PsiOp Radio 162 – 120513
PsiOp Radio 162 – 120513
Posted 3 days ago

 
POR120513a.mp3
 Free Chen Guangcheng Updates

Grassroots Campaigns Support Chen Guangcheng
http://humanrightsinchina.wordpress.com/2012/04/22/grassroots-campaigns-support-chen-guangcheng/

http://www.psiopradio.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=4776&action=edit
AusTex Headlines

Incumbent Constable files lawsuit against opponent (Video)
http://www.kvue.com/news/local/Incumbent-Constable-files-lawsuit-against-opponent-149595725.html
Man sues city over seizure of house with underground shelter (Video)
http://www.statesman.com/news/local/man-sues-city-over-seizure-of-house-with-2345041.html

Travis County Constable, Precinct 2: Mud…

PsiOp Radio 162 – 120513
Soundscape – 120506 backyard near dusk
Soundscape – 120506 backyard near dusk
Posted 11 days ago

Soundscape – 120506 backyard near dusk (mp3)

View at audioboo.fm

Check out the original source here
Anomaly’s boos

Check out the original source here
ANOMALY RADIO » Anomaly Radio Round-Up

www.AnomalyRadio.com

Soundscape – 120506 backyard near dusk
PsiOp Radio 161 – 120503
PsiOp Radio 161 – 120503
Posted 13 days ago

PsiOp-Radio 161: May 3rd, 2012
POR120503a.mp3

Leslie (RIP) & Russ at “Keep Austin Weird Fest 2007″ (Below)
Austin & Texas Weird Headlines

WEIRD Magazine‘s 100th Issue and 10 Year Anniversary – Coming Soon! Issue…

PsiOp Radio 161 – 120503
Anomaly Archives eNews – February/March/April 2012
Anomaly Archives eNews – February/March/April…
Posted 38 days ago

ANOMALY ARCHIVES eNEWSLETTER
February / March / April 2012
Subscribe to the list by sending an email to:
You can visit the archived back issues here on the web and also…

Anomaly Archives eNews – February/March/April…
Free Lecture – Katya’s Encounters – February 28th
Free Lecture – Katya’s Encounters – February …
Posted 83 days ago

This latest Consciousness Connections presentation sponsored by INACS (the Institute for Neuroscience and Consciousness Study) should be fantastic. Katya is a phenomenal mind and excellent presenter.
- SMiles
 
Free Lecture – Katya’s…

Free Lecture – Katya’s Encounters – February …
PsiOp Radio 160 – 120205 Five-Year Anniversary Show
PsiOp Radio 160 – 120205 Five-Year Anniversar…
Posted 101 days ago

POR120205a.mp3
Music in this episode:

на Красной площади с песней ПУТИН ЗАССАЛ – Pussy Riot
Letter from God to Man – dan le sac Vs Scroobius Pip
Invincible – Muse
Strange Overtones – Brian Eno…

PsiOp Radio 160 – 120205 Five-Year Anniversar…
Anomaly Archives eNews – Nov/Dec 2011 and January 2012
Anomaly Archives eNews – Nov/Dec 2011 and Jan…
Posted 112 days ago

ANOMALY ARCHIVES eNEWSLETTER
Nov/Dec 2011 and January 2012
Subscribe to the list by sending an email to:
You can visit the archived back issues here on the web and also at…

Anomaly Archives eNews – Nov/Dec 2011 and Jan…
Anomaly Radio NewsByte 1/23/12 am
Anomaly Radio NewsByte 1/23/12 am
Posted 115 days ago

Anomaly Radio NewsByte 1/23/12 am (mp3)

View at audioboo.fm

Check out the original source here
Anomaly’s boos

Check out the original source here
ANOMALY RADIO » Anomaly Radio Round-Up

www.AnomalyRadio.com

Anomaly Radio NewsByte 1/23/12 am
Anomaly Radio News 1/22/12 am
Anomaly Radio News 1/22/12 am
Posted 116 days ago

Anomaly Radio News 1/22/12 am (mp3)

View at audioboo.fm

Check out the original source here
Anomaly’s boos

Check out the original source here
ANOMALY RADIO » Anomaly Radio Round-Up

www.AnomalyRadio.com

Anomaly Radio News 1/22/12 am
PsiOp Radio podcast 159 – 120116
PsiOp Radio podcast 159 – 120116
Posted 121 days ago

Happy Holidays / Happy New Year to PsiOp-Radio Listeners

POR120116a.mp3
 Closing / Outro Music: Amon Tobin’s Splinter Cell soundtrack
Occupy Austin Courts! January 19th

NEWS LINKS
PsiOp-Radio Listener News Translation:
Warsaw, November 11th: The Nationalist Riots…

PsiOp Radio podcast 159 – 120116
PreviousNext

Posts Tagged ‘Movies’


If your brain’s been bugged, give a listen to this album

May 10th, 2002

The Plain Dealer on Cleveland.com, May 9, 2002,
cleveland.com
Music News

If your brain’s been bugged, give a listen to this album
05/09/02

John Soeder
Plain Dealer Pop Music Critic

As a member of the Kinks, rock ‘n’ roller Dave Davies was a key figure in the British Invasion of the 1960s. Now he’s into space invaders.

For his latest solo project, ‘Bug’, the singer-guitarist has cooked up a doozy of a concept album about how our lives are manipulated by mind- controlling implants. And who planted those nasty devices in our noggins, you ask? Why, the aliens, of course!

“It’s tongue in cheek,” Davies says, not entirely convincingly. He’ll perform tonight at the Beachland Ballroom and Tavern, backed by a four-piece band.

‘Bug’, which came out Tuesday, is “a metaphor for getting rid of all the negative things holding us back,” Davies says during a recent phone interview. “It’s very much a rock ‘n’ roll record. … But I also try to address some issues, like electromagnetic pollution.”

The title track, “True Phenomenon,” “Whose [sic] Foolin’ Who” and other new tunes embrace sci-fi themes and conspiracy theories, with plenty of crunchy, Kinks-style power chords ringing out throughout the album. If the Weekly World News ran CD reviews, this one would get five stars.

The 55-year-old Davies “very much” believes we are not alone in the universe. “I’ve been fairly involved with some UFO research groups over the years,” says this dedicated follower of paranormal activity.

Apparently, extraterrestrials have been fairly involved with Davies, too. In his autobiography, ‘Kink’, he recounts how “strange voices” struck up a telepathic conversation with him before a 1982 concert.

“The intelligences did not tell me who they were,” he writes, “but two of them said they had always been my spirit guides and two others were entities that were not of this Earth, but were involved in missions here as watchers and nurturers of our race.”

Twenty years later, Davies is still coming to terms with his “epiphany,” as he describes the close encounter. “I was fortunate to have been given a lot of information all at once,”
he says. “It takes a long time for some of this stuff to actually seep into the conscious mind…. It’s all related to my personal growth, to a consciousness shift.”

On a less metaphysical note, the good news for Kinks fans is that Davies recently has been communicating (via e-mail, not telepathically) with his sibling rival Ray, the band’s frontman.

“We’re not quite sure what to do, but we definitely want to work together on something,” Davies says. “I don’t want it to be a purely retro thing. I’d like it to be something new.”

The oft-bickering brothers haven’t teamed up for a Kinks album since “To the Bone,” released in 1994 in their native England and two years later in the United States. It featured stripped-down reworkings of “You Really Got Me,” “All Day and All of the
Night” and other classic-rock keepers from the Kinks catalog. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.

Alongside selections from ‘Bug’, Davies has been dusting off Kinks favorites during his solo gigs.

“I’m very proud to be associated with such a body of work,” he says. “Ray and I work best when we give each other space to create… I’ve always tried to nurture his ideas, because he’s a special person, as well as being an [expletive].”

Contact John Soeder at:

jsoeder@plaind.com, 216-999-4562

Mothman Prophecies reviewed

January 27th, 2002

Source: The Scarborough Mirror – Toronto
Sunday, January 27, 2002
Film Review by Stuart Green

Mothman Prophecies Heavy On Horror, Chills

Its not easy to make a monster movie that never shows the
monster. It takes a certain skill on the director’s part to make
us believe there is this menacing being or beast or entity
that’s threatening and tormenting our protagonists without
relying on special effects and pup pets to give the monster
form.

But director Mark Pellington has done just that with the
effective and chilling supernatural thriller ‘The Mothman
Prophecies’.

Based on actual events in West Virginia more than 30 years ago,
the film is the eeriest, smartest and most unpredictable tale
of other-worldly happenings since ‘The Sixth Sense’, with the
added impact of having its roots in real life happenings.

‘The Mothman Prophecies’ crosses ‘X-Files’-like paranormal
investigation and the compelling story of a man trying to get
over the death of his wife some two years earlier.

Richard Gere stars as the grieving widower, a journalist named
John Klein, who gets lost on his way to an interview and ends up
in Point Pleasant, W.Va., some 600 miles from his intended
destination with no recollection of how he got there.

But he, quickly discovers that being lost and without a
functioning automobile is the least of his troubles. It seems
there have been all sorts of strange goings on in the town
that local police are at a loss to explain.

And the more he hears about those goings on, the closer to home
they hit. Apparently dozens of townsfolk have been reporting
seeing a strange moth or bird-like creature and hearing odd
squeals emanating from their telephone receivers.

Klein is particularly struck by the Mothman sightings as his
wife claimed to have had the same vision shortly before she
died.

He quickly teams up with a local cop (Laura Linney) and puts his
investigative journalism skills to use as he attempts to
discover the reality behind the fantastic stories.

The investigation leads him to a local mystery man and a Chicago
author who reveal the sightings are premonitions of a tragic
event that Klein is determined to prevent.

Based on John A. Keel’s 1975 book of the same name, ‘The Mothman
Prophecies’ is part thriller, part love story and part urban
legend.

But as realized by Pellington (director of the equally powerful
crime thriller ‘Arlington Road’), it’s almost all horror. The
former music video maverick turned feature film director has
obviously spent a great deal of time watching movies like ‘The
Exorcist’ and ‘Carrie’ or anything by Alfred Hitchcock that
effectively use lighting, sets and music to evoke terror. We
only ever catch brief glimpses of the Mothman and even those
glimpses are not definitive in portraying the creature.

Gore and Linney as the hapless duo trying to get to the bottom
of the mystery are great as a Mulder and Scully team; he a
believer, she a skeptic. But it’s Will Patton as a local who is
the conduit between the real and supernatural worlds who gives
the film’s most dynamic performance. He’s angry, confused and
scared to death of what’s going on around him and it shows.

Pellington uses him wisely to punctuate an already well-crafted
movie.

‘The Mothman Prophecies’ is both creepy and captivating… and
jump-out-of-your seat scary as hell too.

<!– –>