Hot Line: Difference between revisions
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== Commentary == | == Commentary == | ||
== Footnotes == | == Footnotes == |
Revision as of 23:24, 2 June 2021
Series | |
---|---|
In The Dark | |
Original Broadcast Date | |
1995 | |
Cast | |
Davis Black | |
Format | |
Found Tape, Telephone, 28 minutes | |
Preceded by: | Raymond |
Followed by: | In A Lonely Place |
"Tell me about this big thrill."
Hot Line is a program Joe Frank produced as part of the series In The Dark. It was originally broadcast in 1995.
Synopsis
'Tell me about this big thrill…' says a man, a tarot card reader, to a woman caller who longs for a relationship with a man but won't start talking to any of them. She sees them in stores, on the street; she imagines that they're fascinated with her; she imagines that a state trooper sneaks into her apartment, rearranges her stuff as a message to her. In addition to reading tarot the guy gives common-sense advice, such as that she should strike up conversations with men she likes, go out more often.
17:40: A guy calls the tarot reader, wondering if this other man loves him.
20:10: A woman calls him as a wrong number; he insists on reading her cards.
23:20: (Not on the tarot hotline) A guy remembers his father, how much he misses him (he's dead), how he could always rely on him, talk to him about anything. The father commandeered a street-sweeper in Georgia, drove it into a cemetery. He misses his friends too, dead and alive. He talks about a picture in his room looking at him, over-hearing pay phone conversations.[1]
Music
- "Insomnie Nemurenai (Instrumental)" - United Future Organization (from Insomnie Nemurenai, 1992) | YouTube
Additional credits
On-air credits are: 'This program was called "Hotline" with Davis Black, produced by Joe Frank; it was mixed by Theo Mondle, music editing by Bob Carlson, special thanks to Farley Ziegler, Jennifer Ferro, Sean Levin, and Jerry Summers.'
- Produced by Joe Frank.
- Mixed by Theo Mondle.
- Music editing by Bob Carlson.
- Special thanks to Farley Ziegler, Jennifer Ferro, Shaun Levin, and Jerry Summers
Miscellanea
Joe re-used Hot Line as the second half of Phone Therapy, the first half of which is When I'm Calling You.
Commentary
Footnotes
- ↑ re-used in Dreamland: A Compilation