Black Hole (Remix)
Series | |
---|---|
The Other Side | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
9/16/2001 | |
Cast | |
Alan Hunter, Barbara Sohmers, Marilyn Casky, Arthur Miller, Brother Theodore, Mark Hammer, Joseph Palmieri, Clark Gordon, Larry Block, Richard Bauer, Tim Jerome, Joe Frank | |
Format | |
1 hour | |
Preceded by: | Terminal |
Followed by: | In The Dark (Remix) |
Images of the city at night. People hurry along with umbrellas.
Black Hole is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series The Other Side (Series). It was originally broadcast on September 16, 2001.
Synopsis
- Religious orders
- Bizarre boxing match
- A presidential address
- Interrogation of man regarding an explosion
- Dialog with the man's wife
- Lectures on Electrocism and Naturism
- Actor's monologue on suicide techniques
- Taxicab at suicide bridge
- "Something is missing from my life" discussion
- The president talks about eating nothing as a child, reads the children's questions monologue ("if I don't like it, why do I have to eat it?")
- A man attends his own funeral.
Music
- "Music For Mallet Instruments, Voices And Organ" - Steve Reich (from Drumming, Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ, Six Pianos, 1974) | YouTube
- "Brüder Des Schattens" - Popol Vuh (from Brüder Des Schattens - Söhne Des Lichts, 1978) | YouTube
- "Remote Viewing" - Tangerine Dream (from Exit, 1981) | YouTube
- "Six Marimbas" - Steve Reich (from Sextet · Six Marimbas, 1986) | YouTube
- "Lizard Point" - Brian Eno (from Ambient 4 (On Land), 1982) | YouTube
Additional credits
- Directed by Arthur Miller
- Mixed by Jim Anderson
- Remixed by Ray Guarna
Commentary
Please see guidelines on commentary and share your personal thoughts in this section.
Shiro
This is one of the best radio play programs to introduce to newbies. Of the three different programs containing the same material (with Tour Of The City, A (Part 1) and Nightride), this is the the most humorous and upbeat. Absent is much of the husband and wife dialog, and the structured narrative that is apparent in A Tour of the City. Instead we've treated to a series of scenes which seem to be connected only by a common tone. Although some beautiful acting has been removed, I prefer this tighter edit. " "