Episode 162: Lloyd Kaufman episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 5, 2016 · 1H 4M

Episode 162: Lloyd Kaufman

from RiYL

The real Tromaville is an unassuming place. Located a few blocks from the East River, in an industrialized section of Long Island City still untouched by the rapidly encroaching gentrification of art galleries and speakeasies, the country’s longest running independent movie studio is headquartered in a Queens commercial space, extremely nondescript, save for the giant Toxic Avenger painted on the big metal security shutter. Inside, the walls are littered with old props like a makeshift living museum dedicated to 40 years of some of the most colorful movie making in film history. A few small spaces have been converted into makeshift movie sets, while the majority of the downstairs space serves as a complete film archive of Troma’s four decades of prolific output. Upstairs, it’s business as usual. Lloyd Kaufman is in the middle of an important business call. Even after all this time, the company’s cofounder, director, and long-time mouthpiece still has to hustle get things done. Nothing comes easy when you’re perpetually swimming upstream — and Kaufman’s disinclination to hold punches when discussing the big studio movie machine likely hasn’t helped matters much.It does, however, make for one great interview. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Apr 5, 2016

The real Tromaville is an unassuming place. Located a few blocks from the East River, in an industrialized section of Long Island City still untouched by the rapidly encroaching gentrification of art galleries and speakeasies, the country’s longest running independent movie studio is headquartered in a Queens commercial space, extremely nondescript, save for the giant Toxic Avenger painted on the big metal security shutter. Inside, the walls are littered with old props like a makeshift living museum dedicated to 40 years of some of the most colorful movie making in film history. A few small spaces have been converted into makeshift movie sets, while the majority of the downstairs space serves as a complete film archive of Troma’s four decades of prolific output. Upstairs, it’s business as usual. Lloyd Kaufman is in the middle of an important business call. Even after all this time, the company’s cofounder, director, and long-time mouthpiece still has to hustle get things done. Nothing comes easy when you’re perpetually swimming upstream — and Kaufman’s disinclination to hold punches when discussing the big studio movie machine likely hasn’t helped matters much.It does, however, make for one great interview. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Episode 162: Lloyd Kaufman

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Indie Folk Songs by Drew Blackard (more available on iTunes) Drew Blackard Greetings... I'm an acoustic musician from Texas - DIY indie folk where I write, record, and produce my music. This is a free sampler of my acoustic EPs available on iTunes - please kindly leave a review or purchase my music on iTunes if you enjoy it. Recommended If You Like (RIYL): Tom Petty, Jeff Tweedy (Uncle Tupelo, Golden Smog, Wilco), Josh Ritter, Ryan Adams, Phosphorescent, The Wood Brothers, Rayland Baxter, Gregory Alan Isakov, Trampled by Turtles, The Barr Brothers, Dawes, The Avett Brothers, etc. "It's all about setting a mood - and Drew Blackard accomplishes that beautifully...marks time well spent, in both the making and the listening." - Peter Blackstock, No Depression Grownups Read Things They Wrote as Kids Dan Misener Travel back in time to remember the good, bad, and awkward parts of growing up. Recorded live on stage, adults share the weird and wonderful things they wrote as children and teens. Embarrassing, moving, and hilarious, these readings are powerful reminders of who we used to be. The Guardian says "it has much charm," while Splitsider describes GRTTWaK as "equal parts cringe-worthy and cathartic."RIYL: RISK!, The Moth, Mortified, My Teenage Diary, True Story Somewhere Between Sunrise & Sunset on 88.3FM, WBWC Allen Thompson Somewhere Between Sunrise & Sunset "your program of progressive rock" is part of WBWC's weeknight specialty show lineup. It airs every Tuesday from 10PM-1AM (EST) Cleveland, Ohio. We are proud to bring you progressive rock now for over 10 years on-the-air! Tune in locally on the dial at 88.3FM or listen online live from anywhere in the world at www.wbwc.com. Join your host Allen as he plays three hours of progressive rock from the 70's, 80's, 90's and today's newest progressive rock bands. Genesis kicks things off every Tuesday and you'll hear music from the entire spectrum of progressive rock: Canterbury Scene, Crossover Prog, Eclectic Prog, Experimental/Post Metal, Heavy Prog, Jazz Rock/Fusion, Krautrock, Neo-Prog, Post Rock/Math Rock, Prog Folk, Progressive Electronic, Progressive Metal, Psychedelic/Space Rock, RIO/Avant-Prog, Rock Progressivo Italiano, Symphonic Prog, Tech/Extreme Prog Metal, Zeuhl. RIYL: Genesis, Yes, King Crimson, Van der graaf Generator, Gentle Giant, Rush, Came

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The real Tromaville is an unassuming place. Located a few blocks from the East River, in an industrialized section of Long Island City still untouched by the rapidly encroaching gentrification of art galleries and speakeasies, the country’s longest...

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