Case Studies: Difference between revisions

From The Joe Frank Wiki
m →‎Music: unid'd mp3
m Text replacement - "|labelstyle = background:var(--infobox-header-color);" to "|labelstyle = background:var(--infobox-header-color); width:35%;"
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox
{{Infobox
|name = Infobox/doc
|bodystyle = width:30em;
|bodystyle = width:30em;
|headerstyle = background:#ccf;
|headerstyle = background:var(--infobox-header-color);
|labelstyle = background:#ddf;
|labelstyle = background:var(--infobox-header-color); width:35%;
|header1 = Series
|header1 = Series
|header3 = Original Broadcast Date
|header3 = Original Broadcast Date
Line 11: Line 10:
|label11 = Followed by:  
|label11 = Followed by:  
|data2  = [[Work In Progress]]
|data2  = [[Work In Progress]]
|data8 = [[:Category:Absurd_Monologue|Absurd Monologue]], [[:Category:Panel_Discussion|Panel Discussion]], 1 hour
|data8 = [[:Category:Absurd_Monologue|Absurd Monologue]], [[:Category:Panel_Discussion|Panel Discussion]], 58 minutes
|data4  = 1986
|data4  = [[:Category:1986|1986]]
|title = [https://www.joefrank.com/shop/case-studies Case Studies][https://www.joefrank.com/streaming/shows/?jfsearch=Case%20Studies]
|below = [https://www.joefrank.com/?s={{#invoke:URLEncode|encode|{{PAGENAME}}}} Purchase]
|belowstyle= border-top: 1px solid #333;padding-top:5px;
|data6  = [[Arthur Miller]], [[Nick Ullett]], [[Tim Jerome]], Joe Frank
|data6  = [[Arthur Miller]], [[Nick Ullett]], [[Tim Jerome]], Joe Frank
|data10 = [[Let Me Not Dream]]
|data10 = [[Let Me Not Dream]]
Line 22: Line 22:
''She was a rather peculiar person, a woman in her mid forties who was always playing the child.''
''She was a rather peculiar person, a woman in her mid forties who was always playing the child.''


'''Case Studies''' is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series [[Work In Progress]].  It was originally broadcast in 1986.
'''Case Studies''' is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series [[Work In Progress]].  It was originally broadcast in [[:Category:1986|1986]].


== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
Line 39: Line 39:
{{Totem (Erik Wøllo)}} [19:00]
{{Totem (Erik Wøllo)}} [19:00]
{{Dream Theory (Jon Hassell)}} [35:30]
{{Dream Theory (Jon Hassell)}} [35:30]
== Additional credits ==
The original broadcast credits state: "With [[Arthur Miller]], [[Nick Ullett]], and [[Tim Jerome]]. Technical production by Tom Strother."


== Miscellanea ==
== Miscellanea ==
*In 2004, the Adobe Bookstore in San Francisco sorted their books by color for a week.  Here's a blog entry describing [http://urbanist.typepad.com/jarrett_walker_home/2004/11/update_only_in_.html the work.]   
*In 2004, the Adobe Bookstore in San Francisco sorted their books by color for a week.  Here's a blog entry describing [http://urbanist.typepad.com/jarrett_walker_home/2004/11/update_only_in_.html the work.]   
<!-- *[http://egotron.com/palette/ Here] is a script that displays Amazon's top 100 selling books, sorted by color., dead flash app, sadly -->
<!-- *[http://egotron.com/palette/ Here] is a script that displays Amazon's top 100 selling books, sorted by color., dead flash app, sadly -->


[[Category:Absurd_Monologue]]
[[Category:Absurd_Monologue]]

Latest revision as of 17:24, 31 October 2024

Series
Work In Progress
Original Broadcast Date
1986
Cast
Arthur Miller, Nick Ullett, Tim Jerome, Joe Frank
Format
Absurd Monologue, Panel Discussion, 58 minutes
Preceded by: Let Me Not Dream
Followed by: Cocktails Before Dinner
Purchase

She was a rather peculiar person, a woman in her mid forties who was always playing the child.

Case Studies is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series Work In Progress. It was originally broadcast in 1986.

Synopsis

  • Joe tells stories interspersed by rolling dice.
  • A childish woman becomes morbid when her husband destroys her dolls, goes to psychoanalysis. Her husband the judge steals women's clothing.
  • A Oedipal man wonders the countryside with a staff.
  • Panel discussion on philosophy: reality and perception, music, the books "philosophy and self deception" and "sound and nonsense," pheromones, measuring beauty as ship-launching potential.
  • Panel discussion: the nature of time, life as a series of experiments, Spinoza's stones in motion.
  • Discordant monologue.: calling people, following people, waking up in a subway car, time is a swallow flying, the chinchillas are unbearable, someone saw the aurora, tropical fish boiled, missing snuff bottles.
  • Panel discussion: presence of evil and ugly in everything life affirming, the shark's life, a history of the world from an ant's point of view, humans are bred by the gods for slaughter, god is responsible for everything including the bad things, balance between illness and wonder drugs, immortality, a small town sacrifices prosthetics in exchange for immortality.
  • Monologue: a play that ends in a riot, sudden discharge of foul smelling oil in a restaurant, a room complains about the weight of furniture, a pit throws a baker into an oven, a hemophiliac comic bleeds to death, the dead walk the earth, finance is conducted entirely through bodily gestures, theaters dissolve into nonsense, wise men fake the spirit of the field, suicides immediately reincarnated, a porno house destroyed in a storm and no one notices, an empty frame against a blank wall, the truth is unfathomably, former lovers going beyond their limits, a fly in a coffee cup and imagining a dead animal or baby in the road, running around a hotel six times, a staircase from an ancient city, organizing books according to color, revolutions fail, the speed at which screams propagate, attending meetings in a wax museum, secondary lifetimes, a god for god, seducing women with a harmonica, mouths as the seat of pleasure, attacking a woman in a hotel bathroom, tricking nurses into examining one's you know what, the futility of genealogy.

Music

This is an incomplete record of the music in this program. If you can add more information, please do.

Additional credits

The original broadcast credits state: "With Arthur Miller, Nick Ullett, and Tim Jerome. Technical production by Tom Strother."

Miscellanea

  • In 2004, the Adobe Bookstore in San Francisco sorted their books by color for a week. Here's a blog entry describing the work.