Fictional Hollow Earth invented by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Edgar Rice Burroughs (Chicago; 1 de septiembre de 1875- Encino, Los Ángeles; 19 de marzo de 1950) fue un escritor de género fantástico estadounidense, célebre por sus series de historias de Barsoom (ambientadas en Marte), de Pellucidar (que tienen lugar en el centro de la Tierra), el ciclo de Venus con Carson Napier como protagonista principal y, en especial, por la creación del mundialmente famoso Tarzán.Escucha este episodio completo y accede a todo el contenido exclusivo de EDITORIAL GCO. Descubre antes que nadie los nuevos episodios, y participa en la comunidad exclusiva de oyentes en https://go.ivoox.com/sq/2313218
David Innes and his captive, a member of the reptilian Mahar master race of the interior world of Pellucidar, return from the surface world in the Iron Mole invented by his friend and companion in adventure Abner Perry.Emerging in Pellucidar at an unknown location, David frees his captive. He names the place Greenwich and uses the technology he has brought to begin the systematic exploration and mapping of the unknown land while searching for his lost companions, Abner, Ghak, and Dian the Beautiful. He soon encounters and befriends a new ally, Ja the Mezop of the island country of Anoroc; later he finds Abner, from whom he learns that in his absence the human revolt against the Mahars has not been going well. In a parlay with the Mahars David bargains for information of his love Dian and his enemy Hooja the Sly One, which his foes agree to supply in return for the book containing the Great Secret of Mahar reproduction that David stole and hid in the previous novel. David undertakes to recover it, only to find that Hooja has been there before him and claimed Dian as his own reward of the Mahars! - (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes and his captive, a member of the reptilian Mahar master race of the interior world of Pellucidar, return from the surface world in the Iron Mole invented by his friend and companion in adventure Abner Perry.Emerging in Pellucidar at an unknown location, David frees his captive. He names the place Greenwich and uses the technology he has brought to begin the systematic exploration and mapping of the unknown land while searching for his lost companions, Abner, Ghak, and Dian the Beautiful. He soon encounters and befriends a new ally, Ja the Mezop of the island country of Anoroc; later he finds Abner, from whom he learns that in his absence the human revolt against the Mahars has not been going well. In a parlay with the Mahars David bargains for information of his love Dian and his enemy Hooja the Sly One, which his foes agree to supply in return for the book containing the Great Secret of Mahar reproduction that David stole and hid in the previous novel. David undertakes to recover it, only to find that Hooja has been there before him and claimed Dian as his own reward of the Mahars! (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes and his captive, a member of the reptilian Mahar master race of the interior world of Pellucidar, return from the surface world in the Iron Mole invented by his friend and companion in adventure Abner Perry.Emerging in Pellucidar at an unknown location, David frees his captive. He names the place Greenwich and uses the technology he has brought to begin the systematic exploration and mapping of the unknown land while searching for his lost companions, Abner, Ghak, and Dian the Beautiful. He soon encounters and befriends a new ally, Ja the Mezop of the island country of Anoroc; later he finds Abner, from whom he learns that in his absence the human revolt against the Mahars has not been going well. In a parlay with the Mahars David bargains for information of his love Dian and his enemy Hooja the Sly One, which his foes agree to supply in return for the book containing the Great Secret of Mahar reproduction that David stole and hid in the previous novel. David undertakes to recover it, only to find that Hooja has been there before him and claimed Dian as his own reward of the Mahars! - (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes and his captive, a member of the reptilian Mahar master race of the interior world of Pellucidar, return from the surface world in the Iron Mole invented by his friend and companion in adventure Abner Perry.Emerging in Pellucidar at an unknown location, David frees his captive. He names the place Greenwich and uses the technology he has brought to begin the systematic exploration and mapping of the unknown land while searching for his lost companions, Abner, Ghak, and Dian the Beautiful. He soon encounters and befriends a new ally, Ja the Mezop of the island country of Anoroc; later he finds Abner, from whom he learns that in his absence the human revolt against the Mahars has not been going well. In a parlay with the Mahars David bargains for information of his love Dian and his enemy Hooja the Sly One, which his foes agree to supply in return for the book containing the Great Secret of Mahar reproduction that David stole and hid in the previous novel. David undertakes to recover it, only to find that Hooja has been there before him and claimed Dian as his own reward of the Mahars! (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes and his captive, a member of the reptilian Mahar master race of the interior world of Pellucidar, return from the surface world in the Iron Mole invented by his friend and companion in adventure Abner Perry.Emerging in Pellucidar at an unknown location, David frees his captive. He names the place Greenwich and uses the technology he has brought to begin the systematic exploration and mapping of the unknown land while searching for his lost companions, Abner, Ghak, and Dian the Beautiful. He soon encounters and befriends a new ally, Ja the Mezop of the island country of Anoroc; later he finds Abner, from whom he learns that in his absence the human revolt against the Mahars has not been going well. In a parlay with the Mahars David bargains for information of his love Dian and his enemy Hooja the Sly One, which his foes agree to supply in return for the book containing the Great Secret of Mahar reproduction that David stole and hid in the previous novel. David undertakes to recover it, only to find that Hooja has been there before him and claimed Dian as his own reward of the Mahars! (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes and his captive, a member of the reptilian Mahar master race of the interior world of Pellucidar, return from the surface world in the Iron Mole invented by his friend and companion in adventure Abner Perry.Emerging in Pellucidar at an unknown location, David frees his captive. He names the place Greenwich and uses the technology he has brought to begin the systematic exploration and mapping of the unknown land while searching for his lost companions, Abner, Ghak, and Dian the Beautiful. He soon encounters and befriends a new ally, Ja the Mezop of the island country of Anoroc; later he finds Abner, from whom he learns that in his absence the human revolt against the Mahars has not been going well. In a parlay with the Mahars David bargains for information of his love Dian and his enemy Hooja the Sly One, which his foes agree to supply in return for the book containing the Great Secret of Mahar reproduction that David stole and hid in the previous novel. David undertakes to recover it, only to find that Hooja has been there before him and claimed Dian as his own reward of the Mahars! (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
An extra week between episodes takes us off the beaten path of our regular coverage and into a hidden dinosaur kingdom inside the hollow Earth, where Walt Simonson and Lee Weeks pit pulp hero Tarzan against the Predators of film fame in a four-issue Dark Horse Comics limited series from 1996. Along the way, we'll pontificate about the finer points of Edgar Rice Burroughs' often problematic pop culture icon, speculate about the recurring bit of X-Men lore that probably has its roots in Pellucidar, and pitch our own "Predator vs. ______" crossovers.
In this week's episode, we take a look at seven popular movies about writing & writers and take a look at what they got wrong. This coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of DRAGONSKULL: CURSE OF THE ORCS (as excellently narrated by Brad Wills) at my Payhip store: SPRINGORCS The coupon code is valid through May 20th, 2024. So if you need a new audiobook for spring, we've got you covered! TRANSCRIPT 00:00:00 Introduction and Writing Updates Hello everyone. Welcome to Episode 198 of The Pulp Writer Show. My name is Jonathan Moeller. Today is April 26th, 2024 and today we were talking about seven of the most inaccurate movies about writers. Before we do that, we will have writing updates, Coupon of the Week, and a Question of the Week. So let's start with Coupon of the Week. First up, let's do Coupon of the Week. This coupon code will get you 50% off the audiobook of Dragonskull: Curse of the Orc (as excellently narrated by Brad Wills) at my Payhip store. That coupon code is SPRINGORCS and that's SPRINGORCS. As always, that coupon code will be in the show notes. This coupon code is valid through May 20th, 2024. So if you need a new audiobook for spring, we have got you covered. Now an update on my current writing projects and audiobook projects. I'm currently on Chapter 16 of Cloak of Titans. I'm not sure how many chapters it's going to end up being. My number keeps changing, but I think right now it's 25. I am over halfway through the book and I'm hoping to be past the 70,000 word point by the end of the day, if all goes well. I'm hoping to still have that out before the end of May. I am also 5,000 words into Half-Orc Paladin, which should come out this summer. After Cloak of Titans is out, my next main project will be Shield of Darkness, which I know many people have been asking about, so hopefully it will not be too much longer until I start on Shield of Darkness. In audiobook news, Hollis McCarthy is almost done recording Ghost in the Veils, and we should hopefully have that available to listen to sometime in May. Brad Wills is currently recording the anthology Tales of the Shield Knight, which will contain over 15 of the Shield Knight short stories that I wrote for the Sevenfold Sword and Dragontiarna series, and that should also hopefully be out sometimes toward the end of May or possibly June. So that is where I'm at with my current writing and audiobook projects. 00:01:58 Question of the Week/Update on Starfield from Previous Question of the Week Next up is Question of the Week, which is designed to inspire interesting discussions of enjoyable topics. This week's question: what is the first fantasy novel you remember reading? After all, if you're hanging around the website of Jonathan Moeller, Pulp Writer, there's a non-zero chance that you enjoy fantasy books. So it seems like a reasonable question, and it was indeed a reasonable question because we got a lot of responses. Our first response is from Justin, who says: believe it or not, the first fantasy novel I read was The Hobbit. My older sisters had pooled their money to buy the paper version of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. I saw them reading it, and since my sisters were for once not being nasty to each other and reading together, it had to be good. After they finished The Hobbit, I asked to borrow it. It was allowed to read it as long as I didn't leave the room and wash my hands first. I was eight. Our next response is from Mary, who says: I remember my first reading of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings. It was by no stretch of the imagination my first fantasy novel. Our next comment is from Stuart, who says: Pawn of Prophecy by David Eddings. When I was younger/preteens, I loved adventure books like Hardy Boys and The Three Investigators. I didn't really read much in the coming years, until one day it was raining outside and being bored, I made a nuisance of myself when my older brother was trying to watch TV. He finally snapped, told me to shut up, threw Pawn of Prophecy at me, and told me to read that. The rest, as they say, is history. I went from adding Eddings to Feist and Gemmel and then on to Jordan, etcetera. I will always have a soft spot for David Eddings books, though. So it seems the common themes here will be a sibling rivalry inspiring love of fantasy literature. Our next response is from Grace, who says: does the Magic Treehouse series count? If not, Chronicles of Narnia. Leanne says Dragonriders of Pern. Boy, did I want a dragon! Melinda says Piers Anthony's Night Mare. I was in 6th grade and my friend gave it to me for my birthday. Cheryl says: The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. From then on, it was full steam ahead, Feist, Eddings, Tolkien, Irvine, and now most of the fantasy/sci-fi authors that are currently publishing on Kindle. David says: probably The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis. Kevin says: many, many moons ago it was the Earthsea trilogy by Ursula Le Guin. Then I wandered into TV and films in the sci-fi genre for a number of years, forsaking the written word. My imagination was recaptured more recently, about a decade ago, a decade ago, when a friend lent me a copy of Wizard's First Rule by Terry Goodkind. Alan says: I've been through most of these mentioned so far though the years but my first introduction to once he was Edgar Rice Burroughs, like Tarzan, John Carter of Mars, Pellucidar, etcetera. Then on to Tolkien. Randy says: for me it was The Hobbit. Went on a family vacation with my uncle and his family. I was introduced to The Hobbit. My uncle will read just about every night to my cousins, and as we're all sharing the same room, my sister and I began hearing the story. We got home. I asked my dad if I could read his copy. 50 some odd years later, I'm still devouring as many books as I can. Mike says: I am not sure which one it was, but I believe it was either The Hobbit or The Sword of Shannara. Diana says: The Gunslinger. I said what I said. Venus says: A Wrinkle in Time or Dragonsong. I know that the Pern books are actually science fiction, but I don't recall any of the science stuff that first time I read it. It was the first Pern book I read. The first epic fantasy I recall reading was Dragons of Autumn Twilight. Gary says: I couldn't give you a title or author, but I definitely remember the Choose Your Own Adventure books in the fantasy genre as a young reader. Tom said: Not 100% sure, but this is my best guess. It would be The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Ah, the Chronicles of Narnia. What a series. Juana says: I read The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Catriona says: The Hobbit after listening to the BBC Radio play adaptation in the ‘70s. Pippa says: Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. I've reread them lots too and I've never tired of them. Perry says: Do the Iliad, Odyssey, and Beowulf count? For modern fantasy, would be a toss-up between The Hobbit and The Belgariad. Joy says: the Thomas Covenant series. My boyfriend at the time was into sci-fi and fantasy novels, so I borrowed it and was hooked. A different Glenn says: either Dragonriders of Pern by Anne McCaffrey or the Riddle-Master of Hed by Patricia A. McKillip. I love them both in the same summer while visiting my dad and cannot remember which one came first, but I got hooked on fantasy fiction that summer. Mandy says: The first time I remember reading the left an impression was the Dragonlance Legends series. My favorite fantasy series is Discworld. Gary (a different Gary) says: First one I remember is the Elfstones of Shannara. Also, the Dragonriders of Pern and Crystal Singer series. John says: Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander. I was nine years old. It created a lifelong love of fantasy for me. Darla says: A Wrinkle in Time, The Faraway Lurs, and The Runaway Robot were some of the books I read as a kid. Later it was Lord of the Rings and The Dragonriders of Pern and I continue reading to this day. Andy says first ever was the Deverry series by Katherine Kerr. It was a very intense read for 14 year old on an 8 hour drive on a family trip. Sue says David Eddings- all his series, and Anne McCaffrey, Dragonrider series. Brock says Lord of the Rings. Susan says: probably Lord of the Rings, but it's over 50 years ago. I can't really remember. Edward says The Legend of Huma by Richard A. Knaak. Michael says. Now there's a question! Probably The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe or one of the other Narnia books, all of which are obviously epic. And finally, Judy says the White Mountains by John Christopher or anything by Dr. Seuss. So I think we can see it's safe to say that if you have a small children between the ages of eight and 10 and you want to get them into fantasy literature, the best places to start would be either The Hobbit, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, or perhaps the Dragonriders of Pern. For myself, the very first fantasy novel I ever read was Magician Master by Raymond E. Feist. What got me into that book was The Betrayal at Krondor computer game, which of course was a classic. After I finished the game, I did some reading. Remember this was way before the Internet, so you couldn't find out anything you wanted whenever you wanted and I was astonished to realize that Krondor was in fact based off an actual novel series. So I got Magician Master and started reading it. Fun fact, years later I realized that Magician Master was in fact the sequel to Magician Apprentice and went back to read the first book. So that was this week's Question of the Week. You may remember that last week's Question of the Week was what new Xbox game I should try. Many people had excellent suggestions. I think I'm going to go with Starfield from all the suggestions last week. The reason for this is that Starfield reminds me a great deal of Wing Commander Privateer from the ‘90s. If you remember, the Wing Commander series of PC games, they're basically Top Gun but in space. Privateer took the basic flight gameplay mechanic but changed it so you're an independent privateer captain and you had to make your way through the Gemini sector as a mercenary, a merchant, a pirate, a bounty hunter, or some combination of them. You had to buy your own equipment and weapons and find a way to turn a profit in your jobs, since you had to pay for everything. If you played the main plots, you got involved in conspiracy involving a lost alien relic, but you don't have to do any main plot at all. You just fly around the galaxy making credits, fighting pirates, and trading. Starfield basically feels like someone took Wing Commander Privateer, and then added on a Skyrim-esque role-playing experience for when your character is on the ground. I know it got middling reviews, but I'm enjoying the game so far. Perhaps because, at least to my eye, it feels like a massively updated version of Wing Commander Privateer. 00:09:43 Main Topic: Seven of the Most Inaccurate Movies About Writers Now we're 10 minutes into the show and still haven't gotten to our main topic, so I think it's time we should finally do that, which is Seven of the Most Inaccurate Movies About Writers. I decided to do this because I noticed that whenever a novelist or a writer of fiction turns up in a movie, the depiction of it tends to be grossly inaccurate. That's hardly unique to writers. The joke among the military officers, former military officers, and law enforcement officers is that whenever the military or law enforcement turns up on TV, you can have a good drinking game by counting all the inaccuracies and things that they get wrong. So why should writing be any different? I think the difference might be that writing is kind of a more aspirational career, where it's the sort of career that people tend to daydream about, like going off and becoming a writer and so they tend to get a lot of things wrong about that. So with the help of my transcriptionist, we pulled together a list of seven of the most inaccurate movies about writing. There's actually a couple of Hallmark movies on here, and this isn't to bash on Hallmark movies. I think Hallmark movies tend to be about the fantasy of romance in the way that a show like Law and Order is about the fantasy of law enforcement and criminal justice, or a movie like John Wick is about the fantasy of violence or a game like SimCity is about the fantasy of managing a large city. The reality is of none of these things are nothing like the way they're portrayed in fiction, but instead, Law and Order is about the fantasy of what we would like the criminal justice system to be like and John Wick is kind of like, you know, a revenge fantasy of what we imagine we would do if someone actually shot our dog. So with that in mind, let's look at seven of the most inaccurate movies we found about writing. The first one is called Winter Love Story from Hallmark in 2019. It kind of deserves the 22% it got in the Rotten Tomatometer. The plot is a debut writer who wrote a memoir is appearing on a book tour of a famous fantasy author in order to boost her sales. They travel around visiting charming bed and breakfasts with plenty of time to talk about their feelings. The fantasy writer has a dog that he really loves a lot. The movie really revolves more around the dog more than the books. Now, why is this a bad movie about writing? For one thing, it has an unrealistic view of book tours, namely that a debut writer who is writing a memoir (which is a notoriously hard to sell genre) would be given such a lavish book tour paired with an author outside her genre. Cross-genre of sales promotions here in the real world tend not to work terribly well, because someone who wants to buy an 800 page fantasy novel about dragons is probably not going to be super interested in picking up a new writer's memoir are about her failed dating life. The movie also has an unrealistic view of book marketing and the involvement level and commitment of traditional publishing staff. If traditional publishing marketing staff is marketing 50 plus other writers, they're not going to follow your whimsical book tour and give tons of advice and coaching along the way. Book tours really don't sell very many books in general, to the point where Brandon Sanderson, who is probably the top selling fantasy author in the world right now, stopped doing book tours in 2020 when COVID came along (because you know, everyone had to stop doing book tours). But after all the various restrictions lifted, he found that he really wasn't interested in resuming it because of the physical drain of traveling and it turned out it had no impact on sales whatsoever. Finally, the movie touts the very false belief that the skill of giving heartfelt, heavily autobiographical speeches is the essential skill in marketing your work. Honestly, if you want to sell books, you would have better luck learning how to use Amazon ads or Facebook ads effectively, but I expect that would not make for a very good Hallmark movie. The second movie we're going to talk about is Lost City from 2022, which I actually saw shortly after it came out because it turned up on streaming (I think it was on Prime). I thought it was actually pretty funny, but it was not terribly accurate about the business of writing. The plot is that a romance author is struggling to finish her book. While she's on tour with her famous cover model, she gets kidnapped and the cover model must turn into an action hero and rescue her. The plot very heavily borrows from the 1980s movie Romancing the Stone, which is also about a writer. The scenery in the movie is fantastic and Daniel Radcliffe plays the villain, this insane billionaire who kidnapped Sandra Bullock's character to help find lost treasure and their reactions were pretty funny. It's not a great movie about writing. Even the romance and romantasy (which is a combination of romance and fantasy) authors topping the best seller list right now (as of April 2024) do not have press tours that are more like a fan convention with a budget for sparkly jumpsuits and lighting effects, etcetera. Cover models do not get a lot (or even any) of promotion, attention, or respect from publishers. The cover model is given top billing on the tour along with the author, which just doesn't happen. One side note, what is probably realistic is the publisher trying to discourage tangents in full academic jargon by the author on her history related research interests. You will often find if you're reading a book that involved a lot of research on the part of the author, that the author is going to put that research into the book (whether the reader likes it or not). Our third movie is called Alex and Emma, which came out in 2003. The plot of this movie is that an author with writer's block has debts to a loan shark he must pay in 30 days or else the loan shark is going to get nasty. He hires a stenographer to help him church out a book and since it's a romantic comedy, you can probably guess what happens next. This movie was apparently very loosely inspired by the story of Dostoyevsky writing The Gambler/meeting his wife but is also apparently heavily inspired by the movie Paris When it Sizzles. Even with multiple sources of inspiration, it still received terrible reviews for an incoherent, unsatisfying plot. And why is this a bad movie about writing? For one thing, it treats writing a book draft in 30 days as a near impossible feat. Not to toot my own horn, so to speak, but I'm going to write the rough draft of Cloak of Titans in under 30 days. If all goes well, it will be well over 100,000 words. There's also once again the cliche that writing already must be autobiographical and reflect what's currently happening in your life in order to be good. If that were true, all my books would be about the adventures of a middle-aged IT guy, which would be kind of boring compared to epic fantasy novels. And another thing that's unrealistic is that the struggling writer gets a $125,000 advance from the publisher, but the publisher won't help him replace a computer when it gets destroyed by a loan shark's posse. Computers were, of course, quite a bit more expensive in 2003 than they are now, but still they cost a lot less than $125,000. So that part definitely didn't make sense. Our 4th movie is Not Another Happy Ending, which came out in 2013. A writer becomes successful but has writer's block when she's happy. Her publisher has to figure out how to make her unhappy so she can write again but falls in love with her in the process. And why is this a bad movie about writing? If following around most the successful writers in order to inspire them was the actual job of publishers, a few certain well known fantasy series might have at least one more book by now than they actually do. So we'll just move on from there. The fifth one is a movie that gets made fun of a lot and rather deservedly so: Eat, Pray, Love, which came out in 2010. The plot of this, obviously, is that a reader gets divorced and goes on a journey to Italy, India, and Bali in order to “find herself” and gain writing inspiration. Why is this a bad movie about writing? So many reasons! First, there's a sort of a cliche in poor taste that writers can't be great unless they leave their spouses, that their marriage is preventing someone from devoting themselves to great writing. Although the one thing you say for Eat, Pray, Love is that it's a gender flip as opposed to the way these things usually are in movies where it's the male writer who is being held back by his wife. The reality is that people with stable home lives are more likely to be productive than people without them, and this is true across all fields of endeavor, and not just writing. Another bad cliche is the idea that you need to bankroll a year of travel to luxury destinations in order to find inspiration to write isn't realistic or accurate, and in truth very, very, very, very, very few writers can actually afford this luxury. This type of thinking leads people to believe they need to go on expensive retreats in order to be a “real writer”, when in reality many famous writers rarely traveled. Examples: Jane Austen, the Bronte sisters, I think J.R.R. Tolkien spent most of his post-war life entirely in England, etcetera. For myself, I do most of my writing either on my couch or while sitting in a $40 office chair I bought off Amazon Basics. That is definitely a cliche that you do not need to travel in order to write. In fact, travel can get in the way of getting writing done, which was one of the Brandon Sanderson's stated reasons for why he doesn't go on book tours too often anymore. Our 6th movie is As Good as It Gets, which came out in 1997. The premise of this movie is that a crabby, ill-behaved writer with some mental health challenges has a series of unexpected interactions that inspire him to become a better person. And why is this an inaccurate move about writing? First, there's a cliche that writers need to use a typewriter because a computer isn't as artistic or special. I know there are writers who insist on writing things longhand and or insist on using the typewriter and they have their reasons, but it's my belief that that is in fact very inefficient, and you should probably write on whatever method is most efficient or easy for you. And if you are writing for publication and profit, that means writing on a computer. If you don't like to type, you can dictate. There's also the idea I don't like that the idea that the reading public/critics will forgive terrible behavior or prejudice because of how brilliant you are. This is a fallacy you see across many professions where a brilliant doctor, a brilliant scientist, a brilliant politician, a brilliant writer, or whatever feels they have a license to act like a total jerk because they're so good at what they do. In reality, that often causes a lot of problems and ends up destroying the person's career. So that is a bad cliche, and one that if you're listening to this, I urge you not to put into practice in your daily life. Our seventh and final movie is another Hallmark one called A Novel Romance, which came out in 2015. In this story, a male romance writer who uses a pen name meets a female book reviewer who is unaware of his true identity even as they grow closer. Will pressure from his publisher to reveal his true identity hurt their budding romance? What did this movie get wrong about writing? First, there's the idea that pen names are somehow deceptive or shocking, especially in the romance genre where it's very common for a single writer to have multiple pen names. A professional book critic would consider it a very strong possibility that someone is writing under a pen name, which makes you wonder how competent the book critic is as a book critic. Publishers do not send limos to the airport for writers traveling to their personal vacation homes. If a writer is rich enough to have a limo and a personal vacation home, the writer is probably paying for it him or herself. The publisher is not. Most writing is not done on a legal pad while staring out onto the water next to your very expensive boat. Your agent, even a very nice agent (if such a thing exists) will not fly across the country multiple times in order to give you romantic advice. And finally, an author's pen name reveal would not be front page tabloid news. So those are just some of the things that movie got wrong about writing. So there those are 7 movies that are very inaccurate about what being a writer is like, and the point of that was not to pick on those movies (with the possible exception of Eat, Pray, Love, which deserves to be picked on) but to point out that the way they referenced what being a writer was like was often quite inaccurate, even if the movies themselves may or may not have been enjoyable for their intended audience. So that's it for this week. Thanks for listening to The Pulp Writer Show. I hope you found it useful and a word of thanks to my transcriptionist help me to pull this list together because she's definitely seen more Hallmark movies than I have. A reminder that you can listen to all the back episodes on https://thepulpwritershow.com. If you enjoy the podcast, please leave a review on your podcasting platform of choice. Stay safe and stay healthy and see you all next week.
A Fighting Man of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs audiobook. Under the double moons of Barsoom, an invisible flier sped to the mysterious city of Jahar where Sanoma Tora, the kidnapped princess of Helium had been taken. Hadron of Hastor was at the controls, hatching a rescue plan that required unusual daring and great ingenuity. For invisibility alone was not a great enough weapon against 'The Death.' And should Hadron succeed, what fate would await him at the hands of the madman whose very genius had created the means of that rescue? A FIGHTING MAN OF MARS is the exciting story of Martian adventure as transmitted by Ulysses Paxton on Mars to Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana, by means of Pellucidar's Gridley Wave Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
At the Earth's Core
David Innes is a mining heir who finances the experimental "iron mole," an excavating vehicle designed by his elderly inventor friend Abner Perry. In a test run, they discover the vehicle cannot be turned, and it burrows 500 miles into the Earth's crust, emerging into the unknown interior world of Pellucidar. In Burroughs' concept, the Earth is a hollow shell with Pellucidar as the internal surface of that shell.Pellucidar is inhabited by prehistoric creatures of all geological eras, and dominated by the Mahars, a species of flying reptile both intelligent and civilized, but which enslaves and preys on the local stone-age humans. Innes and Perry are captured by the Mahars' ape-like Sagoth servants and taken with other human captives to the chief Mahar city of Phutra. Among their fellow captives are the brave Ghak, the Hairy One, from the country of Sari, the shifty Hooja the Sly One and the lovely Dian the Beautiful of Amoz. (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes is a mining heir who finances the experimental "iron mole," an excavating vehicle designed by his elderly inventor friend Abner Perry. In a test run, they discover the vehicle cannot be turned, and it burrows 500 miles into the Earth's crust, emerging into the unknown interior world of Pellucidar. In Burroughs' concept, the Earth is a hollow shell with Pellucidar as the internal surface of that shell.Pellucidar is inhabited by prehistoric creatures of all geological eras, and dominated by the Mahars, a species of flying reptile both intelligent and civilized, but which enslaves and preys on the local stone-age humans. Innes and Perry are captured by the Mahars' ape-like Sagoth servants and taken with other human captives to the chief Mahar city of Phutra. Among their fellow captives are the brave Ghak, the Hairy One, from the country of Sari, the shifty Hooja the Sly One and the lovely Dian the Beautiful of Amoz. (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes is a mining heir who finances the experimental "iron mole," an excavating vehicle designed by his elderly inventor friend Abner Perry. In a test run, they discover the vehicle cannot be turned, and it burrows 500 miles into the Earth's crust, emerging into the unknown interior world of Pellucidar. In Burroughs' concept, the Earth is a hollow shell with Pellucidar as the internal surface of that shell.Pellucidar is inhabited by prehistoric creatures of all geological eras, and dominated by the Mahars, a species of flying reptile both intelligent and civilized, but which enslaves and preys on the local stone-age humans. Innes and Perry are captured by the Mahars' ape-like Sagoth servants and taken with other human captives to the chief Mahar city of Phutra. Among their fellow captives are the brave Ghak, the Hairy One, from the country of Sari, the shifty Hooja the Sly One and the lovely Dian the Beautiful of Amoz. (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes is a mining heir who finances the experimental "iron mole," an excavating vehicle designed by his elderly inventor friend Abner Perry. In a test run, they discover the vehicle cannot be turned, and it burrows 500 miles into the Earth's crust, emerging into the unknown interior world of Pellucidar. In Burroughs' concept, the Earth is a hollow shell with Pellucidar as the internal surface of that shell.Pellucidar is inhabited by prehistoric creatures of all geological eras, and dominated by the Mahars, a species of flying reptile both intelligent and civilized, but which enslaves and preys on the local stone-age humans. Innes and Perry are captured by the Mahars' ape-like Sagoth servants and taken with other human captives to the chief Mahar city of Phutra. Among their fellow captives are the brave Ghak, the Hairy One, from the country of Sari, the shifty Hooja the Sly One and the lovely Dian the Beautiful of Amoz. (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
David Innes is a mining heir who finances the experimental "iron mole," an excavating vehicle designed by his elderly inventor friend Abner Perry. In a test run, they discover the vehicle cannot be turned, and it burrows 500 miles into the Earth's crust, emerging into the unknown interior world of Pellucidar. In Burroughs' concept, the Earth is a hollow shell with Pellucidar as the internal surface of that shell.Pellucidar is inhabited by prehistoric creatures of all geological eras, and dominated by the Mahars, a species of flying reptile both intelligent and civilized, but which enslaves and preys on the local stone-age humans. Innes and Perry are captured by the Mahars' ape-like Sagoth servants and taken with other human captives to the chief Mahar city of Phutra. Among their fellow captives are the brave Ghak, the Hairy One, from the country of Sari, the shifty Hooja the Sly One and the lovely Dian the Beautiful of Amoz. (From Wikipedia.)Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
This is the first book in the Pellucidar series. Pellucidar is a fictional Hollow Earth milieu invented by Edgar Rice Burroughs for a series of action adventure stories. The stories initially involve the adventures of mining heir David Innes and his inventor friend Abner Perry after they use an "iron mole" to burrow 500 miles into the earth's crust. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/librivox1/support
Episode 077 of Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick features an interview with author Rhiannon (R. Z.) Held. Rhiannon Held is the author of the Silver series of urban fantasy novels published by Tor. As R. Z. Held, she writes the Amsterdam Institute series of space opera novellas. Her short fiction, also under R. Z. Held, appears in Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Hybrid Fiction, and a number of other publications and anthologies. Rhiannon lives near Seattle, where she works as an archaeologist for an environmental compliance firm. At work, she mostly uses her degree for copy-editing technical reports; in writing, she uses it for cultural world-building; in public, she'll probably use it to check the mold seams on the wine bottle at dinner. Our conversation goes deep on... cultural worldbuilding deep time in fiction touching people through our stories balancing writing from the heart and following genre tropes reaching new readers the benefits of walking and "buffer zones" between our working and writing life... ...and a whole lot more. This one is chock full of good stuff. Listen! This episode was recorded on March 27th, 2023. The conversation with Rhiannon Held was recorded on January 22nd, 2023. Links and Topics Mentioned in This Episode My day job? I'm a creative services provider helping authors, podcasters and other creators. How can I help you? Rhiannon mentions LARPing. That stands for Live Action Role Playing. Here's a little more about LARPs. Rhiannon also mentioned play-by-email role playing games... a modern(ish) version of play-by-mail games that started in the 1970s. Personal creative franchises (storyworlds) come up a lot on this show. In this episode, I mentioned Michael Moorcock's Eternal Champion, Stephen King's loosely interconnected Prime Earth, and Edgar Rice Burroughs' Pellucidar. Rhiannon mentions Chaco Culture and Mesa Verde. I bring up Kevin J. Anderson's walking / dictation routine. What is walking meditation? Rhiannon mentions NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month. Here is the episode where I reveal my proposal for fixing the Amazon bookstore. Rhiannon mentions the DARE program, which, surprisingly, is still a thing. Maybe you would like to be a future guest on Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick? Learn more! Big thanks to my Multiversalists patron community, including Amelia Bowen, Ted Leonhardt, Chuck Anderson, and J. C. Hutchins! This episode took almost nine hours to record, edit, produce, and publish, so I'm incredibly grateful for the support of my patrons. If Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick brings you joy, become a patron! The Multiversalists patron member community receives the uncut, unedited version of every episode. For this episode, patrons get an additional half hour of content, including an entire side conversation on Rhiannon Held's particular day to day life as an archaeologist, plus lots of other stuff. Want in on that? Become a patron for at least $5.00 per month (cancel any time) and get a bunch of other perks and special access, too. Every month the member community has at least twenty members, I will donate 10% of net patron revenue to 826 National in support of literacy and creative writing advocacy for children. Let's go! Love Sonitotum with Matthew Wayne Selznick and have the desire and means to make a one-time donation in support of the show? Donate via PayPal or leave a tip via Ko-Fi, with my grateful thanks.
Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs audiobook. Pellucidar is a fictional "Hollow Earth" milieu invented by Edgar Rice Burroughs for a series of action adventure stories. The stories initially involve the adventures of mining heir David Innes and his inventor friend Abner Perry after they use an "iron mole" to burrow 500 miles into the earth's crust. This is the second book in the series.
This episode we are joined by Chris Holmes: artist, writer, hobby game designer, and all-around renaissance man. Chris recounts his father's, John Eric Holmes, creation of the original D&D basic boxset as well as telling us about his own "made for the con" game designs-that he does as a way to express his interests and creativity. He tells about an up-coming re-release of his father's Pellucidar books and hangs with us for the This Ol' Dungeon segment where we revisit "The Tower of Zenopus"-also known as the sample dungeon from the Holmes D&D boxset. So, hang with us for another great episode! -Oh, don't forget to send us some mail to get entered in for a chance to be the "at home winner" on the next episode's "Geek Credit" segment. Our address again is thisoldungeon@gmail.com. Happy gaming folks!
At the Earth's Core by Edgar Rice Burroughs audiobook. This is the first book in the Pellucidar series. Pellucidar is a fictional Hollow Earth milieu invented by Edgar Rice Burroughs for a series of action adventure stories. The stories initially involve the adventures of mining heir David Innes and his inventor friend Abner Perry after they use an "iron mole" to burrow 500 miles into the earth's crust.
Episode 95 is based on the popular tale, 'Pellucidar' where David Innes journeys back to the lost world at the Earth's Core. Please have a listen! Sly ones coffee? Follow us on frickin' instagram: https://www.instagram.com/l00kmanoscript/ Additional sound effects from https://www.zapsplat.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/look-ma-no-script/support
We begin a four-part look at the Jules Verne novel Journey to the Center of the Earth, first published in 1864 and a precurser to Burroughs' Pellucidar novels. https://erbpodcast.blogspot.com/ email us at edgarsmailbag@gmail.com Please visit our store at: https://www.cafepress.com/erbpodcast
Sleepy Time Tales Podcast – Creating a restful mindset through relaxing bedtime stories
Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs Some exciting times in our story time tonight, but sleep will still slip up as I tell you the story. Disappointments and excitement abound, but a satisfying slumber will still be yours by the time the action starts to happen. Story (07:27) New Merch Store!! I've partnered with TeePublic to setup a new merch store. But because I'm no visual artist I'm taking advantage of a great TeePublic feature that allows me to share the works of other creators; expose them to my audience, allow their work to be purchased, and receive a small cut myself. Check out the storefront at https://www.teepublic.com/stores/sleepy-time-tales?ref_id=25247 or go directly to store.sleepytimetales.net or merch.sleepytimetales.net. I'd also like to issue a call. Any listeners with works up on TeePublic, please feel free to let me know and I'll look at adding your stuff to my store. No promises, but I do have a few thousand monthly listeners, so that may help give you a boost. Find Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/605 Supporting Sleepy Time Tales If you would like to support my work and help keep the podcast available and for free, there are several ways you can support the show. You can support the show as a supporter on Patreon and receive a host of bonuses including Patron only episodes and special edits https://www.patreon.com/sleepytimetales If you're enjoying Sleepy Time Tales and would like to make a financial contribution, but would rather not commit to a monthly payment then check out Buy Me A Coffee at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/sleepytimetales this doesn't require any account registration on your part. You can throw a tip in the jar at me/sleepytimetales Or check out our new Merch store up at TeePublic where you can buy Sleepy Time Tales merch or even cool works from other creators. Go to sleepytimetales.net You can sign up at BetterHelp for professional, low cost counselling services at: https://trybetterhelp.com/sleepytime Treat yourself to a free audiobook to keep from Audible's significant range, and help Sleepy Time Tales to keep the lights on and grow. Go to com/sleepytime and sign up for a free 30-day trial. Patreon $5 Patrons Jessica Jennifer D Sean O Abby F Felicity R Chris & Moya Sharon Michaela Barcode Adam Tim Joni Callan Li Please Share If you're enjoying the show, and finding it helps you sleep despite the stresses and strains of your life, the absolute best thing you can do is share it with your friends, families, acquaintances, cellmates etc. Anyone who needs a good night's sleep might benefit. So please share it with the people in your life, whether in person or on social media. Find The Show Website: sleepytimetales.net Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sleepytimetales Twitter: https://twitter.com/sleepytimetales Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sleepytimetalespodcast/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8gG5z50RjyiJ0_YXeQJpbg Music: http://loyaltyfreakmusic.com/ Music Patreon: https://tinyurl.com/loyaltyfreak Project Gutenberg Terms of Use https://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:Terms_of_Use
Sleepy Time Tales Podcast – Creating a restful mindset through relaxing bedtime stories
We return to the mysterious world beneath our own as our protagonist, who confusingly share a name with me, continues to look for his wife? Partner? And try reform his kingdom. And while this all sounds strange and exciting early 20th century prose and the way I tell stories won't keep you from sleeping. Story (07:35) New Merch Store!! I've partnered with TeePublic to setup a new merch store. But because I'm no visual artist I'm taking advantage of a great TeePublic feature that allows me to share the works of other creators; expose them to my audience, allow their work to be purchased, and receive a small cut myself. Check out the storefront at https://www.teepublic.com/stores/sleepy-time-tales?ref_id=25247 or go directly to store.sleepytimetales.net or merch.sleepytimetales.net. I'd also like to issue a call. Any listeners with works up on TeePublic, please feel free to let me know and I'll look at adding your stuff to my store. No promises, but I do have a few thousand monthly listeners, so that may help give you a boost. Find Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/605 Supporting Sleepy Time Tales If you would like to support my work and help keep the podcast available and for free, there are several ways you can support the show. You can support the show as a supporter on Patreon and receive a host of bonuses including Patron only episodes and special edits https://www.patreon.com/sleepytimetales If you're enjoying Sleepy Time Tales and would like to make a financial contribution, but would rather not commit to a monthly payment then check out Buy Me A Coffee at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/sleepytimetales this doesn't require any account registration on your part. You can throw a tip in the jar at me/sleepytimetales Or check out our new Merch store up at TeePublic where you can buy Sleepy Time Tales merch or even cool works from other creators. Go to sleepytimetales.net You can sign up at BetterHelp for professional, low cost counselling services at: https://trybetterhelp.com/sleepytime Treat yourself to a free audiobook to keep from Audible's significant range, and help Sleepy Time Tales to keep the lights on and grow. Go to com/sleepytime and sign up for a free 30-day trial. Patreon $5 Patrons Jessica Kristen Lacy H Jennifer D Abby F Megan W Felicity R Chris & Moya Angela M Sharon Michaela Emma Barcode Adam Tim Joni Callan Please Share If you're enjoying the show, and finding it helps you sleep despite the stresses and strains of your life, the absolute best thing you can do is share it with your friends, families, acquaintances, cellmates etc. Anyone who needs a good night's sleep might benefit. So please share it with the people in your life, whether in person or on social media. Find The Show Website: sleepytimetales.net Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sleepytimetales Twitter: https://twitter.com/sleepytimetales Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sleepytimetalespodcast/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8gG5z50RjyiJ0_YXeQJpbg Music: http://loyaltyfreakmusic.com/ Music Patreon: https://tinyurl.com/loyaltyfreak Project Gutenberg Terms of Use https://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:Terms_of_Use
Join the daring Hazel Strong in the years long before the world knew her name as a capable adventuress. How did this curious, quick-witted heroine come to be? And what mysteries lurk in her past? Join Hazel, Lord “Bunny” Tennington the III, a mysterious agent named Magpie, and a number of fantastic characters new and old as we learn more about our brave heroine's harrowing origin story. Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, HAZEL STRONG™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. Music Credits for this week go to Epidemic Sound. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
EPISODE 47 | What Lies Beneath - The Hollow Earth (Big 'Uns 4) Is our world hollow, possibly inhabited by evil descendants of the Yeti, or malevolent Detrimental Robots, or aliens, or dinosaurs, or Bigfoot, or Atlanteans, or Tarzan, or Neanderthal Batman? Maybe the Arctic has a giant hole leading into the interior, or is really Atlantis or Eden or Avalon or Mt. Meru or Hyperborea, or part of Yggdrasil or Irminsul, or the homeland of the Vedas. Or maybe the earth is actually expanding all the time. Or the Book of Genesis is really all about Mars. And on and on it goes as the pseudoscientific folks get all hot and bothered about what lies beneath our feet. See a video version of this episode on our YouTube channel. Like what we do? Then buy us a beer or three via our page on Buy Me a Coffee. #ConspiracyClearinghouse #sharingiscaring #donations #support #buymeacoffee You can also SUBSCRIBE to this podcast. SECTIONS 01:58 - The Hollow Earth Point Zero - early notions, Halley, Euler 05:54 - The Symmesulation - John Cleves Symmes Jr., Symmes Holes, Jeremiah Reynolds inspires, early fiction, William Warren's Paradise Found, Etidorhpa 11:43 - Fiction & Fact - Verne, Nequa, Pellucidar (special guest: Tarzan), Agharta (Shamballa lite?) 16:28 - Szukalski & Zermatism (Protong & the Yetisyni) 19:26 - Dero, Dero! The Shaver Mystery - Richard Shaver, the evil Dero, Mantong, Ray Palmer, an Amazing Stories scandal, the Hidden World, Atlantean rock books, Shaver Mystery Clubs crop up 28:36 - Not Visitors, Roommates! - UFO & mountains, Raymond Bernard, Peter Kolosimo, Brinsley Le Poer Trench and a Martian Genesis 33:48 - Facts Cut a Hole in Us - Chimborazo & a vertical deflection experiment, the Kola Superdeep Borehole, facts about the Earth's interior & structure; Rodney Cluff, a multi-dimensional interior 41:02 - Growing Pains - the Expanding Earth Theory - Mantovani, continental drift, artist Neal Adams and Batman Music by Fanette Ronjat LAPSUS LINGUAE: I say the Life Magazine article starts on page 134, but it actually starts on page 127. In the video version, I write the inter-dimensional hollow earth video only has Hungarian subtitles, but I found a copy without (see the playlist for that). More Info: Hollow-Earth Theories: A List of References The Hollow Earth Theory Isn't So Funny Anymore on Wired Tales of a Hollow Earth. Tracing the Legacy of John Cleves Symmes in Antarctic Exploration and Fiction, a research paper by Lester Ian Chaplow Euler and the Hollow Earth: Fact or Fiction? by Ed Sandifer Marshall B Gardner's patent US1096102A The Hollow Earth Theory: Our Inside Out Universe on Mysteries Unsolved Stanislav Szukalski: Zermatic on Kook Science Research Associates Behold!!! the Protong by Stanislav Szukalski List of Protong words with English translation Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski FEAR DOWN BELOW: The Curious History of the Shaver Mystery The Hidden World Volume One: The Dero! The Tero! The Battle Between Good and Evil Underground The Secret World Richard Shaver & the proto-language of Mantong Life Magazine, May 21, 1951 issue (article on science fiction begins page 127) What's This? A Shaver Revival? by Doug Skinner for Fate Magazine The mantong alphabet and sound symbolism Review of Mantong and Protong exhibition Inner Earth Is Teeming With Exotic Forms of Life on Smithsonian World Top Secret: Our Earth IS Hollow - Rodney Cluff's website That awesome video WITHOUT Hungarian subtitles! The earth is expanding and we don't know why on Science Frontiers Online The case against pangea - Neal Adams and the Expanding Earth Theory webpage plus links at the bottom Follow us on social for extra goodies: Facebook (including upcoming conspiracy-themed events) Twitter YouTube (extra videos on the topic, Old Time Radio shows, music playlists and more) Other Podcasts by Derek DeWitt DIGITAL SIGNAGE DONE RIGHT - Winner of the 2021 AVA Digital Award Gold, 2021 Silver Davey Award & 2020 Communicator Award of Excellence, and on numerous top 10 podcast lists. PRAGUE TIMES - A city is more than just a location - it's a kaleidoscope of history, places, people and trends. This podcast looks at Prague, in the center of Europe, from a number of perspectives, including what it is now, what is has been and where it's going. It's Prague THEN, Prague NOW, Prague LATER.
We interrupt our regularly scheduled season for a very special Q&A session with the Freshly Squeezed Pulp Radio-Comedy Troupe! How was FSP formed? Who are the actors and actresses behind your favorite characters? And what WAS the blue frog scare of 1902? All that and more in this wonderful interview! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, HAZEL STRONG™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
We interrupt our regularly scheduled season for a very special Q&A session with the Freshly Squeezed Pulp Radio-Comedy Troupe! How was FSP formed? Who are the actors and actresses behind your favorite characters? And what WAS the blue frog scare of 1902? All that and more in this wonderful interview! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, HAZEL STRONG™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
In the series' exciting finale, our hero Tarzan finally becomes aware of The Last Game's final challenge yet finds himself flipping this quest on its head under the guidance of his friends and past years of adventure. Will Tarzan be able to live the story he's always wanted? All that and more on this week's episode of The Adventures of Tarzan® from Freshly Squeezed Pulp! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. Music Credits for this week go to Epidemic Sound. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
Finally making their way to the center of the Earth, Tarzan are introduced to the inner world of Pellucidar by their greatest enemy Werper. Wrought with fears and insecurities, the group struggles to cope with the uncertainty of their task ahead and wonders what Werper has in store for them. All that and more on this week's episode of The Adventures of Tarzan® from Freshly Squeezed Pulp! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. Music Credits for this week go to Epidemic Sound. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
As the team gets closer to the Earth's core that remains mysteriously linked to winning The Last Game, our team is challenged by an old nemesis returned: Nemone of New Rome. In a violent face-off, our heroes' whits, strengths, and pasts are put to the test in what seems to be one of their greatest challenges. All that and more on this week's episode of The Adventures of Tarzan® from Freshly Squeezed Pulp! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. Music Credits for this week go to Epidemic Sound. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
Pastor Bill: [0:03] Hello and welcome to Season 3 Episode 47 of the Berean Manifesto; Faith, Hope, and Love for the Modern Christian. In tonight's episode we are talking about forgiveness and I've got Pastor Newms with me from Tennessee. Say hi Pastor Newms. Pastor Newms: Hi Pastor Newms. Pastor Bill: The people on the podcast can't hear you. Pastor Newms: Prove it. Pastor Bill: They can hear you, they can't see you when you smile they can't ya see you smile. Pastor Newms: Prove it. Pastor Bill: So as always, we are recording this live on a Sunday evening, we record a live every Sunday evening at 6:30 p.m. Central Standard Time Pastor Newms wants to add a caveat on to that what's. Pastor Newms: [0:50] To point out that it is October 3rd, and I know it was October 3rd because one day he asked me what day it was and I told him it was October third I just realized my New Worlds audio is coming across and so people just heard in the the thing a bunch of punches and you won't be able to edit it out so. Pastor Bill: [1:11] Punches and birds and stuff cool okay I'll have some. Pastor Newms: [1:14] Yeah so have fun with that because I launch the game and was just standing somewhere so that way it's ready to play after because of the queue times and then I'm like. Pastor Bill: [1:28] You're going to take that audio out for the rest of the time we're together right okay. Pastor Newms: [1:32] Yeah cut it off already it's off it's just it it's one of those things. Pastor Bill: [1:38] So how was your week Pastor Newms? Pastor Newms: [1:40] My week was good. Yeah just good busy with work new job. I don't know what Tik-Tok groggy is asking me about, I saw or not I know so the joke for those people who don't get why October 3rd is important its National Mean Girls day, um because in the movie Mean Girls she says. Pastor Bill: [2:13] On October third he asked me. Pastor Newms: [2:15] And he asked me what day it was and I told him it was October 3rd and so that's kind of like one of those memes that that gets and so I'm sitting here at my computer earlier, and I get a text message from rain and it says it's October third and I'm like. Watching it before before and you know it's a really good movie with what the topic is tonight. It's a bad segue because I should have saved it for the actual segue piece but you know hey I messed that up. And Rayne said in Discord that she has a bunch of gifts because she said she just sent me the text but then I took the GIF of the clip of the movie and send it to her like. Times somewhere around there and just flooded her Discord with the gift know that week was pretty good New World by Amazon games came out on Tuesday, we've had a lot of fun with it this week There's, it's a pretty good game there's definitely some balancing that still has to be done but it's a new game so if you don't expect, server issues and balancing to have to happen. Pastor Bill: [3:51] And I gotta be honest I'm struggling I'm struggling to keep up with you so that when we stream it's not like, Pastor news running around hitting moms and me sending the background going feet feet feet and right now you're eager level higher than me as it is, and I still feel like food and I'm struggling to keep up man. Pastor Newms: [4:17] Just imagine how I'm feeling struggling to stay low enough so I don't go in there and. It's been really hard because I don't sleep as much as you do I spend large swaths, the time you're asleep sitting at this exact position and so I've been trying to just do skills and stuff from that time but but you still love her. Pastor Bill: [4:40] Skill still give you XP. Pastor Newms: [4:41] I took I took yesterday off to spend time with the family which is very odd for me but I did like the whole day I did. Pastor Bill: [4:48] Which allowed me to get from Level 22 to just a hair shy of 25. Pastor Newms: [4:54] Yeah and so it's been good it's been good yeah, I'm enjoying it but I definitely I am not. Going as hard as I would like to and not just because of you but overall just not and that, I'm like seeing people ahead of me and it really frustrates me because I'm just that kind of person because I am what you would call as a try-hard or sweaty boy when it comes to games but it's okay. Pastor Bill: [5:33] Sweaty boy. Pastor Newms: [5:35] Yeah that's what they like the people who like try too hard, you know when you're running and when you're active when you're doing crazy things you get sweaty so those people that play like that we call them sweaty boys, and like groggy said there's so much to do every plant you run by every animal you look at every a very much, is about balance and, what you feel like doing if you want to sit there and hit a tree for 24 hours straight you can if you might or might not be you know watch. Pastor Bill: [6:09] Wow wow you can't quite hit a tree for 24 hours because you'll you will end up with 360 1.5 pounds in your pack and then the game will say can't move, and then you have to dump some stuff on the ground in order to move again at all. Pastor Newms: [6:24] That's still still just hitting a tree you just threw some stuff on the ground first. Pastor Bill: [6:27] Because then you have to dump some stuff it's not just hitting a tree. Pastor Newms: [6:30] Technically you have to turn around and go to the next tree but you know. Pastor Bill: [6:33] Yeah you have to hit the next train. Pastor Newms: [6:35] I mean you can like you know other games it's like okay I, there's not a benefit at a certain point unless you're just trying to grind money in here there still is. Pastor Bill: [6:44] And the fishing is the fishing mechanic is. Pastor Newms: [6:48] The fishing is gorgeous, I have to say I think it's the best fishing in an MMO I've experienced yet I do there's two aspects I could see improvements on, but overall it's from from the from the start, because other one's got better over time or got worse over time but from the start I have to say it's probably the best one out the gate that I've ever played with so how was your week Pastor Bill. Pastor Bill: [7:17] My work is good as new world this new game came out that I've been playing new world and it's it's been fun. Pastor Newms: [7:23] Is that really the most important thing that happened this week. It's October. Pastor Bill: [7:32] Yeah there was October first that was fun. We celebrated Day of the Dead and we decorated some cookies and I decorated the house and I built a chandelier, out of you know how they have those plastic, pieces that are supposed to be spooky that you put out in your garden you know you just push them down so I bought four of those and I modified them and attach them into a circle, and then I took some wire hangers and undid the hangers and and attach those inside the circle on the top and the bottom with zip ties, through it hold its shape and then I attach some plastic skulls to it and poked holes in the top of plastic goals, battery operated flickering candles that are on timers into them and about those plastic chains and put chains on it and hung it in our kitchen so that's fun, MacGyver begs on Twitch says MacGyver I don't know why I did that with my finger like to touch my ear like I was receiving her. Pastor Newms: [8:44] I don't know why either but that's okay. Pastor Bill: [8:46] It was weird so that was fun my mother came and stayed at my grandmother's house across the street for several days this week so we got to see her for lots of chunks of time that was. Pastor Newms: [9:01] And how is she doing post-surgery still good. Pastor Bill: [9:03] She's doing good she's up and walking around she walked over to my house today which is it's probably about a quarter of mile one way, and then she went on a walk with the kids, to my grandmother's and around her driveway and back down and up again and around and back down again and you know after having spinal surgery that's that's some good progress. Pastor Newms: [9:26] Ima Be Honest having never had spinal surgery I probably couldn't walk that far I mean. Pastor Bill: [9:35] I'm right there with you man I'm right there with you. Pastor Newms: [9:37] I got a good like quarter mile maybe I went bowling yesterday and barely was able to get out of bed. Pastor Bill: [9:45] Yeah I saw that on. Pastor Newms: [9:48] I know. Pastor Bill: [9:49] On this court and I was like you went what now. Pastor Newms: [9:53] I actually went went outside and spent a day out of the house like the whole day it was, so odd. Pastor Bill: [10:05] I used to love bowling I really did but my hips are so out of whack that just one toss and I can't move anymore and the whole next day I have trouble moving and, Biggs wasn't. Pastor Newms: [10:21] No he wasn't it was a it was adults that live in this house only because we needed some adults that live in this house time away from everyone else because we haven't done that. Pastor Bill: [10:34] So you and your wife and Heather okay I was like adults that live in that house. Pastor Newms: [10:41] Will because I can't sell you the holding people I can't say that you know I did win I did win so here's the bad thing so I used to bowl a lot, there was a time where I would bowl consistently over, that was custom ball that was you know I did the whole the whole nine. Pastor Bill: [11:06] I apologize to Phoenix I didn't call you Phoenix I called you that other name my bad thank you for letting me letting me know that I used the wrong name. Pastor Newms: [11:18] So we picked no I never owned custom shoes actually Biggs but I had my custom Ball but because I used to, it got left in heat and air and year after year after year I bowled with it and it literally hit the pins and then, split into and finish roll finished rolling because time you know it's what happens to a ball, and I tend to bowl a little hard as anyone could imagine that knows me. Pastor Bill: [11:51] I don't think you do anything soft man. Pastor Newms: [11:53] No I really don't I bring its why don't fix things I called Biggs who's literally twice my size whose fingers are two of mine like his wings sighs his you know, four inches taller he's got and like he'll be the, I fixed it and I'm like I broke two of them trying to do what you just did like just because I don't I don't have good but the problem with not having a custom ball was twofold so one, I like to with my wrists and my arthritis in my hands if I go too heavy, the weights I used to use my hand hurts real bad after about, week and I can say it's three frames into the third game but the problem is when you do a lower weight, the balls that aren't custom that are at a bowling alley there just drilled, and they drill them based on okay this size person would use this ball so this is their finger holes. My hands are too big for that so I end up using a ball that either pulls on my thumb joint over and over again. Or a ball that ends up hurting my wrist so we got through the first game and I I beat the girls really really bad like really bad. Demolished and then we go into the second game and I do better than 80 and Phoenix doesn't bulb much and we'll just going to leave it at that and then we go into the third game and. Pastor Bill: [13:45] Is that the one that is 81. Pastor Newms: [13:47] Yeah the second game Zaydie won, I mean I won but just a little just just a little and then the third game I, for gutter balls in a row because my my my hand starts twisting you know it's just the whole night and I'm just angry at that point and you know how. Yeah no I don't use the bumper but luckily I will say my total score. Was still greater than Zaydies and higher than. Pastor Bill: [14:25] After 30 frames Pastor Newms: [14:26] This one this one was interesting so this one you paid by the game not by the hour it's actually a 24-hour bowling alley for the third shit and they actually say third shift friendly 24-hour bowling at because it's in Smyrna, where the factory that Biggs works at is and so they have special leagues for the Third, the third shifters they have like the whole nine and so you're like get it the whole anyway. Pastor Bill: [14:56] Yeah the whole line yeah. Pastor Newms: [14:58] So Pastor Bill: [14:58] As if it was some other sport. Pastor Newms: [15:01] Well it didn't start there as well wasn't bowling just like golf that started in, I thought it started in the north parts of great. Pastor Bill: [15:14] This is neither here nor there. Pastor Newms: [15:15] It Isn't So I did beat them but by the time I woke up this morning and I got and my arm was just like, and and my knees were like those weren't good shoes like your feet hurt all day congratulations so yeah so I was like I do nothing else, they actually had a sign and it was like bumpers are for kids under age blah and I was like I'll ask for you guys if you want there like naught after reading that sign. Pastor Bill: [15:52] Another that's a No-No. Pastor Newms: [15:53] Yeah. Pastor Bill: [15:54] Alright now that we've done all that it's time for getting to know the pastor's. Pastor Newms: [16:02] Which is much easier to do because of cards. Not the hour we talked but the one card we answer. Sorry I'm in a mood I'm in a mood today it's one of those things. Pastor Bill: [16:19] Let's say we've got about three weeks till till that one thing comes in okay when you die what do you want to be remembered for. Pastor Newms: [16:30] Being good at it. Yeah I want to go out and some crazy way that everyone go everyone forgets exactly what you've done in life it's like did you hear about that guy that died doing that. Pastor Bill: [16:43] First of wherever you want to be remembered for like. Pastor Newms: [16:47] How I died. Pastor Bill: [16:48] The band on the Titanic they kept playing until the water just sucked him or the chef on the Titanic he kept drinking until the moment they. Pastor Newms: [17:03] Drink anymore so no I hope I would be remembered for that no I know but no like like. Pastor Bill: [17:05] Well I didn't mean specifically but I meant you know people who've gone you know except except the Shelf didn't die he he lived because of all his drinking. Pastor Newms: [17:18] Well he wouldn't go through hypothermia it'd be much harder to have hypothermia because of the extra heat so as the water Rose he probably just floated up through the ship and was cut to the top and win crap I tried. Pastor Bill: [17:28] Well he didn't he he went up to the front of the ship and then when the ship you know started tipping he was up on top, and he was you know just was still drinking and fell off into the water and swam to a Lifeboat and they pulled him up in and, he was one of the survivors. Pastor Newms: [17:49] That's one of the only times where alcoholism actually saved someone's life because so often that's not the case oh I did this thing that you told me to do I went I did I was at, I was at a place yesterday, and they had hair straighteners they weren't it wasn't specifically a beard straightener but if I straighten my goatee it grows two inches. Pastor Bill: [18:15] Yeah it does it's not great. Pastor Newms: [18:16] It was straight I was like but I wanted to buy it because it was on clearance at Dollar General it so it was like I was like, clearance if it blows up in my hand it was on clearance, and so no Zaydie I don't but that's beside the point I'll get to you in a second, and so I am actually going to invest in the in the in the in the beard thing that you have to because it was kind of nice and if I'm going to grow my beard back out I will, I need to, not looking shabby Zaydie on Twitch said that I would have to leave the house more often and go on trips if I wanted to die fantastically but I really don't I can die fantastically Somehow Here. Pastor Bill: [19:09] I don't know why it reminds me of it reminds me of a Tick-Tock video I saw and there's somebody sent to me and it was this guy and he was I had to have maintenance come into my house, um to fix something in the bathroom and the maintenance guy came in and he went to the bathroom and he worked on it, and he came when he got done he came out and he just left just walked past me he never said anything and then I go back into the bathroom after he's gone and I look down and I see this and he points the camera he's got the toaster sitting on the edge of the bathtub plugged in the bathtub is empty but the toasters there and he was like now there's a legitimate reason why that's there, and I can't hear what he said it was but but he was like but this made this guy just came in saw the toaster plug get on the edge of my bathtub and said nothing, he said nothing to me at all you just left. Pastor Newms: [19:57] I saw another Tick-Tock very similar thing and it said well tomorrow is going to stink I just found out my toasters waterproof. How was like. Oh that that's not funny is but that ain't like are you okay like you're joking right. Pastor Bill: [20:23] It's a good joke is a great joke even but I'm on need you to stop. Pastor Newms: [20:27] Okay so what was your answer what do you want to be remembered for Pastor Bill. Pastor Bill: [20:45] I think it's much better things to remember. Pastor Newms: [20:47] Who do do do do do do do do do do do do do do. Pastor Bill: [20:55] Groggy says he wants to be remembered for being a good person. Pastor Newms: [21:11] Not so good and I mean I get that I can understand that answer I had someone say wow that's rude Biggs. Pastor Bill: [21:22] Your dad loves you so much. Pastor Newms: [21:23] He loves me so much Biggs on Twitch responded when I asked you know wolf defined good he just said not you, holding Love Languages hatred and sarcasm it works. Pastor Bill: [21:41] Okay so let me let me rephrase I have a messages that I won't remember I have, ideals from scripture that I want remembered faith hope love the Berean lifestyle I have a science fiction things that I'm writing that I'm working on but it's not me that I want to be remembered, if anything I want the ideals that I preach to live on not my name and I want the stories that I tell to live on, but not necessarily me not necessarily my name. Pastor Newms: [22:16] Yeah cuz I'll agree with that names. Pastor Bill: [22:19] That does mean 100% no good to be me remembered. Pastor Newms: [22:24] Names and stuff, is rough like I feel bad for some authors that are remembered for the things they did like you take Tolkien and you take CS Lewis and, so much of their work is Remembered in a certain way and then you have these people that that that like everyone knows like, the new movies are based on Lord of the Rings by Tolkien and you're like token had so much good work that never gets touched CS Lewis had some amazing things he wrote that never gets touched. Pastor Bill: [23:01] Edgar Rice Burroughs he's got the Pellucidar series, best thing I've ever read - best writing I've ever read in my life he's got the Barsoom series not quite as well written as Pellucidar, but really really really good and then he's got Tarzan. Pastor Newms: [23:20] And that's what he's remembered for. Pastor Bill: [23:29] Why Tarzan? That's like an insult to this great of great man of literature that Tarzan, is what he's rumored for and I'm like okay move. Pastor Newms: [23:45] Yeah it's definitely yeah yeah I would definitely have some words if people were murdered me for the things you don't want to be remembered for. Pastor Bill: [23:58] All right so we're 626 significantly sing I'm gonna have trouble with in the transcript with that one. Pastor Newms: [24:06] Yeah I have fun I'm interested to see what you write when you translate that on Tuesday. Pastor Bill: [24:11] We are significantly trains like that we are significantly warmed up and so I would like you. To give us a soft cat recap of why and how forgiveness plays into Mean Girls. I've never seen the movie so. And I specifically wait until this moment to say that so that everyone watching could see that face. We've been friends for 20 years and I still haven't seen. Pastor Newms: [25:10] So one of the prefaces of Mean Girls is that girls are mean in high school that's kind of what the movies about and I'd like to point out that it's not until 40 like 48, 43 minutes into the movie that the term mean girl is actually stated so. Pastor Bill: [25:32] So a lot of prologue huh. Pastor Newms: [25:33] That's when the movie actually starts, and Zaydie hates that I told her that Kevin Smith said that at one point because it constantly now just makes her go make sure go. Pastor Bill: [25:44] He's right. Pastor Newms: [25:46] The movie just started. Pastor Bill: [25:51] Up to this point was just them and making sure that you understand the universe that you're in and now the story starts then then the last 15 minutes of the movie that's the story. Pastor Newms: [26:04] So forgiveness forgiveness so the whole bit preface of the movie is I'm not going to go into the whole thing because it's don't condone going and watching it unless you are prepared because it is not a. Necessarily family-friendly depending on your particular religious beliefs. I watch it with my girls they love it but it's there's some definite there's things that happened in the movie that are specifically written poorly and like specifically, like that child should never be exposed to what she was just exposed to and that's the point it's calling out parents that don't watch their children and different things like that and so. And so at the end of the movie we get to a certain point and. Lindsay Lindsay Lohan is that right. Sorry it's so different because the movie so old when I think about her now you're like that's not the same person but they she does. Pastor Bill: [27:22] It's kind of it can isn't the same person I mean if we're being honest. Pastor Newms: [27:24] It really isn't not even a little she does a prologue at the end talking about you know everything has happened through the movie and how huh. Pastor Bill: [27:36] An Apple log a monologue you said a prologue. Pastor Newms: [27:40] I'm in a monologue I'm. Pastor Bill: [27:42] Catch it so she just monologue at the. Pastor Newms: [27:44] And one of the things she talks about is how girls who are always being mean to each other you have to. Get over that by forgiving each other and moving past it after, asking for forgiveness and asking for you know and moving through to then and then, and then it says you know and the next year when we're all seniors it's like none of it ever happened and there's you know and of course the school's perfect blah blah blah and then you see these three freshmen girls walk by and there dressed exactly how the three mean girls are dressed in the beginning of the first scene of the movie and, and it's like it shows that you know one it shows that cycle of you know yeah you guys figured it out but the next group didn't but it's definitely it was just funny when I was watching it I got to that part and I was like, forgiveness knowing that in 15 minutes we were going to go live to talk about forgiveness it was just one of those funny moments where was like, but there's a lot of catch phrases that most people don't even know, that's where they come from that come from that movie and it's just a cultural significant movie for Our Generation that you know you're fugly for never watching. Pastor Bill: [29:11] But you think I'm beautiful. Pastor Newms: [29:13] I didn't say you're not beautiful I said you're fugly there's a difference. Pastor Bill: [29:16] So they don't they zadie on Twitch said it right that time says yes but also the first time after that the story of when the movie officially began and there was two minutes left. Pastor Newms: [29:31] Yeah there was I don't remember what movie it was but I told her the whole thing that Kevin Smith says which is Kevin Smith the director for people who don't know he's decently famous if you have any culture whatsoever but he he says this thing, that well I mean let's be honest he's not mainstream he's cult classics there, the only thing he's ever done this mainstream is like, certain episodes of mainstream television because he's so good other people are like please come write and direct an episode and he's like okay and he did just relaunch some superhero thing that I really want to watch but I don't remember what it was, he's relaunching the whole thing what was it he thought there was something else also but yeah anyway. He says that, a movie has not started until the name of the movie is set, that everything before that is just explaining as Pastor Bill said the universe so shortly after I told Tina that we start watching this movie and it literally gets, like, two minutes before it's ended and they say it Tina's makes the says the thing gets frustrated unpause has the movie because we've been sitting there for two hours unpause has the movie there's like 30 seconds and then it starts be like to end credits and stuff and she's like. Kevin Smith is stupid so after she slept on the couch I forgave her and we moved on that didn't happen. Pastor Bill: [31:14] I like the I like the Trope of putting it at the end because it sends a message of either, now you get to write the actual story, using these characters in your brain or you taking the lesson that was learned and applying it to your own life is the story that we were wanting to sell. Pastor Newms: [31:40] That's interesting way to think about it. Pastor Bill: [31:43] That's the way I like to think about it all right so what is forgiveness. Pastor Newms: [31:52] I don't know you tell me. Pastor Bill: [31:55] I just asked you. Pastor Newms: [31:56] It's something I'm not good at. Pastor Bill: [31:58] I thought you have the answers here. Pastor Newms: [32:00] I don't normally have the answers I have a bunch of things I read and a bunch of things I believe are the correct answers but I do not have the answers. Actually got their conversation with someone this week and we had the whole conversation and then we get to the end and I said the point that the person was trying to make and I said well I think this. And they looked at me and they were like. What what do you mean I said well I agree with your statement I disagree with how you got there and why you got there. And so what I was trying to do was make you think about why you think what you think to get you to the point of. Having the thought process and I was like I don't know I could be completely wrong but I need someone to tell me I'm wrong so that way I know I'm wrong but that's beside the point that's another conversation. For me forgiveness forgiveness is complicated, because see now you got me at 20 minute 20 at 39 minutes in and you're going to make me already say it I like to try to save it towards towards the end as we're wrapping up but, you know English really sucks in that forgiveness means one of these days I'm going to wake up and not speak English, and you know God or someone is going to be laughing going what sucks now just because I've made this comment for so many years something at some point is going to make it right I don't I can't speak English and it's gonna be like, okay well this language sucks more and it's going to be even funnier anyway, you know forgiveness means different things depending on the parties and depending. What's going on so for example if you've wronged someone, and you ask for forgiveness you're asking them to not hold against you whatever it is you did, and normally you're asking. For the relationship to continue in a state of before you did the thing to wrong the person sometimes, depending on if you actually want that I mean there's a whole cavity that's the thing about the term and, and as humans you hear that all the time well forgive me I'm sorry but blah and my favorite is when people say well forgive me for what I'm about to say, or you know things like pardon me you know things like that and you're like no no don't be mad. But you know that's like that's like pre asking forgiveness I'm about to say something that's going to offend you and I'm asking you not to hold it against me. Pastor Bill: [35:11] So let's let's let's talk about English for a second we have we have certain words that the and it how you know we have these words but. And we have these words however. But means to negate right so when you say forgive me but, what you're communicating is forgive me but and now I'm going to negate, request you forgive me and tell you that my request was actually worthless because now I'm going to say the important part of the. Forgive me but right or you say oh man you're such a good painter but if you write so now you've negated the first half of the sentence, and it's gone away that is gone it's gone away that's what you're communicating then you've got however. However is not a negation statement however is a the first part is true and I also think there is another part that is true, even though they may seem to have some sort of conflict between, but I hold them to be able to have a way to coexist oh man you're a great painter however, I feel like if there was a little bit more like. So I'm not negating that you're a great painter and I'm also making a statement of my own personal belief so this is this but and however thing so when someone says forgive me but, now they're asking for forgiveness not that you have to ask for forgiveness but anyway anyway. Go on. Pastor Newms: [37:14] So and then we have what most people believe when, Christian person or organization talks says we're talking about forgiveness most people assume we're going straight to forgiveness of sins or straight, you know things like that and I think it's always interesting because the forgiveness. You know in the Bible it talks about forgiveness between humans, and that we have to continue to forgive the people around us and then talks about forgiveness from God and and they're they're similar in some ways but in other ways they're not, at all and so forgiveness is hard but there's and there's different types of forgiveness there's forgive and forget. And then there's forgiving deal with like you know I forgive you and I'll never think about it again which as humans. Pastor Bill: [38:15] Is impossible. Pastor Newms: [38:16] Is impossible because I'm going to remember that you told me my left toe, it's not the same size as my right toe and I'll never forget I'll never truly forget that you said it and I always think about the fact that my toes are wrong and it will always make me slightly bitter towards you because you're the one who pointed it out but, the difference is we should continue to treat people well after they forget after we've given them forgiveness but as you said earlier they shouldn't always have to ask, now you get to talk cuz I'm done in time. Pastor Bill: [38:52] Now I can just suck so let's look at 2nd Timothy, chapter 2 and turn. Pastor Newms: [39:01] We just in 2nd Timothy 2 like just the other day. Pastor Bill: [39:07] First and second Timothy or are really really good books for anyone who wants to find out, a lot about the way they should live and think as a Christian, I don't agree with everything Paul believes in this area for instance his beliefs that a woman, shouldn't speak in church and should never teach I don't agree with Paul's belief on that, I think God can use. Pastor Newms: [39:43] Well I think that was a cultural. Pastor Bill: [39:46] And teach in church I agree that it was a cult respite but it's still something that he States as an opinion that people grab ahold of and try to apply multiculturally. Pastor Newms: [39:57] The reason I say that is I don't disagree with Paul's opinion because if you don't have access to the scriptures and you've never read the scriptures you probably shouldn't be teaching the scriptures which is his point his point is if you haven't studied. Pastor Bill: [40:12] Point in that situation yes. Pastor Newms: [40:14] So because of that I don't disagree with Paul I disagree with the improper usage of Paul's teaching which sadly has. Pastor Bill: [40:23] You're taking my statement of trying to avoid a 10-minute conversation to justify my, you know and making it a 10 minute conversation, I just wanted to to breathe past it so that people aren't coming at me with emails and I don't have to you know what I mean. Pastor Newms: [40:43] It's just hard. Pastor Bill: [40:44] And it and it doesn't eat up our time here right now. Second Timothy chapter 2 verse 20 now in a large house there are not only gold and silver vessels but also those of wood and Clay some for honorable use and some for. Newms Take 2 minutes if it even needs that much and tell me about this rhinoceros that's up on your shelf back. Why is that there. Pastor Newms: [41:17] Can you ask about something else because the rhinoceros is going to cause an issue with certain listeners because I'm going to say things I shouldn't say about the rhinoceros if I try to talk about. Pastor Bill: [41:27] Okay pick an item. Pastor Newms: [41:31] Now so the rhinoceros is important because it is from my trip to South Africa, when I went on missions trip and it's significant because it survived that whole trip, even though somehow its horn got broken at one point accidentally and I struggle, with forgiveness as we've already talked about so I still think about it every time I look at it but that's not why it's up there it's up there because, it reminds me of that trip to Africa it reminds me of people in need reminds me of continuing to preach the gospel it reminds me of different things so for me it's important not because of the fact that it's a rhinoceros but because of what it is. Pastor Bill: [42:19] All right so overall you have this displayed because of the good and honorable things that it brings to mind yes. But also you when you see it you're reminded of something bad that happened. Pastor Newms: [42:42] Yes. Pastor Bill: [42:43] Yes okay so when we think about our own selves we think about our own minds. Pastor Newms: [42:47] Don't hold it against the person who dropped it I really do. Pastor Bill: [42:52] When we think about our own cells we think about our own minds we think about our own psyche we go through life and we have certain events that happen to us. And we can think of those events as basically like paintings, right so we take a painting or we take a picture and we hanging on a wall because we want to remember in our home we want to remember that event, we want to remember the day that we went to the zoo with the kids and we took a picture and you know so on and so forth, we don't take pictures of a horrible horrific events that happened, and take them and hang them in our home things that made us feel bad things that make us want to hurt ourselves things that make us want to torture ourselves, but in our psyche inside of our self inside of her own little home here we do that all the time right, we take this horrific thing that happened and we put it up on display and we continue to look at it and torture ourselves and we continue to think about it and torture ourselves and we continue to relive the moment and torture ourselves. Forgiveness isn't so much about the other person, oh forgive me for it okay you're asking me for forgiveness because you want their not to be consequence, for what you've done I get that I understand that you don't want there to be consequence some people deserve their not to be a future consequence because they actually messed up some people, are just trying to take advantage of you and they are. Asking for forgiveness as part of them taking advantage of you, and those people don't necessarily deserve to be let off with no consequences but. Don't deserve to constantly be tortured by the memory of this event. So forgiveness the Forgiveness words looking at tonight forgiveness were thinking about. 2nd Timothy 2:20 there are many vessels some for honorable and some for dishonorable. Inside of our own psyche when we forgive someone an event we're not saying we're letting them off the hook, we're saying I'm going to let that go I'm no longer going to, continue to have this thing in my psyche and continue to torture myself over what happened here I'm not going to continue to allow it to affect who I am right because here's what happens, as as someone who was raised by a stepfather who was let's say less than admirable, okay growing up right without forgiveness, every time I would see someone with a nose that reminded me of his, the hurt and the pain would come back and I would a tree and I would let it affect my relationship with that person every time I caught a smell, that reminded me of him all the hurt and the pain would come back and it will affect my relationship with that person, every time somebody moved in a certain way. It would remind me of those interactions with that person and the hurt and the pain would come back, I was torturing myself over Andover and over. Because I refused to forgive. Did he ever learn that forgiveness. Did he ever even ask for that forgiveness. Has he ever even acknowledged that there was anything that could be forgiven. And that is a Hard Sell but the Forgiveness of that person isn't for that person. Forgiveness of that person was for me. So that every time something comes up I'm not torturing myself, and this is one of those steps where we take when we talk about love your neighbor as yourself we talking about love you will never love yourself, if you are constantly choosing. Torture yourself over the things that happened to you. Over the things that you didn't do forgiveness, of events with other people, is for you it's for your own health it's for your own mind is for your own love, it's very important for a healthy saggy and a healthy life to forgive, I'm not saying you're letting them off the hook, because let him off the hook memes oh yeah I'm just gonna go back to the way things were and I'm gonna put myself right back in the same situation where they abuse me where are they you know ignored me where they shortchanged me where they treated me like a cog in a machine where the, you know all these different things you've got people that are were cheated on you know in their marriages their spouse cheated on them and they, don't feel like they can let that go because that person wronged me that person did it get that, I'm not saying you have to go back to that relationship I'm not saying you have to stay in that relationship I'm not saying you let that person off the hook I'm saying you let yourself, off the hook and stop torturing yourself over what the other person did. And that's my message of forgiveness tonight. Is forgiveness is for yourself, not exclusively, but that's the message I want to bring. Pastor Newms: [50:14] And indefinitely especially when we're talking about interpersonal, that is a hundred percent because, you know you hear it said sometimes you need to forgive that person you need to work towards moving past it, not for the other person because a lot of times, like you've mentioned you've already moved on from the physical space so you might never see that person again there's a particular situation in my past that I, as I've stated I think this is the fourth time now struggle with forgiveness of humans and there's particular person that wronged me in a certain way and. Affected my family and everyone around me to the point where it's it's hard some days some days you still want to be like that person, but that's not healthy you know because that person is never thinking about you you're wasting your mental state your mace you're wasting your emotions on it, and you know that's why I think the Bible talks about, forgiveness you know how many times do you forgive someone you know forgive them all the times it's not for the other person it's so it's not eating away at you and consuming everything you're doing because especially when it's trauma, because there's there's little things that people do that, we're not necessarily talking about like someone know why you stepped on my foot you know I made the joke you know you said my big toes too long you know things like that probably aren't going to affect you forever but the things that are, if you don't heal from it you don't try to walk past it not saying that healing is a hundred percent possible because there's with trauma once it's burned in it's something you have to work towards. Pastor Bill: [52:26] It's like scar tissue it really is it's like scar tissue I mean we're going to score right here that you know. It's the I will always be there it's never ever ever going to just not be something you can remember. Pastor Newms: [52:47] Like I have a thing on my own. Pastor Bill: [52:49] To be something that you don't put on a pedestal and continue to run back to. Pastor Newms: [52:56] I got think of my arm that reminds me to always use chemicals properly, do not try to see how much pain you can take that you're a bigger boy than the person that you work with in the Walmart photo lab, beating the person by holding a can of air upside down and burning your skin and giving yourself second-degree burns does not prove you're a better person. When you have to go into the doctor because you have second-degree burns on here arm doesn't help but it's something, you remember it you'll always remember it you it was a lesson learned, and we have to learn from those situations and move past them you know part of it is you know when you go through trauma it. Affects how you interact with people and sometimes that wrong that you felt allows you to interact with people better. Sometimes sometimes it's not but sometimes it is because you strive to not do the same things that were done to you, once you've healed from it until you have all you're going to do is hold hold it against that that person or that group of people or you know what. Pastor Bill: [54:19] And you're going to end up you're going to end up hurting the people around you that love you, because you're torturing yourself and and and you it's okay so I just happen to have this little cup on my desk it had paint in it and more into just brought it in here put it in here but anyway, it's like this right you have a limit to how much your cup can, and if you continue to torture yourself and fill up that cup it's gonna overflow. And the people that are going to get hit by that overflow are those that love you and want to be around you and want to help you and if you're overflowing bile to them because you're constantly torturing yourself, and that's just going to hurt those people those people that you love and that love you so forgiveness. Pastor Newms: [55:17] And I find it I find it. Upsetting and I have to forgive you for it later for specifically picking something for behind me to make a point of just saying. For all my things I'm like where is he going with it oh this is a valid place to go I guess but. Pastor Bill: [55:41] Okay fine all right so that's what we have for tonight, forgiveness if you listen to this podcast it does come out every Wednesday night at 7 p.m. Central Standard Time wherever your podcasts, also and however here's how it see how I did that I didn't say but also and however, we do record it live on Sunday evenings at 6:30 p.m. Central Standard Time and we'd like to invite you to come and see it recorded live and join the conversation in the chat, you can join us on Facebook YouTube or twitch you can go to EK K dot house to find out which twitch which Facebook and which YouTube you can participate on, and we would love to have you join us and actually become a part of the conversation we don't want to be just my voice and Pastor Newms is voice echoing back and forth, we would like the people that join us actually, join in the conversation you know not just during the warm-up not just during the getting to know the pastor's but if you've got something to say that can enrich, the conversation then we want you to be here to say it because. Yeah we enrich each other we build each other up and we move forward as Believers together, so we would love to see you or rather see your handle on the screen, when we go live on Sunday nights don't forget to be looking at twitch for when we go live with gaming with the pastors Pastor Newms and I playing some New World the new game that dropped from Amazon. Pastor Newms: [57:25] You'll definitely learn more about us than when answering the cards. Pastor Bill: [57:30] Oh man you will learn so much more about us. Pastor Newms: [57:32] As you can see I do not have forgiveness towards bill for making me do that segment every week I will be better still and it only hurts me because he doesn't care. Pastor Bill: [57:44] When we are live we also have a Discord server that we have some tunes playing that doesn't go out to the live stream on to Twitch, we have music in our headsets and you can listen to what we're listening to if you want to join us on that server you can hit up Pastor noobs when we're live on Twitch and he can send you an invite, don't be offended if he doesn't send you an invite we have, let's just say he Definitely wants to get to know people more before he puts everyone in the world on that server because his kids are on that server my kids are on that server we just want to make sure that we're creating a safe space for, everyone on that. Pastor Newms: [58:32] Actually most people that would join wouldn't be able to actually see the areas of the server the kids are in and they can't see all the channels either I have them locked down by roll but that's. Pastor Bill: [58:45] You have the role set okay cool. Pastor Newms: [58:47] I have the children lockdown. Pastor Bill: [58:48] They're all set oh good good I'm glad. Pastor Newms: [58:52] They would never know they were there but now they will. Pastor Bill: [58:55] All right well there you go my bad all right I love you guys have a great week Pastor Newms: Stay safe out there. Pastor Bill: and until next time.
Following the guidance of David Inez after last week's adventure, Tarzan joins forces with a team of his best allies throughout the years to journey to a mysterious underground world at the center of the Earth. However, the closer he and his team get, the more challenges they face in their attempts to unravel the perilous dangers of the encroaching Last Game. All that and more on this week's episode of The Adventures of Tarzan® from Freshly Squeezed Pulp! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. Music Credits for this week go to Epidemic Sound. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
After last week's dedication to continue The Last Game, our band of heroes make their way to Hollywood in search of more miraculous coincidences. Little do they know, however, that truth means something entirely different in the land of glorious stardom. All that and more on this week's episode of The Adventures of Tarzan® from Freshly Squeezed Pulp! Trademarks TARZAN®, TARZAN OF THE APES™, LORD OF THE JUNGLE®, LORD GREYSTOKE™, TARZAN AND JANE®, JANE PORTER™, JANE CLAYTON™, KORAK™, PELLUCIDAR®, AT THE EARTH'S CORE™, DAVID INNES™, ABNER PERRY™, AND EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS® Owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Associated logos, characters, names, and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks or registered trademarks of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., and used by permission. Music Credits for this week go to Epidemic Sound. FSP's Theme, “Adventure Awaits”, is composed by Mac Gagné.
Time to talk with author and pulp fiction expert Win Scott Eckert, author of Tarzan: Battle for Pellucidar was released, and the forthcoming The Monster on Hold!
Sleepy Time Tales Podcast – Creating a restful mindset through relaxing bedtime stories
Travel through the mysterious realm under the Earth as our protagonist works with, loses, and finds an old friend, encounters some bears and climbs a mountain to find his way. Story (07:25) Find Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/605 Support Black Owned Businesses: https://www.websiteplanet.com/blog/support-black-owned-businesses/ Supporting Sleepy Time Tales If you would like to support my work and help keep the podcast available and for free, there are several ways you can support the show. You can support the show as a supporter on Patreon and receive a host of bonuses including Patron only episodes and special edits https://www.patreon.com/sleepytimetales If you’re enjoying Sleepy Time Tales you can buy me a coffee over at, well,…Buy Me A Coffee at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/sleepytimetales this doesn’t require any account registration on your part. You can throw a tip in the jar at paypal.me/sleepytimetales Want to wear or decorate with Sleepy Time Tales? Check out the store and get yourself some sleepwear, pillows, phones cases or anything else you’d like http://sleepytimetales.redbubble.com You can sign up at BetterHelp for professional, low cost counselling services at: https://trybetterhelp.com/sleepytime Treat yourself to a free audiobook to keep from Audible’s significant range, and help Sleepy Time Tales to keep the lights on and grow. Go to Audibletrial.com/sleepytime and sign up for a free 30-day trial. BetterHelp (sponsor) We have a new sponsor partner with BetterHelp. A low cost, secure, online therapy service. Sleepy Time Tales listeners get a 10% discount on your first month. Go to https://trybetterhelp.com/sleepytime to try it out or to https://sleepytimetales.net/betterhelp-mental-health/ to learn more. Support this podcast Patreon $5 Patrons Jessa Wyn Nova Regan G Lacy H Jennifer D Abby F Megan W Felicity R Chris & Moya Angela M Sharon Please Share If you’re enjoying the show, and finding it helps you sleep despite the stresses and strains of your life, the absolute best thing you can do is share it with your friends, families, acquaintances, cellmates etc. Anyone who needs a good night’s sleep might benefit. So please share it with the people in your life, whether in person or on social media. Image by Simon from Pixabay Find The Show Website: sleepytimetales.net Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sleepytimetales Twitter: https://twitter.com/sleepytimetales Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sleepytimetalespodcast/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8gG5z50RjyiJ0_YXeQJpbg Music: http://loyaltyfreakmusic.com/ Music Patreon: https://tinyurl.com/loyaltyfreak Project Gutenberg Terms of Use https://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:Terms_of_Use
Tim, Jess and Scott finish their discussion of Tarzan: The Battle for Pellucidar, the 2020 novel written by Win Scott Eckert. https://erbpodcast.blogspot.com/
Jess, Scott and Tim discuss the 2019 novel Tarzan: The Battle for Pellucidar, by Win Scott Eckert. This novel is part of the New ERB Universe. We intended to cover the book in one episode, but there was a lot to talk about. So this is Part 1, with Part 2 posting in about a week. https://erbpodcast.blogspot.com/
Pellucidar - Edgar Rice Burroughs - Book 15 Title: Pellucidar Overview: Pellucidar is a 1915 fantasy novel by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, the second in his series about the fictional "Hollow Earth" land of Pellucidar. It first appeared as a five-part serial in All-Story Weekly from May 1 to 29, 1915. It was first published in book form in hardcover by A. C. McClurg in September 1923. A map by Burroughs of the Empire of Pellucidar accompanied both the magazine and book versions. Published: 1923 Series: Pellucidar Series, Pellucidar #2 Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs Genre: Science Fiction, Fantasy Fiction, Fantasy Episode: Pellucidar - Edgar Rice Burroughs - Book 15 Part: 1 of 1 Length Part: 5:57:53 Book: 15 Length Book: 5:57:53 Episodes: 0 - 15 of 15 Predecessor: At the Earth's Core Successor: Tanar of Pellucidar Narrator: Mark Nelson Language: English Rated: Guidance Suggested Edition: Unabridged Audiobook Keywords: adventure, hero, struggle, camaraderie, danger, morality, selflessness, moral integrity, character, love, forgiveness, authority, rules, freedom, romance, exploration Credits: All LibriVox Recordings are in the Public Domain. Wikipedia (c) Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. WOMBO Dream. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/support
At the Earth's Core - Edgar Rice Burroughs - Book 6 Title: At the Earth's Core Overview: At the Earth's Core is a 1914 fantasy novel by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, the first in his series about the fictional "hollow earth" land of Pellucidar. It first appeared as a four-part serial in All-Story Weekly from April 4 to 25, 1914. It was first published in book form in hardcover by A. C. McClurg in July 1922. Published: 1922 Series: Pellucidar Series, Pellucidar #1 Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs Genre: Fantastic Fiction, Science Fiction, Fantasy Episode: At the Earth's Core - Edgar Rice Burroughs - Book 6 Part: 1 of 1 Length Part: 4:57:47 Book: 6 Length Book: 4:57:47 Episodes: 0 - 15 of 15 Successor: Pellucidar Narrator: Mark Nelson Language: English Rated: Guidance Suggested Edition: Unabridged Audiobook Keywords: adventure, hero, struggle, camaraderie, danger, morality, selflessness, moral integrity, character, love, forgiveness, authority, rules, freedom, romance, exploration Credits: All LibriVox Recordings are in the Public Domain. Wikipedia (c) Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. WOMBO Dream. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/support
Journey to the Center of the Earth - Jules Verne - Book 4, Part 1 Title: Journey to the Center of the Earth Overview: Journey to the Center of the Earth (French: Voyage au centre de la Terre), also translated with the variant titles A Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey into the Interior of the Earth, is a classic science fiction novel by Jules Verne. It was first published in French in 1864, then reissued in 1867 in a revised and expanded edition. Professor Otto Lidenbrock is the tale's central figure, an eccentric German scientist who believes there are volcanic tubes that reach the very center of the earth. He, his nephew Axel, and their Icelandic guide Hans rappel into Iceland's celebrated inactive volcano Snæfellsjökull, then contend with many dangers, including cave-ins, subpolar tornadoes, an underground ocean, and living prehistoric creatures from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras (the 1867 revised edition inserted additional prehistoric material in Chaps. 37–39). Eventually, the three explorers are spewed back to the surface by an active volcano, Stromboli, in southern Italy. The category of subterranean fiction existed well before Verne. However his novel's distinction lay in its well-researched Victorian science and its inventive contribution to the science-fiction subgenre of time travel—Verne's innovation was the concept of a prehistoric realm still existing in the present-day world. Journey inspired many later authors, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his novel The Lost World and Edgar Rice Burroughs in his Pellucidar series. Published: 1864, Revised 1867 Series: The Extraordinary Voyages #3 Author: Jules Verne Genre: Action & Adventure Fiction, Fantastic Fiction, Science Fiction, Adventure Novel Episode: Journey to the Center of the Earth - Jules Verne - Book 4, Part 1 Part: 1 of 2 Length Part: 4:46:07 Book: 4 Length Book: 10:35:59 Episodes: 1 - 22 of 44 Predecessor: The Adventures of Captain Hatteras Successor: From the Earth to the Moon Narrator: Collaborative Memoriam: Lars Rolander (1942 - 2016) Language: English Edition: Unabridged Audiobook Keywords: adventure, travel, hero, struggle, danger, camaraderie Credits: All LibriVox Recordings are in the Public Domain. Wikipedia (c) Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. WOMBO Dream. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/support
Journey to the Center of the Earth - Jules Verne - Book 4, Part 2 Title: Journey to the Center of the Earth Overview: Journey to the Center of the Earth (French: Voyage au centre de la Terre), also translated with the variant titles A Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey into the Interior of the Earth, is a classic science fiction novel by Jules Verne. It was first published in French in 1864, then reissued in 1867 in a revised and expanded edition. Professor Otto Lidenbrock is the tale's central figure, an eccentric German scientist who believes there are volcanic tubes that reach the very center of the earth. He, his nephew Axel, and their Icelandic guide Hans rappel into Iceland's celebrated inactive volcano Snæfellsjökull, then contend with many dangers, including cave-ins, subpolar tornadoes, an underground ocean, and living prehistoric creatures from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras (the 1867 revised edition inserted additional prehistoric material in Chaps. 37–39). Eventually, the three explorers are spewed back to the surface by an active volcano, Stromboli, in southern Italy. The category of subterranean fiction existed well before Verne. However his novel's distinction lay in its well-researched Victorian science and its inventive contribution to the science-fiction subgenre of time travel—Verne's innovation was the concept of a prehistoric realm still existing in the present-day world. Journey inspired many later authors, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his novel The Lost World and Edgar Rice Burroughs in his Pellucidar series. Published: 1864, Revised 1867 Series: The Extraordinary Voyages #3 Author: Jules Verne Genre: Action & Adventure Fiction, Fantastic Fiction, Science Fiction, Adventure Novel Episode: Journey to the Center of the Earth - Jules Verne - Book 4, Part 2 Part: 2 of 2 Length Part: 5:50:00 Book: 4 Length Book: 10:35:59 Episodes: 23 - 44 of 44 Predecessor: The Adventures of Captain Hatteras Successor: From the Earth to the Moon Narrator: Collaborative Memoriam: Lars Rolander (1942 - 2016) Language: English Edition: Unabridged Audiobook Keywords: adventure, travel, hero, struggle, danger, camaraderie Credits: All LibriVox Recordings are in the Public Domain. Wikipedia (c) Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. WOMBO Dream. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/free-audiobooks/support
Sleepy Time Tales Podcast – Creating a restful mindset through relaxing bedtime stories
Sleep will come as the protagonists travel to Morocco and another travels through the world inside the Earth. Pellucidar is part of a series of books by Tarzan author Edgar Rice Burroughs. It’s a proto-scifi series about travelling in the hollow Earth, and it’s really not as interesting as it sounds the way I tell it. Story 15:32 Find A Study in Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/244 Supporting Sleepy Time Tales If you would like to support my work and help keep the podcast available and for free, there are several ways you can support the show. If you need masks for going out in public and want to support Sleepy Time Tales as well as Heart to Heart International, then check out the masks now available on the Redbubble store You can support the show as a supporter on Patreon and receive a host of bonuses including Patron only episodes, special edits and real postcards, eventually when the world opens again.
Opening clip: “Tarzan, Silver Screen King of the Jungle,” featuring ERB fan and scholar Tracy Griffin. Tracy joins Chicago Muckers Jim Hadac, Joan Bledig and Elmo for a tour of Oak Park and Chicago sites related to Edgar Rice Burroughs. Elmo interviews Frank Lipo, who heads the Oak Park historical society. Burroughs lived in four homes in Oak Park and rented an office there during his early prolific period. Tracy and some of the Muckers use the same bathroom ERB would have used in that office building. They also visit 414 Augusta Avenue in Oak Park, where Burroughs wrote Thuvia, Cave Girl, Mad King, Pellucidar, The Mucker and others; and 700 Linden, where he wrote The Oakdale Affair and The Land That Time Forgot. In Chicago, they visit Billy Byrne's neighborhood and 3 Tree Studios, a former artists colony where J. Allen St. John worked. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/panthan-press/message
More great books at LoyalBooks.com
Chris Holmes joins us to discuss Edgar Rice Burroughs's "Tarzan at the Earth's Core", contemporary fantasy fiction, the Holmes Basic set, the varying levels of dignity given to the black characters, IP crossovers, surprisingly positive depictions of Germans, "Mahars of Pellucidar", magic dirigibles, the developmental biology of reptiles, informal vs codified ways of encouraging heroism in RPGs, the incredible speed in which pulp characters learn new languages, and the future of Pellucidarian fandom.
Tim, Jess and Scott discuss ERB's 1915 novel "Pellucidar"--the first sequel to "At the Earth's Core."
Jess Terrell, Scott Stewart and Tim DeForest talk about ERB's 1914 novel "At the Earth's Core," which introduced us to the underground world of Pellucidar.
Elmo describes the idea behind Dateline Jasoom and his favorite Edgar Rice Burroughs worlds. Includes a bit about a documentary crew from Earth running into trouble with white apes and another about the Dolly Dorcas Cruise Line in Pellucidar. Fans Gerald Spannraft, Ray Le Beau and Laurence Dunn make appearances. A song by Stiiv Ryan celebrates Tarzan and Jane. Elmo's wife gives a shout-out to “Tarzan widows.” --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/panthan-press/message
Hoi and Jeff discuss race coding, the laws of gravity, and monogamy in Edgar Rice Burroughs's "Tanar of Pellucidar" with special guest Noah Green.
The Sons of Ether are seen as crazy technomancers but the true history of these explorers go back far farther. Adam and Terry explore their history and ideas from Greek philosophers to the last modern remnants of Victorian explorers and pulp actions heroes. Along the way, find out how the nature of scientific discovery has changed across editions and as always Adam's story ideas. Notes: We're more than half way through the original Tradition books, yay! Etherites have no consistent history at least up to the Renaissance and House Golo Gentlest induction so far. Give em' a book and see if they get a new idea from it No necessity for them to be scientific. Their belief is in the power of human creativity Acts of wonder that don't aid the Consensus are merely magick and not True Science Anders Mage page on the SoE Anders Mad Scientist page Superceded Theories of Science Pathological Science Books: The Smokey God Frankenstein by Mary Shelley - Puffin Classics Etherspace - Lensman series by E E Doc Smith, Skylark series by E E Doc Smith Victoria Station - The War of the Worlds by H G Wells - Penguin Classics, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne - Naval Institute Press (the edition is important!), Around the World in 80 Days by Jules Verne - Signet Classics updated translation by Jacqueline Rogers Hollow Earth - At the Earth’s Core by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne Gernsback Continuum - The Complete Works of Stanley Weinbaum, The Best of Edmond Hamilton, If you can find them, check out The Collected Edmond Hamilton from Haffner Press --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mage-the-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mage-the-podcast/support
The beasts (and constructs) of Pellucidar, the land at the center of the Earth. shasum -a256=86fd24ab28b8016103c2a29f35b1c2a4c78b6c0f534c432371c51e29d0564b59
The environments of Pellucidar, a world within a world. shasum -a256=03b1e051f562d29dabbf54ebda671a78805ab20411e9fe904a5fbc5ada55a01f
Welcome to 4-Panel - the comics and manga podcast where Halloween just keeps on going. Hey, if Christmas advertisements can start on the 1st of November then we can have two Halloween Specials! Anyway, join Andrew (Comics Sage), Mick (Old Man Comics) and Rob (Erstwhile Producer), for a Halloween ComicFest (in other words, a Free Comic Book Day), episode that absolutely definitely didn't take some of us by surprise. So what's on this cavalcade of spooky and supernatural comics and manga? Well, we've got inhale Goosebumps: Monsters at Midnight, Danger Doll: Amalga Lives, Hellboy and the B.R.P.D. 1953: The Phantom Hand & The Kelpie, Lady Mechanika: La Dama de La Muerte, Edgar Rice Burroughs Universe: Genesis (featuring Carson of Venus, The Moon Maid, The Land That Time Forgot and Pellucidar), Shibuya Goldfish by Hiroumi Aoi, Thor: Road to War Of The Realms #1, John Constantine: Hellblazer (Special Edition), Howard Lovecraft and the Kingdom of Madness, The Superior Spider-man #1, APOSIMZ by Tsutomu Nihei, Frankenstein (from the Junji Ito Story Collection), and ... The Adventures of Aspen Mascots exhale. Aaand breathe ... Special thanks go to Geek Corner in Stockton-on-Tees for arranging all of the comics for us. If you've enjoyed this podcast, then please follow us on Twitter @TGS_TheGeekShow or on other social media by searching for The Geek Show (http://thegeekshow.co.uk) . If you want to show your support then head over to Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/thegeekshow) and give whatever you can. Alternatively, we have a shop up and running so head over to The Geek Shop (http://thegeekshow.co.uk/thegeekshop/) and partake in some of our lovely wares. Thanks, and until next time, keep it 4-Panel. and don't read anything we wouldn't! #Podcast #Comics #Halloween #HaloweenComicFest #FreeComicBookDay #FBCD #Horror #Supernatural #SciFi #ScienceFiction #Manga #DarkHorse #AspenComics #ArcanaComics #Marvel # IDW # BeintezProductions #Image #DC #Vertigo #AmericanMythology #VerticalComics #HowardLovecraft #TheKingdomOfMadness #JohnConstantine #Hellblazer #Goosebumps #MonstersAtMidnight #DangerDoll #AmalgaLives #HellboyandtheBRPD #1953 #ThePhantomHandAndTheKelpie #LadyMechanika #LaDamaDeLaMuerte #EdgarRiceBurroughs #Universe #Genesis #CarsonofVenus #TheMoonMaid #TheLandThatTimeForgot #Pellucidar #ShibuyaGoldfish #Thor #RoadtoWarOfTheRealms #TheSuperiorSpiderman #APOSIMZ #Frankenstein #JunjiItoStoryCollection #TheAdventuresOfAspenMascots
Hoi and Jeff discuss Edgar Rice Burroughs' "Pellucidar" with special guest Harley Stroh.
Edgar Rice Burroughs’ first Pellucidar book At the Earth’s Core was part of the supernova period at the beginning of his writing career, wherein he managed to write 25 novels between 1911-1915! The serialization of At the Earth’s Core in All-Story Weekly magazine in 1914 represents the extraordinary feat of launching three major literary franchises in a mere three years, following on the Mars/Barsoom series and the Tarzan series. Pellucidar's Hollow Earth setting with its weird timeless eternal day and its menagerie of threats from the chillingly alien Mahars, the brutish Sagoths, and various pre-historic megafauna remains one of the most sustained acts of invention in fantastic fiction to this day. Although At the Earth’s Core was popular enough to be published in hardcover starting in 1922 and re-serialized in 1929, it doesn’t seem to have been in print after 1940. Certainly, David Innes is a likeable protagonist, but he lacks the larger-than-life qualities of John Carter of Mars or Tarzan of the Apes. Other suspects for At the Earth’s Core’s lapse into relative obscurity would be the World War II paper shortage, followed by Burroughs’ death in 1950. At the Earth’s Core was first published in paperback by Ace Books in 1962, making it an early factor in the great Edgar Rice Burroughs revival of the 1960s. The lush and colorful cover by Roy Krenkel would certainly have helped it stand out on the racks: The Frank Frazetta cover that graced At the Earth’s Core later Ace Books printings from the early 1970s through the 1980s depicts the horrible anticipation of the Mahar temple sequence. The Pellucidar series is terrific worldbuilding but it did not leave as obvious an imprint on early Dungeons & Dragons as Burroughs’ Mars/Barsoom series, other than in its pulp ethos and sense of high adventure. The general pulp ethos was certainly present in Dave Cook and Tom Moldvay’s X1 - The Isle of Dread module which was included in 1981’s Dungeons & Dragons Expert Set. The Isle of Dread would pave the way for TSR’s Known World/Mystara setting and its undeniably pulpy/Burroughsian Hollow World sub-setting.
In the latest episode of The Higherside Chats, Greg Carlwood welcomes hollow earth enthusiast Rick Osmon. Rick has studied Lazer and Electro-Optics Technology, worked for the US Navy and as a defense contractor, authored "Graves of the Golden Bear", is a regular columnist for "Ancient American", and above all a researcher of the strange and unusual alternatives of history, archaeology, cryptozology and more. If knowledge is power, join Greg as he attempts to level up. As we all know, the nefarious powers that be, altar science and history to fit the narrative and paradigm they've carefully crafted brick by brick. With the truth thoroughly obscured, Rick helps tear down the walls surrounding ideas of a Hollow Earth and pre-Columbus Civilization in North America, in order to rebuild a more complete paradigm. 1:50 Join Greg and Rick as the head straight to the core for a chat about the Hollow Earth. As with other similar theories, Rick explains that there is in fact a void in the inner Earth, due to the gravitational field of the Earth, at that point going outward not inward. Using mathematics to support his calculation for this void, Rick clarifies using gravitational wave theory and our accepted belief that mass is the source of gravity. Listen as Rick elaborates on some of the most recent experiments including a dig conducted by Russia approximately 14 km down known as the Kola Borehole. Rick also touches on the theory presented by Dr. Maxlow and found in the work of Neil Adams that eludes to the possibility to a growing planet. 9:00 Greg expands on this theory of a growing Earth as Rick explains the intricacies of the black/white hole pair. Eistein-Rosen bridge helps to better explain the transition of matter and anti-matter through a collider, and the release of newly acquired, highly energetic matter. 14:50 Listen as Rick helps Greg understand the implications associated with bestowing this wealth of gravitational energy knowledge upon the public. With current energy sources being wielded as weapons against the masses, ruining our environment, creating massive global unrest, and depleting the public of their resources with skyrocketing prices, it's no wonder why this information has been buried. 24:00 Greg and Rick discuss the Edmond Halley's theory of the Hollow Earth dating back to the 1690s. Listen as the continue on the road of respected scientist with Hollow Earth hypotheses to the next pit stop with the work of Leonhard Euler. On another stop along the road, Rick details references of the Hollow Earth found throughout works of popular literature from likes of Jules Verne, the Pellucidar series, and Gilgamesh. 31:00 While many questions regarding the size and habitability of the inner Earth void still exist, listen along as they discuss the possible reality of an underground civilization and the stories Rick finds most compelling including Norway's The Smoky God. They also touch on the Macushi, a tribe located near Ecuador and Brazil who possess a tribal memory of being the gate keepers of the gateway to the center of the Earth. Continue as the give a nod the the translations Dean Dominic Delucia and explore the ancient legends of many tribes tracing their origins to the inner Earth. 44:42 Greg inquires with Rick about his time spent in the service and if it was able to offer any significant insights into what if anything the world governments know. 50:00 Because no Holllow Earth discussion is complete without the mention of Admiral Byrd, Greg Carlwood and Rick tackle the topic head on. It is Rick's contention that at least one of the Admiral's expeditions was funded by the Rockefeller machine, casting a dark shadow over what exactly was discovered and who was able to benefit. 57:50 Moving on from the Hollow Earth, Greg and Rick focus their attention on pre-Columbus America as they attempt to reconstruct the history. With Native American folklore alluding to several waves of immigratio...
En este nuevo programa nos sumergimos en la obra de un clásico de la literatura pulp de C-F de la mano de Manuel Rodriguez, divulgador del género a través del blog http://universodecienciaficcion.blogspot.com.es/ . Hablaremos de la biografía del autor y de sus principales sagas: el Ciclo de Barsoom (más conocido por su protagonista, John Carter), Pellucidar, Carson de Venus, La Dama de Luna y otras obras. De acompañamiento musical tenemos a Los Bomboras con "Hypnotica", los Supersónicos con "Estela de Mar" y cerramos con los Polecats y su "Juvenile delinquents from a planet near Mars". Como es habitual la sintonia es el tema "Spectre Detector" de los Tiki Tones. Síguenos y contacta con nosotros a través de Facebook en http://www.facebook.com/retronautas o Twitter en @losretronautas. Saludos desde los días del futuro pasado.
En este nuevo programa nos sumergimos en la obra de un clásico de la literatura pulp de C-F de la mano de Manuel Rodriguez, divulgador del género a través del blog http://universodecienciaficcion.blogspot.com.es/ . Hablaremos de la biografía del autor y de sus principales sagas: el Ciclo de Barsoom (más conocido por su protagonista, John Carter), Pellucidar, Carson de Venus, La Dama de Luna y otras obras. De acompañamiento musical tenemos a Los Bomboras con "Hypnotica", los Supersónicos con "Estela de Mar" y cerramos con los Polecats y su "Juvenile delinquents from a planet near Mars". Como es habitual la sintonia es el tema "Spectre Detector" de los Tiki Tones. Síguenos y contacta con nosotros a través de Facebook en http://www.facebook.com/retronautas o Twitter en @losretronautas. Saludos desde los días del futuro pasado.
Oggi parliamo di: La valle dei dinosauri (1974-1977); il Ciclo di Pellucidar di Edgar Rice Borroughs; il Ciclo degli Yilanè di Harry Harrison; Una statua per papà di Isaac Asimov (1959); Jurassic World di Colin Trevorrow (2015); Evo della Asmodee. Ospiti della puntata: Aldo Fresia e Matteo Scandolin. Buon ascolto! Leggi di più su Fantascientificast.it - Pubblicazione amatoriale. Non si intende infrangere alcun copyright, i cui diritti appartengono ai rispettivi detentori – Autorizzazione SIAE 5612/I/5359.
The Appendix N Podcast - Episode 14 - Pirates of Venus by Edgar Rice Burroughs Boys go to Mars to get more stars. Carson Napier went to Venus to find… adventure! This 1932 adventure by Edgar Rice Burroughs introduces a new hero and a new planet, but after 20 years of writing pulp adventure novels, does the creator of Tarzan have anything more to offer? Find out as we review Pirates of Venus, the first entry in the Carson of Venus series. www.nobleknight.com Burroughs, Edgar Rice, Pellucidar series; Mars series; Venus series Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 Pirates of Venus was first serialized in six parts in Argosy in 1932. Burroughs has been a novelist for 20 years. In the 1920s Burroughs became a pilot and encouraged his family to learn to fly. 2 years after writing this novel, Burroughs divorced his wife Emma Hulbert. A year later he married actress Florence Gilbert Dearholt. Co-host: Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com My guest: Chris Constantin website - http://drevrpg.blogspot.ca http://www.thetomeshow.com thetomeshow@gmail.com Geoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.net Support the show, shop below...
The Appendix N Podcast - Episode 14 - Pirates of Venus by Edgar Rice Burroughs Boys go to Mars to get more stars. Carson Napier went to Venus to find… adventure! This 1932 adventure by Edgar Rice Burroughs introduces a new hero and a new planet, but after 20 years of writing pulp adventure novels, does the creator of Tarzan have anything more to offer? Find out as we review Pirates of Venus, the first entry in the Carson of Venus series. www.nobleknight.com Burroughs, Edgar Rice, Pellucidar series; Mars series; Venus series Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 Pirates of Venus was first serialized in six parts in Argosy in 1932. Burroughs has been a novelist for 20 years. In the 1920s Burroughs became a pilot and encouraged his family to learn to fly. 2 years after writing this novel, Burroughs divorced his wife Emma Hulbert. A year later he married actress Florence Gilbert Dearholt. Co-host: Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com My guest: Chris Constantin website - http://drevrpg.blogspot.ca http://www.thetomeshow.com thetomeshow@gmail.com Geoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.netSupport the show, shop below...
The Appendix N Podcast - Episode 14 - Pirates of Venus by Edgar Rice Burroughs Boys go to Mars to get more stars. Carson Napier went to Venus to find… adventure! This 1932 adventure by Edgar Rice Burroughs introduces a new hero and a new planet, but after 20 years of writing pulp adventure novels, does the creator of Tarzan have anything more to offer? Find out as we review Pirates of Venus, the first entry in the Carson of Venus series. www.nobleknight.com Burroughs, Edgar Rice, Pellucidar series; Mars series; Venus series Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 Pirates of Venus was first serialized in six parts in Argosy in 1932. Burroughs has been a novelist for 20 years. In the 1920s Burroughs became a pilot and encouraged his family to learn to fly. 2 years after writing this novel, Burroughs divorced his wife Emma Hulbert. A year later he married actress Florence Gilbert Dearholt. Co-host: Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com My guest: Chris Constantin website - http://drevrpg.blogspot.ca http://www.thetomeshow.com thetomeshow@gmail.com Geoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.netSupport the show, shop below...
The Appendix N Podcast - Episode 14 - Pirates of Venus by Edgar Rice Burroughs Boys go to Mars to get more stars. Carson Napier went to Venus to find… adventure! This 1932 adventure by Edgar Rice Burroughs introduces a new hero and a new planet, but after 20 years of writing pulp adventure novels, does the creator of Tarzan have anything more to offer? Find out as we review Pirates of Venus, the first entry in the Carson of Venus series. www.nobleknight.com Burroughs, Edgar Rice, Pellucidar series; Mars series; Venus series Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 Pirates of Venus was first serialized in six parts in Argosy in 1932. Burroughs has been a novelist for 20 years. In the 1920s Burroughs became a pilot and encouraged his family to learn to fly. 2 years after writing this novel, Burroughs divorced his wife Emma Hulbert. A year later he married actress Florence Gilbert Dearholt. Co-host: Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com My guest: Chris Constantin website - http://drevrpg.blogspot.ca http://www.thetomeshow.com thetomeshow@gmail.com Geoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.netSupport the show, shop below...
With my guest Jeff Wikstrom I discuss Pellucidar, ironically the second book in the Pellucidar series. David Innes returns to Pellucidar, this time with guns! www.nobleknight.com Hollow Earth Expedition by Jeff Combos — $17.95 Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 At the Earth's Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story Weekly Inspired HP Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter's Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981) Pellucidar published as a four-part serial May 1915 in All-Story Weekly Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com Email us to find out how you can get involved! http://www.thetomeshow.com thetomeshow@gmail.com Geoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.net Like the show? support by shopping below...
With my guest Jeff Wikstrom I discuss Pellucidar, ironically the second book in the Pellucidar series. David Innes returns to Pellucidar, this time with guns! www.nobleknight.com Hollow Earth Expedition by Jeff Combos — $17.95 Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 At the Earth’s Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story Weekly Inspired HP Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter’s Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981) Pellucidar published as a four-part serial May 1915 in All-Story Weekly Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com Email us to find out how you can get involved!http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.comGeoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? support by shopping below...
With my guest Jeff Wikstrom I discuss Pellucidar, ironically the second book in the Pellucidar series. David Innes returns to Pellucidar, this time with guns! www.nobleknight.com Hollow Earth Expedition by Jeff Combos — $17.95 Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 At the Earth’s Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story Weekly Inspired HP Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter’s Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981) Pellucidar published as a four-part serial May 1915 in All-Story Weekly Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com Email us to find out how you can get involved!http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.comGeoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? support by shopping below...
With my guest Jeff Wikstrom I discuss Pellucidar, ironically the second book in the Pellucidar series. David Innes returns to Pellucidar, this time with guns! www.nobleknight.com Hollow Earth Expedition by Jeff Combos — $17.95 Edgar Rice Burroughs born 1875, died 1950 At the Earth’s Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story Weekly Inspired HP Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter’s Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981) Pellucidar published as a four-part serial May 1915 in All-Story Weekly Jeffrey Wikstrom website - jeffwik.com email - jeffwik@gmail.com Email us to find out how you can get involved!http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.comGeoffrey Winn gdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? support by shopping below...
In this episode we discuss At the Earth's Core, the first story in the Pellucidar series by Edgar Rice Burroughs. In this story, hero David Innes and his scientist friend Abner Perry travel to the world of Pellucidar that lies within the Earth itself. www.nobleknight.comHollow World Campaign Set by TSR — $18.00 Edgar Rice Burroughsborn 1875, died 1950 At the Earth's Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story WeeklyInspired HP Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter's Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981) Jeffrey Wikstromwebsite - jeffwik.comemail - jeffwik@gmail.com Coming soon!Pellucidar by Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Moon Pool by Abraham MerritThe King of Elfland's Daughter by Lord Dunsanyand in October, we begin reviewing the short stories of H. P. Lovecraft Email us to find out how you can get involved! http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.com Geoffrey Winngdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? Shop below...
In this episode we discuss At the Earth’s Core, the first story in the Pellucidar series by Edgar Rice Burroughs. In this story, hero David Innes and his scientist friend Abner Perry travel to the world of Pellucidar that lies within the Earth itself.www.nobleknight.comHollow World Campaign Set by TSR — $18.00Edgar Rice Burroughsborn 1875, died 1950At the Earth’s Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story WeeklyInspired HP Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter’s Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981)Jeffrey Wikstromwebsite - jeffwik.comemail - jeffwik@gmail.comComing soon!Pellucidar by Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Moon Pool by Abraham MerritThe King of Elfland’s Daughter by Lord Dunsanyand in October, we begin reviewing the short stories of H. P. LovecraftEmail us to find out how you can get involved!http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.comGeoffrey Winngdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? Shop below...
In this episode we discuss At the Earth’s Core, the first story in the Pellucidar series by Edgar Rice Burroughs. In this story, hero David Innes and his scientist friend Abner Perry travel to the world of Pellucidar that lies within the Earth itself.www.nobleknight.comHollow World Campaign Set by TSR — $18.00Edgar Rice Burroughsborn 1875, died 1950At the Earth’s Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story WeeklyInspired HP Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter’s Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981)Jeffrey Wikstromwebsite - jeffwik.comemail - jeffwik@gmail.comComing soon!Pellucidar by Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Moon Pool by Abraham MerritThe King of Elfland’s Daughter by Lord Dunsanyand in October, we begin reviewing the short stories of H. P. LovecraftEmail us to find out how you can get involved!http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.comGeoffrey Winngdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? Shop below...
In this episode we discuss At the Earth’s Core, the first story in the Pellucidar series by Edgar Rice Burroughs. In this story, hero David Innes and his scientist friend Abner Perry travel to the world of Pellucidar that lies within the Earth itself.www.nobleknight.comHollow World Campaign Set by TSR — $18.00Edgar Rice Burroughsborn 1875, died 1950At the Earth’s Core published as a four-part serial April 1914 in All-Story WeeklyInspired HP Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, Lin Carter’s Zanthodon series, and manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori Cyborg 009 (1964-1981)Jeffrey Wikstromwebsite - jeffwik.comemail - jeffwik@gmail.comComing soon!Pellucidar by Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Moon Pool by Abraham MerritThe King of Elfland’s Daughter by Lord Dunsanyand in October, we begin reviewing the short stories of H. P. LovecraftEmail us to find out how you can get involved!http://www.thetomeshow.comthetomeshow@gmail.comGeoffrey Winngdwinn@comcast.netLike the show? Shop below...
Hemos preparado un especial muy completo sobre el Pulp. Comenzamos introduciendo qué es el pulp, la historia, el origen y su paso por la red, y luego describimos sus principales características. Después tratamos los siguientes temas: El género del terror, con Lovecraft a la cabeza. R.E. Howard: la creación de la "espada y brujería", Conan, Kull y Solomon Kane Clark Ashton Smith "La Sombra" de Maxwell Grant Abraham Merrit "Doc Savage" de Lester Dent "Fu-Manchú", el diabólico doctor de Sax Rohmer Los pulps policiacos: Hammett, Chandler, Charteris... "Bill Barness", "Pete Rice" y otros muchos E.R. Burroughs: Sword&Planet, Tarzán, John Carter de Marte, Pellucidar y Carson de Venus Los pulps de Ciencia Ficción Pulps de aventuras orientales Algunos pulp españoles (Marcial Lafuente Estefanía, Corin Tellado... Pulps españoles en la actualidad Dirigido por Víctor M. Yeste y M.C. Catalán, con colaboración de Manuel Callejo, Sergio y Diego Domínguez.
Hemos preparado un especial muy completo sobre el Pulp. Comenzamos introduciendo qué es el pulp, la historia, el origen y su paso por la red, y luego describimos sus principales características. Después tratamos los siguientes temas: El género del terror, con Lovecraft a la cabeza. R.E. Howard: la creación de la "espada y brujería", Conan, Kull y Solomon Kane Clark Ashton Smith "La Sombra" de Maxwell Grant Abraham Merrit "Doc Savage" de Lester Dent "Fu-Manchú", el diabólico doctor de Sax Rohmer Los pulps policiacos: Hammett, Chandler, Charteris... "Bill Barness", "Pete Rice" y otros muchos E.R. Burroughs: Sword&Planet, Tarzán, John Carter de Marte, Pellucidar y Carson de Venus Los pulps de Ciencia Ficción Pulps de aventuras orientales Algunos pulp españoles (Marcial Lafuente Estefanía, Corin Tellado... Pulps españoles en la actualidad Dirigido por Víctor M. Yeste y M.C. Catalán, con colaboración de Manuel Callejo, Sergio y Diego Domínguez.