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Episode 161 Chapter 22, Electronic Music in Canada. Works Recommended from my book, Electronic and Experimental Music This podcast is produced as a companion to my book, Electronic and Experimental Music, published by Routledge. Each of these episodes corresponds to a chapter in the text and an associated list of recommended works, also called Listen in the text. They provide listening examples of vintage electronic works featured in the text. The works themselves can be enjoyed without the book and I hope that they stand as a chronological survey of important works in the history of electronic music. Be sure to tune-in to other episodes of the podcast where we explore a wide range of electronic music in many styles and genres, all drawn from my archive of vintage recordings. There is a complete playlist for this episode on the website for the podcast. Let's get started with the listening guide to Chapter 22, Electronic Music in Canada from my book Electronic and Experimental music. Playlist: ELECTRONIC MUSIC IN CANADA Time Track Time Start Introduction –Thom Holmes 01:34 00:00 1. Hugh LeCaine, “Dripsody: An Etude For Variable Speed Recorder” (1955). One of the earliest pieces of tape music by the inventor and composer Hugh Le Caine. Also, one of the most available works from the early years when it was used to demonstrate simple techniques of tape composition. It is probably the most-played work of electronic music other than “Poeme Electronique” by Varese. Every sound in this work is based on a recording of a single drop of water falling into a bucket, which then underwent various speed adjustments and edits to create this composition. 2:12 01:38 2. Hugh LeCaine, “Ninety-Nine Generators” (1956). The title refers to the 99 tones of the touch sensitive organ. Each note had a separate generator and they could all sounds at the same time. 1:42 03:40 3. Hugh LeCaine, “This Thing Called Key” (1956). Le Caine composed on his Special Purpose Tape Recorder using individual tape playback heads for six tapes, activated by keys. 1:53 05:22 4. Anhalt, “Electronic Composition No. 2” (1959). 8:47 07:16 5. Norma Beecroft, “From Dreams of Brass” (1964). Norma Beecroft is a Canadian composer, producer, broadcaster, and arts administrator. Among the pioneering academic electronic music composers, she worked independently in the Electronic Music Studio of the University of Toronto. 15:59 16:04 6. Paul Pedersen, “For Margaret, Motherhood And Mendelssohn” (1971). Composed at McGill University where Pedersen was director of the electronic music studio. The electroacoustic work uses fragments of speeches such as prime minister Pierre Trudeau's and the electronic sounds were composed using Le Caine's Polyphonic Synthesizer. 4:21 32:02 7. Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux, “Zones” (1972). Musique électroacoustique réalisée au Sonic Research Studio, Université Simon Fraser, Vancouver. An exploration of different instrumental timbres using electroacoustic music. 9:02 36:22 8. Alcides Lanza, “Eidesis IV For Wind Ensemble And Electronic Sounds” (1977). Lanza studied music in Buena Aires, moved to Canada in 1971, and became Director of the Electronic Music Studio of McGill University in 1976. 11:20 45:24 9. John Mills-Cockell, “Collision” from Gateway (1977). Produced, engineered, organ and synthesizer by independent Canadian musician John Mills Cockell. 03:32 56:54 10. Dennis Patrick, “Phantasy III (Excerpt)” (1977-78). Completed in the Electronic Music Studio of the University of Toronto, where he was Director of the studio beginning around 1976. 04:53 01:00:26 11. Hildegard Westerkamp, “Cricket Voice” (1987). This work is a “musical exploration of the cricket,” with a cricket sound recorded in Mexico. If you know crickets, you will note that this one is not Canadian. But the composer is and this work was produced at the Simon Fraser University in Vancouver where Westerkamp was teaching at the time. 11:09 01:05:20 12. Ann Southam, “Fluke Sound” (1989). Southam is another female Canadian composer of note. She is from the Toronto area. This work is from a period when she was immersed in electroacoustic music. 10:22 01:16:16 13. Norma Beecroft, “Evocations: Images Of Canada (1992). In contrast to the earlier tape works of Beecroft, this is a purely digital composition. She used an Apple Macintosh, the program/sequencer Performer and a Roland D-70 synthesizer. 16:01 01:26:30 Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes. My Books/eBooks: Electronic and Experimental Music, sixth edition, Routledge 2020. Also, Sound Art: Concepts and Practices, first edition, Routledge 2022. See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation. For a transcript, please see my blog, Noise and Notations. Original music by Thom Holmes can be found on iTunes and Bandcamp.
I, Frankenstein (2014): Miranda Otto as Leonore, Aaron Eckart as Adam, Bill Nighy as Naberius, Yvonne Strahovski as Terra, Caitlin Stasey as Keziah, Jai Courtney as Gideon, Kevin Grevioux as Dekar, Amanda Dyar as Runner, Chris Pang as Levi, Penny Higgs as Sargon, and Bruce Spence as Molokai. The Time Travelers (1964): John Hoyt as Doctor Varno, Steve Franken as Danny, Delores Wells as Reena, Merry Anders as Carol White, Preston Foster, Phillip Carey, Dennis Patrick, and Joan Woodbury as Gadra. 16th installment of Blackened Armor written by Doc. Podcast cover art by Rodney Holmes with Vecteezy. Michael Combs: Website Music: February (mumblemix) this track is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commerical 3.0 Unported License. https://blocsonic.com/releases/track/bscomp0007-disc-1-6-calendar-girl-february-mumblemix http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ Heroes of Science Fiction and Fantasy covers heroes of movies, television, comics, and books, interviews, and commentary. Sci-Fi Talk. doc@heroesofsciencefictionandfantasy.com. Text 510-610-8944. www.heroesofsciencefictionandfantasy.com
Episode 121 Crosscurrents in Early Electronic Music of Canada, Part 2 Playlist Track Time Start Time Introduction –Thom Holmes 04:32 00:00 1. John Mills-Cockell, “On The Heath” from A Third Testament (1974 True North). John Mills-Cockell is a Canadian composer from Toronto who was a very early adopter of the original Moog Synthesizer. He was part of the multi-faceted and ground-breaking work with the avant garde/poetry group Intersystems in the late 1960s and then the group Syrinx. I became acquainted with John more recently and he told me that his original Moog modules, used for Intersystems, burned up in a fire and so he turned to the use of ARP instruments around 1971. I am featuring his synthesizer work from a couple of solo albums as a representative of the independent stream of electronic music artists from Canada. John has continued to produce works for and for his numerous works for radio, television, film, ballet, and stage, and he is still active. 02:30 04:32 2. John Mills-Cockell, “North African Gladiator” from A Third Testament (1974 True North). Produced, played, engineered, organ and synthesizer, John Mills Cockell. 04:08 07:00 3. John Mills-Cockell, “Collision” from Gateway (1977 Anubis Records ). Produced, played, engineered, organ and synthesizer, John Mills Cockell. 03:32 11:03 4. Alcides Lanza, “Eidesis IV For Wind Ensemble And Electronic Sounds” (1977) from McGill Wind Ensemble (1980 McGill University Records). This collection of contemporary Canadian works was released by McGill University's own label. This track is the only work with electronic sounds on the album, by Argentinean-born composer Lanza. Lanza studied music in Buena Aires, moved to Canada in 1971, and became Director of the Electronic Music Studio of McGill University in 1976. 11:20 14:34 5. Dennis Patrick, “Phantasy III (Excerpt)” (1977-78) from Dennis Patrick--Musical Portrait (1982 CAPAC). Another one of the 7” vinyl Musical Portrait series of Canadian artists, released by the Composers, Authors and Publishers Association of Canada, Limited (CAPAC). Completed in the Electronic Music Studio of the University of Toronto, where he was Director of the studio beginning around 1976. 04:53 25:48 6. Barry Truax, “Arras” (1980) from Anthologie De La Musique Canadienne / Anthology Of Canadian Music - Musique Électroacoustique; Electroacoustic Music (1990 Radio Canada International). Truax represented the left coast of Canada, and worked with R. Murray Schafer beginning in 1973 on the World Soundscape Project. Several of the composers in this episode came from that same environment, mixing natural acoustic sounds with electroacoustic treatments. This work was made using four computer synthesized tracks. Truax became known for his computer compositions as well as soundscapes. 10:08 30:38 7. Canadian Electronic Ensemble, “Chaconne À Son Goût” from Canadian Electronic Ensemble (1981 Centrediscs). Performers, David Grimes, David Jaeger, James Montgomery, Larry Lake. Composed by David Grimes. The ensemble was founded in Toronto in 1971 by David Grimes, David Jaeger, Jim Montgomery and Larry Lake, "to promote the live performance of electronic music and thereby the composition of new repertoire for this medium." This is another nice example of music by independent artists working in Canada. 17:21 40:34 8. Dennis Patrick, “Metasuite” (1982) from Dennis Patrick--Musical Portrait (1982 CAPAC). Another one of the 7” vinyl Musical Portrait series of Canadian artists, released by the Composers, Authors and Publishers Association of Canada, Limited (CAPAC). Completed in the Electronic Music Studio of the University of Toronto, where he was Director of the studio beginning around 1976. 07:55 57:54 9. David Keane, “Aurora” (1985) from Aurora (1985 Cambridge Street Records). A work from a fellow author, David Keane who wrote a book called Tape Music Composition in 1981 (Oxford University Press). He was born in America but became a Canadian citizen in 1974. At the time of “Aurora” Keane was a professor of music theory and director of the electronic music studio at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, which I think he founded in 1970. The music was created to be played during a dance performance in which movement was seen through colored images projected on the dancers. The work was realized in the Queen's University Electroacoustic Music Facility. 10:17 1:05:48 10. Claude Schryer, “A Kindred Spirit” (1985) from Group Of The Electronic Music Studio - McGill University (1986 McGill University Records). Bass Clarinet, Yves Adam; Cello, Andras Weber; Composed and conducted by, Claude Schryer; Flute, Jill Rothberg; Guitar Daniel Desjardins; Percussion, Helen Barclay; Piano, Laurie Radford. Recorded at McGill University Recording Studios. This work is notable for its use of the Synclavier, a high-end digital synthesizer/sampler/workstation from the mid-1980s. 16:02 1:16:04 11. Bruno Degazio, “Heatnoise” (1987) from Anthologie De La Musique Canadienne / Anthology Of Canadian Music - Musique Électroacoustique; Electroacoustic Music (1990 Radio Canada International). Degazio is a composer, researcher and film sound designer based in Ontario, Canada. “Heatnoise is one of a series of algorithmic compositions applying principles of fractal geometry to music.” It uses digital synthesis. 11:24 1:32:04 12. Hildegard Westerkamp, “Cricket Voice” (1987) from from Anthologie De La Musique Canadienne / Anthology Of Canadian Music - Musique Électroacoustique; Electroacoustic Music (1990 Radio Canada International). A super accomplished sound ecologist, Westerhamp is best known today as the creator of many works of sound art that use natural acoustic environments. She also composed many tape works. This work is a “musical exploration of the cricket,” with a cricket sound recorded in Mexico. If you know crickets, you will note that this one is not Canadian. But the composer is and this work was produced at the Simon Fraser University in Vancouver where Westerkamp was teaching at the time. 11:09 1:43:18 13. Ann Southam, “Fluke Sound” (1989) from Anthologie De La Musique Canadienne / Anthology Of Canadian Music - Musique Électroacoustique; Electroacoustic Music (1990 Radio Canada International). Southam is another female Canadian composer of note. Much of her career has been spent composing works for dance. She is from the Toronto area. This work is from a period when she was immersed in electroacoustic music. 10:22 1:54:13 14. Norma Beecroft, “Evocations: Images Of Canada (1992) (2003 Ovation Volume 3). In contrast to the earlier tape works of Beecroft featured in part 1 of this series, this is a purely digital composition. She used an Apple Macintosh, the program/sequencer Performer and a Roland D-70 synthesizer. Commissioned by the Music Department in Toronto of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. with the purpose of utilizing their then new digital mixing facilities. The materials for this composition represent the many aspects of Canadian culture and was a statement around her concern for the “future of Canada as a unfied country.” 16:01 2:04:22 Opening background music: David Keane, “Lumina” (1988) from Anthologie De La Musique Canadienne / Anthology Of Canadian Music - Musique Électroacoustique; Electroacoustic Music (1990 Radio Canada International). For tenor voice and “digital tape recorder” to sample and manipulate the sound. Created in Keane's studio in Scarborough, Ontario. Voice, Richard Margison. 11:46 Opening and closing sequences voiced by Anne Benkovitz. Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes. My Books/eBooks: Electronic and Experimental Music, sixth edition, Routledge 2020. Also, Sound Art: Concepts and Practices, first edition, Routledge 2022. See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation. For a transcript, please see my blog, Noise and Notations.
This week we are doing an audio only episode!! Bringing back to the show are my friends Jack and Joe of DERAZZLED PODCAST - a podcast dedicated to Golden Raspberry award winning films. We discuss the 1970 drama JOE - directed by John G. Alvidsen and starring Peter Boyle, Susan Sarandon and Dennis Patrick. Don't forget to like and subscribe!Try NOM NOM TODAY! https://zen.ai/Ax2lLiOypAMyn_rp4eoKejMMH3kG31Hc8ShXDUV0BWMSign up for Zencaster TODAY! https://zen.ai/Ax2lLiOypAMyn_rp4eoKemgLq-YYFcUzPdCT19xZh1EOFFER CODES: cultworthyVisit thecultworthy.comVisit https://www.derazzled.com/
9. What Makes a Great Leader w/ Dennis Patrick
8. Religion & Politics w/ Dennis Patrick
Patrick, Dennis and Angelo welcome to the studio Kate Bodner. Kate is a London based Creative that has blended her love for the Performing Arts with Augmented and Virtual Reality. Having lived in Ireland, Australia, and now London, she is embarking upon an exciting career after completing her Master's Degree in Big Data Culture & Society at Kings College London. We look forward to sharing with you her journey as well as some local insight to fantastic 'Spoons' located around the London area. 00:00 Welcome to the Show 00:25 Update with Dennis, Angelo, and Patrick 03:33 Kate Bodner: Welcome to the Show! 05:40 Kate's beginning within Performing Arts 05:40 Q: What was one of your earliest performances? 08:00 Q: Describe your experience at the Conservatory at Point Park 10:30 Q: What did you learn while training with the Conservatory? 15:00 Q: How did you fuse Performing Arts with Augmented Reality? 22:10 Q: Could you speak about your research at Kings College London related to the 4th Wall and Augmented Reality in a performance? 29:15 Q: Could you share some perspective of performing arts from being abroad? 30:20 Q: What have you learned from your time in Ireland, Australia, and London? 35:15 Q: What is the best advice Kate has received? 37:50 Q: What advice would you give to our audience? 42:30 Q: What is the one food you miss while living abroad? 43:50 Kate shares the phenomenon of ‘Spoons' in London 46:30 Staying connected with Kate 47:50 Dennis & Patrick answer Audience Questions 48:38 Q1: Should I take lower paying job that I'm excited about or a higher paying job that I would not really be happy doing? 52:30 Q2: Dennis, Angelo, Patrick, what have you learned about leadership from hosting the podcast? 55:25 Q3: How can I become better at integrating my instincts into decision making rather than always looking for additional quantitative data? 1:00:40 Q4: Angelo, Dennis, Patrick… what is your favorite Ice Cream? 1:03:30 Final Thoughts 1:04:00 Final Credits
Face to Face with Dennis Patrick SlatteryLive on OMTimes Radio Thursday, February 10, 2022 at 10:30 PST / 1:30 PM ESTWatch the Livestream on the No BS Spiritual Book Club on Facebook, OMTimes Radio & TV Facebook, or OMTimesTV YoutubeThis week on the No BS Spiritual Book Club's Face to Face With… Video interview series…He calls himself a midwife, a translator, an explorer, poet, teacher, motorcyclist, elder and listener… but there's a lot more to Dennis Patrick Slattery than that. For the past 28 years he was a professor in Mythological Studies at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, California, and his fields of interest are the mythopoetic imagination, depth and archetypal psychology, creativity, metaphor, theories of myth, and writing. When I tell you his library encompasses over 6500 books, well, you just know that this is going to be one helluva fascinating conversation.Dennis Patrick Slattery offers riting [sic] retreats and workshops in the United States and Europe on exploring one's personal myth through the works of Joseph Campbell and C.G. Jung's Red Book. He is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of 30 volumes, including seven volumes of poetry, numerous essays, including Exploring Personal Myth Through the Divine Comedy; Riting Myth, Mythic Writing: Plotting Your Personal Story, and Deep Creativity: Seven Ways to Spark Your Creative Spirit, and one novel.https://www.facebook.com/sandiesedgbeer | https://www.facebook.com/groups/nobsspiritualbookclubhttps://www.thenobsspiritualbookclub.comVisit the NO BS Spiritual Book Club Page https://omtimes.com/iom/shows/the-no-bs-spiritual-book-club/Join the No BS Spiritual Book Club mailing list https://forms.aweber.com/form/93/758545393.htmConnect with Sandie Sedgbeer at https://www.sedgbeer.com#DennisPatrickSlattery #SandieSedgbeer #NoBSSpiritualBookClubSubscribe to our Newsletter https://omtimes.com/subscribe-omtimes-magazine/Connect with OMTimes on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Omtimes.Magazine/ and OMTimes Radio https://www.facebook.com/ConsciousRadiowebtv.OMTimes/Twitter: https://twitter.com/OmTimes/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/omtimes/Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/2798417/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/omtimes/
No BS Spiritual Book Club Meets... The 10 Best Spiritual Books
He calls himself a midwife, a translator, an explorer, poet, teacher, motorcyclist, elder and listener... but there's a lot more to Dennis Patrick Slattery than that. For the past 28 years he was a professor in Mythological Studies at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, California, and his fields of interest are the mythopoetic imagination, depth and archetypal psychology, creativity, metaphor, theories of myth, and writing. Author of The Way of Myth, A Pilgrimage Beyond Belief and many more, when I tell you his library encompasses over 6500 books, well, you just know that this is going to be one helluva fascinating conversation. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sandie-sedgbeer/support
Rondo Award-winning writer Rod Labbe has interviewed many of the Dark Shadows stars over the years, and even ran the Dennis Patrick fan club in 1969-1970. He visits Terror at Collinwood to discuss his DS and monster memories! After that, Rod and Penny look at the DS actors who played six or more characters on the show and challenge themselves to pick their favorites from each set!
Our buddy Virgil Texas (@VirgilTexas) calls in to discuss the 1970 exploitation film "Joe," starring Peter Boyle, Dennis Patrick, and — in her first ever movie role!— Susan Sarandon. In a spiritual sequel to Episode 17, the crew examines the rise of neoliberalism and concurrent dissolution of the American working class through the lens of this low-budget sleeper hit, in which the titular character, fed up with the degeneracy of hippie youth culture, teams up with a well-to-do dad to get revenge. Part II of the episode is available now to Patrons at [Patreon.com/TheAntifada](Part II of the episode is available now to Patrons) Check out Bad Faith, Virgil's podcast with Briahna Joy Gray, at patreon.com/badfaithpodcast Follow us at Twitch.tv/TheAntifada to watch our livestreams Wednesdays and Fridays at 3pm and assorted additional times. We usually take calls! Intro: Dean Michaels - Hey Joe Outro: Exuma - You Don't Know What's Going On
Click here to watch Webcast of Episode on our Youtube Channel! During this episode Dennis & Patrick have the opportunity to speak with Amanda Schwartz about the COVID19 course she has developed to help employers meet standards of safety within a highly dynamic operating environment. Join us to learn more about Amanda and the depth of content embedded within this great resource. 00:00 Welcome to the Show 00:50 Introducing Amanda Schwartz 04:10 From the Medical Field to Operations The COVID-19 Course 04:50 The benefits of the COVID19 Course 06:49 What can the smaller Entrepreneur do to ensure safety 08:00 Misconceptions within COVID0-19 response 09:45 Course Delivery, Length, and Certification More insight from Amanda 11:45 Potential Future Courses 12:40 What can organizations do to enhance Human Connections safely 13:50 Recommended Resources 15:50 What is on the horizon for organizations within the Pittsburgh area Important Information about the Course 16:50 Course Cost, Group Discounts, Registration Information 18:00 Course Website 18:25 How to Stay Connected with Amanda 19:30 Final Thoughts from Amanda 20:00 Final Thoughts from Dennis, Angelo & Patrick 22:00 Closing Credits Amanda & Course Contact Information Click here to be taken to the COVID19 Course Page Click here to view Amanda's LinkedIn Page Email Address: amandachristineschwartz@gmail.com
Click here to view VideoCast of this episode on our YouTube Channel. During this episode Dennis & Patrick explore an approach designed to help you focus your thoughts while leading your organization through uncertainty. Regardless of the variable, challenge or opportunity you are contemplating, a systemic mindset will help you to not only make better decisions, but will enable you to consider outcomes across all levels of your organization. 00:00 Welcome to the Show 01:10 Leadership is Complex 01:30 Three Primary Areas of Focus 02:50 Strategic Focus - Looking over the Horizon 10:25 Operational Focus - The Most Difficult Role 20:00 Tactical Focus - The Essence of Your Organization 29:40 Navigating Between the Areas of Focus 32:40 Final Thoughts from Dennis & Patrick 36:51 Support & Thank You
A MILLION MONKEYS: THE REAL STORY BEHIND GENESIS AND THE MEANING OF LIFE BY Dennis Patrick Treece Why are we here? What are we supposed to do on this earth? Who created us? Humankind has struggled with these questions for millennia. We’ve created complex societies, religions, and theories to answer them, but we’ve ignored the simple truth. Dennis Patrick Treece shares this truth with readers of all faiths and persuasions. Treece was in an airplane when he first heard the voice of a spirit guide. The voice told him that he needed a pen and paper because he was going to write something important down. A Million Monkeys is the message that followed. Treece wants to remind readers that they are special. It took billions of individual chemical and biological events for humanity to develop into its current state. Yet many have no concept of the uniqueness of their existence. They waste their precious time in cycles of hate and anger. Treece encourages readers to find a different way to celebrate the Creator and his creation. He inspires everyone to dedicate their lives and their time to love. It is through love that the current course of humanity can be changed so that we can be in harmony with the rest of the universe. Dennis Patrick Treece spent thirty years in the army. He saw combat and was wounded in action. After retiring from military life, Treece created a second career in security. Treece is now retired and enjoys spending time with his wife, helping her with her art business, and working in the couple’s vegetable garden. https://www.amazon.com/Million-Monkeys-Behind-Genesis-Meaning/dp/1537797654/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=dennis+patrick+treece&qid=1587171468&sr=8-1 http://www.bluefunkbroadcasting.com/root/twia/dptreece.mp3
Your host, Peter F. Hunt, welcomes Dennis Patrick Murphy to the show.Dennis Murphy is a hotel business entrepreneur and American hotel executive. Together, Peter and Dennis discuss Buffalo's need and appeal in the business and hospitality market. To find out more, listen to this week's show.
It is my great pleasure tonight to have with me, Dr. Dennis Patrick Slattery, Emeritus Faculty, Mythological Studies Program at pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpinteria, CA discussing Kurt Anderson's Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire: A 500 Year History. Subjects we'll be discussing tonight include: What America's history, beginning with its origin, brought Fantasy Thinking to the extreme level we witness today The accelerated rise of the individual and beliefs as "true if I say it is true" The loss or marginalizing of an objective reality everyone can agree on Wanting the magic now: instant gratification and its consequences Technology feeds the fantastic by encouraging people to seekout the magical and the miraculous The shaping of a new myth is developing as a result of truth's relativemerits and the demise of an objective truth The rise of the make-believe community The loss of a literate and reflective citizenry If you've been looking "out there" and wondering we got to where we are, this show might offer many insights....please tune in!F
Survivor ORG Podcast is back with the latest episode recap of Survivor Philippines episode 6. Joining Colin Conners and Dennis Patrick today is fellow ORG players Dylan Deangelis and Adam Weigel. Find out just what we thought about the latest episode. Also, for those of you who want to hear more from Holly Hoffman, we have an interview with her coming up this Monday so be on the look out for that! Music by: Acid-Notation A Warm Feeling
Colin Conners and Dennis Patrick had the opportunity to sit down with Holly Hoffman and talk about her time on Survivor Nicaragua. Find out some of the stories and events that didn't make it on the show! Music by: Acid-Notation A Warm Feeling
BGPE #27 In this episode, we have a familiar voice jumping into the host seat, our own Ian Miles Cheong has stepped up to take the reigns for BGPE episode 27. Joining us this week is Josh Harmon, Annie Dennisdottir Wright, Dennis Patrick, and John Mix Meyer from Wired.com. Jumping into news we start off […]
BGPE #30 We’re down a few cast members in this weeks episode but that’s not to say episode 30 doesn’t pack a mean punch. This week we’re joined by Andrew Kent, one of our daily news writers, along with Jacob Saylor and Dennis Patrick. We start off with a bitter piece of news that doesn’t […]
Inheritance - A Dramatized look into American History. NBC Networt in cooperation with the AMERICAN LEGION Sundays 4:30 - 5:00 pm PRUDUCER/DIRECTOR: Albert McCleary ANNOUNCER: John Wald MUSIC: Robert Armbruster. THIS EPISODE: Inheritance. July 11, 1954. Program #14. NBC network. "America's Greatest Bargain". Sustaining. Not auditioned. 4:30 P. M. The program is produced in co-operation with The American Legion. There is no after-drama speaker. Albert McCleary (producer, director), John Wald (announcer), Robert Armbruster (composer, conductor), Milt Kahn (writer), Whitfield Connor, Dennis Patrick, Clarence Straight, Gil Harmon, Ann Seaton, Tyler McVey, Jay Barney, Ben Wright, Donald Lawton. 29:32.