He's Aidan...She's Lindsay
Together we are The Bicks, and we're here to take you through all our pop culture favourites. Join us as we train our literary lenses on the stories that shape us.
Together we are The Bicks, and we're here to take you through all our pop culture favourites. Join us as we train our literary lenses on the stories that shape us.
Tuesday Aug 24, 2021
Tuesday Aug 24, 2021
Tuesday Aug 24, 2021
There were lots of ways we could have looked at the topic of Shakespeare's most famous plays. A deeply analytical examination of what makes some plays rise above others. A detailed case study of a single play, like Romeo & Juliet or Hamlet, that has remained popular over the years. Or even a dismissal of the very idea of popularity.
Instead, we decided on a listicle format. What can we say? We've been moving all week, and we needed to relax and have some fun. We hope you'll have some too as we rank our top five most popular plays - if we were the sole deciders of what is popular.
Notes:
The Shakespeareances list of most often produced plays was our basis for winnowing down the list to the most common productions for establishing our lists.
Our five categories for ranking the popularity-factor (TM pending) of each play were as follows:
Characters
Plot/story
Quotability
Accessibility
Relevance
Tuesday Aug 10, 2021
Tuesday Aug 10, 2021
Tuesday Aug 10, 2021
Macbeth may be Shakespeare's second most famous play after Hamlet, and for good measure. The speeches and quotes have been seared into English-speaking culture, the phrase "Lady Macbeth" denotes all sorts of things (depending on your point of view), and it may be our most durable parable for the dangers of too much ambition. It's also one of Shakespeare's shortest plays (and the shortest tragedy), with numerous well-received film adaptations over the years to help keep it in the public consciousness.
We were lucky enough to be joined by returning fellow Shakespeare nerd (and David Lynch fan) Brittany, who brought a much needed third perspective on some of the key themes and character discussions of this play: is Lady Macbeth to be understood as a woman, or a unsexed would-be male competing in a man's world? Are the central pair a good couple? And a return to our old question: what does this play have to tell us about what makes a good king? We talk about all that and more in this episode!
Notes:
We discussed a number of film adaptations, including:
The 2015 Justin Kurzel and Michael Fassbender version
The 1971 Roman Polanski and Jon Finch version
The 1957 Akira Kurosawa and Toshiro Mifune adaptation "Throne of Blood"
Ancient Bickering:
Just like your high school English class discussion on this play, we were looking at the timeless question of: "Did Macbeth choose to commit his acts of heinous violence, or was it destiny as foretold by the witches?"
Tuesday Jul 27, 2021
Tuesday Jul 27, 2021
Tuesday Jul 27, 2021
It is natural to wonder what Shakespeare was trying to tell us about money. He was, after all, the owner of his own theatre company, a man who made several wise financial decisions involving his land holdings in his later years. He’d grown up around money. Surely we can read into his plays and discover something of the business acumen and economic philosophy of the man, right?
Maybe. Maybe not. All the same, we’re going to look at the various depictions of money and economic concerns within the works of Shakespeare this week on The Bicks Pod.
Ancient Bickerings: If Shakespeare were writing a play based on a modern financial or economic news headline, what story would he choose?
Notes:
- For an interesting look at mentions of money in Shakespeare, check out the aptly titled "Money in Shakespeare" by Fumita Ojima- Funnily enough, the Watcher YouTube series Puppet History did a hilarious deep dive into the world of 'coin clipping' (and Isaac Newton, who was Master of the Mint from 1699 until his death in 1727) in their episode "Isaac Newton's Nemesis", so if you would like to learn more about this kind of early currency counterfeiting, check it out! - "This is the Very Coinage of Your Brain: Shakespeare and Money Revisited" by B.J. Cook, a numismatic examination of Shakespeare's work- If you would like to hear us discuss the modern Shakespeare industry, check out our episode "Selling Shakespeare"- This 2014 BBC article breaks down the modern day economy of Shakespeare
Tuesday Jul 13, 2021
Tuesday Jul 13, 2021
Tuesday Jul 13, 2021
One of Shakespeare's lesser-known plays, Timon of Athens (aka "How to Make Friends and Alienate People") may not be his most engaging yarn -- being co-authored by Thomas Middleton strikes your humble podcasters as one potential reason why -- but that doesn't mean that it can't be relatable and interesting, or that it won't resonate with modern life. On the contrary! A story about an uber-wealthy man who literally gives away the entirety of his fortune to the freeloading Athenians he believes are his friends but who abandon him the moment the going gets tough...feels strikingly modern in this day of growing wealth inequity and the reality of late-stage capitalism.
What a cheery way to start...
Well, join us today for a conversation about misanthropy, greed, and wealth and how it resonates from the Ancient Greeks all the way through to the 21st century via Shakespeare and Middleton's Timon of Athens.
Notes:
- "Shakespeare and Middleton’s Co-Authorship of Timon of Athens" by Eilidh Kane- BBC Production of Timon of Athens (1981) on iMDB- The New Yorker article (which is, admittedly, tongue-in-cheek, but which stirred up some discourse on the bird app) "Invoices for Various Recent Acts of Emotional Labor"- Shakespeare Onscreen's episode about Justin Kurzel's 2015 film version of Macbeth
Ancient Bickerings:
Can money buy happiness?
Tuesday Jun 15, 2021
Tuesday Jun 15, 2021
Tuesday Jun 15, 2021
Who has three daughters, two thumbs, and one inheritance to distribute? That guy! *pointing at King Lear* That simple premise becomes the source for one of Shakespeare's most well known and tragic plays. It's also a strangely unsatisfying journey into family dysfunction and moral dilemma, so join us as we chat about the characters, themes, and structure underpinning the tragic history of King Lear!
Notes:
Lindsay was listening to the 1994 BBC radio production of King Lear, available on YouTube.
The quote Lindsay was looking for (from Lear) is: "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child!"
"The true chronicle history of King Leir, and his three daughters, Gonorill, Ragan, and Cordella As it hath bene diuers and sundry times lately acted" is the official title of the other Lear play that was contemporaneous to Shakespeare's version, and is available online.
Ancient Bickerings:
Which character gets the ending they deserve?
Tuesday Jun 01, 2021
Tuesday Jun 01, 2021
Tuesday Jun 01, 2021
This is a very special episode dedicated to the era most near and dear to (at least one of) us: the 90s. It was an era that kicked off with parachute pants and Kurt Cobain, and ended with Friends at the top of the ratings chart and Beyoncé still a member of Destiny's Child. In-between there were a whole lot of Shakespeare movies, so we gathered together to ask a few questions.
We were joined in these questions by Brittany, a recent Twin Peaks convert and fellow Shakespeare nerd, who also has fond memories of the 90s and the cultural milieu around it. The three of us dove into some especially pertinent topics like: Why were there so many of these kinds of movies? Do the movies hold up to this day? And what do they tell us about the era in which they were made?
It's a fun chat full of more Britney Spears and N Sync references than we usually manage to fit in. Join us for this one!
Notes:
Our semi-definitive list of 90s Shakespeare movies and adaptations can be found through this Google Doc - let us know if we missed anything!
Shoutout to the Redditors who participated in my question on this topic: why were so many of these movies made?
Ancient Bickerings:
Taking a more lighthearted approach this episode, each of us answered a simple question: which of the 90s Shakespeare movies is your favourite?
Tuesday May 18, 2021
Tuesday May 18, 2021
Tuesday May 18, 2021
Another one of Shakespeare's problem plays, All's Well That Ends Well doesn't really, well... end well. It's a play deeply concerned about gender norms, sex, and lies, with some interesting characters who - like those in other problem plays - defy the typical conventions we usually associate with Shakespeare's better known figures. We talk about these themes and the characters that lay trapped within them, in this episode!
Notes:
As always, the Folger accompanying essay, "All's Well That Ends Well: A Modern Perspective" is a good resource for digging into some of the thornier issues of this play.
The Shmoop guide ain't half bad either!
The BBC version really does rip off the baroque and other famous painters shot-for-shot at times - well worth checking out for that alone!
The film Aidan mentions in the outro is definitely Ran by Akira Kurosawa. not Rain, which is a lesser known film that doesn't sound nearly as good.
Ancient Bickerings:
It's a simple question for this one: is all well at the end of the play? Lindsay says no, Aidan says yes. Aidan is wrong.
Tuesday May 04, 2021
Tuesday May 04, 2021
Tuesday May 04, 2021
Shakespeare's ability to write convincing human emotions is one of the reasons why he remains such a popular playwright to this day. His works explore what it truly means to be human -- warts and all. And the warts are what we're talking about in today's episode, in which we take a look at the roots of jealousy in Shakespeare's plays.
From the murderous rage of Othello to the living room comedy of The Merry Wives of Windsor, jealousy gets its hooks into Shakespeare's characters in ways that are both surprising and surprisingly mundane. Whether it's the ridiculous farce of Sir John Falstaff's attempts at cuckolding Masters Ford and Page, the somewhat Oedipal longing underpinning Hamlet's madness, or the shocking descent faced by Othello or The Winter's Tale's Leontes, Shakespeare has a way of making jealousy appear out of nowhere and yet feel like a natural part of the worlds he creates; one might even go so far as to say that the 'green-eyed monster' is its own unique character whenever it arrives. So join us as we look at the function of jealousy in Shakespeare's plays.
Ancient Bickerings:
Who is Shakespeare's most jealous character?
Notes:
Cuckoldry in Shakespeare (Prezi)
Love, Revenge, Jealousy and Legacy: The Psychology of Shakespeare
https://geoffrey-gibson.com/2019/12/05/here-and-there-envy-and-jealousy-in-shakespeare/
Theorising Early Modern Jealousy A Biocultural Perspective on Shakespeare’s Othello
https://www.nosweatshakespeare.com/quotes/famous/green-eyed-monster/
Lindsay is a writer and junior high school English teacher based in Edmonton, Alberta. In addition to loving Twin Peaks and Shakespeare, she is a big fan of her husband, Aidan, her three cats (Neko, Cooper, and Audrey), teaching, reading and writing, and traveling.
And coffee...you can't forget coffee.
Aidan is a writer and communications professional also based in Edmonton, Alberta. His work has been featured in several different publications, periodicals, and books. When he isn't writing or podcasting, he can usually be found attending to his second love: gaming, with a cat or two at his side.
We met when we were 18. We supported each other through university. We moved in together at and then we got married. We live in the coolest neighbourhood in Edmonton. And we record our podcast in our home office overlooking the North Saskatchewan River Valley.
Our podcast came to life in late 2016 as Bickering Peaks: A Twin Peaks Podcast. In those early days, we spent our time rewatching Twin Peaks and analysing the series in Season One of the podcast.
In Season Two of our show, we applied that same rigour to Twin Peaks: The Return.
Season Three saw us tackle the larger question of series co-creators' David Lynch's and Mark Frost's creative oeuvre.
We decided to take our podcast into vastly different territory for Season Four when we dove headfirst into the works of William Shakespeare.
Our slightly truncated Season Five boldly went where no Bicks have gone before...and we promise we will finish our look at the Star Trek universe soon.
Season Six is our soft reboot — a return to form and hopefully a more regular release schedule. We hope you'll continue to follow along as we tackle the pop culture stuff that strikes our fancy.
You can contact us at thebickspod[at]gmail[dot]com.