Episode #11 Listening With Adam Schartoff, Filmwax Radio
In this episode I speak with Hudson Valley's Adam Schartoff of Filmwax Radio who tells us about his conversations with famous actors and filmmakers.
Season 3, Episode 4 | Nick and the Assassination of JFK (Irish Centre of Pittsburgh - Pittsburgh, PA)
A last-minute decision to peek into the abandoned Irish Centre of Pittsburgh transforms into a daydream of a haunted heads-up penny and the assassination of JFK.
Conversation with Martha Frankel
Martha Frankel has spent her whole life telling stories. She is the executive director of Woodstock Bookfest, an avid poker player and knitter, and a pretty good cook.
Season 3, Episode 3 | Megan and the Very Bad Dream (Tillson Elementary - Tillson, NY)
What do Blake’s sister, a giant, and a very bad dream have in common? Find out as Blake guides you through the abandoned Tillson Elementary School where he ponders his relationship with his sister and a recurring nightmare he had as a child.
Episode #10 Listening with Alvin Eng, Playwright & Author
In this episode I talk with Alvin Eng the author of "Our Laundry, Our Town: My Chinese American Life from Flushing to the Downtown Stage and Beyond." He tells us about his experience living in a Chinese laundry where Chinese and English were both heard, how that defined his love for rock and roll and shaped his writing.
Alvin Eng is a native NYC playwright, memoirist, performer, acoustic punk rock raconteur and educator. His plays and performances have been seen Off-Broadway, throughout the U.S., as well as in Paris, Hong Kong and Guangzhou, China.
He is also the author of "Three Trees: A Portrait Play of Alberto Giacometti & Isaku Yanaihara," "Tokens? The NYC Asian American Experience On Stage An Oral History and Play Anthology." He produced the musical "Last Hand Laundry in Chinatown" and created the solo performance work, "The Last Emperor of Flushing."
Season 3, Episode 2 | Nazis in the Canyon (Murphy Ranch - Los Angeles, CA)
Once upon a time, there was an active Nazi compound situated in a Los Angeles canyon. After it was emptied of its filth in 1948, Murphy Ranch sat abandoned for years before the city transformed it into a public park, where, over time, the architectural remnants of evil slowly faded away, reclaimed by the dirt and stone of the canyon.
Made in Kingston, NY
