Podcasts about Varsity Theater

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Best podcasts about Varsity Theater

Latest podcast episodes about Varsity Theater

The Jefferson Exchange
'Defiant Requiem' commemoration in musical performance at SOU and film at Varsity Theater

The Jefferson Exchange

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 29:53


Joining the Exchange are Dr. Jerron Jorgensen, Director of the Rogue Valley Chorale, and Maestro Murry Sidlin, Founder and President of The Defiant Requiem Foundation.

Comedy Dynamics Daily
Josh Blue Talks African-American

Comedy Dynamics Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 6:41


Josh Blue: Sticky Change Quipster Josh Blue hits the stage at Minneapolis' Varsity Theater, where he turns his cerebral palsy and cross-cultural marriage into comedy gold. COMEDY DYNAMICS YouTube Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Gaijin Guys
Our REACTION to BAND-MAID LIVE at Varsity Theater in Minneapolis!

Gaijin Guys

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 65:48


Our REACTION to BAND-MAID LIVE at Varsity Theater in Minneapolis! Today we are there LIVE with an audience for this podcast, and this was the first time having all of us together!Support the show

Dan Murrell Podcast
CHARTS: What Is Sound of Freedom? Inside July 4th's Surprise Hit

Dan Murrell Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2023 48:15


July 4th had a surprising box office contender: Sound of Freedom, from faith-based distributor Angel Studios. I break down the story behind the movie and the numbers behind its reported July 4th box office upset. Get a 4-week trial, free postage, and a digital scale at https://www.stamps.com/murrell. Thanks to Stamps.com for sponsoring the show! Start your new language-learning journey today with Babbel. Get up to 55% off your subscription at https://Babbel.com/DAN Learn more about The Varsity Theater in Davis, CA at https://DavisVarsity.net

The Tom Barnard Show
Tom Barnard Show: Hour 1 - Bob Sansevere and Kristyn Burtt's entertainment report

The Tom Barnard Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 55:31


Tom, Brittany and Rudy get Monday going by recapping the weekend!In the first hour, Bob Sansevere tanks his first bit with Crumpet The Orb and then Kristyn Burtt comes in to talk about what people should be watching until the writers' strike is over and some great stories about William Shattner.In hour #2, KSTP's Chris Egert talks the rising cost of college and the air quality warning in Minnesota. Next, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on The Block calls in to promote his solo tour and show July 14th at The Varsity Theater. In hour #3, Skor North's Phil Mackey hops to chat about the weekend in sports!Stream the show LIVE on the Tom. Barnard Show app M-F from 7-10AM or get the show on-demand on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Tom Barnard Show
Tom Barnard Show: Hour 2 - Chris Egert recaps his son't grad party and gives the local news from KSTP

The Tom Barnard Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 65:42


Tom, Brittany and Rudy get Monday going by recapping the weekend!In the first hour, Bob Sansevere tanks his first bit with Crumpet The Orb and then Kristyn Burtt comes in to talk about what people should be watching until the writers' strike is over and some great stories about William Shattner.In hour #2, KSTP's Chris Egert talks the rising cost of college and the air quality warning in Minnesota. Next, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on The Block calls in to promote his solo tour and show July 14th at The Varsity Theater. In hour #3, Skor North's Phil Mackey hops to chat about the weekend in sports!Stream the show LIVE on the Tom. Barnard Show app M-F from 7-10AM or get the show on-demand on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Tom Barnard Show
Tom Barnard Show: Hour 3 - Skor North's Phil Mackey talks this past weekend's sports!

The Tom Barnard Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 52:19


Tom, Brittany and Rudy get Monday going by recapping the weekend!In the first hour, Bob Sansevere tanks his first bit with Crumpet The Orb and then Kristyn Burtt comes in to talk about what people should be watching until the writers' strike is over and some great stories about William Shattner.In hour #2, KSTP's Chris Egert talks the rising cost of college and the air quality warning in Minnesota. Next, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on The Block calls in to promote his solo tour and show July 14th at The Varsity Theater. In hour #3, Skor North's Phil Mackey hops to chat about the weekend in sports!Stream the show LIVE on the Tom. Barnard Show app M-F from 7-10AM or get the show on-demand on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Tom Barnard Show
Tom Barnard Show: Hour 1 - Bob Sansevere and Kristyn Burtt's entertainment report

The Tom Barnard Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 57:31


Tom, Brittany and Rudy get Monday going by recapping the weekend! In the first hour, Bob Sansevere tanks his first bit with Crumpet The Orb and then Kristyn Burtt comes in to talk about what people should be watching until the writers' strike is over and some great stories about William Shattner. In hour #2, KSTP's Chris Egert talks the rising cost of college and the air quality warning in Minnesota. Next, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on The Block calls in to promote his solo tour and show July 14th at The Varsity Theater. In hour #3, Skor North's Phil Mackey hops to chat about the weekend in sports! Stream the show LIVE on the Tom. Barnard Show app M-F from 7-10AM or get the show on-demand on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Tom Barnard Show
Tom Barnard Show: Hour 2 - Chris Egert recaps his son't grad party and gives the local news from KSTP

The Tom Barnard Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 67:42


Tom, Brittany and Rudy get Monday going by recapping the weekend! In the first hour, Bob Sansevere tanks his first bit with Crumpet The Orb and then Kristyn Burtt comes in to talk about what people should be watching until the writers' strike is over and some great stories about William Shattner. In hour #2, KSTP's Chris Egert talks the rising cost of college and the air quality warning in Minnesota. Next, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on The Block calls in to promote his solo tour and show July 14th at The Varsity Theater. In hour #3, Skor North's Phil Mackey hops to chat about the weekend in sports! Stream the show LIVE on the Tom. Barnard Show app M-F from 7-10AM or get the show on-demand on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Tom Barnard Show
Tom Barnard Show: Hour 3 - Skor North's Phil Mackey talks this past weekend's sports!

The Tom Barnard Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 54:19


Tom, Brittany and Rudy get Monday going by recapping the weekend! In the first hour, Bob Sansevere tanks his first bit with Crumpet The Orb and then Kristyn Burtt comes in to talk about what people should be watching until the writers' strike is over and some great stories about William Shattner. In hour #2, KSTP's Chris Egert talks the rising cost of college and the air quality warning in Minnesota. Next, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on The Block calls in to promote his solo tour and show July 14th at The Varsity Theater. In hour #3, Skor North's Phil Mackey hops to chat about the weekend in sports! Stream the show LIVE on the Tom. Barnard Show app M-F from 7-10AM or get the show on-demand on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Song of the Day
Abraham Alexander - Tears Run Dry

Song of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 4:14


Today's Song of the Day is "Tears Run Dry" from Abraham Alexander's album, SEA/SONS, out April 14th.Abraham Alexander will be performing at the Varsity Theater on Saturday, April 29th.

song tears varsity theater abraham alexander
Song of the Day
Altin Gün - Rakiya Su Matamam

Song of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 3:40


Today's Song of the Day is "Rakiya Su Matamam" from Altin Gün's album, A​ş​k, out March 10th.Altin Gün will be performing at Varsity Theater on Tuesday, July 18th.

song altin g varsity theater rakiya
Moose Tracks
Wickett Makes The Pat Mcafee Show

Moose Tracks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 8:45


- When can you talk about money? - Welcome back, Varsity Theater! - Wickett makes the Pat McAfee Show.

pat mcafee wickett varsity theater
Moose Tracks
When Can You Talk About Money?

Moose Tracks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 26:07


- When can you talk about money? - Welcome back, Varsity Theater! - Wickett makes the Pat McAfee Show.

Song of the Day
Bear's Den - Please Don't Hide Yourself Away (feat. Jade Bird)

Song of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2022 3:10 Very Popular


Today's Song of the Day is Bear's Den, “Please Don't Hide Yourself Away” (feat. Jade Bird), from the Trying: Season 3 (Apple TV Original Series Soundtrack), out now on Communion Records.Bear's Den will perform at the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis on Friday, September 23.

The Nine-45 Show
The Nine-45 Show - Ry Edwards 8.20.22

The Nine-45 Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2022 70:03


On today's show we welcome Ry Edwards in studio. Ry is an award winning singer/songwriter from the Twin Cities and he is organizing the Find Your Stage Event in September at the Varsity Theater. Listen to this episode to see how you can get a 10% discount on your ticket.  --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mikerezradio/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mikerezradio/support

edwards twin cities ry varsity theater
A Long Walk to Cleveland
Review: Dave Chappelle at the Varsity theater

A Long Walk to Cleveland

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2022 26:46


Caught the Dave Chappelle show last night at The Varsity Theater. Give a listen to t hear the review! Rudy 's Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rudypavich57 Rudy's website: www.rudypavich.com Rudy Pavich is a long time radio host, actor, producer and stand up comedian. Having started his career in southern Minnesota, he's been around the radio industry working in MN, WI, NH, MO and for the last 14 years, Minneapolis, MN. He's interviewed everyone from Rock Gods Ozzy Osbourne and Corey Taylor all the way to Kelly Clarkson and Ed Sheeran. On the production side of his life, Rudy produces for such podcasts as The Adam Carolla show, Fantastic! with Dana Carvey, About Last Night with Adam Ray, Sharp Tongue podcast with Jessimae Peluso and Meghan Trainor's Workin' on it! His short films have won numerous awards, with his most endearing award, Louie Anderson's Favorite, for his film Raising a Daughter at the 2021 Z-Fest awards! You might even hear his voice on commercials for Pepsi, Icy-Hot, Revel Stoke Whiskey and many more!  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Hammer + Nigel Show Podcast
Dave Chappelle Show Canceled After Backlash

Hammer + Nigel Show Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2022 2:27


Dave Chappelle show in Minneapolis canceled after local backlash. First Avenue, one of the longest-running, independently owned venues in the U.S. announced the cancellation of Chappelle's performance on Wednesday night. Chappelle's show got moved to the nearby Varsity Theater, which is owned by another business.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Isnt It Queer
2022-06-29 CHOICES

Isnt It Queer

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2022 58:16


Jonny interviews Jen Pepper, President and CEO of the Memphis CHOICES sexual health clinic, about the branch opening soon in Carbondale. In addition to pregnancy services including abortion, the clinic also provides gender-affirming hormone replacement therapy. Although the interview was recorded just before the Supreme Court released its Dobb's decision overturning Roe v Wade, Jen and Jonny discuss that likely outcome and how best to respond to it. In the back half of the show, Jonny interviews Jeff Keasler-Bird and Tara Bell about the upcoming production of "The Laramie Project, Ten Years Later" by The Stage Co. at The Varsity Theater in Carbondale, IL.

The Five Count
An Evening With Comedian Joe Pera…

The Five Count

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2022 119:40


Check Playlist This episode of The Five Count featured an exclusive interview with comedian Joe Pera. Joe is best known as the creator and star of the TV show Joe Pera Talks with You. He's also appeared on TV shows like F is for Family and Bob's Burgers. During the show he discussed starting his stand-up career in New York City, his unique approach to comedy, and being on the road for his Summer in the Midwest and Rustbelt Tour. See him Aug. 7 at the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis! During the rest of the show we retold the tale of how we first met, explained which hardware stores have the best chocolate-covered peanuts, and Ton discussed his recent Onewheel accident. All the old people at the Madison East Mall laughed at him! https://youtu.be/SSTixeqrkIw

Song of the Day
Pachyman - All Night Long feat. Winter

Song of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 4:20 Very Popular


Today's Song of the Day is "All Night Long feat. Winter" from Pachyman's album, El Sonido Nuevo, out now.Pachyman will be performing at Varsity Theater on Friday, April 8th.

Comedy Dynamics Daily
Josh Blue's Origin Story

Comedy Dynamics Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 6:14


In Sticky Change, quipster Josh Blue hits the stage at Minneapolis' Varsity Theater, where he turns his cerebral palsy and cross-cultural marriage into comedy gold. Follow Comedy Dynamics on social media! YouTube: https://bit.ly/3ymp1to Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ComedyDynamics Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ComedyDynamics TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/J1wucyQ/ Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/ComedyDynamics http://www.comedydynamics.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Making It with Chris G.
#119 Alex Bowen - An Adventure from being a DIY Talent Buyer & Promoter to Booking the Fillmore New Orleans as a Talent Buyer for Live Nation

Making It with Chris G.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2020 74:54


Alex Bowen is a senior Talent Buyer for Live Nation Entertainment in New Orleans, LA where he books the Fillmore NOLA. His journey began promoting shows independently and even owning a small venue. Eventually, Alex started booking the historic Varsity Theater in Baton Rouge, LA. Throughout his journey, he’s booked and promoted shows at many venues and has even managed artists such as Earphunk and the legendary George Porter Jr. In this conversation, we discuss what it takes to be a successful Talent Buyer, running a venue, managing artists, and much more.  To learn more about Alex Bowen visit https://www.fillmorenola.com/.  Keep in touch:chris.goyzueta@gmail.com www.makingitwithchrisg.com https://www.instagram.com/chrisgoyzueta/ https://twitter.com/chrisgoyzueta https://www.facebook.com/makingitwithchrisg  Credits: Host: Chris GoyzuetaProducer: Jason TrosclairExecutive Producer: Making It Academy Music: Emily Kopp  

dsm CultureCast
Des Moines Film Society

dsm CultureCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2020 14:29


Today we are joined by Ben Godar, president of the board of directors for the Des Moines Film Society. The organization has been launching a project to renovate the Varsity Theater into a nonprofit cinema for the Greater Des Moines community. It has also held virtual cinema series throughout the pandemic, providing at-home entertainment while partnering with local businesses. We chat about all of it on this episode. For more information on the Des Moines Film Society, click here. Music by Admiral Bob.

And That's Why We Drink
A Vegetarian Lake Monster and a Proud Consumptive

And That's Why We Drink

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2020 71:10


"Pour one out for Michael Scott, Juniper and Em's computer! We attempted to up our game and record video this week and accidentally crashed Em's computer... oops! But that only means we get the chance to release the audio from one of our favorite live shows: Minneapolis at the beautiful Varsity Theater! Sit back, relax and get your drinks ready while we tell you the tales of Pepie the monster of Lake Pepin. He's either the size of a leg, an elephant or 20 feet, we're not exactly sure. Then Christine covers "the most cold blooded murderer who ever walked god's footstool", Harry Hayward and his dramatic murder of the badass dressmaker Kitty Ging. We're also mildly confused by the Minneapolis hamster tubes... and that's why we drink!

The Five Count
A Chat With Comedian Beth Stelling…

The Five Count

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2020 17:22


The Five Count recently had a chance to speak with Comedian Beth Stelling. Beth is a stand-up comedian, writer, and actress. She was a writer for TV shows like The Last O.G., Crashing and Sarah Silverman's Hulu series, I Love You America. See her at the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis for a pair of shows on March 7! https://youtu.be/R4jdvQV6Zcs

Chris Carr & Company's I Tell You What
Jordan Davis is Ready for Minnesota

Chris Carr & Company's I Tell You What

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2020 5:34


Jordan Davis is heading to Minnesota this weekend and he's ready! Get your tickets to see him at Varsity Theater!

Two Pour Bastards
Legend

Two Pour Bastards

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2018 108:35


In this episode the boys cover a lot of territory. They start out by cracking into Kiels stash of Weller's Special Reserve. They talk about the 1985 classic fantasy movie Legend and talk about all of Tim Curry's glory. Eric Talks about his experience seeing She Wants Revenge at The Varsity Theater. They Spend a lot of time talking about the Haunting of Hill House where Kiel compares it to the Matrix and Eric thinks its very similar to American Horror Story's first season. They also talk about the whiskey tasting they went to. They also talk a little about Game of Thrones and Goblin Slayer. Check it out.

Itsezbreezy
Listen To Interview With Tyler Zarzeka

Itsezbreezy

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2018 8:37


Tyler Zarzeka (Professional Drummer) talks about upcoming US headline tour with Noah Cyrus" GOOD CRY TOUR 2018" and KIIARA TOUR 2018. In the interview Tyler explains his excitement for the upcoming tour including rehearsals and how he has developed a love for the road calling the tour bus "home away from home". Tyler currently on the roster for Q drums, Zildjain, Remo, Roland, Vic Firth, etc. For more information follow the links below.   Tyler Zarzeka https://www.tylerzarzeka.com https://www.facebook.com/tylerzarzeka https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoYYouL-ZVZWummUankP07Q https://www.instagram.com/tzarzeka/    NOAH CYRUS THE GOOD CRY TOUR 2018 SEP 22 REVOLUTION LIVE. FORT LAUDERDALE, FL SEP 23 THE BEACHAM. ORLANDO, FL SEP 26 CANNERY BALLROOM. NASHVILLE, TN SEP 28 BALTIMORE SOUNDSTAGE. BALTIMORE, MD SEP 29 The Big E. West Springfield, MA OCT 01 IRVING PLAZA. NEW YORK, NY OCT 03 THEATRE OF LIVING ARTS. PHILADELPHIA, PA OCT 05 SAINT ANDREWS HALL. DETROIT, MI OCT 07 HOUSE OF BLUES CHICAGO. CHICAGO, IL OCT 08 VARSITY THEATER. MINNEAPOLIS, MN OCT 10 GRANADA THEATER. DALLAS, TX OCT 11 HOUSE OF BLUES HOUSTON. HOUSTON, TX OCT 13 SUMMIT MUSIC HALL. DENVER, CO OCT 16 THE BELASCO THEATER. LOS ANGELES, CA KIIARA TOUR 2018 OCT 29 LINCOLN HALL. CHICAGO, IL, US OCT 31 FINE LINE MUSIC CAFE. MINNEAPOLIS, MN, US NOV 01 THE SHELTER. DETROIT, MI, US NOV 05 ELSEWHERE. BROOKLYN, NY, US NOV 06 THEATER OF THE LIVING ARTS. PHILADELPHIA, PA, US NOV 08 THE SINCLAIR. CAMBRIDGE, MA, US NOV 10 REC ROOM. BUFFALO, NY, US NOV 11 U STREET MUSIC HALL. WASHINGTON, DC, US NOV 12 TERMINAL WEST. ATLANTA, GA, US NOV 14 TREES. DALLAS, TX, US NOV 15 WAREHOUSE LIVE. HOUSTON, TX, US NOV 16 ANTONE'S. AUSTIN, TX, US NOV 18 THE CRESCENT BALLROOM. PHOENIX, AZ, US NOV 19 THE OBSERVATORY. SANTA ANA, CA, US NOV 20 REGENT THEATER. LOS ANGELES, CA, US NOV 21 AUGUST HALL. SAN FRANCISCO, CA, US 

Method To The Madness
Greil Marcus

Method To The Madness

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2018 30:21


Bay Area music critic and culture historian, Greil Marcus, discusses The Slits and former Slits guitarist Viv Albertine's new memoir as well as his fascination with The Manchurian Candidate.Transcript:Lisa Kiefer:Method to the Madness is next. You're listening to Method to the Madness, a biweekly public affairs show on KALX Berkeley, celebrating Bay Area innovators. I'm your host, Lisa Keifer, and today I'll be speaking with Bay Area native and resident Greil Marcus. Greil's has been writing about music and culture for the last 40 plus years, and today we're going to be talking about an event coming up as part of the Bay Area Book Festival. He'll be speaking with Viv Albertine, formerly of the seminal girl punk band, the Slits, on Sunday, April 29th at 3:15 PM at the David Brower Center, Goldman Theater, right here in Berkeley at 2150 Allston Way. Viv Albertine wrote a debut memoir in 2014 that was shortlisted for the National Book Award. Her new book is called To Throw Away Unopened. We'll be talking about that and much, much more.Did you ever see The Slits live?Greil Marcus:Nope.Lisa Kiefer:When did you first hear the Slits?Greil Marcus:You know, I heard the Slits, I was in England in 1980, and I went over there to do a story about the Raincoats and the Gang of Four and Essential Logic early in 1980, and met everybody, and in some cases had formed lifelong friendships out of that trip. And somebody handed me a record there. Yeah, it was called Once Upon a Time in a Living Room. It was the Slits official bootleg, or maybe, I don't know how official it was. It was on Y Records, and it was just the rawest stuff I'd ever heard in my life. I knew who the Slits were, I was aware of them. I heard their first album and it didn't knock me out, but this destroyed me.The first song, Once Upon a Time in a Living Room, starts off with one of them saying, "You're ready?" And someone else is, "Ready?" And then they just burst into laughter, and then there's this tremendous guitar chord coming down and that's it. There is just this storm of guitar noise with the most joyous back and forth, up and down yelping all through. It really is a song, even though at any given moment you, depending on how you're hearing it, it absolutely is noise. But there is a song, there is a musical theme. There are words, not that you could ever make them out. And I just thought it was the purest expression of punk I'd ever heard and I still do.Speaker 3:You're ready? Ready! Oh, no. (singing)Greil Marcus:I just fall over. How could anybody have the nerve to do this?Lisa Kiefer:They had no role models. It was so fresh. And I wonder, has there been anything so fresh as that period of time where the Sex Pistols emerged? They came on the scene, it was a short time, then they're gone. Do you think there's been anything quite like that?Greil Marcus:Yeah, there are analogies. There are parallels, maybe. Elvis at Sun Records in 1954 and '55. It was a similar explosion of creativity, and it brought people from all over the south to knocking on that same door saying, "Let me in. I want to make records too." And a lot of those people became legends, and there's creativity going on in hip hop, just unlimited. There are no borders. There's no bottom, there's no top. It's not just Kendrick Lamar, it's not just Kanye West. There is a group in Edinburgh called the Young Fathers, which is just tremendously playful and experimental, and at the same time, dead serious.Speaker 4:(singing)Greil Marcus:And I'm just talking about the few things I know, but in terms of coherence, with punk in England you have a time, you have a place, you have a scene, you have all different kinds of people who know each other, who are topping each other, who are learning from each other. Viv Albertine of the Slits, I want to be a guitarist. Well, she finds people who can show her how to be a guitarist, and there isn't envy and there isn't fear. I don't want to teach her, you know, she may end up outshining me. There isn't that spirit and it doesn't last very long. None of them. And yet that kind of camaraderie and a desire to speak and a desire to be heard, that was really what punk was all about, at least as I hear it. That was replicated all over the world and still is.One of the best stories about punk I ever heard was from a friend of mine who was spending time in Andalusia in Spain, and she's fluent in Spanish, and she was sitting in a cafe, and these kids came up to her and they said, "You're American, right?" And she said, "Yes." "But you speak Spanish." And she said, "Yes." And they said, "Well, we're punkies, and we have the Sex Pistols album, but we don't understand any of the words. Could you translate these songs for us?" So she did. And that led them, this little group of people who were trying, they didn't know if they wanted to form a band, if they wanted to put out a magazine, if they just wanted to do disruptive things in public, put on hit and run plays.That led them to rediscovering the history of their own town. The anarchist history of their own town, which had been completely erased and buried. And they started talking to older people, and they started digging into the libraries, and they realized that they were the heirs of a tradition that was being reenacted on this Sex Pistols record. And it gave them this tremendous sense of pride and identity. Now they didn't form a band, they didn't make any records, and yet that is a punk story. That is a story about a punk band, band of people as true and as inspiring as any other.Lisa Kiefer:It's a way of being, like as you've pointed out in many examples in Lipstick Traces, one of my favorite of your books.Greil Marcus:Oh, thank you.Lisa Kiefer:And I find myself going back to that. I mean I bought it when it came out, and the Lester Bangs collection that you edited.Greil Marcus:Sure.Lisa Kiefer:That I continue to go to, and that really opened my eyes. I was listening to this kind of music and I saw the cover and I thought, oh, this is a book about the Sex Pistols. So I start reading it and really it wasn't, but it educated me on the history, all the movements that I considered to be punk. From the Priests going up on Easter Sunday in 1950 and saying, "God is dead."Greil Marcus:In Notre Dame.Lisa Kiefer:Somewhere in France.Greil Marcus:Easter Mass in Notre Dame.Lisa Kiefer:And then, 10 years later, and John Lennon saying, "We're more popular than Jesus." I mean, this has been happening along the way.Greil Marcus:Yeah. And what was so fascinating to me, and the stories I end up trying to tell in Lipstick Traces was that it involved all sorts of people who were not unaware of each other, but are doing the same work, speaking the same language in different formal languages, whether it's English or French or German or whatever it might be.These are people who never met, who, if you told them, if you told the Dadaist Richard Huelsenbeck in the 1970s just before he died, that his real inheritors, his real soulmates were these people across town, he was living on the Upper West Side in Manhattan, people across town called the Velvet Underground, he might say, "I have all their albums." Or he might say, "Leave me alone. I'm a serious psychoanalyst." Who knows? But these people weren't aware of each other, and yet they are following in each other's footsteps and taking inspiration from other, whether they know it or not.Lisa Kiefer:Let's talk a little bit about what's going on Sunday and your conversation with Viv, her first memoir, and now I want to talk a little bit about musician memoirs. I love literature deeply and it's kind of my guilty pleasure to read all of these rock memoirs or whatever, whether it's Keith Richards, Kim Gordon. Have you read Kim Gordon's?Greil Marcus:Sure.Lisa Kiefer:Viv's first one, which is called Clothes, Clothes, Clothes, Music, Music, Music, Boys, Boys, Boys, it was so entertaining. I was so engaged and I didn't expect to be.Greil Marcus:You know, it's a marvelous book.Lisa Kiefer:You called it the best punk book ever.Greil Marcus:I think it is. I think if you want to get a sense of what impelled people, what drove people to step out of their shells, their shyness, their manners, their politeness and reinvent themselves and the joy they felt in doing so for a very brief period of time, this book will show you that, not just tell you, but show that to you, like no other book or film that I'm aware of. But you know, the title really sums up Viv Albertine, I think. Clothes, Clothes, Clothes, Boys, Boys, Boys, Music, Music, Music, which is what her mother once said. "That's all you care about. Clothes, clothes, clothes and boys, boys, boys and music, music, music." And she's, "Yeah, that's right." And there's a wonderful scene at the end of the book. She's in her fifties, she's been married and divorced, she has a daughter, she has this boyfriend and their relationship is not working.And at one point he just explodes, and he grabs her by the neck, and he's shoving her face into the carpet on the floor and she really feels he's trying to kill her, and she's struggling and she's thinking, but she takes you right into her head at that moment. And she says, "Here's a man who I've introduced to my mother and my daughter, who I've cooked for, who I've dressed. I've done everything for this person. And here I am wearing an applique blouse." And she goes and tells you exactly what clothes she's wearing at this moment. And he's pounding my face into the carpet. And she says, "You know, there's just no pleasing some people," and she has that sardonic attitude. But what have you got here? While there's no music in that scene, but you got the boys and you got the clothes, and there's an appendix that tells you what she was wearing and what she was listening to and who she was involved with in any given point of time in the many years covered by this book.The only analogy to that is a Jan and Dean album, the wonderful surf doo-wop group from the 50s and 60s, and it's a collection, and on the back of the album there's a concordance matching the car and girlfriend that Jan or Dean had at the time any given record was released. And what's really fascinating as you read through this is that both the cars and the girlfriends are constantly shifting back and forth between the two of them. They both have Corvettes. One gets a Porsche, the other gets a Maserati. One is going out with Jill, the other's going out with Debbie, and then Debbie is going out with the other one. It's just so funny to read. And so is Viv Albertine's book.Lisa Kiefer:Yeah, she starts her book saying, "I don't masturbate and I never had a desire to masturbate." That's how she starts the book. Later she's talking about Ari Up, who is their vocalist, that she takes a wee right on the stage. I mean, that had to be the first time ever for a girl band to, she had to go and that's where she did it. She was stabbed a couple of times. Really vivid, and you just get this idea that she was so courageous and brave and honest. She's talking about when she first started listening to T. Rex. And why? Because he was a little less aggressively masculine. And I can remember the same thing happened to me in my little town in the Midwest. No one was listening to T. Rex. They did not understand what I liked about Marc Bolan and I loved him, so I've really connected with this book on many levels.Greil Marcus:Yeah, and one of the things that I find so moving in her new book, it's called To Throw Away Unopened, which is another book. I hate to think of them as memoirs because both of these books are so imaginatively constructed, and they really are about things outside the writer's life. The writer is living in a world. The world is present in these books. I think of them as much more ambitious intellectually than memoirs. What happened to me, this all really happened. You should care about it. Why should I care about this? I don't care about this. You have to make me care.This is a book revolving around the death of her mother in 2014, which was at the time that she published her first book, and her conflicts with her sister, and the mystery of her parents' marriage and why it broke up, and who her parents really were. Things that she began to find out after her mother died. Putting all this stuff together, and yet you are always aware of a particular individual fighting to maintain her sense of self, which is constructed, which is self-conscious, which is real, but which could disappear and shatter at any time.There's one incident early on in the book, where she's talking about going to pubs, playing her songs. You know, she's got her guitar, she goes to places, she plays songs because she wants to be heard. She's not making money doing this. She's not supporting herself doing this. It's something she absolutely has to do. And she's in one pub, and there's a bunch of guys right up front who are really drunk and loud-mouthing and shouting and paying no attention to her at all, making it impossible for anybody else to pay attention to her. And there are people there who want to, and impossible for her to pay attention to what she's supposedly doing. So she asked him, "Could you maybe go to the back, maybe go to the bar. I'm trying to get these songs across." And they ignore her. They didn't even say (beep) you. Sorry, we're on the radio.Lisa Kiefer:I'll bleep.Greil Marcus:They don't say a word to her, they just ignore her. And so she gets up, she puts her guitar down, she gets up, she walks over to their table, she picks up a mug of ale, which is the closest thing to her, and she simply sweeps it across the faces of these four guys sitting at the table, and they look at her, absolutely stunned. And then she picks up another mug and she says it was a Guinness, which, this is Viv Albertine as a writer. Every detail is important. It's a Guinness. That's interesting. It's going to be thicker. It's going to stay in clothes more. It's actually going to be more unpleasant to have that thrown in your face.And she throws that in their face and she says, "Your punk attitude, it comes back to you when you need it." And there's a way in which that is sort of the key as I read it anyway, to this new book, as it comes back to you in terms of the the responsibility you have to not back down, to stand up for yourself, but also to stand up for things you believe are right and in jeopardy, to fight when you have to. And to be relentlessly honest, and not pretend you don't care when you do or that you do care when you don't.Lisa Kiefer:I've read her first book. The second isn't out yet. So are they going to be selling it on Sunday?Greil Marcus:Well, she's on a book tour.Lisa Kiefer:So I assume it'll be there.Greil Marcus:So presumably, you don't go on a book tour unless you've got a book that people can go out and get.Lisa Kiefer:And it is the Bay Area Book Festival.Greil Marcus:Yeah.Lisa Kiefer:So, it sounds like you think it's as strong as the first book, which was nominated for a National Book Award.Greil Marcus:It's very different. It's very different, and as writing, it certainly is strong. Whether the story is smaller in terms of the room that makes for the reader, maybe it is, I'm not sure. Viv Albertine is a remarkable person who's done exceptional things in her life, who has a tremendous sense of humor, who has a sense of jeopardy and danger.You can hear it in her music and you can feel it coming off the pages that she writes. I don't know what we're going to talk about. I don't know what this will be like. I just know that as someone listening to the record she made, seeing her play live, reading her books, that she is just a person who can go in any direction at any time. I saw her in 2009 at the Kitchen in Brooklyn, at a show with the Raincoats. She was opening for them, just herself and her electric guitar. Most of what she did was tell stories on stage, was talk. She played songs, but she was mainly telling stories, and it was the most entertaining and diverting and compelling stuff I'd seen in a long time. I was just hanging on every word, and she was both funny and sardonic and cruel to herself and anybody she might be talking about.And at one point she made some reference to how she looks. She was, I think, 54 then. She looked about 30. There was just no question. You say, "Is this real? Is this happening?" And she said, "Yeah, yeah, I know, it's the curse of the Slits." Well, one thing I'm going to ask her is, "What do you mean by that?" You know, the Fountain of Youth? What's going on here? You know, I met her once in, I think, 1991 in England.Lisa Kiefer:When she was doing films. She's a director.Greil Marcus:Yeah, she was a TV director. We were introduced and I said, "My God, you're Viv Albertine?" I'm like, wow. And she was saying, "No, I just, you know, I'm just doing this little TV crew." And I said, "No, this is a big deal for me to meet you." Well, it will be a big deal for me to meet her again.Lisa Kiefer:If you're just tuning in, you're listening to Method to the Madness, a biweekly public affairs show on KALX Berkeley, celebrating Bay Area innovators. Today I'm speaking with Greil Marcus, music critic and culture historian.You've written a monogram on The Manchurian Candidate sometime ago, and you introduced it as part of a film series at the Pacific Film Archive this week. What is your fascination with this Frankenheimer film?Greil Marcus:Well, I saw it when it came out in 1961, saw it at the Varsity Theater in Palo Alto with my best friend. I was 16 and came out of that movie shellshocked. I had never seen anything like it. The only analogy was, I guess the year before seeing Psycho in a theater across the street in Palo Alto. And when that chair turns around at the end of the movie, and you see this mummy, I think you could have peeled me off the ceiling of the theater. But that movie, ultimately it was a puzzle. It was a game. It was a tease for the audience. It wasn't about anything real. You didn't carry it with you. It wasn't like a waking bad dream. It wasn't like a bad conscience that this movie was passing onto, and that's what The Manchurian Candidate was. It was shocking in every way I could possibly account for, and at 16 couldn't begin to account for.I realize now that I had never seen a movie that so completely went to the edges of possibility of the medium itself. What I mean by that is I understood what movies could be after seeing The Manchurian Candidate, and I had never even thought the movies could or couldn't be anything before. The question wasn't even there. The only comparable experience was seeing Murnau's Sunrise quite a few years later and say, "Ah, now I understand this is what movies were meant to be, but almost never are."Lisa Kiefer:With Trump as our president, it's almost like he could be the Manchurian Candidate.Greil Marcus:Well, you know, since John McCain was first running for president and he was, you know, remember he was a prisoner of war and he was beaten and he was tortured. He was filmed, essentially confessing. And there were many people who began to spread rumors about him that he was, and this phrase was used, the Manchurian Candidate, that he had been brainwashed in Vietnam.And he had come back here as a kind of sleeper agent. And somebody once said to him, "How do you make decisions?" And he said, "Well, I just turn over the Red Queen," which is one of the clues in The Manchurian Candidate.Lisa Kiefer:Yeah, I brought one with me. I was going to try and brainwash you.Greil Marcus:Yes, exactly. The Queen of Hearts. That is a crucial marker in the film. But it wasn't that it was showing us a conspiracy to destroy our country, which is part of what the movie is about. And that we would then say, "Oh my God, this could happen. This is so scary. This is so terrible." Over the years, this is 1961 or '62, Kennedy, John F. Kennedy was involved in the making of the movie. He and Sinatra discussed it. Kennedy wanted Lucille Ball to play the role of the mother that Angela Lansbury ended up playing. Kennedy was weighing in on the casting.He and Sinatra were close at that time. Sinatra's the lead in the movie. Kennedy is assassinated in 1963, Malcolm X was later. It was Malcolm X who said that with Kennedy's assassination, the chickens had come home to roost. And then we just go through the decades, it's just a panoply of disaster, whether it's Wallace, whether it's Reagan, whether it's Malcolm X, whether it's Martin Luther King, whether it's RFK, and going on and on to Gerald Ford, two assassination attempts on him, and into the present.As each of these things happened, the movie comes back to people with more and more reverberation because the story, the sense that our politics don't make sense. This is that everything is happening in a world beyond our control, knowledge or even our abilities to comprehend.Lisa Kiefer:And there are so many secrets that we aren't able to know about.Greil Marcus:Yeah, this gets more and more present. So when you end up with a president, a candidate, and then a president who is at the very least beholden to, and at the very worst, under the control of another country, it's almost as if you can't make the Manchurian Candidate argument because it's too trivial. Well, this movie said, but that's what we carry around our heads.But what's shocking about the movie? I want to get back to that because if people haven't seen it, it was unavailable for many years. It was essentially, it wasn't banned in any legal sense, of course, but you couldn't see it for many, many years. It just felt wrong after Kennedy's assassination and it played on TV after Kennedy was assassinated, but then Sinatra controlled the movie. He pulled it. It didn't come out in video. It didn't show on late night TV. It didn't show in revival screenings. It just wasn't there.You could tell people about it as a kind of legend. Now it's available. People can watch it in any way they want, at any time they want. And one of the things that happens in this movie is violence. Violence that from the very first moment is wounding, is disturbing, is hard to take, and it's absolutely in your face. I mean that literally, the movie puts blood splatters in your face. It happens in a way that you're just desperate, as the movie is going on, for it not to go where you know it's going to go. This is not a movie with a happy ending. This has one of the most awful endings that I know. It is an ending of complete despair and self-loathing and hopelessness. The last words of the movie is Sinatra. "Hell, hell, hell!" That's how the movie ends. And there's a thunderclap. Bang. That's it. And you just walk out of there...Lisa Kiefer:Stunned.Greil Marcus:... and it's like your world has been taken away from you. None of this would matter if this movie wasn't made with tremendous glee and excitement on the part of the director and the writer and the editor and the cinematographer and Lawrence Harvey and Frank Sinatra...Lisa Kiefer:Great cast.Greil Marcus:... and Angela Lansbury and Janet Leigh and on and on and on. All these people are working over their heads. They've never been involved in anything that demanded so much of them, that is making them feel, this is what I was born to do. Can I pull this off? Can I make this work? Can I convince people this is who I really am, that I actually would do these terrible things, and going past themselves. None of the people in this movie, to my knowledge or the way I see it, ever did anything as good before or after.They never did anything as innovative. They never did anything as radical. They never did anything as scary. And whether or not they felt that way about their own work in their own lives, don't have any idea, but I don't think so.Lisa Kiefer:I do want you to mention your website, which I have found to be very interesting. What is that?Greil Marcus:Well, there's a writer named Scott Woods who lives in Canada, and he approached me a number of years ago and asked if he could set up a website to collect my writing and just be a gathering place. And I said, "Sure." It's greilmarcus.net, and he just immediately began putting up articles, old things I'd written, recent things I'd written in no particular order, no attempt to be comprehensive, at least not right away. He did it with such incredible imagination and flair, but he started a feature a few years ago. It has the rather corny title of Ask Greil where people write in and ask me questions, and it could be about a song, or a band, or politics, or history or anything, or novels, movies. And I just answered them. I answered them all immediately because if I didn't, they'd pile up and I'd never get back to them. Is Donald Trump a Russian agent? Well, here's why he might be, and that's a complicated argument. So I take some time to talk about it.Lisa Kiefer:Thank you for coming onto Method to the Madness and being our guest here at KALX.Greil Marcus:Well, thank you. It's a thrill to be on your show.Lisa Kiefer:That was musicologist Greil Marcus. He'll be in conversation this Sunday, April 29th at 3:15 with Viv Albertine, formerly of the Slits. This is part of the Bay Area Book Festival in partnership with the San Francisco Chronicle. They'll be speaking at the Goldman Theater of the David Brower Center at 2150 Allston Way. Tickets are $10 ahead.You've been listening to Method to the Madness. You can find all of our podcasts on iTunes University. We'll be back in two weeks. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

This Week in Mormons
Episode #370 – The View from the Varsity Theater

This Week in Mormons

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2017 53:54


Greg Anderson worked at BYU's Varsity Theater while in college, and he spent hours splicing film to remove questionable material. How does that apply today?

byu greg anderson varsity theater
Doug Loves Movies
S06E669: Brendon Walsh, Chad Daniels, and DC Pierson Guest

Doug Loves Movies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2013 101:35


Live from the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis, MN, Doug welcomes Brendon Walsh, Chad Daniels, and DC Pierson to the show.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Tour Bus Music Show
The Tour Bus Music Show - Episode# 42 - Interview And Music With Familiar Sin From Orlando, FL

The Tour Bus Music Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2013 40:26


Some dishes are best served RAW and there’s nothing closer to raw than rock bands. The power, the message and the music has been delivering that message for a long time. With all of the changes and styles in today’s music, it’s good to see that the message that has always been the backbone of rock music is not lost on a younger generation of musicians. Being outspoken, loud, blunt and unforgiving is in the very essence of what makes up some of the best rock bands of all time and it is what gets the message across. Familiar Sin from the Orlando, Florida area is one of those bands. Not only do they play the music, but they live the life. Founded in 2009 the band has spread their own brand of whisky and women fueled original rock music around the nation. I had a chance to catch up with them a few weeks back for a candid, if not “revealing”, interview with the band. In our time together they paint a real picture of life on the road as a rock band bringing the party and all the debauchery that comes with it. They also share 4 of their songs with us to serve as the anthem living life on your own terms and to remind us that being a little bad can feel so good. Welcome Tour Bus Music Show listeners and Leather Ladies around the world, this is T. Mic, your host and this is episode# 42 where again we will be featuring Familiar Sin from Orlando, Florida. Before we get to the interview I just wanted to bring to up to date on what will be going on in the next few weeks here on the Tour Bus. We are currently working on bring you some great interviews this season and we invite you to join in the fun in you are going to be in Louisiana within driving distance of Baton Rouge and Lafayette, LA in mid-March. We be on location at The Varsity Theater in Baton Rouge, LA on March 15th shooting a video interview with Nonpoint that day and will be at their show that night filming and shooting photos at their show with Hinder. So join us at the Varsity Theater that night for a great show, we’d love to meet up with all of our Tour Bus Listeners there! The next day, March 16, we’ll be at The Station in Broussard, LA where we will be attending CrouchStock. This is a concert featuring bands from 10:30am to 10:00PM that will feature both local and national touring and recording artists such as Sevendust, Pop Evil, Trapt, Candlelight Red, CrackJaw, Digital Summer and many more. Then at 10:00 starts an after party in the club that’s not to be missed. Remember to get your tickets early because this event WILL sell out! We’ll be there doing video interviews with several bands including Sevendust and Candlight Red and will be bringing them to you in the coming weeks and of course we would love to meet you there as well! We’ve got lots more coming as summer approaches and plenty of great music. So stay tuned to Tour Bus Music Show for more details coming soon! Now a word from our sponsor and it’s off to the show! Familiar Sin is: CJ – Vocals Chris – Lead Guitar Caveman – Bass Josh – Drums You can find out more about Familiar Sin at: http://www.reverbnation.com/familiarsin and connect with them on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/familiarsin Familiar Sin’s Bio: When you think about rock and roll, does “Sin” not come to mind? Well, the Central Florida based four-piece Familiar Sin is always the first to bring both. Summer 2009 is when the Sin began and they haven’t looked back since. “The reason we started Familiar Sin is so we can Use Our Demons and Make Them Work for us”, says the front man CJ Orazi. Fueled by honey flavored whiskey, greasy rock and dirty women, they bring the party with them wherever they go, leaving a tattoo of their testimony. Familiar Sin IS getting down to the business of Jamming and Preaching the  Gospel of celebrating good old fashioned “Sinning”. This band lives its name and plays from experience. Managed by Mind’s i Entertainment, look for big things in the future from Familiar Sin. And ask yourself, “Am I a Sinner”? See you at the next show.... Familiar Sin. 

The Smartest Man in the World

Live from the Varsity Theater in Minneapolis, Greg broaches bathrooms, Bill Holm and Bob Dylan.

ID10T with Chris Hardwick

Tim Meadows visits Minneapolis with us! There's talk about Saturday Night Live, the inception of "The Ladies Man" and special guest, Doug Benson, joins the show to help take some quemments! Recorded on March 30, 2012 at The Varsity Theater in Minneapolis.

The Tour Bus Music Show
The Tour Bus Music Show – 014 5/15/2011 - Our Interview With Nonpoint At the Varsity Theater

The Tour Bus Music Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2011 56:56


Welcome to Episode 14 of the Tour Bus Music Show. In this episode we take a trip to the Varsity Theater in Baton Rouge, Louisiana USA for an interview with Rob Rivera and Ken Macmillan of Nonpoint. We sat down with Rob and Ken on their tour bus for a detailed interview that lasted over 30 minutes. They share with us what the band has been up to, how their "Miracle" tour is going and what the group is planning in the near future. We were also fortunate enough to catch Nonpoint perform that night along with their opening acts Surrender The Fall and Conquer The Throne. We also caught some video of the show which we will be posting by Friday of this week (5/21/2011). It was a outstanding show and Nonpoint blew the doors off of the place. Check out the interview as well as the four tracks off of their Miracle Album that posted with the interview. You can find out more information and tour dates on Nonpoint at:www.nonpoint.com. Be sure to get their newest album Miracle and be sure to check them out on tour if they are coming anywhere near you. Their current tour dates (as of 5/15/11) are: Headlining 5/17/11            Nonpoint in Des Moines, IA                 The Peoples Court         US 5/18/11            Nonpoint in Chicago, IL                      Reggie’s                      US 5/19/11            Nonpoint in Battle Creek,                    MI Planet Live Music     US 5/20/11            Nonpoint in Bloomington, IL                The Castle Theatre       US Tour: Supporting Disturbed 5/21/11            Nonpoint in Milwaukee, WI                  Eagles Ballroom           US Tour: Headlining 6/5/11              Nonpoint in Sarasota, FL                    Jakes Tavern              US Tour: 95 WIIL FEST 8/13/11            Nonpoint in Twin Lakes, WI                 Shadow Hill Ranch       US Special thanks to Elias, Zach, Ken, Rob, Josh and Brenna for being so accomodating and hospitable during production of this show! This Show Is 56:55 Minutes In Length. To leave questions, comments, or if you simply want to speak your piece; call our listener feedback line at  (206) 338-1478 or email us at feedback @audiosmaximus.com. Until next time…ROCK ON!

Ghost Labor Radio
Full Service Interview with Rudy D.

Ghost Labor Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2009 1:35


Live From the House of Blues tour with Badfish. An excerpt from the Full Service Diary about the shows: TourSaw with Scotty Don't and Badfish There have been many an amazing tour in the history of this here band. There was, of course, Toursaw I; "the first" always has a special place in the heart. The Takeover Tour, too, was memorable for obvious reasons. But this last tour definitely ranks high. Our friends Scotty Don't (who moonlight as "Badfish: A Tribute to Sublime") invited us to play 4 dates with them in Baton Rouge, Dallas, Houston, and Austin. As the following videos will attest, one of the reasons these shows were exciting was because of the venues and the large crowds (House Of Blues in Dallas and Houston, Varsity Theater in Baton Rouge, and Emo's in Austin). But perhaps more importantly, the shows will forever go down in history because of the bond we formed with a band who proved to be, by the end of our little run with them (they continue on for months after last Sunday's Austin date,) our kindred spirits. They were into playing soccer, they had a trumpet player who was kind enough to sit in with us for "Trumpets," their merch dude was one of the kindest, funniest people we've ever met, their drummer greeted us at our first show with them in Baton Rouge holding an ice bag to his ridiculously swollen black eye (something about defending Pat Benatar against an angry drunk bully after their show in New Orleans?), their singer pins a photo of The Fonz on his amp and skates around on his ripstick inside the venue before shows, and their bass player repeatedly challenged Bonesaw's manhood with competitive banter on and off the field. And not only this, but they work harder than any band we've seen and they play their hearts out every single night. So, many thanks to these guys for the opportunity to play those shows with them. We made a boatload of new fans and we are greatful for that chance.

CPMS News Podcast
Izatt-Christensen Lecture 2012 - Dr. Richard N. Zare, Stanford

CPMS News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 8:34


Dr. Zare, professor of Chemistry from Stanford University, will give his lecture titled “How to Be Successful” on Feb. 7, at 4 p.m. in the Varsity Theater of the Wilkinson Center. His technical lecture will be at 4 p.m. on Feb. 8 in room W112 of the Ezra Taft Benson building.