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Jabberwocky

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Posts posted by Jabberwocky

  1. 8 hours ago, k12 said:

    I am guessing as he was locked in a cage for the majority of his life and realized he was not getting out he wishes he could have done things differently 

    If he did he would have said so while he was still alive. He'd been in and out of jails and reform schools almost all of his life. That was what he was accustomed to. In his own twisted logic, just because he was physically in prison - his mind wasn't. The guy was a master manipulator and played head games with everybody he came in contact with. He grew up in a very rough environment. He got his followers to commit murder on innocent people. He never repented or even took culpability. All of that was his "game" and he won it by taking all of that to his grave.

  2. 10 hours ago, Len Cnut said:

    Y'know...i do love the fuckin' shit you come up with :lol:  A  Jabberwocky post is essential viewing here in Len Land.  Like that fuckin' fuckin' thread you made about the fuckin' nether regions of youtube, I wish I could've contributed to that but nothing I have ever got to is worthy but you do dig out some crazy shit :lol:

    :lol:Thanks Lenny. I use YouTube like someone who has a TV with a billion channels on it. Every genre of music has at least one dedicated video or documentary about it.

  3. Twin Peaks’ Season 4: Mark Frost Is Considering Making New Episodes, Showtime ‘Musing as Well’ — Exclusive

    David Lynch's long-time writing partner said he hasn't decided yet if he'll do another season, but it's an open question he is considering.

    http://www.indiewire.com/2017/10/twin-peaks-season-4-mark-frost-david-lynch-showtime-1201891106/

    David Lynch’s “Twin Peaks” co-creator Mark Frost said today that he hasn’t decided yet if the show will come back for a fourth season, but it is something that is being considered.

    “I haven’t decided yet,” said Frost in an interview with IndieWire. “I think it’s still an open question and it’s one that we’re looking at and one that I think Showtime is musing as well.”

    Back in September, Lynch said that he hadn’t ruled out a fourth season. He told a crowd at the Belgrade Culture Centre in Serbia, where his photos were being exhibited, that it was too early to say anything and teased that a new season may entirely depend on how long it takes to develop.

    Frost and Lynch’s close working relationship and friendship dates back 30 years, as Frost — responsible for more of the mythology and narrative world of “Twin Peaks” than he’s sometimes given credit for — is as integral to the show’s creation as Lynch himself. It was Frost, back in 2012, who came up with the initial idea of how the duo could revisit the world of the show more than two decades after it went off the air.

    “The anchor [for ‘Twin Peaks: The Return’] and starting point came from the moment we revisited the last episode of the original show,” said Frost. “Cooper’s dilemma of when Good Cooper trapped Bad Cooper [both played by Kyle MacLachlan] out and that weirdly prescient line of the spirit of Laura’s whispering to Cooper, ‘I will see you again in 25 years.’ That was the springboard to the story and that is where I saw the opening to bring us back and that is what I proposed to David when we got back together in 2012 and said this is where we can pick up the thread.”

    It was an idea that set into motion a nonstop and tireless four-and-half years for Lynch in writing the show with Frost, then shooting and editing the 18 episodes. It’s an enormous commitment, and one that Frost says neither he nor Lynch takes lightly.

    “It’s something you have to think long and hard about,” said Frost. “We’ll make the decision when the time is right. There certainly is no sense of urgency about it.”

    Frost’s second book about the show, “Twin Peaks: The Final Dossier” comes out Tuesday, October 31. This weekend he will take part in the Screenwriting Conference at the Austin Film Festival, where on Saturday one of the panels is “A Conversation with Mark Frost.”

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  4. Necro-bumping this thread for news.

    Exclusive “Twin Peaks: The Final Dossier” Audiobook Excerpt Reveals The Death Of A Character From The Original Series

    http://welcometotwinpeaks.com/news/twin-peaks-the-final-dossier-audiobook/

    With only a week left until the official release of Mark Frost’s Twin Peaks: The Final Dossier, Audible has listed the digital audio version of Mark Frost’s Twin Peaks: The Final Dossier in their extensive library. Just like on The Secret History of Twin Peaks, Annie Wersching reprises her role as (now) Blue Rose Task Force member Tamara Preston. No other voice actors have been confirmed.

    Before the 3-hour audiobook becomes available on Halloween (midnight PST on October 31, 2017) —completely free for those who haven’t tried Audible yet— here’s an exclusive 150-second excerpt which reveals the tragic demise (and birth name) of a character from the original series by way of a priceless autopsy report by the always eloquent FBI Special Agent Albert Rosenfield.

     

     

  5. We've all found ourselves on what is called "The Weird Side Of Youtube" when clicking random link after random link. Post videos that you have seen when you've been on YouTube at 12 o'clock at night (times may vary LOL). Whether it is something funny, bizarre, musical, or scary it all goes here.

    I Feel Fantastic

     

    Agamemnon Counterpart

     

    Robert Alberg - I Been Single All My Life

     

    Soap Scum

     

  6. How can we have a mysterious music stars thread and not mention The Residents? They aren't really a band but an artist collective that branch not only into music but film, and performance art. Nobody even knows what any of the members look like.

     

    • Like 2
  7. While not a mainstream artist (he's an outsider artist), it doesn't get anymore mysterious than Jandek. He's been performing since 1978 and did only one official interview back in 1985 for the first issue of Spin magazine. He only started performing live around 5 or 6 years ago. Live performances are different than what he records (live shows are all improvised). He's released about 50 or 60 albums. Some are solo acoustic, some electric, full band, whatever comes to his mind.

    Track down the documentary about him called "Jandek On Corwoord" that came out about 10 years ago. Here's the trailer for it.

     

    And here is a sample track

     

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