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Campfire Classics Podcast explicit
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campfireclassics에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 campfireclassics 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
A Literary Comedy podcast where we try to read those books that look good on your shelf...and laugh a lot along the way!
…
continue reading
200 에피소드
모두 재생(하지 않음)으로 표시
Manage series 2879940
campfireclassics에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 campfireclassics 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
A Literary Comedy podcast where we try to read those books that look good on your shelf...and laugh a lot along the way!
…
continue reading
200 에피소드
所有剧集
×Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! You ever join a cult? Not a cute one like a bookclub, or pilates, or Taylor Swift fans, but one of the scary ones, like Heaven's Gate, or Scientology, or Dave Matthews fans (just kidding Dave, love you!). This week's story give strong culty vibes. Ken picked the story for Heather to read. It's by previous Campfire Classics author Clark Ashton Smith and it's called "The Demon of the Flower". It's a bizarre trip of a story clearly written by a man who would have rather been writing poetry. Your hosts learn a lot of new words, choose a graphic alliterative euphemism, and make juvenile jokes about what the author's name sounds like. "The Demon of the Flower" was published 1933 in Astounding Stories. Extensive research has uncovered no evidence of an active copyright. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! This one goes some places. The story, yes, but also your hosts. Tangent alert. Heather picks a story by Frank Stockton, an author we've not heard from since his appearance 4 years ago with the story "The Lady or the Tiger." Ken can't finish a sentence, Heather makes up a new word, and dialects wander, generally. Also, this is the week of Aroused Amusements. Oh, and your hosts acknowledge (grudgingly) the Big Game. "The Philosophy of Relative Existences" was published 1893 in The Watchmaker’s Wife and Other Stories Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Good morning Campers! We're taking on a bug name in American Literature this week. Kurt Vonnegut! So, many of our listeners already know whether they are in or out right there. Ken has chosen the story "The Big Trip Up Yonder." He also does the Fun Facts session and leaves it on a cliffhanger! Who'd have thought the education part of an edutainment podcast could be a cliffhanger. Well, it is. Heather reads and makes up some weird voices since there are no dialects to butcher. Your hosts discuss the Grammy Awards, the Club in your mind, and how long it takes to learn to "conceal your pleasure". "The Big Trip Up Yonder" was published in 1954 and is in public domain. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Good morning Campers! It's another beautiful day here at Campfire Classics, even if your hosts don't know what day it is. But, in fairness, neither of them has even claimed to be overly good at keeping track of such things. Time. Life. Sanity... But, they are here! For you! Reading another ridiculous (but only because they made it so) story, chosen this week by Heather. Ken reads the H. G. Wells story titled simply "The Apple," and I get the impression he regrets one of his character voices immediately upon realizing that that character would be narrating most of the story. But, choices were made, and you can't go back and change it!! Surprise episode themes include the power of knowledge, the wisdom of talking to strangers, and the deliciousness of balls. "The Apple" was published in 1896 in The Idler , Volume 10, Issue 3. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! It's a very rare episode that gets a content warning here, but this one does get it. This isn't a language thing it's just that the story takes on some issues that some may find difficult to digest. There's a warning in the episode and you get plenty of heads up to stop it should you decide to, but hey. Fair warning and all that. Anyway! How are you doing? Life feeling kinda f-d? Yeah...our hosts clearly sympathize. Or empathize. Whichever one means "ditto!" Heather reads a story called "And All the Earth a Grave" by C.C. MacApp, and yes, I thought that name was a typo at first, too. Anyway, during the episode your going to hear all about self care, the literal end of humanity, and Neil deGrasse Tyson sucking at Jeopardy. "And All the Earth a Grave" was published in 1963, but extensive research has found no evidence of an active copyright. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Welcome to 2025! A New Year! New Stories! Hopefully not the end times... Here we are, campers, bringing love, literature, bad jokes to the world. After a recap of what's new in the Public Domain this year, Ken selects a story for Heather to read by podcast muse, Dame Agatha Christie. And it is a Poirot. So, for those of you who have been missing Heather's French accent, it's your lucky day. Your hosts also discuss the difference between sexy and sexual, how to accidentally call a cat, and post coital podcasts. "Wasps' Nest" was published in 1928. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! It's Christmas! You know what that means!? Ghost stories... That's right, holiday spooky stories are back. Heather reads a tale by long time favorite author M.R. James called "A School Story". Love a good tradition. Along the way your hosts accidentally leak spoilers for the movie The Ring, spoilers for the movie Hunt for Red October, and spoilers for the movie Highlander. "A School Story" was published in 1911. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Did that title get your attention? Really? I think there might be something seriously wrong with you! But that makes you our kind of people, I guess. This week Heather is reading a story Ken picked out for her by Susan Coolidge called "Who Ate the Pink Sweetmeat?" It's a cute little holiday story about... Socks? Candy? Whipping out your precious in public? Whatever it is, it's not nearly as tragic as your hosts seemed prepared for. Along the way, conversation topics include poncy ravens, talking inanimate objects, and what exactly does gross mean? "Who Ate the Pink Sweetmeat?" was published in 1884. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Do you like terrible accent choices from actors? Do you appreciate a euphemism about at sausage so long you have to wind it around itself? Do you love the upbeat and chipper works of 19th century Russian literature? Then this episode is for you! Heather has chosen the story "Black Fog" by Aleksandr I. Kuprin. Ken is dubious from the beginning and by the end he's still unsure how to feel. Ken whines about crumpets, uses a wildly inappropriate dialect, and hints that Tennessee Williams might just be American Chekhov. "Black Fog" was published in 1905 and translated by Douglas Ashby. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Let's get ready to rumble!!! It's the battle of the Franceses...the Francees? The Franci? And what do you call a group of people called Frances? Anyway, this week's story is from Irish Poet Frances Browne. Ken talks all about her before turning things over to Heather to read "The Christmas Cuckoo"! The story gets side tracked by discussion of Weird Harvard Majors, a Magical Waffle House, and Heather accidentally ruining her Google search algorithm. Oh, also, if you happen to know Travis McElroy, send him this episode or just let him know the team at Campfire Classics appreciates the work he put in at Twenty Sided Tavern "The Christmas Cuckoo" was first published in 1857. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! This week's story is one of those OLD stories that is surprisingly current feeling. It is called "The Stranger Woman," and it was selected by Heather, who despite not being the one reading today still manages to trip over her tongue. Written by G.B. Stern, the story takes nearly as many turns as last weeks journey to dream ancient Egypt, and it gives birth to conversations about the game Cops and Robbers, the musical Chicago , and the earliest self-pleasure joke your hosts have yet faced. "The Stranger Woman" was first published in 1922. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! You've been gifted, this week, with possibly the kinkiest story (at least in your hosts minds) yet read on this podcast. But what do you expect out of a story called "The Mummy's Foot"? Ken has chosen the story for Heather to read based solely on the fact that the author, Pierre Jules Théophile Gautier, is super French, and he thought that would be funny. Regular listeners are either excited or rolling their eyes. Proceed with caution. Along the way your hosts discuss French stereotypes, explicit paper weights, and cursed thrifting. "The Mummy's Foot" was first published in 1840. Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Well, your hosts might have played last week...poorly... But, no one has ever accused them of TOO MUCH tact. Ah well, life goes on. We hope. This week will be better. Probably. Not. Heather has picked a story called "The Dream Snake" for Ken to read. It's by previous Campfire Classics author Robert E. Howard, who you can hear all about by listening back to Episode 53. Heather gives us Fun Facts completely unrelated. Conversation topics include the original lyrics to the song "Waltzing Matilda," weird dreams, and disappointing parties. Definitely not any recent politics... Okay, maybe a little recent politics. But your hosts move on quickly, so you can enjoy it amyway! "The Dream Snake" was published in 1928 in the magazine Weird Tales . Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Heather's back! And we're really hoping that not the best news you're getting today. Ken has selected a story for Heather to read called "The Mysterious Case". It's by a previous Campfire Classics author named Anna Katherine Green. And frankly, you can tell your hosts have been chomping at the bit to get back at it, so I'm not even going to spoil conversation topics for you. Just listen! "The Mysterious Case" was published in 1891. The organizations Ken has mentioned during these specials are Beloved Asheville and North Carolina Stage Company . Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
Welcome to Campfire Classics, a Literary Comedy Podcast!! Welcome to the final Special of October 2024. Ken is going to be reading the book The Willows by Algernon Blackwood. At five chapters long, you'll be getting one chapter per week! And this is the final chapter. The end of the story. We're finally at the end. This has been a wild trip. The Willows was published in 1907. The organizations Ken has mentioned during these specials are Beloved Asheville and North Carolina Stage Company . Email us at 5050artsproduction@gmail.com . Remember to tell five friends to check out Campfire Classics. Like, subscribe, leave a review. Now sit back, light a fire (or even a candle), grab a drink, and enjoy.…
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