By Jack Silbert on February 18, 2025
EPISODE #629: BLACK HISTORY MONTH 2025
Tampa Red — “Happy Jack” [ALTERNATE THEME]
Brenda & the Tabulations — “Who’s Lovin’ You”
Earl Lewis & the Channels — “The Gleam in Your Eye”
The Chantels — “I Can’t Take It”
Dangerdoom feat. Talib Kweli — “Old School Rules”
Faye Adams — “I’ll Be True”
Freddy King — “Have You Ever Loved a Woman”
The Dixie Cups — “Iko Iko”
The Paragons — “Florence”
The Jesters — “The Wind”
The Marvelettes — “Danger Heartbreak Dead Ahead”
The Originals — “Suspicion”
The Ethics — “There’ll Be a Sweet Tomorrow”
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes — “Satisfaction Guaranteed (or Take Your Money Back)”
Archie Bell & the Drells — “Tighten Up”
The Friends of Distinction — “Grazing in the Grass”
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Archie Bell and the Drells, Brenda and the Tabulations, Chantels, Dangerdoom, Earl Lewis and the Channels, Faye Adams, Freddie King, Freddy King, Friends of Distinction, Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes, MF Doom, Talib Kweli, Tampa Red, The Dixie Cups, The Ethics, The Jesters, The Marvelettes, The Originals, The Paragons
By Jack Silbert on February 16, 2025
Posted in poems | Tagged Chris Pine, Saturday Night Live
By Jack Silbert on February 13, 2025
“President” Donald Trump replaced the Kennedy Center’s board of trustees with braindead loyalists, who immediately installed him as the once great organization’s chairman. Soon after, the Kennedy Center announced the slate of 2025 recipients for its Honors.
• Kid Rock
• Scott Baio
• Arnold Palmer’s schlong
• Hannibal Lecter
• The Hamburglar
• Kyle Rittenhouse
• Snidely Whiplash
• Morganna the Kissing Bandit
• Bernhard Goetz
• A plastic straw in a glass of motor oil
Posted in satire | Tagged Donald Trump, Kennedy Center, Kennedy Center Honors
By Jack Silbert on February 11, 2025
EPISODE #628: VALENTINE’S DAY 2025 (HEARTBREAK II)
Erika Sherger — “Valentine” [ALTERNATE THEME]
Stevie Wonder — “Tuesday Heartbreak”
Laura Cantrell — “Don’t Break the Heart”
Bruce Springsteen — “What Becomes of the Brokenhearted”
Elvis Presley — “You’re a Heartbreaker”
Sensational Country Blues Wonders — “I’m a Heartbreaker”
Fascinations Grand Chorus — “Sunny Day (A Tale of Heartbreak)”
Pale Lights — “Another Broken Heart”
La Sera — “Break My Heart”
Johnny Cash — “Sea of Heartbreak”
Roseanne Cash — “The Way We Make a Broken Heart”
The Hypos — “Heartbroke Town”
Sweet Nobody — “Why Don’t You Break My Heart”
Los Campesinos — “Broken Heartbeats Sound Like Breakbeats”
Tiny Lights — “Flowers Through the Air” r.i.p. John Mastro
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Presley, Erika Sherger, Fascinations Grand Chorus, Johnny Cash, La Sera, Laura Cantrell, Los Campesinos, Pale Lights, Roseanne Cash, Sensational Country Blues Wonders, Stevie Wonder, Sweet Nobody, The Hypos, Tiny Lights, Valentine's Day
By Jack Silbert on February 8, 2025
4.5 stars out of 5
Despite being made in Iran by Iranians, this is not Iran’s submission as Best International Feature for this year’s Academy Awards. That’s because writer/director Mohammad Rasoulof made the film — which is highly critical of Iran’s theocratic government — in secret, and then fled to Germany. Three of his lead actresses have followed suit, while another is — chillingly — not being allowed to leave the country. That the authoritarian rule on display seems increasingly feasible here as well, under the second Trump regime, only adds greater urgency to the film.
We meet career bureaucrat Iman, finally promoted to investigative judge. He quickly learns that his own understanding of due process is irrelevant in his new position; Iman is also issued a gun as the job will likely earn him enemies. Meanwhile, we meet his wife Najmeh and two daughters: college student Rezvan and high-schooler Sana. Even in this strict society, they are modern girls, interested in fashion, music, and social media. Najmeh explains to them that with Dad’s new post, they’ll have to be much more demure in public, to not draw any attention to the family and Iman.
But the daughters can’t help but be fascinated by the female-led protests in the streets sparked by the suspicious (real-life) death of young Mahsa Amini, arrested for not wearing her hijab. The girls hear shouts of “down with the theocracy!”, and see on their phones the violent crackdown by the police, while none of this is being covered honestly by the state-run media. The growing protests creates great conflict at home, the girls realizing that their dad is now part of the problem (signing off on arrested protesters), with Mom caught in the middle.
Sohella Golestani is brilliant as the mother. She shifts seamlessly from nurturing wife, caring for her husband who is riddled with anxiety from the new job, to scolding mom who is dreaming of the better life now possible for her family. Then ultimately we see her overarching need to be a protective mom at all costs. This transition is moving and heartbreaking.
We see Iman (actor Missagh Zareh) go in the other direction; it’s frightening as we see humanity drained from him. And the girls — actresses Mahsa Rostami and Setareh Maleki — each know when to take a stand despite knowing the price they’ll pay at home. (Interestingly, one of the only bits of English we see in the movie is a decorative sign in the girls’ room reading Never Ever Give Up.)
Director Rasoulof cleverly ratchets up the family tension to match the rising tension in the streets. In a harrowing touch, he frequently inserts real cell-phone footage of the brave protests and the over-the-top police response. And when things reach the boiling point, Rasoulof goes full Hitchcock the rest of the way out; the message being that the government has created an untenable situation where no one can be trusted.
Mohammad Rasoulof, his cast, and crew risked so much to get this important story out there. That they accomplished it with finessed filmmaking, honest writing that blends the political with the personal, and extremely heartfelt performances deserves our attention, our praise, and hopefully motivates us to be vilgilent for our own rights.
Posted in movie reviews | Tagged 20s movies, Iran, Mahsa Amini, Mohammad Rasoulof
By Jack Silbert on February 4, 2025
EPISODE #627: TERRY MCCARTHY
Theme chosen by 2024 contest winner… Terry McCarthy! All songs by Terry McCarthy unless otherwise noted.
The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]
Kirsty MacColl — “Terry”
“It’s Beautiful”
“The One Never Came”
“Constellation Nora”
“Stay With You”
“Your Side of the Story”
“Margery Anne”
“Just Today”
The Porchistas — “The Tierney’s Tavern Song”
The Nutley Brass — “Head Over Heels”
Bern & the Brights — “Heart Wide Open”
“Anything To Have You Here”
“By Any Chance”
“Most Sorry”
Marianne Faithfull — “Something Better” r.i.p.
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Bern & the Brights, Nutley Brass, Porchistas, Terry McCarthy
By Jack Silbert on January 28, 2025
EPISODE #626: WORDS
The Who — “Happy Jack” [THEME]
The Monkees — “Words”
UV-TV — “Only Kind Words”
Lee Hazlewood — “Words Mean Nothing”
Jimmy Cliff — “Action Speaks Louder Than Words”
Buddy Holly — “Words of Love”
The Ladybug Transistor — “Words Hang in the Air”
Ella Fitzgerald — “Too Marvelous for Words”
Radiohead — “These Are My Twisted Words”
James Mastro — “Three Words”
The Magnetic Fields — “All my Little Words”
Boyracer — “Stand By Yr Words”
Elvis Costello & the Attractions — “Pretty Words”
The Connells — “Unspoken Words”
Dany Laj & the Looks — “In Other Words”
Lucinda Williams — “Words”
Garth Hudson — “Little Island” r.i.p.
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Boyracer, Buddy Holly, Dany Laj & the Looks, Ella Fitzgerald, Elvis Costello, Garth Hudson, James Mastro, Jimmy Cliff, Ladybug Transistor, Lee Hazlewood, Lucinda Williams, Magnetic Fields, Monkees, Radiohead, The Connells, UV-TV
By Jack Silbert on January 28, 2025
4 stars out of 5
The day started out with me planning to see the movie September 5 in Montclair. But for the second week in a row I didn’t get an early-enough jump, so hunkered down in Vito’s Pizza of Bloomfield (last week it was the Tick Tock Diner in Clifton) to figure out Plan B. I hadn’t scrolled too far down the Regal app Secaucus listings before realizing, “Ooh, Wolf Man! I want to see that!”
I’d seen the trailer a number of times, and it looked pretty scary. Plus I have a vague knowledge that horror-meisters Blumhouse are revitalizing the old Universal monsters for the 21st century. My IMDd account confirms that I already saw 2020’s The Invisible Man. I only remember a scene in a restaurant Elisabeth Moss and a knife, but I did rate the film 7 out of 10 so I guess I mostly liked it. Invisible Man writer/director Leigh Whannell returns to helm Wolf Man. And I liked it 1 more out of 10!
Christopher Abbott (who I only know from the underwhelming dominatrix flick Sanctuary) and Julia Garner (who I’ve appreciated since The Americans in 2013) are a not-very-happy married city couple with a kid. Abbott suggests they shake things up by going to the woods in Oregon and clearing out his old man’s house. Before they even get to the driveway, though, he gets bit by a radioactive wolf or something. And then the fun begins.
Whannell, with help from an excellent special-effects crew, is terrific at slowly building up the scares, within a limited physical space (scares inside the house, scares from outside the house, in the barn, in the pickup truck, etc.). Abbott loses the ability to speak and the child-actor daughter is somewhat overdoing it, so it’s up to Julia Garner to hold down the acting chops — and she does a great job. We see her go from overworked, depressed corporate mom not feeling she’s spending enough time with the kid, to a wife worried that there’s something seriously wrong with her husband, to someone worried about her own safety, to the mom who will protect her kid at any costs, all the while rediscovering some real love for her family.
But the main reason I really dug this movie: It scared the bejesus out of me and wouldn’t let go. I sat there wide-eyed with my mouth hanging open as the film moved from one scary set piece to the next. It’s a raw, no-frills horror flick, so if you like that sort of thing, be in pursuit of the hirsute!
Posted in movie reviews | Tagged 20s movies, Blumhouse, horror films, Julia Garner, Leigh Whanell
By Jack Silbert on January 21, 2025
4 stars out of 5
Ticket clerk: “You’re in Theater 1.”
Me: “Yes, but what’s in… the room next door?”
After that bit of hilarity, I was ready to purchase my popcorn and settle in for Pedro Almodóvar’s first English-language feature with the boffo leads Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton. On the surface, this is a pretty heavy story: One old friend (Swinny) has terminal cancer and asks the other old friend to accompany her at the Very End. But Almodóvar has the lightness of touch to make it as much a celebration of living and friendship as it is a meditation on death and grief. Plus he tosses in some humor and a little police drama too.
Moore’s character, Ingrid, is compellingly drawn, and perfectly portrayed. We quickly learn that — like the writer of this review — she’s not great at setting boundaries/saying no. And she’s not even Martha’s (Swinton) BFF — they’ve reconnected after many years only because Ingrid has learned of Martha’s illness. So why not ask a closer pal to be her room-next-door death buddy? Uh, Martha did ask three others first, but they all said NO. (I found that pretty funny.)
Swinton is very well-cast too, and not just because she’s gaunt. She’s quite believable as someone who wants to call her own shots, wants to plan it all out, but every now and then we see the cracks in her armor.
We’re in a classic Woody setting of high-achieving individuals (Ingrid’s a novelist; Martha’s a war reporter) in high-rent Manhattan. We get much more of Martha’s backstory, including some flashbacks. All we learn of Ingrid is her shared history with Martha: both worked at Paper Magazine and schtupped John Turturro (now a doom-preaching expert on the environment).
Martha and Ingrid decamp to upstate New York (credits reveal that much was actually filmed in Spain; baby steps for Pedro) to a rented house for the endgame. Now surrounded by nature, silence, and time, the women consider the resultant ethical and philosophical questions, and is Martha asking too much of too-agreeable Ingrid?
The viewer gets to ask themselves these same questions. How would we handle a similar situation? And who would we want in the room next door?
Posted in movie reviews | Tagged 20s movies, John Turturro, Julianne Moore, Tilda Swinton
By Jack Silbert on January 21, 2025
EPISODE #625: DAVID LYNCH TRIBUTE
Angelo Badalamenti — “Twin Peaks Main Theme” [edit; ALTERNATE THEME]
Roy Orbison — “In Dreams”
Angelo Badalamenti — “Laura Palmer’s Theme”
Julee Cruise — “Into the Night”
Chris Isaak — “Wicked Game”
James Marshall feat. Lara Flynn Boyle & Sheryl Lee — “Just You”
Angelo Badalamenti — “Audrey’s Dance”
Rebekah Del Rio — “Llorando”
David Lynch — “So Glad”
David Lynch feat. Jack Cruz — “True Love’s Flame”
Chrystabell & David Lynch — “The Answers to the Questions”
Julee Cruise — “Falling”
Angelo Badalamenti — “Love Theme Farewell”
Jack Silbert proudly records the Aquarium podcast in Hoboken, NJ.
Posted in internet radio playlists | Tagged Angelo Badalamenti, Chris Isaak, Chrystabell, David Lynch, Jack Cruz, James Marshall, Julee Cruise, Lara Flynn Boyle, Rebekah Del Rio, Roy Orbision, Sheryl Lee
Jack Silbert, curator