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    Cinema Death Cult

    A movie podcast hosted by Adam Bulger, a journalist slowly going insane in New Jersey. You can reach me at cinemadeathcult@gmail.com (adam.bulger@gmail.com for a faster response since I neglect the CDC inbox often), read my stories at misterbulger.com or follow me on twitter at @adamrbulger.
    en-us47 Episodes

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    Episodes (47)

    Episode 09: The Secret Origin of Freddy Krueger

    Episode 09: The Secret Origin of Freddy Krueger
    In honor of Halloween, Adam reads his 2016 article "Sudden and Unexplained: The Sleep Deaths That Inspired Nightmare on Elm Street" and selections from the sample chapter he wrote for a book proposal based on the article. Literary agents: that book proposal is yours for the taking: adam.bulger@gmail.com. Here's (https://www.darkmatter.radio/blogs/blog/adam-bulger)the Midnight in the Desert episode Adam was on. Looks like you need to buy a membership to listen. The host was Heather Wade. Glad the episode is still up Photo by Arkham Photography (https://www.instagram.com/arkhamphotography/), AKA Jared Breslow. I used to live in the house in the picture (so did Jared). It was not the last house but it was sometimes on your left, depending on where you stood.

    Episode 08: Friday The 13th and Friday The 13th Part 2

    Episode 08: Friday The 13th and Friday The 13th Part 2
    Colin and Adam watch the first two Friday The 13th movies and finally solve the mystery of who the real murderers are (Jason and his mom). Also, it's our 13th episode. Wow. Serendipity. Can't wait to see what we're going to do for episodes 69 and 420. This is the documentary (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drpAtACafmU) Adam mentions. This is a great story about the Maine hermit (https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2017/04/north-pond-hermit-maine-knight-stranger-woods-finkel/)we briefly mention. All the information about Tom Savini was from Savini's wiki page. You can get to it this great search engine called google. Check it out! Our longest episode yet. We were laughing and vibing. Being bros.

    Episode 06: The Karate Kid

    Episode 06: The Karate Kid
    The sound cuts out on this right before I launch into a banger riff on how Mr Myagi is racist but it's not a big deal because the racism doesn't hurt anybody. When we were recording on Zencastr, my track stopped recording for about 10 minutes and never synched back up with Colin. I'm very disappointed because it was an interesting conversation that took a lot of directions I didn't expect and I like the audio editing I did on the rest of the track. Anyway, we talk about "The Karate Kid" on this one. Colin thinks Ally Sheedy was 30 in "The Breakfast Club" but Adam sweeps his leg with a google search.

    Episode 04: Mad Max Commentary

    Episode 04: Mad Max Commentary
    If you've ever wondered what it's like to watch a movie with Adam, wonder no more. He recorded a commentary track for the classic 1979 low-budget indie Australian end-times car chase movie Mad Max. The movie's streaming on Netflix as of Sept., 2020, so if you're feeling lonely, play the episode as a commentary track and hang out with an intense but chill weirdo from New Jersey. (Audio cuts off around the 54 minute mark. I figured out the problem but can't fix it. Sorry!)

    Episode 01: Back the Blue

    Episode 01: Back the Blue
    Adam does a quick hit solo episode about his exciting day on twitter. Here's the thing I read, with links: Police brutality is the most pernicious and visible problem with police work. But it’s not the only one. Modern police forces are expensive and drain resources that could be put to better use. Look at Los Angeles. LA spent 54% of the city’s general fund on cops while it cut the far smaller amount of money allocated for housing and economic development programs. (https://peoplesbudgetla.com/) You’ll see similar patterns in other major cities. New York City spends more on policing than it does on the Departments of Health, Homeless Services, Housing Preservation and Development, and Youth and Community Development combined. (https://www.nydailynews.com/…/ny-oped-cut-the-nypd-budget-n…) Boston spends $60 million on police overtime alone.A 20 percent cut to the police force’s overtime budget would mean $12 million could be reallocated to other city services. (https://www.bostonherald.com/…/boston-councilors-mull-reje…/) In Minneapolis, where Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd, police get a $1.6 billion budget while services get pocket change--$31 million for affordable housing, more than $400,000 for the Office of Crime Prevention and about $250,000 for downtown community organizations working with at-risk youth. (https://kstp.com/…/minneapolis-city-council-passes…/5576492/) And despite all the money we spend on police, they’re remarkably ineffective. They’re probably an effective deterrent, keeping people from committing crimes for fear of being caught by police. That’s unquantifiable. We’ll never know. We can say, though, that they’re awful at solving crimes. Just dog shit. In 2015, 46% of the violent crimes and 19% of the property crimes reported to police in the U.S. were cleared, according to FBI data (https://www.pewresearch.org/…/most-violent-and-property-cr…/). Despite a revolution in technology for forensic investigations, cops solve less homicides today than ever (https://www.themarshallproject.org/…/why-are-american-cops-…). And the crimes most needing their attention are ignored. It takes years for police to catch up with serial killers, particularly ones who prey on vulnerable populations (https://www.vice.com/…/how-cops-botch-serial-killer-investi…). Rape kits are piled up in police departments without being tested (http://www.endthebacklog.org/…/where-backlog-exists-and-wha…). Cops rarely investigate or prosecute stalking claims (https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/228354.pdf). And if we magically ended police brutality tomorrow, abuses would remain. Cops would still lie in courts to get convictions (https://www.nytimes.com/…/why-police-officers-lie-under-oat…), a practice so commonplace cops nicknamed it “testilying.” (https://www.nytimes.com/…/testilying-police-perjury-new-yor…) They could still routinely plant evidence during investigations. (https://www.themarshallproject.org/…/4692-cops-planting-evi…) They could target minorities in crackdowns on petty crimes. (https://www.nytimes.com/…/nyc-police-subway-racial-profilin…). So, in conclusion, I believe the problems with police extend beyond police brutality and that I’ve spent way too much time on this Facebook post nobody’s gonna read. Thanks!
    Cinema Death Cult
    en-usAugust 06, 2020
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