- Oct 29, 2021Become a member of The Antifada in order to view this post
- Oct 29, 202100:0000:41
Happy Halloweekend! Jamie and Leslie are back with a seasonally appropriate discussion of two takes on the same tale from two towering directors: "Bram Stoker's Dracula" (1992), directed by Francis Ford Coppola, and "Nosferatu the Vampyre" (1979), written and directed by Werner Herzog.
Which film contains the more convincing worldview? Which Dracula is incel, and which is volcel? Does Mina come off cooler than she should because she's played by Winona Ryder? All will be revealed.
Subscribe to The Antifada's premium feed to access the rest of this frighteningly fun series, plus tons of other bonus content and our Discord community! Patreon.com/TheAntifada
NYC listeners come to Jamie's Halloween cover bands show on 10/31!: https://bit.ly/3besiBW
- Oct 27, 202100:0047:07
After the GSA convention (Gothic Socialists of America) the Antifidada crew spends a night at a hotel made famous by the book The Palmer Hotel, a collection of spooky short stories set over a century at a downtown hotel. $20. Venmo: Rick-Paulas, PayPal: RickPaulas@gmail, CashApp: $RickPaulas. Include address.
Please help pay for our ptsd therapy by becoming a patron
NYC listeners come to Jamie's Halloween cover bands show 10/31!: https://bit.ly/3besiBW
- Oct 24, 202100:0004:15
In the second part of our first episode of Armed Love, Peter Coyote discusses his interest in Zen, how it came to be so influential to the beatniks and hippies, and his background with indigenous solidarity, particularly the campaign to free Leonard Peltier.
Coyote recommends Peter Matthiessen's In the Spirit of Crazy Horse regarding Peltier, and The New Buddhism by David Brazier and How the Swans came to the Lake by Rick Fields about Zen Buddhism.
The full episode is available free at Patreon.com/TheAntifada. If you like what we do, please support the show by becoming a patron and we'll send you a union-made letterpress postcard!
Opening song: Pink Fairies - Do it
Closing song - John Trudell - Look at Us / Peltier / Aim Song
- Oct 20, 202100:00:0001:15:14
We begin our new series on the revolutionary counterculture of the sixties by interviewing Peter Coyote, founding member of the Diggers -- an anarchist group from San Francisco whose free stores, tie-died shirts, free concerts, and activist street theater opened the gates of the Haight to tens of thousands of dropouts and helped define the sixties aesthetic. But by '67, the Diggers were already trying to escape the hippie movement by forming a network of revolutionary communes.
Joining Andy for the interview is Sean Lovitt, researcher sixties revolutionary groups and author of Mimeo Insurrection: The Sixties Underground Press and Long Hot Summer of Riots
Topics discussed include: The SF Mime Troop and their controversial minstrel show, the formation of the Diggers, the alleged insurrectionary activities, the Hells Angels, psychedelic drug culture and conspiracies, and the movements against war and for racial justice then and now.
For Part 2 of the series visit Patreon.com/TheAntifada
Check out Peter Coyote's books Sleeping Where I fall and Rainman’s Third Cure
And Diane di Prima's Revolutionary Letters
Intro song: Patti Smith - Citizen Ship
Outro Song - My Chemical Romance - Desolation Row
- Oct 13, 202100:00:0001:17:16
Jamie and Sean are joined by superproducer Paul Channelstrip (@aufhebenkultur) (Antifada twitch channel, Everybody Loves Communism, many more) for a laid back episode about the zoo, a high profile bird murder, and the tendency of the rate of treats to fall over time. Why is the supply chain having a normal one and what does it mean for the current phase of capitalism?
You can watch this trio shoot the shit from 3pm-5pm ET every Wednesday and Friday at Twitch.tv/TheAntifada!
Check out Paul's many projects:
Everybody Loves Communism <--Jamie's new history and theory pod
closing song: Berner - Status
- Oct 6, 202100:00:0001:25:40
The madlads from TrashFuture are back! Sean is joined by Riley (@raaleh) and Nate (@inthesedeserts) to discuss the very public meltdown of, well, you know, the entire British civilization. As it turns out, things in the UK are even more bleak than they appear from across the pond: supply chains breaking down, petrol stations empty, services being cut, etc. But even more dire, and darkly funny, is the reaction of the British ruling class' which absolutely refuses to rule. Put on your schadenfreude caps before queuing up for this one.
For excellent bonus content, access to our Discord and more become a patron today at www.patreon.com/theantifada. We're currently running another promotion so help us get to the lucky number 1917 and get a free Antifada prize pack with stickers and postcards!
Good writers on the UK mentioned by Nate:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6372431-when-the-lights-went-out
https://tribunemag.co.uk/author/owen-hatherley
Outro: Stormzy - Disapointed
- Sep 29, 202100:00:0001:19:20
Jamie and Andy are joined by Natasha Lennard (@NatashaLennard), contributing writer at The Intercept and author of "Being Numerous: Essays on Non-Fascist Life," to commemorate Occupy Wall Street's ten-year anniversary. What are people erasing when they remember Occupy solely as something that "changed the conversation" around wealth inequality? How did the occupiers demonstrate anarchist politics in action? And what lessons can we carry into the future as we fight not merely to shore up the system, but to overthrow it?
Natasha on OWS:
https://theintercept.com/2016/10/01/occupy-wall-street-brooklyn-bridge-five-years/
https://www.thenation.com/article/activism/occupy-socialist-anarchist/
Audio: Slavoj Zizek speaks at OWS: https://imposemagazine.com/bytes/slavoj-zizek-at-occupy-wall-street-transcript
"Peanut butter man" is alive and well and asks that we support LES Food Not Bombs: tiktok.com/@lesfoodnotbombs, Instagram.com/lesfoodnotbombs
Closing song: Third Eye Blind - If There Ever Was a Time
Support the show at Patreon.com/TheAntifada!
- Sep 22, 202100:00:0001:08:37
Sean is joined by special guest Adam H Johnson (@adamjohnsonnyc), writer and host of the excellent Citations Needed podcast, to discuss the political economy of mass media, how consent is manufactured and the myriad ways in which the capitalist press is complicit even in a declining US empire.
Then, with some extra time, Sean gives a briefing of several recent strikes and what they might mean for organized labor going forward.
Links:
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/09/13/the-other-afghan-women
https://labornotes.org/2021/09/ten-thousand-uaw-members-gear-strike-vote-john-deere
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/09/13/pari-s13.html
Closing song: B.o.B. - Arena
- Sep 17, 202100:0004:15
The crew discuss some of the cultural changes that happened in New York City and the country following the attacks of September 11th through the lens of the biggest band of that era, The Strokes.
Sign up as a member at Patreon.com/theAntifada to unlock this episode and all of our fine bonus content!
search