Love believes all things (1st Corinthians 13:7)
People tend to get worked up about variance in religious belief. The Tao Te Ching says truth is paradoxical. It’s better this way.
People tend to get worked up about variance in religious belief. The Tao Te Ching says truth is paradoxical. It’s better this way.
P. Gregory extols the virtues of watching movies on the tiny screen and art that gets away with anything.
P. Gregory shares his New York Times’ Editorial Page byline. Written 30 years ago, it’s about us hicks from the Midwest.
P. Gregory uncovers why Americans are so obsessed with stuff. It’s right there in the Declaration of Independence.
If 60 Minutes came to Champaign-Urbana, they’d keep plenty busy.
P. Gregory Springer is reminded that memory and reality are two very different things.
Springer wonders what may have been had he played nude volleyball instead of studying Kierkegaard.
Sometimes the people who complain about censorship are the ones trying to censor.
A confluence of 29s, old melodramas, and upcoming local film festivals leads to a surreal appearance of Salvador Dali on What’s My Line.
Springer finds that voice recognition software is not yet able to understand Tao Te Ching translations, violence, Jesus, AK-47s, and blog flame wars.