
The Industry Podcast
1) The Linguini Incident
The making of the quirky heist comedy The Linguini Incident is not a pleasant memory for writer-director Richard Shepard. Yes, he had a great cast including David Bowie and Rosana Arquette. He also wa...Show More
2) Closing Night Returns
Season 2 of Closing Night is finally here—the theater history podcast that takes you behind the curtain to uncover stories about famous and forgotten Broadway show that closed too soon. While season 1...Show More
3) History Daily - The Suppression of Citizen Kane
Presenting an episode from Noiser and Airship's podcast History Daily.On History Daily, they do history, daily. Every weekday, Lindsay Graham (American Scandal, American History Tellers) tak...Show More
4) Introducing Stories My Brother Used To Tell
Something different from the creator of The Industry is coming soon. Here's a short preview of Stories My Brother Used To Tell.My older brother Eric would often tell stories of his misspent youth at f...Show More
5) Strike It All
In 1982 British filmmakerJames Scott had made an Academy Award winning adaptation of a Graham Greene novella. Adapting another Greene novella, this time as a feature length film, seemed like a natural...Show More
6) Elaine's Mayhem
Elaine May will always be best known for her comedy with Mike Nichols and her screenwriting skills. However, as a director May is an uncompromising force who seemingly do whatever it takes to get her ...Show More
7) Blake Edwards Strikes Again
The death of actor Peter Sellers in 1980 also seemed like the death of the Pink Panther film series. Instead, director Blake Edwards decided it was a new beginning. A beginning of numerous lawsuits, s...Show More
8) Alan Dean Foster
Alan Dean Foster is an accomplished author in his own right, but in this episode of The Industry, he shares his process of writing movie novelizations and some of the more interesting novelizations he...Show More
9) Novelizations 101
Back in the 1970s and 80s if you walked into a bookstore you would undoubtedly had seen whatever the newest movie was in theaters sitting on a display in book form. The movie novelization is a world u...Show More
10) Unmade Hitchcock
By the 1960's director Alfred Hitchcock was at the absolute height of his powers. He had reached the point where he could make any movie he wanted. Yet as the decade rolled on. Hitchcock seemingly had...Show More