Brother, Mine - An Audio Drama Podcast Por Hand Forged Fiction arte de portada

Brother, Mine - An Audio Drama

Brother, Mine - An Audio Drama

De: Hand Forged Fiction
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Malcolm O'Brien, a young man adopted into a life of advantage, returns to the neighborhood of his birth seeking credibility from a father he's never known. To determine his own destiny and apply privilege to a societal cause, he finds himself at odds with everyone he’s ever called family both old and new.

An audio drama based on the stage play - Brother, Mine by KC Keene and Eric Dente.

With an original score and songs by Matt Parker.

Sound and spatial design by Will Pickens & Eric Dente

Starring: Drew Drake, Rob Karma Robinson, Elizabeth Brewster, Andrew Kaempfer, and Rob Hille.

Hand Forged Fiction
Arte Entretenimiento y Artes Escénicas
Episodios
  • Ep. 9 - Inventory
    Feb 6 2024

    Season One Finale - Malcolm and Raymond negotiate a new balance in their relationship. A door opens and a new chapter begins.

    With Drew Drake as Malcolm O'Brien, Rob Karma Robinson as Raymond Aurum, and Elizabeth Brewster as Sarah O'Brien.

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    14 m
  • Ep. 8 - Fight Amongst Yourselves
    Jun 18 2023

    The best intentions cut deepest when they come home to roost.

    Más Menos
    13 m
  • Ep. 7 - No More Handouts
    Oct 14 2022

    Malcolm must find the courage of his conviction when faced with the reality of cost.

    With Drew Drake as Malcolm O'Brien and Rob Karma Robinson as Raymond Aurum.

    Más Menos
    10 m
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I started with the first one mostly on elitism and Pythagoras. Any commentary on Pythagoras that doesn't start with "we don't know much about him with certainty" because he never wrote anything, and it all comes from biased or mythologized secondhand accounts is suspect. There is simply too much wrong with this episode. Why is it so difficult to find a good math Podcast in which people stay in their lane of what they know, or at least have guests that do? Sounds like a bunch of pompous hipsters. Sad..
They need to stop trying too hard to sloppily fit everything to their narrative about elitism. There was obviously a lot of politics involved when opponents labeled Pope Sylvester II a sorcerer. But the way these hipsters present it, with zero social or cultural nuance regarding the times, it was all because he dared to use foreign Arabic numerals. They are straining to have everything fit their per-determined narrative about elitism. They give a long quote from a Galilean book presented as some kind of lame "proof” of Aristotelian ignorance, but they do not bother to mention that it is a fictional dialogue. The language and translations are probably deceiving but again, they are determined to keep themselves and the listener stuck within their modern lens.

Still wondering where the math is and how this makes math more accessible.

They then provide a questionable definition about cults stating they all have the characteristic of starving and restricting adherents into submission, even ridiculously positing out of thin air that that makes sense evolutionary. Sure, why not throw in some armchair evolutionary biology too. But actually, competition makes just as much sense as cooperation evolutionary, probably even more so. The audacity to think they can apply a questionable modern definition to something so long ago that we have little evidence of is absurd. Everything was called a "cult" in those ancient Greek days, partly because they didn't have a word for religion. These people are ignorantly stuck in their modern hipster lens of what "cult" means combined with the story of the guy who was supposedly murdered for revealing the irrationals (probably a baloney account for all that we know) and then essentially concluding that the Pythagoreans must be an elitist cult no different than David Koresh or something. I am not sure how these hipsters got degrees.

Epsiode 1 - Too much non-math and pomposity.

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