The Entertainment with Tom Knoblauch

Tom Knoblauch

Everything we do is filtered through entertainment. If it’s not entertaining, there is a good chance that nobody is paying attention. So, to understand the world, you have to not only look at your screen but comprehend what is on it. Where does our entertainment come from? Why? How is it shaped by the world around us and how is it shaping that same world?  This is the focus of The Entertainment. Each week, Tom Knoblauch explores an element of our culture through conversations with creators and consumers of film, television, music, art, and more.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. 01/28/2025

    36. Guy Maddin on 'Rumours' and the Collapsing World Order

    Guy Maddin, director of My Winnipeg, The Saddest Music in the World, and Brand Upon the Brain is a filmmaker who seemingly operates by no rules and often merges the surreal, the traditional, and the experimental. The idea of discomfort at the merger of traditional ideas with the inexplicable, of the familiar with the bizarre, is both true of his style and also the substance of his latest film, Rumours—which he directed with Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson. Available now on video on demand, the film follows a G-7 meeting between leaders from the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the U.K in the midst of an apocalyptic event that leaves them alone in the woods, having to fend for themselves without any of their systems of support. This week's show is a conversation with Maddin about both the construction of the movie but also its context as an artifact of a world in transition, whether its leaders want to admit it or not. Keep the conversation going in the comments. Follow The Entertainment on Facebook, Instagram, or Substack and let us know what you think. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and we’d love it if you gave us a review. The Entertainment is a production of KIOS 91.5 FM Omaha Public Radio. It is produced and edited by Courtney Bierman. Our artwork was created by Topher Booth. Thank you for listening. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    54 min
  2. 01/13/2025

    34. The Case for Physical Media

    Something that has changed drastically about our relationship with screens over the course of the past few decades has been the shift from reliance on physical media to streaming. With the click of a button and an internet connection, you now no longer need the middle man of DVDs, Blu Rays, or rental stores. You have it all. Or do you? If you listened to our four part series on the life and legacy of Elaine May, you know that a legal nightmare has stopped her 1972 classic The Heartbreak Kid from getting any kind of digital release. And the merger of Warner Brothers and Discovery in 2022 led to a new practice among streamers of deleting their original programming that didn’t meet standards of requisite clicks such as Moonshot, Mrs. Fletcher, Vinyl, and Run. It turns out that the ease of digital programming is subject to more politics than simply offering a library of content. But not everyone is content to accept the precarity of the streaming age, and that’s the focus of our show today: the case for physical media. First, we’ll hear from executive director Kate Barr and inventory assistant Joel Fischer from Scarecrow Video, a nonprofit video rental store in Seattle which offers nearly 150,000 titles including rare and out of print offerings that represent over a century of cultural history that they’re here to archive, not delete. Then, later in the show, The Blair Witch Project producer Mike Monello discusses the path toward the latest physical release of the 1999 classic, which finally captures the filmmakers’ intended vision and documents its story in a way that can only be found on physical media. Keep the conversation going in the comments. Follow The Entertainment on Facebook, Instagram or Substack and let us know what you think. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and we’d love it if you gave us a review. The Entertainment is a production of KIOS 91.5 FM Omaha Public Radio. It is produced and edited by Courtney Bierman. Our artwork was created by Topher Booth. Thank you for listening. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    54 min
  3. 12/07/2024

    32. The Rick Steves Philosophy of Travel

    One of the things we’re not doing when we’re buried in our screens is soaking in the world around us. Sometimes that’s intentional—a way of hiding from an often ugly and overwhelming reality. Sometimes it’s to fight off the horror of boredom. But the more we live inside our screens, the less we’re outside in our communities or exploring new kinds of cultures that exist all around us. And this brings us to Rick Steves—today’s Herodotus in chinos, insisting that “out there” remains not just more interesting than the echo chamber of our screens but that engaging with it is vital for us as people, and that, in fact, the very act of travel is an act of transformative politics. In an era of walls and fears of “the other,” he continues a crusade for curiosity. His call is simple: put down the phone, go out there, and meet the world. For decades, Steves has been bringing his mission to the homes of Americans through his public access show Rick Steves’ Europe, his radio show Travel with Rick Steves, his travel guides, and his lectures. He has a new edition of his book Travel as a Political Act out now, and he’s currently touring the country with his live orchestral series A Symphonic Journey with Rick Steves, which you can see at the Holland Center on February 15th and 16th. Tickets are available now. Then, later in the show, we’re diving into the history of the travelogue by going all the way back to The Innocents Abroad author Mark Twain in a conversation with Matt Seybold, Professor of American Literature and Scholar-in-Residence at the Center for Mark Twain Studies. You can learn more about the Center for Mark Twain Studies here. Keep the conversation going in the comments. Follow The Entertainment on Facebook, Instagram, or Substack and let us know what you think. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and we’d love it if you gave us a review. The Entertainment is a production of KIOS 91.5 FM Omaha Public Radio. It is produced and edited by Courtney Bierman. Our artwork was created by Topher Booth. Thank you for listening. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    54 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Everything we do is filtered through entertainment. If it’s not entertaining, there is a good chance that nobody is paying attention. So, to understand the world, you have to not only look at your screen but comprehend what is on it. Where does our entertainment come from? Why? How is it shaped by the world around us and how is it shaping that same world?  This is the focus of The Entertainment. Each week, Tom Knoblauch explores an element of our culture through conversations with creators and consumers of film, television, music, art, and more.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.