The Road To Calvary: Difference between revisions

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== Music ==  
== Music ==  
{{One More Night (Can)}}
{{One More Night (Can)}}{{Unidentified|id=need id starting at 27:45}}
{{Unknown (Unknown)}} (starting at 27:45)
{{Go Faster (Propellerheads)}}
{{Go Faster (Propellerheads)}}
{{Rearrange (Cinematic Orchestra)}} was used in place of "Go Faster" in an alternate version of the program


== Additional credits ==
== Additional credits ==
The original broadcast credits state: "Created in collaboration with [[David Rapkin]]. Recorded, edited, and mixed by Theo Mondle. Music production by [[Bob Carlson]]. Special thanks to Jennifer Ferro, Carly Eiseman, and Esmé Gregson."
The original broadcast credits state: "Created in collaboration with [[David Rapkin]]. Recorded, edited, and mixed by Theo Mondle. Music production by [[Bob Carlson]]. Special thanks to Jennifer Ferro, Carly Eiseman, and Esmé Gregson."
== Miscellanea ==
* {{Rearrange (Cinematic Orchestra)}} was used in place of "Go Faster" in an alternate version of the program


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

Revision as of 07:11, 2 April 2021

The Road To Calvary[1]
Series
Somewhere Out There
Original Broadcast Date
March 3, 1996
Cast
Joe Frank
Format
Absurd Monologue, Narrative Monologue, 1 hour
Preceded by: The Sacred
Followed by: God Only Knows

I was working in a slaughterhouse. My job was to grasp two cantilevers.

The Road To Calvary is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series Somewhere Out There. It was originally broadcast on March 3, 1996.

Synopsis

Working in a packing house, sex in the presence of death, the evil plant manager. Working in a nuclear plant, sex and electricity, plant disasters, spies. Getting rich by black mailing a spy. Working as a test subject on addictive substances. Running out of gas in the desert and having a meaningless encounter with an Indian. Jesus on the road to Calvary - he considers alternatives, witnesses lovers with an audience, stops at a blues club. Praying in a godless world. Woman talks about a man's illness.

Music

Additional credits

The original broadcast credits state: "Created in collaboration with David Rapkin. Recorded, edited, and mixed by Theo Mondle. Music production by Bob Carlson. Special thanks to Jennifer Ferro, Carly Eiseman, and Esmé Gregson."