What Do We Do When Icons Die?
FACE FRONT! Dazzlin’ Don Grant and Harrumphin’ Harry Chute deliver another modern classic in this new age of podcast entertainment! When Icons die, where does that leave the rest of us??!
FACE FRONT! Dazzlin’ Don Grant and Harrumphin’ Harry Chute deliver another modern classic in this new age of podcast entertainment! When Icons die, where does that leave the rest of us??!
Terrorism is defined in over a hundred different ways, with dozens of different justifications. This week the guys discuss the utility of differentiating international vs. domestic, understanding terrorism through different media, radicalization, and more lighthearted subject matter.
The guys discuss all things Halloween! The traditions, horror film icons and what horror says of us as people!
What is the nature of our hate? How do we do it? How do we come to feel anything towards things, both popular and unpopular? This episode begins in fresh territory (with the Kardashians) and only burrows down weirder paths, cataloging popular hate, general acceptance, memes and darker territory.
Don and Harry risk making the most indulgent episode ever, discussing their favorite things and people whilst reconciling with what about them is tough to talk about.
Continuing a conversation that began in the final days of the Battle Beyond Planet X, Harry and Donovan look at three treasury edition prestige format DC comic books from writer Paul Dini and painter Alex Ross – Superman: Peace on Earth, Batman: War on Crime and Wonder Woman: Spirit of Truth – and address the … More If Superheroes Were Real, Would the World Be a Better Place? (Round 2)
This week the guys are joined by the infamous Stella of Batgirl to Oracle: The Barbara Gordon Podcast to discuss empathy, defining it and understanding how it helps maintain a society, as well as recognizing its limits.
This week Donovan and Harrison discuss artists expressing their sexuality through their creative works. Is that an inevitability for a creator? How much does sexuality fuel our creative energy? How much does it inform it?
Peter returns to disabuse any notions that the majority of LGBT representation through media history was done for LGBT audiences.