At The Border: Difference between revisions

From The Joe Frank Wiki
show categories
m airdate
Line 36: Line 36:
*People with umbrellas.
*People with umbrellas.
More about umbrellas. An architect inspects his work. Via [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czes%C5%82aw_Mi%C5%82osz Czesław Miłosz], the tale of a German prisoner of war who is comforted, but then killed for his coat.<ref>"Miłosz saw Russian soldiers first extolling the brotherhood of men, then indifferently killing a German prisoner for his coat." Maria Rybakova, [https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/against-the-devil-the-tormented-life-of-czeslaw-milosz "Against the Devil: The Tormented Life of Czesław Miłosz"], ''LA Review Of Books'', September 9, 2017.</ref>  Kierkegaard - despair that does not know it is despair compared with living in Glendale. The invisible man and what people see when they look at you.  The lives of animals.  Hole worshipers.    Uncertainty and human knowledge.  Naming things so as not to fear them.  Being lost on an elevator, getting off at 39th street in the wrong city. Joe addresses cheering crowds.  Discordant monologue against cello music: Joe's father is a famous physician who sues his patients.  Joe hunts his father's killer.  A church in honor of evolution.  Honking at an apartment building.  Meeting a ghost in a cemetery while dressed as a nun wearing an alarm clock.  A rich man thought dead awakens, loses his memory and joins a religious sect.  Joe is a king whose power is linked to the phases of the moon.  A roman army attacks the sea.  A factory owner who only discusses aesthetics.  Scenes from the bible portrayed by actors dressed as concentration camp victims.  Our reason for existence is to nurse parasites.  "What the world needs now," sung in a exaggerated Indian accent.  A human being is a pile of secrets.  A jealous husband discovers that his wife has given birth. A child's sense of time.  A Dutchman who sees people's skeletons.  All the things my right hand does for me. The earth was created all at once.  Traveling and finding that all towns are the same.  Scenes from a car.  Discovering the ruins of Los Angeles.  Discovering the meaning of existence and forgetting it. Yelling at drivers with road noise in the background. Joe's father was killed at the screw works.
More about umbrellas. An architect inspects his work. Via [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czes%C5%82aw_Mi%C5%82osz Czesław Miłosz], the tale of a German prisoner of war who is comforted, but then killed for his coat.<ref>"Miłosz saw Russian soldiers first extolling the brotherhood of men, then indifferently killing a German prisoner for his coat." Maria Rybakova, [https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/against-the-devil-the-tormented-life-of-czeslaw-milosz "Against the Devil: The Tormented Life of Czesław Miłosz"], ''LA Review Of Books'', September 9, 2017.</ref>  Kierkegaard - despair that does not know it is despair compared with living in Glendale. The invisible man and what people see when they look at you.  The lives of animals.  Hole worshipers.    Uncertainty and human knowledge.  Naming things so as not to fear them.  Being lost on an elevator, getting off at 39th street in the wrong city. Joe addresses cheering crowds.  Discordant monologue against cello music: Joe's father is a famous physician who sues his patients.  Joe hunts his father's killer.  A church in honor of evolution.  Honking at an apartment building.  Meeting a ghost in a cemetery while dressed as a nun wearing an alarm clock.  A rich man thought dead awakens, loses his memory and joins a religious sect.  Joe is a king whose power is linked to the phases of the moon.  A roman army attacks the sea.  A factory owner who only discusses aesthetics.  Scenes from the bible portrayed by actors dressed as concentration camp victims.  Our reason for existence is to nurse parasites.  "What the world needs now," sung in a exaggerated Indian accent.  A human being is a pile of secrets.  A jealous husband discovers that his wife has given birth. A child's sense of time.  A Dutchman who sees people's skeletons.  All the things my right hand does for me. The earth was created all at once.  Traveling and finding that all towns are the same.  Scenes from a car.  Discovering the ruins of Los Angeles.  Discovering the meaning of existence and forgetting it. Yelling at drivers with road noise in the background. Joe's father was killed at the screw works.
== Music ==
{{Kakashi (かかし Scarecrow) (Aragon)}}
{{Eine andere Welt (Another World) (Popol Vuh)}}
{{Otherwise (Adam Rudolph)}}


== Miscellanea ==
== Miscellanea ==
Line 42: Line 47:
*Also a KCRW "Flashback" program.
*Also a KCRW "Flashback" program.
*The "compulsion to wander" and "the psychopathology of the tramp" segments (and possibly others from this program) are re-used later in [[Philosophy]].
*The "compulsion to wander" and "the psychopathology of the tramp" segments (and possibly others from this program) are re-used later in [[Philosophy]].
== Music ==
{{Kakashi (かかし Scarecrow) (Aragon)}}
{{Eine andere Welt (Another World) (Popol Vuh)}}
{{Otherwise (Adam Rudolph)}}


== Commentary ==
== Commentary ==
Line 57: Line 57:
[[Category:Sound_Effects]]
[[Category:Sound_Effects]]
[[Category:1987]]
[[Category:1987]]
[[Category: Work In Progress]]
[[Category:Work In Progress]]
[[Category:Unknown_air_date]][[Category:Show]][[Category:Show_by_date|1987]]
[[Category:Unknown_air_date]]
[[Category:Show]]
[[Category:Show_by_date|19871009]] {{Airdate|airdate=1987-10-09}}

Revision as of 15:00, 9 March 2021

At The Border[1]
Series
Work In Progress
Original Broadcast Date
10/9/1987
Cast
Joe Frank
Format
Absurd Monologue, Sound Effects, 1 hour
Preceded by: He Hesitated
Followed by: Thank You, You're Beautiful

One evening I walked up to a beautiful woman in a restaurant and said....

At The Border is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series Work In Progress. It was originally broadcast on October 9, 1987. Also see At The Border (Remix).

Synopsis

Joe meets a woman at a party, tells her she will become obsessed with him. The compulsion to wander. The psychopathology of the tramp. A religious sect known as the wanderers. What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. War and peace. A woman kills her child, begins to doubt the reality of things. Dating a woman whose father has a prosthetic nose and whose mother is enchanting. Can you cut off yourself from your past? Odysseus cries as his story is read to him. People who change their identities to fit the times. A list of memories:

  • Snowflakes under a microscope
  • A desert caravan with camels on the horizon
  • Rain on a railroad coach window
  • Pebbles in a mountain stream
  • Moonlight over the jungle
  • Old photographs
  • Summer lightning
  • Cool, white sheets
  • A freighter on the horizon
  • People with umbrellas.

More about umbrellas. An architect inspects his work. Via Czesław Miłosz, the tale of a German prisoner of war who is comforted, but then killed for his coat.[1] Kierkegaard - despair that does not know it is despair compared with living in Glendale. The invisible man and what people see when they look at you. The lives of animals. Hole worshipers. Uncertainty and human knowledge. Naming things so as not to fear them. Being lost on an elevator, getting off at 39th street in the wrong city. Joe addresses cheering crowds. Discordant monologue against cello music: Joe's father is a famous physician who sues his patients. Joe hunts his father's killer. A church in honor of evolution. Honking at an apartment building. Meeting a ghost in a cemetery while dressed as a nun wearing an alarm clock. A rich man thought dead awakens, loses his memory and joins a religious sect. Joe is a king whose power is linked to the phases of the moon. A roman army attacks the sea. A factory owner who only discusses aesthetics. Scenes from the bible portrayed by actors dressed as concentration camp victims. Our reason for existence is to nurse parasites. "What the world needs now," sung in a exaggerated Indian accent. A human being is a pile of secrets. A jealous husband discovers that his wife has given birth. A child's sense of time. A Dutchman who sees people's skeletons. All the things my right hand does for me. The earth was created all at once. Traveling and finding that all towns are the same. Scenes from a car. Discovering the ruins of Los Angeles. Discovering the meaning of existence and forgetting it. Yelling at drivers with road noise in the background. Joe's father was killed at the screw works.

Music

Template:Eine andere Welt (Another World) (Popol Vuh)

Miscellanea

  • Originally broadcast live from KCRW on October 9, 1987.
  • A 'remix' version may contain material from Thank You You're Beautiful. (Lots of the above is based on the remix.)
  • Also a KCRW "Flashback" program.
  • The "compulsion to wander" and "the psychopathology of the tramp" segments (and possibly others from this program) are re-used later in Philosophy.

Commentary

Please see guidelines on commentary and share your personal thoughts in this section.

Footnotes

    1. "Miłosz saw Russian soldiers first extolling the brotherhood of men, then indifferently killing a German prisoner for his coat." Maria Rybakova, "Against the Devil: The Tormented Life of Czesław Miłosz", LA Review Of Books, September 9, 2017.