At The Border (Remix)
Series | |
---|---|
The Other Side | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
9/24/2002 | |
Cast | |
Joe Frank | |
Format | |
Absurd Monologue, Sound Effects, 55 minutes | |
Preceded by: | Endings |
Followed by: | Time's Arrow |
"One evening, I walked up to a beautiful woman in a restaurant and said, 'tonight you will fall insanely in love with me."
At The Border (Remix) is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series The Other Side. It was originally broadcast on September 24, 2002.
Synopsis
The first 27:50 comes from At The Border, the next 23 from Thank You, You're Beautiful, the last 4 from At The Border.
Joe walks up to a beautiful woman in a restaurant, tells her she will fall madly in love with him.[1]
Joe, manic for walking, walks from LA to Vancouver, writes a book about the psychopathology of tramps, mentions the Russian religious sect the Wanderers.[2][1]
3:20: 'Whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger.' - Nietzsche. Joe recalls Bolkonsky's death at the battle of Borodino in 'War and Peace.'[1]
3:50: 'The famous writer once asked... are we any more significant than microbes under a microscope?'[1]
4:30: Last Christmas, Joe's landlady, dreaming that a mad dog was attacking her, threw her baby daughter against the wall, killing her. She found it droll, began to doubt reality, got her nose trepanned.[1]
5:30: Joe used to go out with a woman whose father had lost his nose as a child to a fungus, had a variety of prostheses. Joe describes her beautiful mother, her dress and manner. The daughter was nondescript so Joe stopped dating her.[1]
7:30: Joe asks if all our past experiences form our present state or if we can be free of them.[1]
8:10: Joe tells the story of Odysseus returning from Troy, hearing an account of his travails, cries for the first time.[1]
8:50: Polish Jews tried to pass themselves as gentiles when the Russians occupied. Eastern European immigrants to the west passed themselves off as nobles.[1]
9:40: 'Snowflakes under a microscope, a desert caravan with camels on a horizon, rain on a railroad coach window, pebbles in a mountain stream, moonlight over the jungle, old photographs, summer lightning, cool white sheets, a crater on the horizon, people with umbrellas.'[1]
10:50: Joe describes a construction site on an old potters' field. Apparently Joe is the architect, sees that the house will not match his plans.[1]
11:40: Joe tells a story from Czesław Miłosz about a Soviet soldier killing a German POW for his sheepskin coat. This story is nearly the same as the original, which is in The Parallax View.[1]
13:40: Kierkegaard on despair, apparently an accurate reference.[1]
14:10: Joe talks about the movie The invisible man, observes that he had to put clothes and bandages on to be seen, asks what we expect people to see in us.[1]
15:10: Joe says that wild animals are comfortable with themselves, aren't self-conscious.[1]
16:20: Joe asks what we think about TV talk shows that see both sides of every issue.[1]
16:50: Joe tells about going to sort-of-church last Sunday.[1]
17:20: Joe tells of a Russian sect that worshipped holes, drills a hole to worship.[1]
19:00: 'Oh, wondrous void, eternal nothingness. I offer myself so that you might cast your inscrutable dear silence upon me. Oh lustrous hole, symbol of the greater glory of absence, darkness, and mystery beyond the realm of human thought. Let me ask for your grace and forgiveness in the knowledge that I shall serve you all the days of my meaningless life.'[1]
19:50: Joe talks about the ambiguities of life, how facts become obsolete, that complete understanding is impossible.[1]
23:00: 'The Bible says, in the beginning was the word. But which word?...'[1]
24:00: Joe describes a surreal trip on a horizontal elevator, calling his father for help; he smokes a pack of Chesterfields in the phone booth all at once.[1]
27:50: Joe tells about his father, the famous surgeon, who blamed his patients when they died under his care, sued them for undermining his practice. After a distraught husband of a patient who died killed him Joe searched for his murderer for so long he forgot what he was searching for.[3]
29:10: Joe's in a railroad station, tries to buy a ticket to Denver, after an absurd exchange he drives. Absurd events follow.[3]
30:20: Joe's in a cemetery.[3]
31:40: Joe tells about rich man who died, his body was taken to Darjeeling to be burnt, but rains put the fire out, then the man revived.[3]
32:20: Joe tells of being the king of Kabala (sp?) whose power correlates with the phases of the moon.[3]
34:10: The Roman army of Aelius Gallus lost its way in north Africa, miguided by his Nabatean guide, eventually made war on an inland sea.[4][3]
35:10 Joe visits Monte Carmel (sp?) monastery, torched during the revolution.[3]
36:20: Joe saw a new play at the Hollywood Bowl, all scenes based on the Bible, all the actors dressed as concentration camp prisoners.[3]
37:20: Someday we'll discover that our real mission on Earth is to host microbes.[3]
38:10: Guy with south Asian accent (sounds like a parody to me) sings (poorly) 'What the world needs now'.[3]
41: The truth about a person is what he or she hides...[3]
41:20: Joe's uncle is trying to get into his home, physician has just helped his wife deliver twins.[3]
42: Child's sense of time is different.[3]
42:40: Dutchman who fought in Indochina contracted tropical disease, saw people as skeletons.[3]
43:20: Joe thinks about all his right hand does for him.[3]
43:50: 'A blind power could not create an amoeba...' Joe argues for Creationism.[3]
45: Joe drives across the country, finds things the same everywhere.[3]
45:50: Joe loves the morning fog...[3]
46:40: In 1900, remains of ancient civilization of Crete were found,[5] Imagines a future archaeologist stumbling across a buried Los Angeles.[3]
47:20: Joe has dream in which he understands everything, forgets when he wakes up.[3]
49:00: Joe narrates aggressive, rude driving.[3]
51:00: Joe tells of his farmer father, who lost it to debt. They moved to the city where he took a job at a screw factory, got caught in the threader, was threaded to death.[1]
52:10: Joe took his place, was attracted to the woman who worked next to him. They walked a mountain path to a cliff, looked out over the empty quarter.[1]
53:50: 'Oh, wondrous void, eternal nothingness, I offer myself so that you might cast your inscrutable dear silence upon me. Oh lustrous hole, symbol of the greater glory of absence, darkness, and mystery, beyond the realm of human thought - let me ask for your grace and your forgiveness in the knowledge that I shall serve you all the days of my meaningless life.'[1]
An early reading of the "compulsion to wander" bit, story of end of WWII, Russian hole worshippers, drill (again the early version), nice absurd lost bit, honking at building to move, rich man becomes wise man after his funeral then recovers his memory and sues everyone to recover his past life, bible scenes played by actors in concentration camp outfits.
Music
This is an incomplete record of the music in this program. If you can add more information, please do.
- "Kakashi (かかし Scarecrow)" - Aragon (from Aragon, 1985) | YouTube [Intro]
- "World Anthem" - Charles Ditto (from In Human Terms, 1987) | YouTube [26:49]
- "Brüder Des Schattens" - Popol Vuh (from Brüder Des Schattens - Söhne Des Lichts, 1978) | YouTube [31:24]
- "What the World Needs Now" - Harvey Sachs (from Unknown, 1987) [38:10]
- "Creatures" - Startled Insects (from Curse Of The Pheromones, 1987) | YouTube [40:32]
- At The Border
- Thank You, You're Beautiful
- Some of this material can be heard in a later version in Philosophy.
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 1.24 originally aired in At The Border
- ↑ I can't find this. There were wandering monks in 19th century Russia, not a sect. See 'The Way of the Pilgrim'
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 originally aired in Thank You, You're Beautiful
- ↑ According to Wikipedia Aelius Gallus was Roman prefect of Egypt 26-24 BCE, undertook an expedition to Arabia (not north Africa), did lose.
- ↑ Knossos was discovered in 1878, first excavated in 1900.