The Angina Dialogues: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:The Other Side]] [[Category:Show_by_date|20010311]] {{Airdate|airdate=2001-03-11}}{{Series|series=The Other Side}}{{Cast|cast=[[Larry Block]], [[Jack Kornfield]], Joe Frank}} | [[Category:The Other Side]] [[Category:Show_by_date|20010311]] {{Airdate|airdate=2001-03-11}}{{Series|series=The Other Side}}{{Cast|cast=[[Larry Block]], [[Jack Kornfield]], Joe Frank}} |
Revision as of 08:54, 19 March 2021
Series | |
---|---|
The Other Side | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
3/11/2001 | |
Cast | |
Larry Block, Jack Kornfield, Joe Frank | |
Format | |
Karma Style, 57 minutes | |
Preceded by: | Fire And Ice |
Followed by: | Love Prisoner |
"I was walking past a church, off of Central Park West, you know."
The Angina Dialogues is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series The Other Side. It was originally broadcast on March 11, 2001.
Synopsis
- Larry Block and Joe: Having compassion for God. Larry gets married by a young, hip rabbi. Where was Superman during the Holocaust. "God wept at the gates of Auschwitz." A slick Rabbi only does parties.
- Jack Kornfield: Happiness doesn't depend on external circumstances.
- Larry and Joe: The story of a great Rabbi who comforts a catholic woman after she confesses to anal sex. Nihilism and King Lear. Violence in Shakespeare and resolving conflicts through Chess tournaments. The giraffe as a school mascot. The road less traveled.
- Kornfield: Our interests limit what we see.
- Larry and Joe: Writing a book about a psychiatrist who recommends suicide. Being prescribed anti-depressants. Zak is in the bathroom smoking pot. Addiction, mixing liquor and drugs. A painter arrives.
- Kornfield: Men or their children walking toward a church.
- Larry and Joe: An unfinished story that gets repeated over and over again: a neighbor who seems a nice guy has screaming fights with his Aunt in Greece. After he disappears for a few weeks and returns, Larry shares that he had hoped the man had been left some property and come into a better life. The man responds with a bizarre ethnic insult.
- Larry and Joe: a psychiatrist suggests Larry is responsible for the problems in his life.
- Kornfield: self knowledge and surrender, instant gratification.
Music
Commentary
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