4.8 • 2K Ratings
🗓️ 12 February 2025
⏱️ 169 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Aaaaaaand we’re back. Episode 1 of season 14 of the Dana Gould Hour Podcast. Has anything of interest happened since the last episode? Don’t think so. Certainly not here in Los Angeles, or America. Okay. Great. Let’s get at it!
Drew Friedman is here. Drew Friedman is one of the premiere illustrators and cartoonists in America. You know his work from The New York Observer, the New Yorker, his books, Warts And All, Old Jewish Comedians, More Old Jewish Comedians, Still More Old Jewish Comedians, Too Soon, Drew Friedman’s Sideshow Freaks, Heroes Of The Comics, More Heroes Of The Comics, the list goes on and on. In 1987 I discovered his book Any Similarity to Persons Living Or Dead is Purely Coincidental and it quite literally redefined my sense of humor. It is hard to articulate the impact the book had on me. No kidding. Drew has a new book out called Schtick Figures, portraits of people important to Drew. And me. People he refers to as The Cool, The Comical and The Crazy. Portraits of people like Gilbert Gottfried, #2 and #3 as only Drew can draw them. Drew is also the subject of a new documentary that’s about to be released entitled The Vermeer Of The Borscht Belt, Drew Friedman is here.
Kurt Sayenga is a writer, director and producer. We first met when Kurt ran the series Eli Roth’s History Of Horror. Kurt now has a series on Shudder called Horror’s Greatest. Season #2 just dropped, with guests like Davi Dastmalchian, Joe Hill, Jonah Ray, Alex Winter, Mick Garris, yours truly and many, many more. Kurt’s here to talk about the show and the topics covered this season as it continues to explore our fascination with all things cinematically horrific.
Cinematically horrific. If you want to examine the realistically horrific, True Tales From Weirdsville takes a deep dive into the 1957 classic A Face In Crowd, starring Andy Griffith, written by Budd Schulberg and directed by Elia Kazan. It tells the cautionary tale of what happens when a corrupt, amoral grifter gains a position of power and influence in America. It was made in 1957 and it was a FREAKISHLY predictive film.
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0:00.0 | They come from the bowels of hell. |
0:07.0 | It's... |
0:09.0 | The Dana Gouldower. |
0:14.0 | Jungle worms and swamp rats run around your feet. |
0:17.0 | I bought a dog that killed the calf, that ate the canary. What is true? |
0:22.0 | And once again, welcome back. |
0:28.9 | And we're back. |
0:31.2 | Episode one of season 14 of the Dana Gouldauer podcast. |
0:36.7 | Has anything of interest happened since the last episode? |
0:39.8 | Anything on the news? |
0:41.3 | Certainly nothing going on here in L.A. |
0:44.0 | Drew Friedman is here. |
0:46.4 | Drew Friedman is one of the premier illustrators and cartoonists in America. |
0:50.7 | You know his work from the New York Observer, the New Yorker, |
0:53.7 | his books, warts and |
0:55.0 | all, old Jewish comedians, more old Jewish comedians, still more old Jewish comedians, too soon, |
1:01.2 | Drew Friedman's sideshow freaks, heroes of the comics, more heroes of the comics. The list |
1:06.2 | goes on and on. In 1987, I discovered his book, any similarity to persons living or dead |
1:14.9 | is purely coincidental, and it quite literally redefined my sense of humor. It is hard to articulate |
1:24.0 | the impact that book had on me. Drew has a new book out called |
1:29.0 | Stick Figures. They're portraits of people that are important to Drew and to me. The people |
1:35.1 | he refers to as the cool, the comical, and the crazy. Portraits of people like |
... |
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