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Lore of the Things

Podcast de Rebecka Green

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Lore of the Things is a podcast about the lore...of things. You may have been searching for Lord of the Rings, but maybe you just put on press on nails and can’t type properly, or you’re eating olive oil with your hands, or you’re using talk-to-text, but you have Invisalign in. In any case, you are welcome here!And by "here," I mean, here to dissect the most beloved aspects of fantasy TV and film storytelling, from Shire folk to Smoke Monster, with lil stops in the stranger corners of pop culture. Whether it's the bonkers plots of 90s Swedish children’s movies, the oft maligned enigma of LOST, or George RR Martin sh*tposting about Tolkien, let us overanalyze with haha's (hopefully), heart (definitely), and neuroses (definitely x2). A guide through the Multiverse of Mythical Minutiae, if you will.Hosted by: Rebecka Green. You can VERY SWEETLY @ her on Instagram @rebecka_green or TikTok @thebecksfactor. With questions, comments, love letters, email: loreofthethingspod@gmail.com.

Todos los episodios

4 episodios

episode The 3 ingredients of a successful villain origin story artwork

The 3 ingredients of a successful villain origin story

"This is my villain origin story," we all scream-text our friends at the smallest inconvenience. My "thirteenth reason why." What brings us each to our breaking point, or as the kids say: "crashing out." We are all one Trader-Joes-being-out-of-eggs-for-the-9th-day-in-a-row away from Villain Era, and we'd be in good company. Compelling genre stories nearly always feature a compelling villain. And in the era of IP expansion at the film and TV levels, we are spoiled for choice in villain origin stories to inspire our own impending Crash Outs. This episode of Lore of the Things argues there are three ingredients of a successful villain origin story (listen to find out!!!) Using Star Wars's Darth Vader, Lord of the Rings's Lord Sauron, and ASOIAF's Targaryen family, we'll debate which origin stories successfully cook using these ingredients, and if/when we need to know why mask-clad bad guys do bad things (g*noc*de). Show notes and references: * RogerEbert.com: How The Phantom Menace Predicted Hollywood’s Prequel Future [https://www.rogerebert.com/features/the-phantom-menace-prequels] * Sunsets of High Renown: An Interview with George R. R. Martin by Nick Gevers [https://www.infinityplus.co.uk/nonfiction/intgrrm.htm] * The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien. Letter 183. [https://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/Letter_183] Lore of the Things is produced, hosted, and blood/sweat/tear'd over by Rebecka Green. Find her on Instagram @rebecka_green [https://www.instagram.com/rebecka_green/] and email loreofthethingspod@gmail.com [loreofthethingspod@gmail.com] with compliments and complaints. Opening and closing music is "Magical Journey" by Geoff Harvey, and podcast artwork is by Levi Åhlén, @oloflevi [https://www.instagram.com/oloflevi/], featuring Terry O'Quinn's portrayal of John Locke in the pilot episode of LOST.

11 de feb de 2025 - 24 min
episode 20 Years of LOST - Pt. 2: John Locke and 17th Century Empiricism (in a cool, fun way) artwork

20 Years of LOST - Pt. 2: John Locke and 17th Century Empiricism (in a cool, fun way)

TWENTY YEARS AGO, the pilot episode of ABC's beloved yet maligned LOST debuted and for-e-ver changed how TV TV'd. In honor of this singular, 121-episode piece of media, we're kicking things off at Lore of the Things by embarking on a 10-part miniseries about the 10 most controversial, infamous, and eternal aspects of LOST. Think: Jack's tattoos, 'purgatory,' the finale. For part two, we're talking about everyone's problematic fave, John Locke. You may know him as the person in the artwork of this show, and/or, as easily THE fan favorite LOST character. Locke straddles the line between protagonist and antagonist as the Island's #1 hype man and paraplegic-turned-wilderness-guru with a brutal case of Bad Dad syndrome. Locke was named after a 17th century philosopher, referred to in this episode as OG John Locke, for his theories on free will, blank slates, and personal identity, all of which are key themes in LOST, and all of which we explore in this episode. One part character study, one part philosophy lesson. Spoiler warning: This episode contains minor spoilers for a show that aired the same year the Motorola Razor debuted. LOST newbies, you are 95% safe here. Show references/notes: * NYT: The Men Who Made ABC’s ‘Lost’ Last [https://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/16/arts/television/16weblost.html?pagewanted=1&hpw] * BBC Radio 4: John Locke on Personal Identity, narrated by Gillian Anderson [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1iy8fMCe0o] Lore of the Things is produced, hosted, and blood/sweat/tear'd over by Rebecka Green. Find her on Instagram @rebecka_green [https://www.instagram.com/rebecka_green/] and email loreofthethingspod@gmail.com [loreofthethingspod@gmail.com] with compliments and complaints. Opening and closing music is "Magical Journey" by Geoff Harvey, and podcast artwork is by Levi Åhlén, @oloflevi [https://www.instagram.com/oloflevi/], featuring Terry O'Quinn's portrayal of John Locke in the pilot episode of LOST.

9 de feb de 2025 - 22 min
episode Nostalgia, prequels, and the origin of origins artwork

Nostalgia, prequels, and the origin of origins

The word "origin" originates (heh) from the Latin word “oriri” which means, “to rise," as in: bread, Jesus, and my blood pressure. Humankind has a long-standing—if not pathological—fascination with origins. Luckily for us, with a multitude of storytelling mediums at our fingertips, this desire for explanation and "safe surprises" influences the contemporary tales we are drawn to, the IPs we entertain at our own peril, and how we connect with people at the proverbial "water cooler" through shared pop-cultural experience. No better way to kick off Lore of the Things, a podcast about the lore of things, than with an exploration about why human psychology is drawn to origin stories in TV and film, and the role nostalgia plays in our pop culture consumer choices. And besides: what are origins if not lore, and what is lore if not an origin? Yeah baby! Show notes and references: * Speaking of Psychology: Does nostalgia have a psychological purpose? With Krystine Batcho, PhD [https://www.apa.org/news/podcasts/speaking-of-psychology/nostalgia] * Pew Research Center: What’s new with you? What Americans talk about with family and friends [https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/07/02/whats-new-with-you-what-americans-talk-about-with-family-and-friends/] * IndieWire: TV’s IP Problem: How Reboots, Spinoffs, and Blockbuster Franchises Could Shape the Future [https://www.indiewire.com/features/general/tv-ip-reboots-franchises-future-of-television-1234660157/] * Hollywood Reporter: Why Hollywood Is in the Throes of an IP Frenzy [https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/ip-film-tv-rights-options-market-1235625913/] Lore of the Things is produced, hosted, and blood/sweat/tear'd over by Rebecka Green. Find her on Instagram @rebecka_green [https://www.instagram.com/rebecka_green/] and email loreofthethingspod@gmail.com [loreofthethingspod@gmail.com] with compliments and complaints. Opening and closing music is "Magical Journey" by Geoff Harvey, and podcast artwork is by Levi Åhlén, @oloflevi [https://www.instagram.com/oloflevi/], featuring Terry O'Quinn's portrayal of John Locke in the pilot episode of LOST.

29 de ene de 2025 - 24 min
episode 20 Years of LOST - Pt. 1: The Polar Bears artwork

20 Years of LOST - Pt. 1: The Polar Bears

TWENTY YEARS AGO, the pilot episode of ABC's beloved yet maligned LOST debuted and for-e-ver changed how TV TV'd. In honor of this singular, 121-episode piece of media, we're kicking things off at Lore of the Things by embarking on a 10-part miniseries about the 10 most controversial, infamous, and eternal aspects of LOST. Think: Jack's tattoos, 'purgatory,' the finale. And where else could we possibly started besides...the polar bears of LOST. Truly, IYKYK. Why are people still convinced LOST never explained the polar bears? What animal did show creator J.J. Abrams want in the pilot instead? And what do the polar bears represent about LOST's network-driven tension between being a science fiction show and/or a drama that just ~has science~? These are the questions, folks! Spoiler warning: This episode contains minor spoilers for a show that aired the same year the Motorola Razor debuted. LOST newbies, you are 95% safe here. Show references/notes: * THE LOST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF JAVIER GRILLO-MARXUACH [https://web.archive.org/web/20150527022211/http://okbjgm.weebly.com/lost/the-lost-will-and-testament-of-javier-grillo-marxuach] * Emmy's Magazine: J.J. Abrams Unpacks Some of Lost’s Most Memorable Scenes [https://www.televisionacademy.com/features/news/online-originals/lost-jj-abrams] * TIME: Lost Endweek: Cuse and Lindelof Interview, Part One [https://entertainment.time.com/2010/05/17/lost-endweek-cuse-and-lindelof-interview-part-one/] Lore of the Things is produced, hosted, and blood/sweat/tear'd over by Rebecka Green. Find her on Instagram @rebecka_green [https://www.instagram.com/rebecka_green/] and email loreofthethingspod@gmail.com [loreofthethingspod@gmail.com] with compliments and complaints. Opening and closing music is "Magical Journey" by Geoff Harvey, and podcast artwork is by Levi Åhlén, @oloflevi [https://www.instagram.com/oloflevi/], featuring Terry O'Quinn's portrayal of John Locke in the pilot episode of LOST.

29 de ene de 2025 - 20 min
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Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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