PZ's Podcast - podcast cover

PZ's Podcast

From "Telstar" to "Vault of Horror," from Rattigan to Kerouac, from the Village of Bray to the Village of Midwich, help PZ link old ancient news and pop culture. I think I can see him, "Crawling from the Wreckage." Will he find his way? This show is brought to you by Mockingbird! www.mbird.com
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Episodes

Episode 117 - Horror Hotel

This tight expressionist outing is a study in egos prepared to take any measures in order to prolong (ego-) life. It's a sure fail, but most instructive. Then there's the fog, and the blocking of the characters in the fog. It endures in the memory. There is also an outstanding note of psychotronic Episcopal haberdashery and service schedules. 'Mr. Russell' is a wonderful minister!

Sep 11, 201229 min

Episode 116 - Wing Thing

Another meditation on hope (i.e., the Wing Thing), via death; yet death concretely and in the now, death you can get your skull around today and not tomorrow. Akira Ifukube is here to help undress us, as is Diogenes the Cynic, and Ludger Tom Ring; and, wouldn't you know, Raymond Scott. Podcast 116 is dedicated to Hewes Hull.

Aug 28, 201222 min

Episode 115 - In the event of

"What makes the melon ball bounce?" What makes you bounce? This is an undressed talk about death, and death's funny aftermath.

Aug 25, 201230 min

Episode 113 - Return to Form

This is podcast one in a new "story arc" -- a study in defeatedness, and a new hope I strangely feel. You could call it cross-notes of a theological psychologist.

Aug 11, 201228 min

Episode 113 - The Two Geralds

Gerald Fried (b. 1928) and Gerald Heard (d. 1971): both were communicators of the non-rational, both were exponents of the subterranean echo. Fried did it through B-movie (and other) musical scores; Heard, through mystery novels and fantastic short stories. Jesus did it, too, through similes and parables. (If the second Gerald chose for his "nom-de-plume" 'H.F. Heard', I wonder what name Christ would have chosen, had His stories been published.)

Jun 28, 201233 min

Episode 112 - Kipling's Lightworks

Kipling shed light! From "Recessional" to "Children's Song", this podcast sings his praise. Kipling was also a 'both-and' thinker, a rare eirenic gift, and a Gift for Today. Episode 112 is dedicated to Stuart Gerson.

Jun 21, 201240 min

Episode 110 - Color Him Father

John Betjeman listed five masters of the English ghost story, or supernatural tale. All five of them were the sons of Protestant ministers. What was going on with these sons, and their fathers. 'The Winstons' can tell us the answer, in their 1969 45 that we loved so, we sons of our fathers.

Jun 04, 201233 min

Episode 108 - J.C. Ryle Considered

Bishop Ryle made at least three big mistakes during his long ministry. If he were able to speak now -- he died in 1900 -- I believe he would admit them. To me they are revealing mistakes, from which there is something to learn. J.C. Ryle also had a core strength: He had been saved in his youth, when his world fell apart. He was a Christian, in other words, for the right reason. Yet like many spiritual people, there were still "unevangelized dark continents" inside him. Had these been "colonized"...

May 25, 201228 min

Episode 107 - Bishop Ryle

John Charles Ryle, who lived from l816 to 1900, was "a giant of a man with the heart of a child". He was a Christian warrior in the Church of England, who contended against High Churchmen and Liberals for 60 years, concluding his ministry as the first Bishop of Liverpool. J.C. Ryle is a fascinating character, a hero-type with some interesting weaknesses. This podcast tells the story of his life. It is dedicated to my friend Fred Rogers.

May 25, 201235 min

Episode 106 - Requiem

Alternate Title: I Feel Like I Lose When I Win. Also, there's a correction: It was 'Fraulein Doktor', not the actress who played her (Suzy Kendall), who died young, at age 52, in 1940.

May 21, 201227 min

Episode 104 - What does it take (to win your love)?

A meditation on defense: that's what this is. Someone wrote that the inner being of a human being is "covered by thirty or forty skins or hides, like an ox's or a bear's, so thick and hard". Too true! What's to get through? Is there an antipode, a blessed antipode, to such a coverage from hope? I honestly think there is. (Even if you've only got a toe on the Road.)

May 16, 201229 min

Episode 103 - Flowers for Algernon I

How does the ego actually die? Or rather, what does a person look like when their ego has died, or is dying? Can we see this -- the "seed falling into the ground"? Algernon Blackwood wrote about the dying. He wrote about it vividly and concretely, not just symbolically. This podcast quotes from two of Blackwood's "Eternity" stories: "The Centaur" (1911) and "A Descent into Egypt" (1914). The theme is healing, at the end of the day; and even, priesthood....

Apr 24, 201236 min

Episode 102 - Flowers for Algernon I

Algernon Blackwood (1869-1951) knew a lot. In reaction to his Sandemanian childhood, he still remained a religious person, all his life. In his "weird tales" Blackwood tried to map a religious way forward -- through an inspired imagination. I used to put Arthur Machen at the top of the list of writers of supernatural horror. Because of a change in me, Blackwood is now number one. This podcast, together with Episode 103, which comes next, follows directly from "Eternity"....

Apr 24, 201238 min

Episode 100 - Eternity

What dies when we die, and what continues to live? What should we fear in relation to physical death, and what can we affirm? Philip Larkin gives a little assist here, but so does St. Francis. This is Episode 100.

Apr 14, 201235 min

Episode 101 - I feel like I win when I lose

Between "Waterloo" and "Lay all your love on me", I don't see how you could achieve a purer pop moment. Or just a purer moment period! The insight within these two 45s is communicated to perfection. What is that insight? Well, two things: first, "all I've learned has overturned" (note the 'Euro' English). I thought I knew myself. Then LUV came knocking, and "everything is new and everything is you." That's the way people really are. Second, "now it seems my only chance is giving up the fight... ...

Apr 12, 201236 min

Previously Unreleased: Heinz

Heinz Burt, known as "Heinz", the Wild Boy of Pop, was, you could say, Joe Meek's muse. Meek did everything possible to make his "Heinz" into a star. Although Meek failed to do that, he produced a large body of fabulous music around his Golden Child. This podcast, previously unreleased, deals with the alchemy of imputation; the theme of unrequited love and consequent melancholy in much of the gold that Meek created out of Heinz; and with the proximity, to almost all of us, of mental illness. The...

Apr 10, 201231 min

Previously Unreleased: Joe Meek

"The Nazareth Principle" (Simeon Zahl) and Joe Meek: they're synonymous. Joe Meek was an improbable genius, who Hear(d) a New World. His wondrous work, achieved under conditions so unusual as to make the mind boggle, is a pure example of Christ's being labelled by the question, "Can anything good come out of Nazareth?" This podcast lay languishing in the vaults, mainly because there are two mistakes in it: the speaker confuses the guitarist Jimmy Page with the guitarist Ritchie Blackmore; and, '...

Mar 23, 201249 min

Episode 99 9/10 - Twisterella

When reality comes crashing in to call, you've got to be prepared for a re-think. It's what happens to 'Billy Liar', in another dazzling English rose, the movie "Billy Liar" from 1963. It's based on a novel then a play, but the visuals bring it home. A man of 19, who flees from his life, for his life, into a fantasy world, begins to falter, then crumble, in the face of reality. (O Lucky Man! -- at age 19, to begin to see.) Like the English city in which he lives, in which every building seems to...

Mar 17, 201232 min

Episode 99 5/8 - A Kind of Loving

This podcast is about categorization -- the pitfalls of categorization. With people, with friends (and prospective friends), with husbands and wives (and prospective husbands and wives), with everybody. It's also about possession -- the pitfalls of possession. Especially with people you love. My surface subject is a 1962 movie entitled "A Kind of Loving": an English rose. But the real subject is putting life into categories, and love into objects. Note the new intro, too. It's got 45 RPM crackli...

Mar 13, 201227 min

Episode 99 - A Night at the Bardo

Harpo's Night at the Bardo -- but not Harpo's, actually. It was mine:. It was PZ's Night at the Bardo. From dusk till dawn. This is something that actually happened. I saw my own death, or rather, myself dying, on a reclining chair in an airplane, on March 1, 2012. It was an unpleasant, elucidating experience. It rattled me! Let me tell you all about it.

Mar 10, 201229 min

Episode 98 - Reflections in a Golden Eye

If you want to find out what true north is in your life -- in other words, where you are really going -- notice what books you are drawn to. Or what movies you really like. Or what music you're putting on your iPod these days. Or what television show you can't miss this week. Those things function as a truth north for your life's actual direction. This podcast looks at two revealing sentences, within two modern masterpieces, of this phenomenon of true north's revelation. Operationally, I am wond...

Mar 10, 201233 min

Episode 97 - Surprise (Symphony)

"Oops! I did it again!": it just came over me. Despite a break, a real break, very soon to come, Lola compelled one to speak. I mean, "Lola", the 1961 movie by Jacques Demy. This podcast is a memo on ego-less communication. It can really happen, and almost never does. But you can't beat it -- you can't beat it -- when it does. In just about any aspect of life you can name.

Feb 13, 201224 min

Episode 96 - Strack-Billerbeck

"Disputed Passage" (Lloyd C. Douglas) is what this podcast is not. There are any number of issues to talk about, yet so many are so particular, and rally around themselves all kinds of differing opinions. I'd rather do -- that is, try to do in a small way -- something of what Claude Berri actually did in "Jean de Florette/Manon of the Spring" (1986), which was, in his own words, to scrape down to the universal: our human nature and suffering, in common -- the tie that binds. After this cast, I a...

Feb 11, 201224 min

Mini Podcast 94 - My New Program

Language changes, changes, changes. "Elle coule, coule, coule." Like a simple but undeviating "conversation" at the drive -through window of the bank. Or like the use of the word "program". "Program" doesn't mean a Lenten series anymore. It doesn't mean what it used to mean. It means something else now. So I need your help, to devise a more robust program than just another pot luck.

Feb 03, 201216 min

Episode 93 - Falsification

"Falsification" is another word for compartmentalization. When we falsify reality -- as in "being untrue", either to a person or to convictions that we (otherwise) hold sincerely -- we get, well, what we deserve. The New Testament gets falsified all the time; and the obloquy which falsification, when found out, gets us, clouds everything -- not to mention the very goods we actually could give. Those goods are Reality and Mercy. This podcast goes from Cozzens (don't worry) to Christians to lawyer...

Feb 03, 201231 min

Episode 92 - G-d

"Kuh-hay-tchuh-pek". It means 'God', or rather G-d, in Martian. You can find out all about "Kuh-hay-tchuh-pek" in the now Criterioned 1964 movie "Robinson Crusoe on Mars". "Kuh-hay-tchuh-pek" is God, and a very right and proper God, too. He is Divine Order, but He is also a Nice Guy. This podcast is about G-d. I hope you'll like Him.

Feb 01, 201220 min

Episode 91 - Sequels

Sequels are strange: sometimes they're better than the original, most of the time they're worse. What makes a good sequel? "The Empire Strikes Back", for example; or "The Invisible Man Returns"; or "The Ghost of Frankenstein". Well, preaching -- I mean preaching in the formal sense, i.e., preaching in churches -- is a study in sequels. When you preach a sermon, you're in a long succession. It goes all the way back to the Sermon on the Mount. That was a good one. Most of its sequels, however, don...

Jan 27, 201232 min

Episode 88 - Tana and Tahrir

I don't believe in "reality", or rather, I believe what looks like reality is seldom reality. This can be easily proved by a quick viewing of ... "The Mummy Ghost" (1944). One look at that wonderful movie is able to confer an accurate understanding of reality. This is because "The Mummy's Ghost" 's reality IS reality. Podcast 88 concerns Kharis, Tana Leaves, and the Arab Spring. P.S. From Kerouac: " 'Facts' are sophistries."

Jan 20, 201233 min

Episode 87 - Bette Davis Eyes

They are all, like Ray Milland, "The Man with the X-Ray Eyes" -- these Huguenot heroes: Marot, Duplessis-Mornay, de Beze, de Coligny, de Rohan, d'Aubigne. That includes their English co-religionists, such as Whitgift and Abbott and Grindal. These are eyes of defeat, eyes that convey an end to self-reference, eyes of a markedly ego-less state. You simply have to undergo defeat, have to, in order to, well, become a little child. Old ancient wisdom....

Jan 19, 201231 min
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