Coast to Coast, April 18, 2020; Seth Auberon, Pfc. Sandoval, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Lycanthrope (pinterest.com) |
(Tim Binnall) Residents of Ocozocoautla de Espinosa or "Coita" in Chiapas, Mexico are on edge over reports of a werewolf-like creature, a lycanthrope or "wolf person." The panic came to light on social media last week. Residents have been disturbed at night by unsettling sounds of what seems to be howling and gunshots and reported sightings. The beast is said to be 6'5" and capable of leaping 9 feet in the air, with an unpleasant odor, and is seemingly impervious to bullets. There are many similarities with reports of the "Springman" haunting Thrissur, India over the last few weeks, with both described as supernatural entities with fantastic abilities keeping residents up at night. One explanation put forward by a psychologist is that coronavirus concerns may manifest as a kind of mass hysteria about an invisible danger to the community.
Last night's show
Last night's show
Onboard UFO Encounters |
Brooks Arthur has crossed paths with some of the most vital people of the pop and rock era. As an engineer and producer, Arthur's been involved in seminal moments in rock history and has produced albums for Dusty Springfield, Janis Ian, and comedy legend Robin Williams. Guest Host Richard Syrett discusses his history in the music business, like having a hand in The Shangri-Las, who had the hit "Remember" (shown above)." More
What is "Coast to Coast"?
Wolfman, Werewolf, Dogman: lycanthropes |
Coast to Coast is the largest syndicated radio show in the U.S. The only thing is that it takes place all night and goes away by morning. It emanates out of Los Angeles, California and St. Louis, Missouri with over 800 affiliates. It's bound to be playing on a radio station near everyone in the country and online for everyone else. Los Angeles gets more than one broadcast with a good enough antenna, but it comes over the clear channel KFI 640 AM from 10:00 PM to 2:00 AM and replays until 5:00 AM. It is a horrible experience due to the mind deadening repetition of very poorly made commercials spots in what seems to be an effort to get listeners to sign up for the paid ($55/year), commercial-free, subscription-based version.
It's not the show going off the rails but Poland's version of the flying car.
I get drunk, but I get paid too much to drink here. |
I'm ain't a drunk tramp. |
The Atlantic's Timothy Lavin wrote: "Noory can be an uneven broadcaster. Sometimes he seems to not pay full attention to his guests, offers strangely obvious [often moronic and self-serving, virtue-signaling] commentary, or — and this has alienated some fans — ...listens [and silently hangs up on most] all of his callers [without a close or anyone seeming to notice that he turns down the volume on nearly everyone then misdirects what they were saying back to his own agenda]."
No comments:
Post a Comment