Spread Radio Live is a very intimate Internet radio program that I broadcast live from my home. I play anything and everything. Well, anything and everything I think is good! Unsigned artists, alternative, electro, metal, mashups, comedy, punk, goth and lots of talk! Including, spur of the moment call ins.
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2046:In this loose sequel to Hong Kong-based filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai's In the Mood for Love, Tony Leung Chiu-wai returns as struggling writer Chow Mo-wan, but now he's a boozing womanizer who writes soft porn. Through time travel and parallel worlds, this lushly photographed romantic drama explores Mo-wan's relationships with various women, including the one he truly loves, Su Lizhen (Gong Li). 2046 premiered at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.


The Chumbscrubber: Director Arie Posin transforms his short story into a frightfully honest portrait of suburban dysfunction in this film about Dean (Jamie Bell), a young boy who finds his friend hanging from the rafters during a neighborhood party. Figuring that no one else would care, he doesn't report his discovery to the adults, and instead embarks on a journey of harrowing isolation and loneliness. Glenn Close, Rita Wilson and Carrie-Anne Moss costar.


Three Extremes: Three Asian masters of horror spin twisted tales in this terrifying trilogy. Hong Kong's Fruit Chan directs "Dumplings," in which an aging actress's obsession with recapturing her youth leads to an unnatural diet; in Korean filmmaker Chan-wook Park's "Cut," a movie extra with a grudge torments a successful director; and in "Box," from Japan's Takashi Miike, sibling rivalry and jealousy reach disturbing new heights.


Inside Deep Throat: This fascinating documentary by Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato examines the goings-on behind the porn film that grew to become an icon: Deep Throat. Released in 1972, the film made more money than its producers anticipated and ignited a sexual and social revolution. Features interviews with the movie's stars, Linda Lovelace and Harry Reams, plus commentary by director John Waters and writers Norman Mailer and Gore Vidal.


DiG! Documentarian Ondi Timoner spent seven years chronicling (and shot 1,500 hours of footage of) the rise of two rival musicians -- Anton Newcombe of the Brian Jonestown Massacre and Courtney Taylor of the Dandy Warhols, both of whom were intent on carving out their own piece of the highly volatile and unpredictable music business. Follow the two wanna-bes through their loves, obsessions, arrests, death threats and (relative) success!


The Celebration: Director Thomas Vinterberg's 1998 winner of the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival follows a Danish family as they gather for the 60th birthday of the family's patriarch, Helge (Henning Moritzen). All of Helge's children -- Christian (Ulrich Thomsen), Helene (Paprika Steen) and Michael (Thomas Bo Larsen) -- are present at the party, where it will be revealed quite publicly that Christian has an axe to grind with the guest of honor.


Audition: Director Takashi Miike fashions an explosive drama in Audition. Shigeharu Aoyama (Ryo Ishibashi) has lived as a widower for too long and decides it's time to marry again. But how will he find a wife? When a friend suggests he hold a fake audition to pick the right woman, he takes him up on it -- only to realize that his choice may be a better actress than he bargained for.



Driver 23/The Atlas Moth: Minneapolis-based musician/deliveryman Dan Cleveland battles daily against a complex strain of obsessive-compulsive disorder in this biography/rocumentary. Dan is determined to succeed with his band, Dark Horse, and remains courageously optimistic despite his severe personal problems. Driver 23 and The Atlas Moth depict his plight and shed light on the ingenious methods he undertakes to overcome his debilitating problem and lead a normal life.


Oldboy: With no clue how he came to be imprisoned, drugged and tortured for 15 years -- and no one to hold accountable for his suffering -- a desperate businessman seeks revenge on his captors, relying on assistance from a friendly waitress. Korean director Chan-wook Park -- a former philosophy student and Hitchcock devotee -- uses his influences to create a mesmerizing psychological drama with a resolution that will leave you speechless.


Suicide Club: After 54 schoolgirls simultaneously jump in front of a train at Shinjuku Station in Tokyo, the city becomes plagued with "suicide clubs" -- groups of teens who get together and make plans to kill themselves. The police have little luck in deciphering the motivation of the youngsters, but they do keep finding a ribbon composed of bits of skin from all the previous suicides at each new death scene. Whoah!


The Elegant Universe: Based on physicist Brian Greene's book, Greene and Nova present this look at our universe with scientific explanations in simple terms, interjecting humor and graphics. Here, he tackles the String Theory (the idea of a single, ultimate theory for everything), with information about Einstein's research into Quantum Mechanics and the General Theory of Relativity, to name a few. The relaxed nature of the program makes complex theories accessible.


UFOs: The Best Evidence: Las Vegas television journalist George Knapp is your host through this fast-paced, persuasive documentary exploring evidence that UFOs are real. In three segments ("The Visitors," "Strange Encounters" and "The Government Cover-Up"), an arsenal of experts presents hundreds of jaw-dropping photos and eyewitness testimony, covering everything from tales of abduction and cattle mutilation to unexplained crop circles.


Books:

Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia by Marya Hornbacher








The Dice Man:by Luke Rhinehart









The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment: