September 03, 2025

Our Interesting Times With Timothy Kelly 2025.09.03




Andy Nowicki on the Grunge Psyop
  

   Andy Nowicki returns to Our Interesting Times to discuss his recent article "the Grunge Psyop."

   His Substack page.





5 comments:

Ed Case said...

Oooh, this looks good!

zap, I know you like to watch the odd bit of cinematography... well, this ain't a movie but a tv series of ten parts... total fantasy but with some great footage of modern London and a gripping central theme around gambling. Star of the show is a fine actor, but his supporting crew are regular tv actors and left a bit wanting, but he drives a cool old BMW like the one I used to drive back in the nineties, so maybe I'm a bit biased.

The series is called Stan Lee's 'Lucky Man' from 2016, and it is easy to find.

Michael_nyc said...

They talked about grunge for like ten minutes altogether throughout the show lol, with Kelly doing most of the talking and branching out to all sorts of different topics. Not very good and not sticking to the topic. He should of just named the show "miscellaneous psyops".

zapoper said...

I did watch that show back then and I can't even remember how it ended. The bracelet was the only thing that kept me watching.

The last movie of Downton Abbey is out here and last night as I was watching the first episode of lucky man and saw them insert an Indian woman as his partner, I just started imagining a reboot of Downton Abbey where part of the main cast is a squaw married to a Samurai and their butler is a gay Viking. Lots of lesbians running around in the background too.

Ed Case said...

I just binged all ten and I can't remember how it ended either, lol, I think the budget must have run out.

In the case of London, the Indian woman detective is pretty accurate in this day and age; they are everywhere... not so much out in the provinces yet. I was subpoenaed to view an identity parade back in the eighties and one of the London coppers was a Sikh, sporting a black turban with the Masonic chequers around it, lol.

The Northern Irish are probably the most homogenous and staunchly nationalistic two tribes of the archipelago, so it is unlikely that he would have tolerated an import as a partner, in reality.

Ed Case said...

The guest keeps trying to bring the conversation back to grunge, then Tim goes off on another tangent.

Jazz may have begun as a social engineering project but by the sixties and seventies it had taken on a life of it's own and began developing into a higher art form. That's when 'they' tried to put it to bed... couldn't have black role models that were wholesome and extremely talented... that wouldn't do at all.