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    the sixties

    Explore " the sixties" with insightful episodes like "Bringing It All Back Home with Dr. Jim Curtis", "London Emerges Swinging", "JFK", "Meet The Author - Donna D. Conrad - House Of The Moon" and "Altered States of the Spirit" from podcasts like ""The Gritty Hour", "Yesterday's London Times", "Overlapping Dialogue", "MinddogTV Your Mind's Best Friend" and "Showing Up"" and more!

    Episodes (17)

    Bringing It All Back Home with Dr. Jim Curtis

    Bringing It All Back Home with Dr. Jim Curtis

    Joined by co-host George Bauer, Dr. Jim Curtis stopped by to discuss his book "Decoding Dylan: Making Sense Of The Songs That Changed Modern Culture".
    Dr. Curtis makes a refreshingly cerebral analysis of Dylan's songs and their effect on society, as well as the influence Dylan has had on popular music from the early sixties to this day.
    Along with his other book, "Rock Eras: Interpretations of Music and Society, 1954-1984",  Dr. Curtis skillfully describes the unbroken chain of popular music from the days of Bing Crosby to the more modern artists like Dylan and Bruce Springsteen.
    You can find both books mentioned here at Amazon.com

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    London Emerges Swinging

    London Emerges Swinging

    London. The 1960s. The “Capital of Cool”.

    London was indeed swinging. But how? Why?

    Join us, as we inquire and explore:

           - how London emerged from war torn chaos,   soot,  deadly fog, and rations into a vibrant and vivacious style epicenter by the mid 1960s

           - the trends that dominated the era

           - how the baby boom and subsequent youth culture movement rocked British life at its core

    1940s London was battered and bruised, but the city came back swinging in just under two decades. Come along with us as we look at the path that paved the way for such astonishing change.

    Photos, sources, and recipes can be found in our show notes HERE.

    JFK

    JFK
    Was it Lee Harvey Oswald on the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository with a Carcano Model 38 carbine rifle? Perhaps David Ferrie years before in a Floridian swamp owned by the CIA with a decaying Thompson submachine gun? Wait, what about a forever anonymous gunman, in effect a shadow indicative of forces far beyond our understanding (much less control) armed with the potent mysteries inherent to the ever evolving demands of the American Century? All we know for certain is that President John F. Kennedy died in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963, a day that forever changed the nation. This week's subject film, 1991's JFK, attempts to make the abstract concrete in an exploration of American fault lines that would soon threaten to cripple the country in the decade(s?) to follow. Listen as we walk through our own reflections of the assassination and its enduring legacies before diving into the conspiratorial cinema of Oliver Stone. Does the movie's technical brilliance distract from its logical and ethical discrepancies? What relationship does this film hold to a citizenry ever more comfortable with tin-foil-hat philosophizing? Where can we find any additional scenes, alternate takes, blooper reels, etc. of John Candy's performance as Dean Andrews? Indeed, if any exists, #ReleaseTheDeanAndrewsCut. We don't intend to definitively answer any of the aforementioned questions but we promise you there's plenty to sort through in this jam packed, 6.5 hours long episode. Feel free to skip to 2:49:01 for the beginning of our audio commentary. As always, please like, subscribe, rate, and review us on all of our channels, which include Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube! Contact us at huffmanbrothersproductions@gmail.com with your questions, comments, and requests.

    Meet The Author - Donna D. Conrad - House Of The Moon

    Planet of the Apes

    Planet of the Apes
    This week's episode marks the beginning of a nine episode trek through the Forbidden Zone into one of the oddest, most influential franchises in the history of Hollywood with our look at 1968's opening entry, Planet of the Apes! We follow the breadcrumbs towards our own destruction by discussing a variety of topics, including the script's sizable pedigree with Michael Wilson and the one and only Rod Serling, the timely yet elusive themes this film and its successors came to represent, the timelessly ham-fisted choices of Charlton Heston, and the larger off-kilter brilliance that combines John Chambers's legendary makeup, Jerry Goldsmith's eerie score, and the panicked precision of Franklin J. Schaffner's direction into a piece of pop art brilliance which remains one for the ages. Feel free to skip to 1:29:34 for the beginning of our audio commentary. As always, please like, subscribe, rate, and review us on all of our channels, which include Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube! Contact us at huffmanbrothersproductions@gmail.com with your questions, comments, and requests.

    Episode 44 - Dead Presidents

    Episode 44 - Dead Presidents

    On this episode, the guys need not venture any further than their own backyard, as they take it to the East Bronx (with a quick trip to Vietnam) and review 1995's Dead Presidents. Its 1969, Anthony Curtis is fresh out of high school and right into the Vietnam war. Upon his return home, he realizes that life outside of the jungle can be just has unforgiving. Desperate times call for desperate measures.  

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    Episode 50: Mrs. McMahon, You're Trying to Seduce Me.

    Episode 50: Mrs. McMahon, You're Trying to Seduce Me.
    _Another powerhouse of an episode for our Golden 50th. We showered down knowledge and witty judgmental insight on your candy axes. No one in Hollywood or Washington D.C. was safe during this audio odyssey. We crap on people locally, nationally, and globally because the trio does not believe in discrimination. The Beer Can tells of his latest swinging experience with the misses while Scott fills us in on why Vince McMahon is the Genetic Jackhammer. We discuss the extinction of malls, Jeff's recent vacation to Florida and once again, the worst US presidents of all time. Woodrow Wilson is the Lebron James of terrible presidents. DOWNLOAD, SUBSCRIBE, LIKE, SHARE!! _

    They Hate to See a Girlboss Winning

    They Hate to See a Girlboss Winning

    It’s true, they really do hate to see a girlboss winning, but you know what they say, nevertheless she persisted! When we were twelve, we’d stay up all night long at sleepovers fantasizing about being married with kids at the age of twenty-five. Then, a few years later we watched the Carrie Bradshaws and the Sophia Amorusos, I mean, Marlowes of the world build their empires and take their cities by storm, all with impressive ease and impeccable style. By the time we got to college we were so confused about what our dreams and goals were actually supposed to be that we signed ourselves up for a ‘Music, Movies and the Sixties’ Freshman Year Interest Group and well, it doesn’t get anymore #girlboss than that—am I right, ladies?

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    Seconds

    Seconds

    What better way to celebrate our contemporary era of avatars, ghosting, and the crippling realization that we'll all die alone  than with 1966's own portrait of prolonged emotional crisis?! Listen to our eighth episode for a discussion on John Frankenheimer and the place his trilogy of paranoid thrillers had in the opening and middle years of a tumultuous decade, the many symbols and precedents Seconds signaled for the forthcoming New Hollywood era, and the endlessly exquisite camera work of the great James Wong Howe.

    Feel free to skip to 1:00:57 for the beginning of our audio commentary. 

    As always, please like, subscribe, rate, and review us on all of our channels, which include Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube! Contact us at huffmanbrothersproductions@gmail.com with your questions, comments, and requests.

    American Graffiti

    American Graffiti
    We're cruising for a bruising with our second episode on American Graffiti, George Lucas's 1973 coming-of-age classic. We explore where this film fits into Lucas's own groundbreaking career, the soundtrack that's defined a generation, and whether or not street racer Bob Falfa (Harrison Ford) is in fact a serial killer. Feel free to jump to 36:50 for the beginning of the audio commentary. As always, please like, subscribe, rate, and review us on all of our channels, which include Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube! Contact us at huffmanbrothersproductions@gmail.com with your questions, comments, and requests. Read Levi’s piece on the movie, THX 1138, and George Lucas generally here: https://thebigwblog.wordpress.com/2018/04/26/since-buddy-holly-died-the-dichotomy-of-cynicism-and-nostalgia-in-the-early-cinema-of-george-lucas/

    Re-Membering and Surviving: African American Fiction of the Vietnam War

    Re-Membering and Surviving: African American Fiction of the Vietnam War

    In the words of Yusef Komunyakaa, Shirley A. James Hanshaw’s Re-Membering and Surviving is a powerful call seeking a response. This superb analytical voice examines literature by four black writers—John A. Williams, Wesley Brown, A. R. Flowers, and George Davis—who are masterful storytellers shaped by the caldron of war. Through her attention to these figures, Hanshaw reveals an American voice that has been kept in obscurity. Here, the historical background illuminates a postmodern imagination. As Jay Watson puts it, “This is an invaluable work that will kindle important scholarship about the Black war experience and its literary representation for years to come. A vital contribution to African American literary criticism and literary history.”

    Shirley A. James Hanshaw is professor emerita in the English Department at Mississippi State University where she was instrumental in establishing the first African American Studies Program. She is the recipient of a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, a Danforth Associateship for Outstanding Teaching in the Sciences and Humanities, and a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship.

    Re-Membering and Surviving: African American Fiction of the Vietnam War, is available at msupress.org and other fine booksellers. You can connect with the press on Facebook and @msupress on Twitter, where you can also find me @kurtmilb.

    The MSU Press podcast is a joint production of MSU Press and the College of Arts & Letters at Michigan State University. Thanks to Daniel Trego, Madiha Ghous, Kylene Cave, and the team at MSU Press, especially Elise Jajuga and Julie Reaume, for helping to produce this podcast. Our theme music is “Coffee” by Cambo. 

    Carlos and Cindy Santana

    Carlos and Cindy Santana

    Carlos Santana and Cindy Blackman Santana join host Steve Baltin to talk about how lessons from the '60s and icons such as Martin Luther King Jr., the Black Panthers, Cesar Chavez and more are still applicable and relevant to their music and lives today in 2020. 

    They also discuss her new album, 'Give The Drummer Some,' protest songs from the likes of Bob Marley, John Coltrane and John Lennon and more and the importance of protests in history.

     

    American Songwriter Podcast Network

    Track07: Laurel Canyon

    Track07: Laurel Canyon

    On this track, Kris welcomes to the program, filmmaker Alison Ellwood, director of the 2 part documentary Laurel Canyon. 

    For more about the documentary, CLICK HERE

    Watch Laurel Canyon now, available on EPIX

    --

    About the Podcast: 

    ‘TEXT PROSE AND ROCK N ROLL’- is the only podcast dedicated to the written account of musicians. From artist memoirs to band bios, and anything in between. You'll hear first accounts from those who lived the lifestyle; a Book Club that rocks - literally. 

    It was Created, Hosted & Executive Produced by Kris Kosach

    It was Produced & Edited by Charlene Goto of Go-To Productions

    For more on the show, visit the website

    Or follow us on Instagram and Facebook @Textproserocknroll

    Follow Kris on Social Media: @KrisKosach

    Follow Producer Char on Social Media: @ProducerChar

    THE SIXTIES: America's Suicide Attempt

    THE SIXTIES: America's Suicide Attempt

    In his classic work, Modern Times, historian Paul Johnson titled his chapter on the  Sixties, “America’s Suicide Attempt.” He  saw that decade as a near implosion of American culture, due partly to a war between the generations.

    In this second episode of Fran’s new series, “There And Back Again: A Hippie’s Tale,” he paints a vivid family portrait of Middle America after it had enjoyed its vacation from war during the Eisenhower era of the Fifties. James Dean’s classic film title, “Rebel Without a Cause” seemed to have expired by the end of the Sixties as America found that it was at war with itself. And the Church, it seemed, was more bound to the flag than the Cross.
    _______________________________________

    OTHER  RESOURCES BY FRAN SCIACCA:

    What If There Was a Coup d'état in America during the 60s & 70s

    What If There Was a Coup d'état in America during the 60s & 70s

    "The Sixties", as they are known in both scholarship and popular culture, is a term used by historians, journalists, and other objective academics; in some cases nostalgically to describe the counterculture and revolution in social norms about clothing, music, drugs, dress, sexuality, formalities, and schooling; and in others pejoratively to denounce the decade as one of irresponsible excess, flamboyance, and decay of social order.  What if it was all part of the plan?  What if there was a coup during that time to overthrow the American government?  This week The Doctor and PUG explores this parallel timeline.

    Find out more about History's What If Podcast

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    Eisenhower Farewell Address Military Industrial Complex warning

    The girl next door 2

    The girl next door 2

    The murder of Sylvia Likens was a child murder which occurred in Indianapolis, Indiana in October 1965. Likens, a 16-year-old girl, was held captive and subjected to increasing levels of child abuse, neglect, humiliation, and torture committed over a period of almost three months by her caregiver, Gertrude Baniszewski, many of Baniszewski's children, and several other neighborhood children before ultimately succumbing to her injuries on October 26.

    Baniszewski; her oldest daughter, Paula; her son, John; and two neighborhood youths, Coy Hubbard and Richard Hobbs, were all tried and convicted in May 1966 of neglecting, torturing, and murdering Sylvia, with counsels at the defendants' trial describing the case as the "most diabolical" ever to be presented before a court or jury[1] and Sylvia having been subjected to acts of "degradation that you wouldn't commit on a dog" prior to her death.[2][3]

    The torture and murder of Sylvia Likens is widely regarded by Indiana citizens as the worst crime ever committed in their state[4][5] and has been described by a senior investigator in the Indianapolis Police Department as the "most sadistic" case he had ever investigated in the 35 years he served with the Indianapolis police.

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