
An art historian revisits the grisly book of murders and madness and finds it missed part of the story.
It's another crossover deep dive! This week we're joined by Big Rigs from one of our favorite podcasts, Bacio Death Trip. He came on the show and we went deep into the band Motograter's self-titled debut, along with many other numetal topics. Is there a better numetal gateway album than this? Listen and let us know! Cheers! Bacio Death Trip podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/bacio-death-trip/id1553043811 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nubreed_podcast/ Email: Nubreedpodcast@gmail.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/nubreed_podcast Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/nubreedpodcast/ Tim Twitter: https://twitter.com/timLSD Jay Twitter: https://twitter.com/horsecow Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrlK456FML4jtXN1YF7fxHg Spotify Playlists: https://open.spotify.com/user/o0f47xzeolb7nk7yuq1by3rry/playlists
Martin and Steve are joined by special guest Big Rigs, from the Bacio Death Trip Podcast, to discuss Refused - The Shape of Punk to Come.
Though the band themselves reject the label, My Chemical Romance is often credited as one of the pioneers of the mid-2000s emo scene, and they are certainly one of the biggest rock groups of the 2000s. The band's debut, I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love was released in 2002, produced by Thursday's Geoff Rickley, it showcased the band at its most raw and hardcore punk inspired. In 2004, MCR released their major label debut, Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, garnering the band mainstream success and showcasing a more refined sound. In 2006, MCR followed up with The Black Parade which eclipsed the success of their previous records and earned the band the Number 2 spot on the Billboard Charts, losing out on the top spot to Disney's Hannah Montana Soundtrack. Follow us on Instagram and Listen to our Companion Playlist This week we are joined by Big Rigs of the Bacio Death Trip Podcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/violenceandsunshine/message
Back on the show for his second appearance is horror author Sean McDonough! Sean has a number of books under his sleeve such as Terror at Turtleshell Mountain, Rock and Roll Death Trip, and The Class Reunion, but is here to talk about his latest book The 13 Black Cats of Edith Penn. Sean is a die-hard horror fan and his love for the genre shines in his works!
In this podcast Will Carver talks about Nothing Important Happened Today, Hinton Hollow Death Trip, The Beresford, and much more. About Will Carver Will Carver is the author of books such as Good Samaritans, Nothing Important Happened Today, and Psycopaths Anonymous. Show notes Click the timestamps to jump straight to the audio. Thanks for Listening! Help out the … Continue reading
It's July 16, 1998! Machine Bolt and Él Farto are moving on up, the cops are in Merkin's pocket, and Gary Shadow from KHJ knows that when the police fail DJs, society's collapse is not far behind. Your calls on the MCI Worldcom Rock Talk Line™. Also, Taekwondo remote to promote! Plus: Versace is dead, crazy sign guy is god, and a couple of big male and female reticulated Pythons are nesting in the heavens above. Lastly, we're organizing breakout groups of listeners who will fight each other, please place only educated wagers.
Heavy music fans all over this amazing world have a lot in common, but let's focus on the part wherebeing a fan of a band means for us to let the music completely consume our very existences. We bingeon the music and we become human billboards, not the ugly money hungry types but truerepresentatives of a band/ bands. What am I on about? We wear the shirt/ shirts and we add it as astaple to our wardrobes.We all know how Heavy music was birthed and as time went on sub genres became the new normal inthe music world.Who remembers the absolute landmark albums that shaped our world's from the mid 90s to the late2000s? What albums come to mind for you?Almost one year ago a podcast was born by two mates who simply but specifically love to dive in, and Imean dive into these heavier genre albums once a week for a solid, and I mean solid hour!If you dig honest, humorous yet intelligent conversation then Bacio Death Trip the podcast may just bewhat you are/ were looking for!Founders Reece and Benji will fill an hour of your week with deep nostalgia and an even deeper gutlaugh as the give their takes on the bands we idolise/ idolised and the albums we adore/ adored.I'm purposely leaving out what albums Reece and Benji focus on as the whole point of this is to leadpeople to take a look and listen at this ground breaking podcast.If you take the path, you have some catching up to do as Bacio Death Trip is about to celebrate it's 50thEpisode!To help celebrate the 50th Episode I had a chat with Reece and Benji, and the discussion went exactlyhow I'd hoped! Not only was it a pleasure to do so but it was actually the first ever interview for theseguys.Do yourself an favour, hit the play button, buckle in, dust off the wallet chain and sit back and enjoy afresh and humble interview conversation about classic albums that really did shape our generation/generations.Once you're done with the interview brace yourself for a time warp into music history by following thepodcast links.Trust me you will genuinely love it, horns up legends!Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/66K08iX0r8D3pnSlqaYbYJ?si=-qJJQ1BMRt2jxswRFL_fRg&utm_source=copy-linkInstagram:https://instagram.com/baciodeathtrip?utm_medium=copy_link
Dustin and Nick dive into one of the lesser known nü-metal bands with The Union Underground's ...An Education In Rebellion. Is their most popular song still the one that was the WWE Monday Night Raw theme for like ten years? Probably!
“This whole album just gets you so hyped. It's kind of a party album.” In this episode of Life Was Peachy, host Andrew Cahak is joined by Matthew Leonard "Gravey" Graves (UnderCurrentMPLS, Oyster World, Cult Vibes) to discuss 1999's debut Wisconsin Death Trip by Static-X. For more info, check out lifewaspeachy.com and @LifeWasPeachy on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
“This whole album just gets you so hyped. It's kind of a party album.”In this episode of Life Was Peachy, host Andrew Cahak is joined by Matthew Leonard "Gravey" Graves (UnderCurrentMPLS, Oyster World, Cult Vibes) to discuss 1999's debut Wisconsin Death Trip by Static-X. For more info, check out lifewaspeachy.com and @LifeWasPeachy on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
Skål!We conclude our Vacation Horror month, Death Trip!, with Ari Aster's Midsommar! This may have been our most requested episode, and the time has finally come to conclude this hell of a month with it. Grab your oblivious friends, take them to a remote commune, feed them copious amounts of psychedelics, and relax with this episode.Next month, we are taking things back to school with high school horror films! Do you smell that? Smells Like Teen Spirits! And, we are kicking off this month with The Faculty!————————————————————— Want access to this show ad-free as early as Monday and to our post-show? Head over to our Patreon in the links below to see how you can gain access five days before release on podcast services!Want to be a part of the growth of GoodKnight Life? Support us at these links! WEBSITE: www.goodknight.life PATREON: patreon.com/goodknightlife TWITTER: twitter.com/KnightLight_PodPRINCE: twitter.com/theheadknight DAVID: twitter.com/davidcelery FREDDY: twitter.com/fredericknuti See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What's one place you can go to in the completely unapologetic UK, the locals are absolute sh**, and the teens are complete devils? Well, Eden Lake, of course!We are continuing our Death Trip! with one hell of a ride from James Watkins. It was one of the most upsetting movies to come out of the 2000s, and it still isn't sorry for it.Next movie: Midsommar————————————————————— Want access to this show ad-free as early as Monday and to our post-show? Head over to our Patreon in the links below to see how you can gain access five days before release on podcast services!Want to be a part of the growth of GoodKnight Life? Support us at these links! WEBSITE: www.goodknight.life PATREON: patreon.com/goodknightlife TWITTER: twitter.com/KnightLight_PodPRINCE: twitter.com/theheadknight DAVID: twitter.com/davidcelery FREDDY: twitter.com/fredericknuti See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What do you get when the whole school is on vacation in the snowy month of February except for two students? Catch one of them praying to a furnace in the school's basement, of course! In this week's episode for our Vacation Horror month, Death Trip!, we are diving into the psyche of Osgood Perkin in his directorial debut with The Blackcoat's Daughter! Next movie: Eden Lake ————————————————————— Want access to this show ad-free as early as Monday and to our post-show? Head over to our Patreon in the links below to see how you can gain access five days before release on podcast services!Want to be a part of the growth of GoodKnight Life? Support us at these links! WEBSITE: www.goodknight.life PATREON: patreon.com/goodknightlife TWITTER: twitter.com/KnightLight_PodPRINCE: twitter.com/theheadknight DAVID: twitter.com/davidcelery FREDDY: twitter.com/fredericknuti See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We wanted to do something extra special - so we decided to add this episode to have our special Patreon exclusive post-show! Make sure to stay after the episode to listen to the rest of the episode. If you like that, a lot more where that came from on our Patreon for as low as $5 a month!Continuing our Vacation Horror month, Death Trip!, with a classic that does not get nearly enough love. What do you get when you mix nature with nurture? Killer vines, of course! We take a deep dive into the Mayan pyramids in Carter Smith's The Ruins! Next movie: The Blackcoat's Daughter ————————————————————— Want access to this show ad-free as early as Monday and to our post-show? Head over to our Patreon in the links below to see how you can gain access five days before release on podcast services!Want to be a part of the growth of GoodKnight Life? Support us at these links! WEBSITE: www.goodknight.life PATREON: patreon.com/goodknightlife TWITTER: twitter.com/KnightLight_PodPRINCE: twitter.com/theheadknight DAVID: twitter.com/davidcelery FREDDY: twitter.com/fredericknuti See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A brand new month here at Knight Light: A Horror Movie Podcast, summer is filling up the air here in the US, and people really are itching to get out of their homes and vacation! For this month of Death Trip, we are breaking down vacation-themed horror films! Starting with M. Night Shyamalan's The Visit! So grab your popcorn, ask for a photo of your grandparents from your mom before visiting them, and whatever you do...record everything!Next movie: The Ruins————————————————————— Want access to this show ad-free as early as Monday and to our post-show? Head over to our Patreon in the links below to see how you can gain access five days before release on podcast services!Want to be a part of the growth of GoodKnight Life? Support us at these links! WEBSITE: www.goodknight.life PATREON: patreon.com/goodknightlife TWITTER: twitter.com/KnightLight_PodPRINCE: twitter.com/theheadknight DAVID: twitter.com/davidcelery FREDDY: twitter.com/fredericknuti See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Our month of Pride Horror concludes, but is never truly over, with writer and host of This Ends At Prom, BJ Colangelo! She assists us with the break down of James Whale's The Bride of Frankenstein. We have an interesting conversation surrounding the history and symbolism of the queer-related tropes with Whale's Universal monster film.Follow BJ Colangelo on Twitter!Next month we are uncovering vacation horror! With most of us itching to go on a much-needed vacation after 2020, we decided to make it that much better with Death Trip month! Kicking things off with M. Night Shyamalan's The Visit. ————————————————————— Want access to this show ad-free as early as Monday and to our post-show? Head over to our Patreon in the links below to see how you can gain access five days before release on podcast services!Want to be a part of the growth of GoodKnight Life? Support us at these links! WEBSITE: www.goodknight.life PATREON: patreon.com/goodknightlife TWITTER: twitter.com/KnightLight_PodPRINCE: twitter.com/theheadknight DAVID: twitter.com/davidcelery FREDDY: twitter.com/fredericknuti See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this groundbreaking episode, Natalie & Drew expose the sick truth behind The Beach Boys, as well as the hidden dirt on pneumatic bank tubes, macadamia nuts, volcanos, and exactly how you get between all of the islands in Hawaii.What are Rhode Islanders up to? Where did the people in Hawaii come from? And, finally, what is the Hawaiian Death Trip? These questions, and more, are answered right here, right now.If you’re not a subscriber, subscribe to join our secret community, as well as gain access to group games (we played poker last weekend!) and the other half of the GBU episodes you’ve never heard.Until later!natalie & drew This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at www.garbagebrainuniversity.com/subscribe
This bonus episode Brian and Nez review the 2021 Canadian Horror.Thriller film DEATH TRIP. Hit up E Society on Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/ESocietyPodcast/ Twitter: @macnezpod @TheoZissou Instagram: @espmacnezpod @thezissou @macnez Nez and Taylor Blu-ray IG pages: @bluraynez @blurayterror Join The Horror Returns Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1056143707851246 THR Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thehorrorreturns Join The Action Returns Facebook group. https://www.facebook.com/groups/841619946357776 Follow The Action Returns on IG and Twitter: Instagram: @theactionreturns Twitter: @action_returns
This bonus episode Brian and Nez review the 2021 Canadian Horror.Thriller film DEATH TRIP. Join The Horror Returns Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1056143707851246 THR Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thehorrorreturns Join The Action Returns Facebook group. https://www.facebook.com/groups/841619946357776 Follow The Action Returns on IG and Twitter: Instagram: @theactionreturns Twitter: @action_returns
James Watts and Kelly Kay chat to HEAVY Cinema about their new film Death Trip.
WARNING: FOR MATURE AUDIENCES ONLY. UNDER 17 REQUIRES ADULT SUPERVISION. This week we have a newer film, "Death Trip" (2018)! The girls have fun with this one, as it points out many shocking differences in their formative years... Buckle up. Stay Tuned... Stay Nasty... xoxo instagram: @queensofnc17 music by: @TOBAXXO www.queensofnc17.com
Brian and Angelo have lots to chat about after several weeks of not recording together: Angelo would love a new iPhone, but he's gonna wait, Brian hates the touch bar on his Mac but he'll live with it, Chrome OS has taken over as second most used computer operating system, and Twitter wants some of your money. Shifting to the paranormal, Brian presents the Armageddon Time Ark, a UFO-centered doomsday cult, to Angelo - will they join? Will you join? WHO IS PHONE? Linx: * A typical KingCobraJFS video compilation (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjDKbeBoqds) * Kompressor Wants To Get With You (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhI-KLk-Y0c) * Death Trip trailer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O619WocL5Ts)
My family had always played a very active role in my life and showed up occasionally on social media. So, I thought I'd do an official episode with my mom, dad, and brother! We chat about all sorts of random things, spilling the beans on family secrets and taking turns throwing each other under the bus. A little bit about all of them and where you can find them online: Mom: Tracy Butler She's the caregiver of the family, will do anything for anybody She also loves to sew and runs Tiny Autumn Dad: Bruce Watts He's the easy-going one who loves nature, the outdoors, and being goofy He loves camping and is the OG blogger in the family with Campology Brother: James Watts He's the creative one in the family, always doing something artsy. He's also the funny one and can make anybody laugh. He just released his first full-length movie with his girlfriend Kelly Kay, called Death Trip ___
How to stay motivated as the winter and the pandemic drag on. Jean-Francois Menard, a mental performance coach who works with some of Canada's top athletes and Olympians has some tips; Megan Read has the business digest; This week for 'Karchut on Cars', Paul looks at new vehicle headlight techology; 'Death Trip' is a new movie set around Bass Lake and the towns of Perth and Smiths Falls.
How to stay motivated as the winter and the pandemic drag on. Jean-Francois Menard, a mental performance coach who works with some of Canada's top athletes and Olympians has some tips; 'Death Trip' is a new movie set around Bass Lake and the towns of Perth and Smiths Falls. Kelly Kay Hercomb and James Watts are the co-writers of the movie 'Death Trip' . She's an actor - he's the director. They tell us about making the thriller; two perspectives on the relaxing of restrictions due to the coronavirus. We hear from the Mayor of the the Town of the The Blue Mountains, Alar Soever and from Norah Rogers, the co-owner of the Waring House restaurant and inn in Prince Edward County; Emily Hallgren of Better Life Lab Experiments tells us about their research project aimed at helping families to better share household responsibilities; Greg Layson of Automotive News Canada discusses the implications of GM's commitment to going carbon neutral - both for the company and the industry as a whole; Dr. Anne Ellis outlines their large scale study in which they hope how COVID-19 spreads among students at Queen's University in Kingston; Peter Evans tells us about his pandemic project: making cheese.
Lene Lennartti on äänitaiteilija, joka tunnetaan mm. yhtyeistä Terveet Kädet, Lapin Helvetti, The Kolmas, The Sultans, Billy Boys, Death Trip, Plan E, Luciferin Parfuumi sekä Tasselit. Jakso äänitettiin kahvila Hertassa, Kemissä, 5. tammikuuta 2021. Tue podcastin tekemistä: MobilePay 0407688249
#055: Swarms of biting insects, oppressive heat and humidity, over 100,000 mostly white, conservative retirees who drink, drug and drive around in golf carts ... welcome to The Villages! COVID-19 has run rampant in this Florida retirement community full of anti-maskers. "Villagers" voted overwhelmingly for Trump in 2020. "If you name each of the groups least likely to wear a mask, the result roughly correlates with the average Trump voter," according to The New Yorker (1-4-21). What could go wrong?
Pennsylvania Death Trip 2020 A very special episode of Wisecrackin With Winter. Mike & Paul drive the ol’ RV from Indianapolis out to Harrisburg, PA to cover a rally to Continue readingPennsylvania Death Trip 2020 The post Pennsylvania Death Trip 2020 appeared first on Wisecrackin' with Winter.
We're headed back to Victorian London as we discuss John Snow and the discoveries he made regarding the spread of cholera. We discuss horrifically overcrowded cemeteries, body bugs, dancing on the dead at Enon Chapel, and take you on a ride on the London Necropolis Railroad. This episode is sponsored by Ballsy. Use promo code “FRESH20” for a 20% discount. Go to http://www.ballwash.com
We’re headed back to Victorian London as we discuss John Snow and the discoveries he made regarding the spread of cholera.We discuss horrifically overcrowded cemeteries, body bugs, dancing on the dead at Enon Chapel, and take you on a ride on the London Necropolis Railroad. This episode is sponsored by Ballsy. Use promo code “FRESH20”... Continue Reading →
This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies’ selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip’ bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. Because Liz collected too much info, this digital death trip podcast is in 3 parts. This is the 3rd and final episode. Listen to 1 & 2 first! Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies’, so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement’ and ‘selections’, later ‘soldier settlement’, as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system’s administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father’s right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns’ that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. This is the last instalment of 3. We return to hear a few updates Liz could not help researching further. It includes specially written Taylor Project song Ghost Upon the Hill: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train, even when you close your windows, it comes back again, there’s a ghost upon the hill”. Further post-script: Robert Mueller, youngest son, survived and moved to Germany. He married there in 1925. Also, re: the early ‘cinematograph’ the children went to at the Athenaeum. Most cinemas in early Australia were in inner city theatres. Each reel was about 3 minutes, usually a short documentary display: boxing, footy, horses. The show would have included magicians. Mueller's servants took the children to this new popular entertainment spectacle. And while they were out, Mueller made preparations to kill everyone.
This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies’ selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip’ bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. In this instalment, Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies’, so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement’ and ‘selections’, later ‘soldier settlement’, as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system’s administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father’s right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. Pre: Family Law Act custodial grievances, we hear Lang killed his family partly from a vendetta against his former father in law, Sergeant Frank Jordon (of East Malvern!). The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. Rumours of “certain allegations” were one reason given to explain Lang’s violence, otherwise attributed (as with Mueller) to a fit of mania. Jordon, meanwhile, seemed to know what was coming but be powerless to stop it. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. Police suspect Krystal was killed by the father of her unborn child, and that people in Pyramid Hill know what happened but are not coming forward. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns’ that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. Factoids of early railways, cinemas, mobility scooters, migrants, TB, police filing systems. And a specially written Taylor Project song, closing with: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train, even when you close your windows, it comes back again, there’s a ghost upon the hill”. Because Liz collected too much information, this digital death trip podcast – Pyramid Hill and East Malvern - is in 3 parts. This is the 1st episode of 3.
Because Liz collected too much info, this digital death trip podcast (episode of This Must Be The Place) is in 3 parts. This is the 2nd episode of 3. Listen to episode 1 first! This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies’ selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip’ bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies’, so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement’ and ‘selections’, later ‘soldier settlement’, as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system’s administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father’s right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. Pre: Family Law Act custodial grievances, we hear Lang killed his family partly from a vendetta against his former father in law, Sergeant Frank Jordon (of East Malvern!). The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. Rumours of “certain allegations” were one reason given to explain Lang’s violence, otherwise attributed (as with Mueller) to a fit of mania. Jordon, meanwhile, seemed to know what was coming but be powerless to stop it. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. Police suspect Krystal was killed by the father of her unborn child, and that people in Pyramid Hill know what happened but are not coming forward. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns’ that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. Factoids of early railways, cinemas, mobility scooters, migrants, TB, police filing systems. And a specially written Taylor Project song, closing with: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train…” This is the 2nd episode of 3, where we return to the 1900s to hear more about Lang, Mueller, and their contexts.
This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies' selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip' bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia's Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. Because Liz collected too much info, this digital death trip podcast is in 3 parts. This is the 3rd and final episode. Listen to 1 & 2 first! Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies', so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement' and ‘selections', later ‘soldier settlement', as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system's administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father's right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns' that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. This is the last instalment of 3. We return to hear a few updates Liz could not help researching further. It includes specially written Taylor Project song Ghost Upon the Hill: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train, even when you close your windows, it comes back again, there's a ghost upon the hill”. Further post-script: Robert Mueller, youngest son, survived and moved to Germany. He married there in 1925. Also, re: the early ‘cinematograph' the children went to at the Athenaeum. Most cinemas in early Australia were in inner city theatres. Each reel was about 3 minutes, usually a short documentary display: boxing, footy, horses. The show would have included magicians. Mueller's servants took the children to this new popular entertainment spectacle. And while they were out, Mueller made preparations to kill everyone.
Because Liz collected too much info, this digital death trip podcast is in 3 parts. This is the 2nd episode of 3. Listen to episode 1 first! This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies' selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip' bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia's Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies', so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement' and ‘selections', later ‘soldier settlement', as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system's administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father's right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. Pre: Family Law Act custodial grievances, we hear Lang killed his family partly from a vendetta against his former father in law, Sergeant Frank Jordon (of East Malvern!). The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. Rumours of “certain allegations” were one reason given to explain Lang's violence, otherwise attributed (as with Mueller) to a fit of mania. Jordon, meanwhile, seemed to know what was coming but be powerless to stop it. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. Police suspect Krystal was killed by the father of her unborn child, and that people in Pyramid Hill know what happened but are not coming forward. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns' that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. Factoids of early railways, cinemas, mobility scooters, migrants, TB, police filing systems. And a specially written Taylor Project song, closing with: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train…” This is the 2nd episode of 3, where we return to the 1900s to hear more about Lang, Mueller, and their contexts.
This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies' selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip' bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia's Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. In this instalment, Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies', so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement' and ‘selections', later ‘soldier settlement', as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system's administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father's right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. Pre: Family Law Act custodial grievances, we hear Lang killed his family partly from a vendetta against his former father in law, Sergeant Frank Jordon (of East Malvern!). The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. Rumours of “certain allegations” were one reason given to explain Lang's violence, otherwise attributed (as with Mueller) to a fit of mania. Jordon, meanwhile, seemed to know what was coming but be powerless to stop it. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. Police suspect Krystal was killed by the father of her unborn child, and that people in Pyramid Hill know what happened but are not coming forward. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns' that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. Factoids of early railways, cinemas, mobility scooters, migrants, TB, police filing systems. And a specially written Taylor Project song, closing with: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train, even when you close your windows, it comes back again, there's a ghost upon the hill”. Because Liz collected too much information, this digital death trip podcast – Pyramid Hill and East Malvern - is in 3 parts. This is the 1st episode of 3.
In this episode we discuss our big week's we've had including: Matt's visit to see Tool in Cincy, Dunkman's High School Cheerleading dad experience, Indianapolis Motor Speedway being sold to Penske, and why we think the entire Florida Football team is banging Megan Mullen. SUBSCRIBE, RATE, & REVIEW PLEASE! SUBSCRIBE ON YOUTUBE FOR VIDEO https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC70dT2hC8EDi4oTdRtPMrEA “LIKE” US ON FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/HighlyInappropriatePodcasts/ “FOLLOW” US ON TWITTER https://twitter.com/HighlyInapprop1 “FOLLOW” US ON INSTAGRAM https://www.instagram.com/highlyinappropriatepodcast/
This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies’ selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip’ bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. Because Liz collected too much info, this digital death trip podcast is in 3 parts. This is the 3rd and final episode. Listen to 1 & 2 first! Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies’, so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement’ and ‘selections’, later ‘soldier settlement’, as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system’s administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father’s right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns’ that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. This is the last instalment of 3. We return to hear a few updates Liz could not help researching further. It includes specially written Taylor Project song Ghost Upon the Hill: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train, even when you close your windows, it comes back again, there’s a ghost upon the hill”. Further post-script: Robert Mueller, youngest son, survived and moved to Germany. He married there in 1925. Also, re: the early ‘cinematograph’ the children went to at the Athenaeum. Most cinemas in early Australia were in inner city theatres. Each reel was about 3 minutes, usually a short documentary display: boxing, footy, horses. The show would have included magicians. Mueller's servants took the children to this new popular entertainment spectacle. And while they were out, Mueller made preparations to kill everyone.
This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies’ selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip’ bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. In this instalment, Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies’, so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement’ and ‘selections’, later ‘soldier settlement’, as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system’s administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father’s right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. Pre: Family Law Act custodial grievances, we hear Lang killed his family partly from a vendetta against his former father in law, Sergeant Frank Jordon (of East Malvern!). The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. Rumours of “certain allegations” were one reason given to explain Lang’s violence, otherwise attributed (as with Mueller) to a fit of mania. Jordon, meanwhile, seemed to know what was coming but be powerless to stop it. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. Police suspect Krystal was killed by the father of her unborn child, and that people in Pyramid Hill know what happened but are not coming forward. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns’ that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. Factoids of early railways, cinemas, mobility scooters, migrants, TB, police filing systems. And a specially written Taylor Project song, closing with: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train, even when you close your windows, it comes back again, there’s a ghost upon the hill”. Because Liz collected too much information, this digital death trip podcast – Pyramid Hill and East Malvern - is in 3 parts. This is the 1st episode of 3.
Because Liz collected too much info, this digital death trip podcast is in 3 parts. This is the 2nd episode of 3. Listen to episode 1 first! This episode of This Must Be The Place is part of the Digital Death Trip segment, where we investigate geographically themed ‘tragedies’ selected at random by the custom-coded ‘Digital Death Trip’ bot. The code uses the API to the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it. It compiles a case file, then Liz follows up with some research about the incident, its place and time. Digital Death Trip has picked two random and distant Victorian locations, and two random tragedies: The 1902 East Malvern Tragedy and 1906 Pyramid Hill Tragedy. Both are ‘triple tragedies’, so run in parallel. They also end up connected in ways that start to seem not quite random. On November 14th 1906, in a murder-suicide reported as The Pyramid Hill Tragedy, Constable Oliver John Lang killed himself and his two daughters (Olive and Doreen) at Pyramid Hill, an agricultural town in northern Victoria where Lang had been stationed for 5 years. Noting Constable Lang had repeatedly spoken about shooting himself and his family, an inquest found that “a heavy responsibility lies on those hear such words”, especially threats made by “anyone holding a public position such as that of a constable of police in whose hands are often the property liberty and perhaps the lives of others”. In 1902, in a murder-suicide reported as The East Malvern Tragedy, German merchant Arthur Mueller killed himself, his wife (Cecile) and one of his children (Willy) in a prestigious eastern suburb of Melbourne. Themes include police and law in settler-colonial contexts: the roles of police stationed in rural areas, and the fragile line of law. Also Land Law. Land Acts facilitated ‘closer settlement’ and ‘selections’, later ‘soldier settlement’, as tools of colonial expansion. Through land titles, Pyramid Hill was made into a late 19th century agricultural settlement, and police had a vital role in the system’s administration. Fathers and family law: fathers and grandfathers, and inheritances (good and bad) are key. We discuss custodial law in 19th and 20th century Australia, and the legal principal of “father’s right” through which fathers were always granted custody of their legitimate children. Pre: Family Law Act custodial grievances, we hear Lang killed his family partly from a vendetta against his former father in law, Sergeant Frank Jordon (of East Malvern!). The stories share knowledge and lies: advanced lying skills central to traditional morality and legitimacy, unnoticed patterns, unknowing, and what you can or should do with knowledge. Rumours of “certain allegations” were one reason given to explain Lang’s violence, otherwise attributed (as with Mueller) to a fit of mania. Jordon, meanwhile, seemed to know what was coming but be powerless to stop it. There are echoes through to a recent mystery in Pyramid Hill, the disappearance of heavily pregnant intellectually disabled woman Krystal Fraser in 2009. Police suspect Krystal was killed by the father of her unborn child, and that people in Pyramid Hill know what happened but are not coming forward. A final theme is cultural references to ‘ghost towns’ that seem isolated not only in space but in time. Wake in Fright, Twin Peaks, The Shining, 100 years of Solitude, Blazing Saddles. And country song Long Black Veil: “nobody knows, nobody sees, nobody knows but me”. Featuring a wintery visit to the Pyramid Hill op shop, cop shop, abattoir, and cemetery. Factoids of early railways, cinemas, mobility scooters, migrants, TB, police filing systems. And a specially written Taylor Project song, closing with: “on the hill there is a lookout, I can see that long dark train…” This is the 2nd episode of 3, where we return to the 1900s to hear more about Lang, Mueller, and their contexts.
This week we bring on our friend (and possible new host) Amy for some spicy LaPorte County Indiana local government chat. We also have a discussion about Epstein and whether there's any consciousness building/ organizing potential in conspiracy speculation or if it's ultimately just a hobby/selfsucc.
Deadly wallpaper, exploding combs, burning ballerinas, murder bottles, and more macabre stories… Join us on a Victorian Death Trip, where we discuss all the horrible and shocking ways you could die in this fascinating era!
Deadly wallpaper, exploding combs, burning ballerinas, murder bottles, and more macabre stories... Join us on a Victorian Death Trip, where we discuss all the horrible and shocking ways you could die in this fascinating era!
If you enjoy a twist and heart pumping thriller checkout my newest book . Through the realm lies the unforgotten legacy. It's a ride you will never regret just open it up and let your emagination take you to another world . You can buy it on Google play Barn's and Noble Amazon Kindle
Tony Campos talks to HEAVY Mag about their brand new tour and forthcoming tour.
An episode about a faceless man, and irrigation history. In April 1905, a man’s mutilated body was found in a bag in an irrigation channel in Girgarre East, northern Victoria. The channel was not far from where hundreds of men were constructing the Waranga Basin– a formative irrigation project storing water from the Goulburn River for distribution through channels that parceled up land for orchards, dairy farms and new towns. The body in the channel had been disemboweled, its head cut off, its legs missing, and its face sliced off in an apparent attempt to avoid identification. The find was dubbed The Tatura Tragedy, for the nearby irrigation town, and while investigators took weeks to identify the body, they quickly speculated on a connection to workers at the Waranga camp. This “rowdy township” housed “the usual navy class, neither better nor worse, prone to quarrel or to be hilarious and enjoy themselves on pay nights”, who “come and go without any notice being taken of them”. They typically travelled in pairs laboring, shearing or rabbiting. The Tatura Tragedy 1905 story was selected at random from the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive of digitized historical newspapers by Digital Death Trip, a custom bot coded by Sarah. The code uses Trove’s API to randomly select a Victorian town, then a random so-called Tragedy from it, then compile a case file. In the pilot run, DDT picked 2 stories from irrigation towns in Victoria, including The Tatura Tragedy. In this episode, Elizabeth has dug up more about the incident, its place and time. One theme is the nature of work, particularly itinerant work for men. When the victim, William Skinner (!) was finally identified, and killer James Edwards apprehended, speculation proved correct: the pair were workers and had been travelling together. A police description said Edwards was “fond of using the expression, ‘there’s no crawfish about me’, a shearer, a gambler, and two-up player; frequents country racecourses, drinks heavy when able, talks fighting, quiet when sober”. Edwards said he tramped the rivers of Victoria his whole life “like a book to me”, doing “any kind of work that comes my way”. Another theme is irrigation (which is interesting, at least in “Chinatown”). The Waranga wall is a 7km long, 12m high barrier built over a decade with horses, shovels and picks. It was Australia’s first major dam. Visiting Waranga Shores caravan park, maybe site of the workers’ camp, the basin looks like the sea but also like a flooded field. It’s popular for boating. Beneath the water lie remains of old grazing stations; and of the longer history of indigenous Taungurung people. Massive early 20th century irrigation and Closer Settlement projects were stages in the displacement embodied in settler colonialism: through which land, waterways, and rights to them, were carved out anew. Waranga still feeds Victoria’s irrigation system and its politics of water rights, environment, and the economic viability of farming and small towns. We also drove back roads of Girgarre East, searching for where Skinner’s body was dropped. Near where we narrowed it down to, someone had strung up bodies of dead hares, foxes and kangaroos along a barbed wire fence – including a fox’s decapitated decaying head. Very “In the Pines”. Edwards was found guilty of manslaughter: the defense argued the victim, Skinner, a comparatively privileged man, was bad-tempered and the killing was provoked. Edwards blamed drinking and working: “I’ve worked hard, lived hard, drunk hard and fought hard; but hard work has brought hard drink…”. Public fascination waned as Edwards seemed ‘ordinary’ back-blocks brawler. Today, there are rumors of unknown bodies from the camp buried in the Waranga wall. There are also tales of giant 2m waves coursing across the otherwise glassy surface of the basin, spooking workers and anglers. Like 70s song the Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, “the lake, it is said, never gives up her dead”.
In this experimental episode of This Must Be The Place Elizabeth pilots a computer program named Digital Death Trip, or alternatively Trove Town Tragedy, coded by Elizabeth’s sister Sarah. The program selects a random location in Victoria, then a random ‘tragedy’ from that location using the National Library of Australia’s Trove archive of digitized newspapers, and the Trove API. The olden days articles retrieved are mostly from between the 1860s and 1950s. The program uses ‘Speak’ to read out articles in a robot voice. It’s art meets historical geography meets Perfect Match robot. Death Trip is a reference to 1973 book Wisconsin Death Trip, a collection by Michael Lesy of photographs and news articles from two small superficially comfortable Wisconsin towns in the late 19th century. By picking darker articles – suicides, epidemics, bankruptcies, murders, tramp armies – the effect was “constantly repeated themes”, with fragments illustrating each another and the disruptions of their times. Elizabeth wondered if something broadly similar could be done with Australia’s Trove. Trove’s API allows you to use a key to search and use results automatically, to create your own application (one example is the Trove Penguin Bot). Much of Trove is open and crowd-sourced - anyone can search, or correct machine-read text, or create lists. While it doesn’t yet have specific location data, experiments like this bring more of a spatial dimension. What the Death Trip code does is randomly select a place name in Victoria, combine this with the key word “tragedy”, search Trove, shortlist and read out headlines, and compile a case file on a random article. Depending what comes back, the idea is to investigate the selected town tragedy. This could be an excuse to go on trips to visit Victorian towns, perhaps some with swimming pools. While the code could search for any kind of event or word, this project is specifically interested in the word ‘tragedy’. Tragedy was a common news headline partly because covering Coroner’s courts and police beats was a convention of the emerging popular newspaper industry of the 19th century. The articles the bot retrieves are not just any tragedies, but those tied to a place, usually with ‘the’ definite article. Nearly every Australian town seemed to have had incidents headlined The [insert Town Name] Tragedy. These included forces of nature – drowning and fires, and what we might now call negligence involving workplace machinery. Car accidents, as we now know them, were at first ‘tragedies’. And violence: it covered suicides, murders, and murder-suicides particularly in the context of the home. Naming things ‘The’ town tragedy seemed to suggest such things couldn’t and haven’t happened in that place, and that if they did they would leave a lasting impact. One thing the experiment shows is these things have happened, usually more than once, and they are forgotten, and happen again. Tragedy seemed then, as now, to mean the line between things we want to try to understand or control, and those we do not. Some of these change, and some don’t (notably, some of the language of domestic murder suicides). As part of this project, Elizabeth has so far corrected and tagged about 1,100 tragedies. Words like farm, ‘pea-rifle’, and ‘quarrel’ have new connotations. In this test, Elizabeth and Sarah run through the concept, then the mechanics and mishaps of running the code, and see which towns and tragedies the bot picks. As it turns out, those selected are from 2 irrigation towns in Victoria: The Tatura Tragedy 1905; and The Quantong Tragedy 1894. As a follow up, Elizabeth will use the results to find out more about the incidents and their contexts in time and place. Trove Town tragedy list: trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/result…trovetowntragedy Github project: github.com/SarahTaylorProject/trove_experiment
Its the "Heavy Metal Over A Six Pack" Halloween episode! This episode has everything from news, Marilyn Manson Dildos, spook tunes, and beer.... Featured Artis Today... we were joined by Jordan Simpson, Philip Loupin, and Jason Matthews from the band "Faced" to talk about their most recent album "Death Trip". Awesome dudes from New York state and their music is featured throughout the episode. Like, Share, Listen, Repeat! Support the cause and check out the Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/hmoa6pack Cheers! Todays Featured Artist: Faced Jordan Simpson- Guitars Philip Loupin- Vocals Jason Matthews- Drums,keys Steven Wick-bass https://www.faced518.com Tracks Played in order: Drunk As Shit Faced Rippin Thru Mushroom Force Fed Trust Was Broken https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aBq2GBSPfhU&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR2_Nanchq8S3Q4SrPs_atTzGFUADW4S3P88piuhNNsMI0Ki_P-M1umZORE https://www.facebook.com/Faced518faced-1887446751284215/ https://faced.bandcamp.com/releases?fbclid=IwAR0a_u7ywK8v01PBUdZDY1N8a1ZxvO91ZLRAJrkEdkZyCU1IbV-mbzxDgSU Markus’ Halloween Inspirations: They’re Coming To Take Me Away - Butcher Babies https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23ywNYOde4Y ICE NINE KILLS - The Silver Scream https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/the-silver-scream/1435519854 https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/the-struggle/1232828832 Album Review: Markus Says - 4.5 News: https://www.revolvermag.com/music/korns-self-titled-album-10-things-you-didnt-know-nu-metals-first-shot?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Korn%27s%20Self-Titled%20Album%3A%2010%20Things%20You%20Didn%27t%20Know%20Nu-Metal%27s%20First%20Shot&utm_campaign=UA-8316105-1 https://www.loudersound.com/news/ben-stiller-reforms-his-teenage-punk-band-and-releases-first-song-in-36-years https://www.loudersound.com/news/ben-stiller-reforms-his-teenage-punk-band-and-releases-first-song-in-36-years Todays Beers: Wormtown Oktoberfest http://wormtownbrewery.com Markus Says: 4.5 Shed - Mountain Ale http://theshedbrewery.com/age-verification?destination=node/2 Anthony Says: 5 https://www.harpoonbrewery.com/beers/harpoon-dunkin-coffee-porter-210805 End track info from Inverse Records: Black Lotus Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/orderoftheblacklotus Bandcamp: https://orderoftheblacklotus.bandcamp.com/releases Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blacklotuscultband Twitter: https://twitter.com/BandBlackLotus Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSD-fXPuSFvK4cCvDaH56sg Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-681530500 Older Episodes Not Available on the Directories can be found here via these Google Drive Links: Episode 1- Fav Bands You’ve Probably Never Heard Of https://drive.google.com/open?id=1SDiSore2oMrzecsZtYklK_x_y5yfH2hB Episode 2 - Battle Royale - Best Folk/Celtic Metal Band https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_8CwPmS9dBSxUkgVkRRMO3NjbqJ5ePmL/view?usp=sharing Episode 3 - Guest Host - Tom Smith - A New Game - Headlines https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TrvBBO1eiaJDgfSmQyPdRrvfZMUxU8My/view?usp=sharing Episode 4 - Heavy Metal Cover Songs https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TrvBBO1eiaJDgfSmQyPdRrvfZMUxU8My/view?usp=sharing Visit our Patreon account and contribute to the cause! https://www.patreon.com/hmoa6pack Vector Graphic credit: Vector Graphics by Vecteezy.com ARMPHIS YouTube Channel - Royalty Free Music Background https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQZ4eWuXjiHw0aurWGPFOUA https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtgf00GvfFQVsYBA7V7RwUw https://www.youtube.com/redirect?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fteknoaxe&redir_token=-2bh4KUz3kifjmhBBvSCdpbUPc98MTUyNjkxNzAzM0AxNTI2ODMwNjMz&event=video_description&v=HaZzgw9aWc8 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMZ8uDWrYwi62AASCNhMHcg All submissions to “Heavy Metal Over A Six Pack” are under the understanding that they are royalty free, and usage will be decided by editors and directors of “Heavy Metal Over A Six Pack”. Submissions are voluntary, we do not claim ownership of submissions but any submissions we deem free to use at our discretion. Please respect our material, share with your friends and colleagues, please do not replicate or copy. We give credit to all sources who contribute to our show and all research we use. Like, Share, Listen, Repeat respectively! Check out the material and research the topics on your own, send us your feedback at hmoa6pack@gmail.com and go to our directories and give us a rating! Cheers!
Rocketship X-M inspires Beth and Adam to talk about chins, Matt Damon, robot puberty, intrepid reporters, and female astronauts.
Darren and Paul continue their look at the Tales of the Legion era, as Wildfire and Invisible Kid make their way out of paradise, the Heroes of Lallor help one of their own, and Paul finds an unintended way to Stump a Sub!
This time it’s my friend Kenny Keil talking with me. We cover a lot of subjects here. Some good rap and music talk. We talk some TLOP (The Life of Pablo) and Kanye. We talk about the craft of making comics and drawing in vector along with comedy writing on Mad Magazine and why Cracked was dope. Kenny tells me how he going into writing Rap video treatments. We talk about Kenny’s comics, Rhyme Travelers, Death trip, Tales to Suffice, and Ferrari Boyz webcomic. We also talk about biting, hip hop culture and comic fandom (read the subtext bruh). Plus a manga talk all throughout. Enjoy this cloth talk. Major keys are laid down. Check out Kenny online: http://talestosuffice.com/ http://ferrariboyz.talestosuffice.com/ http://kennykeil.blogspot.com/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/kennykeil Buy his comics on comixology: Rhyme Travelers - https://www.comixology.com/Rhyme-Travelers/comics-series/42918?ref=Y29taWMvdmlldy9kZXNrdG9wL2JyZWFkY3J1bWJz Death Trip - https://www.comixology.com/Death-Trip/comics-series/13283 Tales to Suffice - https://www.comixology.com/Tales-to-Suffice/comics-series/16685?ref=cHVibGlzaGVyL3ZpZXcvZGVza3RvcC9saXN0L3Nlcmllc0xpc3Q Stay at Home Scarface - http://www.amazon.com/Stay-Home-Scarface-Coloring-Activity/dp/1942099096 Music in this episode: No More Parties in LA - Kanye West featuring Kendrick Lamar TLC - Elkco Milk - starRO Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 1 (version 3) - Kanye West Featuring Kid Cudi Am I Wrong - Anderson .Paak featuring ScHoolboy Q Throw Some Mo - Rae Sremmurd Featuring Nicki Minaj and Young thug BUS RIDE - Kaytranada w Karriem Riggins & River Tiber Strive - A$AP Ferg featuring Missy Elliot Trophy - Charlie XCX Views - Drake All the music copyright their respective owners Get at me @julianlytle on Twitter, IG, Snapchat, Tumblr, Soundcloud & Vine email the show at ignorantblisspodcast [at] gmail [dot] com Subscribe on iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ignorant-bliss-podcast-feed/id415595194?mt=2 also please leave a review if you can! Also on Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/ignorant-bliss Also on Soundcloud - https://soundcloud.com/julianlytle Also on Google Play Music - https://play.google.com/music/m/Ipbp7daje4f62qiyzyfujoxhpwi?t=Ignorant-Bliss Also on the Taylor Network of Podcasts - http://taylornetworkofpodcasts.com/?s=ignorant+bliss&submit=Search
Finally...The Ross has come back to...Odyssey Unleashhhhhhhhed! Ross and J appear for the first time all over again. They help to round out the full format of the show, which really isn't a format. They'll add to the conversations including video games and television. They also know a thing or two about comics and music. Stand back and watch the magic happen, or jump aboard...just make sure to hold on as we unleash the odyssey!Planet of Vampires #1 (Atlas/Seaboard Comics 1975) - Opening / -Video Games our personal history, what we're playing now and what our favorites are from all consoles - 11:37 / -Starburn #1 (Markosia Ent. LLC. 2015) - 36:14 / -Various music topics from J and Ross as an introduction and we discuss Static-X's Wisconsin Death Trip (1999) - 46:37 / -Transformers: Robots In Disguise (2015) Pilot 1&2 - 1:00:20 / -You can contact us on twitter: @odysseyunleash and also at hotmail: odyssey-unleashed@hotmail.com. Thanks for listening and feedback is always appreciated.
Death Trip Logic (Dance of the Tutuguri)Image by Milla GaleaPresented by Simon Saint-SimonExcerpts from 'To have done with the judgement of God', a play by Antonin Artaud.A little death music...Sounds:01 Harmonia and Eno 76 - Welcome02 Kristen Hersh - Your Ghost03 Iron & Wine - Carousel04 Onoehetrix Point Never - Nobody here (echo jam)05 Chris Rea - Rain (Peter Visti edit)06 Fleetwood mac - Keep on Going (Cosmo Vitelli edit)07 Tame Impala - H.F.G.W. (Canyons drunken rage)08 Invisible Conga People - Cable Dazed09 Demdike Stare - Jannisary10 Ghost Note - Holy Jungle11 Patti Smith - Ghost Dance (Pocketknife's Arms Out Remix)12 Exuma - Thirteenth Sunday13 Faust - The Sad Skinhead14 Lindstrom and Prins Thomas - I Love You + 100Love you. Sleep tight.xxxsss
A little death music… (Dance of the Tutuguri) 01 Harmonia and Eno 76 – Welcome 02 Kristen Hersh – Your Ghost 03 Iron & Wine – Carousel 04 Onoehetrix Point Never – Nobody here (echo jam) 05 Chris Rea – Rain (Peter Visti edit) 06 Fleetwood mac – Keep on Going (Cosmo Vitelli edit) 07 […]
In this jam-packed episode of Dread Media, Darryll joins Desmond for a Roadkill Review of the newly released Platinum Dunes suckfest The Unborn. Desmond recovers enough to review The Summer I Died by Ryan C. Thomas, and DW's triumphant return heralds a review of an obscure DOS game: Harvester. Tons of talk is had as well as an announcement about the clearance sale going on at www.Fright-Rags.com where you can save even more with your DREAD10 coupon code and a Rue Morgue Magazine giveaway is offered. Tunes include: "Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell" by Iggy & The Stooges, "New Born" by Muse, "Dirty Black Summer" by Danzig and "Death Trip" by Iggy & The Stooges. RIP Ron Asheton. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.
In this jam-packed episode of Dread Media, Darryll joins Desmond for a Roadkill Review of the newly released Platinum Dunes suckfest The Unborn. Desmond recovers enough to review The Summer I Died by Ryan C. Thomas, and DW's triumphant return heralds a review of an obscure DOS game: Harvester. Tons of talk is had as well as an announcement about the clearance sale going on at www.Fright-Rags.com where you can save even more with your DREAD10 coupon code and a Rue Morgue Magazine giveaway is offered. Tunes include: "Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell" by Iggy & The Stooges, "New Born" by Muse, "Dirty Black Summer" by Danzig and "Death Trip" by Iggy & The Stooges. RIP Ron Asheton. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.
In this jam-packed episode of Dread Media, Darryll joins Desmond for a Roadkill Review of the newly released Platinum Dunes suckfest The Unborn. Desmond recovers enough to review The Summer I Died by Ryan C. Thomas, and DW's triumphant return heralds a review of an obscure DOS game: Harvester. Tons of talk is had as well as an announcement about the clearance sale going on at www.Fright-Rags.com where you can save even more with your DREAD10 coupon code and a Rue Morgue Magazine giveaway is offered. Tunes include: "Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell" by Iggy & The Stooges, "New Born" by Muse, "Dirty Black Summer" by Danzig and "Death Trip" by Iggy & The Stooges. RIP Ron Asheton. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.
In this jam-packed episode of Dread Media, Darryll joins Desmond for a Roadkill Review of the newly released Platinum Dunes suckfest The Unborn. Desmond recovers enough to review The Summer I Died by Ryan C. Thomas, and DW's triumphant return heralds a review of an obscure DOS game: Harvester. Tons of talk is had as well as an announcement about the clearance sale going on at www.Fright-Rags.com where you can save even more with your DREAD10 coupon code and a Rue Morgue Magazine giveaway is offered. Tunes include: "Your Pretty Face is Going to Hell" by Iggy & The Stooges, "New Born" by Muse, "Dirty Black Summer" by Danzig and "Death Trip" by Iggy & The Stooges. RIP Ron Asheton. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.