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Classic Pulp
Veronica presents The A.I. Repertory Theater
37 episodes
2 days ago
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Fiction
Arts,
Books
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All content for Classic Pulp is the property of Veronica presents The A.I. Repertory Theater and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
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Fiction
Arts,
Books
Episodes (20/37)
Classic Pulp
At the Earth's Core [5]
[5/8] Cast back into the shadowed halls of Phutra, a weary wanderer faces merciless investigators and ravenous prehistoric terrors, gambling his life for a desperate chance to save his friends—and win back the woman haunting his dreams! Edgar Rice Burroughs' "At the Earth's Core" appeared as a four-part serial in ALL-STORY WEEKLY (April 4 to 25, 1914).   Produced and Directed by Keith Brian Shaw [human]   Our A.I. Repertory Theater Cast Host . . . . . . . . . . . .  . Adam Stone  David Innes . . . . . . . Benjamin Ackerman Perry  . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick McElhone Ja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Howie French Sagoth Guard 1 . . . . Barry Eubanks Sagoth Guard 2 . . . . Oscar Humphries                Sagoth Guard 3 . . . . Jerry Eubanks   Audio production © 2025 Keith Brian Shaw A.I.R.T. actors created using elevenLabs.ai Source text is in the Public Domain
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2 days ago
35 minutes

Classic Pulp
At the Earth's Core [4]
[4/8] Fleeing the hypnotic slaughter-pits of the Mahars, a lone castaway braves island jungles, monstrous sea serpents, and treacherous tribes as he fights to win freedom—and return for the friend he left behind!!    Produced and Directed by Keith Brian Shaw [human]   Our A.I. Repertory Theater Cast Host . . . . . . . . . . . .  . Adam Stone  David Innes . . . . . . . Benjamin Ackerman Perry  . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick McElhone Dian the Beautiful . . Marjorie Belmont  Ja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Howie French   Audio production © 2025 Keith Brian Shaw A.I.R.T. actors created using elevenLabs.ai Source text is in the Public Domain
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1 week ago
36 minutes

Classic Pulp
At the Earth's Core [3]
[3/8] Dragged into the reptile-ruled depths of Phutra, desperate slaves plot a mad escape beneath the unblinking inner sun—while the monstrous Mahars prepare a blood-soaked spectacle of beasts and doom!   Produced and Directed by Keith Brian Shaw [human]   Our A.I. Repertory Theater Cast Host . . . . . . . . . . . . . Adam Stone David Innes . . . . . . . Benjamin Ackerman Perry  . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick McElhone Dian the Beautiful . . Marjorie Belmont  Ghak  . . . . . . . . . . . . Victor Glenn   Audio production © 2025 Keith Brian Shaw A.I.R.T. actors created using elevenLabs.ai Source text is in the Public Domain
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2 weeks ago
30 minutes

Classic Pulp
At the Earth's Core [2]
[2/8] Hurled into the blazing noonday of the earth’s hollow heart, two helpless captives are driven in chains toward the monstrous Mahars—winged overlords who rule Pellucidar with terror and slave-blood!   Produced and Directed by Keith Brian Shaw [human]   Our A.I. Repertory Theater Cast Host . . . . . . . . . . . .  . Adam Stone  David Innes . . . . . . . Benjamin Ackerman Perry  . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick McElhone Dian the Beautiful . . Marjorie Belmont  Ghak  . . . . . . . . . . . . Victor Glenn   Audio production © 2025 Keith Brian Shaw A.I.R.T. actors created using elevenLabs.ai Source text is in the Public Domain
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3 weeks ago
36 minutes

Classic Pulp
At the Earth’s Core [1]
[1/8] A runaway “iron mole” plunges two unsuspecting explorers into a hidden inner world where ravenous beasts, savage tree-folk, and a motionless sun hurl them headlong into screaming adventure!   Produced and Directed by Keith Brian Shaw [human]   Our A.I. Repertory Theater Cast Host . . . . . . . . . . . . Adam Stone David Innes . . . . . . Benjamin Ackerman Perry  . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick McElhone   Audio production © 2025 Keith Brian Shaw A.I.R.T. actors created using elevenLabs.ai Source text is in the Public Domain
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1 month ago
40 minutes

Classic Pulp
Veronica Talks All-Story Magazine
Let’s talk about ALL-STORY—the magazine that quietly helped invent modern pop fiction.  Frank Munsey launched The All-Story magazine in January 1905 as a companion to ARGOSY, and it quickly became a playground for imagination.  By 1914, readers were hooked on fast-moving serials, so it switched from a monthly to a weekly and, after merging with The Cavalier, became All-Story Cavalier Weekly for about a year before settling on All-Story Weekly.  The stories came at a breakneck pace—fantasy, romance, science fiction, adventure—all designed to keep readers desperate for the next installment. What really makes All-Story special is how many legends it launched. Edgar Rice Burroughs introduced John Carter of Mars here, and not long after, Tarzan swung into the pages and straight into pop-culture history.  A. Merritt built entire dream worlds out of words, and Johnston McCulley created Zorro—the original masked hero who set the mold for everyone from Batman to The Scarlet Pimpernel’s modern cousins. Even mystery master Rex Stout passed through, experimenting with serialized storytelling before inventing Nero WOLFE.  By the time All-Story Weekly merged into Argosy in 1920, it had already changed the rules of commercial fiction forever. Here are 5 standout tales from the magazines: 1. "Under the Moons of Mars” - Edgar Rice Burroughs February through July 1912.  This is where it all began for John Carter—an ordinary man flung to Mars, sword in hand, leaping across red deserts and falling for a princess. Pure pulp magic! 2. “Tarzan of the Apes” - Edgar Rice Burroughs October 1912.  Tarzan’s first swing into print turned one issue into publishing gold. It’s adventure, identity, and myth all rolled into one! 3. “The Moon Pool” - A. Merritt June 22, 1918.  A glowing doorway to another world, lush and terrifying, filled with strange light and stranger beings. Merritt’s prose made fantasy feel cosmic! 4. “THE CURSE OF CAPISTRANO” - Johnston McCulley August 9 throughSeptember 6, 1919. Zorro makes his masked debut, charming by day and slashing justice by night. It practically invented the swashbuckling hero we still love! 5. "A PRIZE FOR PRINCES” - Rex Stout May 2 through 30, 1914. Before Nero Wolfe, Stout wrote this high-stakes romantic adventure packed with political intrigue and moral tension. Proof that pulps could also aim for sophistication.
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1 month ago
3 minutes

Classic Pulp
The Curse of Capistrano
We did this just for fun on our season hiatus. It the first appearance of Zorro from All-Story Magazine. Please let us know if you's like us to do the whole story this coming season. Enjoy!
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1 month ago
28 minutes

Classic Pulp
Season Two Trailer
Coming November 13th!
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1 month ago

Classic Pulp
Grandma was a Lady
Grandma Never Drank Whiskey When Jock Stanford bets the company on a flashy new speedboat, old Chugger Brown turns back to a forgotten mahogany relic—“Nell,” the lady of yesterday. Can an aging boat, souped up with forbidden power, out-race a cutthroat rival and save them all—or will she splinter like a tree in a storm?
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1 month ago
36 minutes

Classic Pulp
Veronica Talks Adventure Magazine
Adventure magazine debuted in November 1910 from The Ridgway Company (a Butterick subsidiary); the imprint changed to Butterick Publishing Company in October 1926, then to Popular Publications in July 1934, and the magazine continued—through several format shifts—until 1971. What made Adventure special wasn’t only longevity but ambition: under editor Arthur S. Hoffman (1912–1927) it became a rigorously fact-minded market for historically and geographically “correct” tales, ran innovative reader departments (“The Camp-Fire,” “Ask Adventure”), went to a three-times-a-month schedule at its peak, and built an international audience that included Theodore Roosevelt. In October 1935, Time famously saluted it as “The No. 1 Pulp.” Beyond sheer thrills, Adventure was a proving ground for writers who treated far-flung settings with reportorial care—Talbot Mundy, Harold Lamb, H. Bedford-Jones, Rafael Sabatini, Georges Surdez, Gordon MacCreagh, Arthur O. Friel, and many more. The magazine’s pages mixed robust serials with standalone novellas, nurtured ongoing cycles like Lamb’s Cossacks and Mundy’s historical epics, and cultivated unusually engaged reader participation through classifieds like “Wanted-Men and Adventurers” and the “Lost Trails” column. The result was a pulp with a reputation for quality and authenticity that outlasted most rivals. Here are five standout tales from Adventure magazine: 1. "Tros of Samothrace” — Talbot Mundy, Adventure, February 10, 1925. Launches Mundy’s anti-Caesar epic—historical adventure at its boldest, and a signature demonstration of the magazine’s appetite for big, meticulously researched serials. 2. "Khlit” — Harold Lamb, Adventure, November 1, 1917. The first story of Lamb’s gray-bearded Cossack sets the tone for a cycle whose lean prose, cultural breadth, and on-the-ground detail influenced generations of adventure and fantasy writers. 3. "The Pathless Trail” — Arthur O. Friel, Adventure, serialized from October 10, 1921 to November 10, 1921. A landmark Amazon-jungle saga whose field-experience feel epitomizes Adventure’s “you-are-there” realism and helped cement Friel’s reputation as the pulp’s premier explorer-story hand. 4. "The Green Splotches” — T. S. Stribling, Adventure, January 3, 1920. A much-reprinted early science-fiction classic about an alien outpost in South America—evidence that Adventurecould stretch beyond pure swashbuckling into idea-driven speculative fiction. 5. "Don Diego Valdez” — Rafael Sabatini, Adventure, June 18, 1921. An early Captain Blood tale; its presence in Adventure showcases the magazine’s ability to attract top-tier historical romancers and feed material into later landmark novels.  
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1 month ago
3 minutes

Classic Pulp
By Night They Creep [6]
PAIN-MAD VENGEANCE [6/6] Trapped in an underground hell of disease and death, Paul Lawton turns his torment into fury to face the monstrous master of the plague! In a climax of fire and madness, the green horror is unmasked—and the true face of evil stares back from beyond the grave! 
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2 months ago
16 minutes

Classic Pulp
By Night They Creep [5]
MASTER OF MONSTERS [5/6] Dragged into the heart of the swamp, Paul Lawton faces the ghastly truth behind the plague—a nightmare kingdom ruled by a man who has become a monster! As living corpses close in and the mad surgeon reveals his hideous revenge, Lawton’s only hope lies between love, horror, and the blazing fires of hell itself!
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2 months ago
21 minutes

Classic Pulp
By Night They Creep [4]
DEATH STRIKES AGAIN [4/6] In a town gripped by a hideous plague, Paul Lawton races against madness and time to save the woman he loves from a fate written in green fire and death. But when the dead rise and the living vanish into the swamp, the line between man and monster dissolves in a nightmare of horror and revenge!
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2 months ago
15 minutes

Classic Pulp
By Night They Creep [3]
THE DEAD RETURN [3/6] When the green plague tightens its grip on Rillwood, vengeance rises from the grave with arrows and blood-soaked warnings! Paul Lawton faces madness, murder, and a terror from beyond the veil that no man—or corpse—can escape!
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2 months ago
19 minutes

Classic Pulp
By Night They Creep [2]
ANCIENT ARROWS [2/6] From the blighted heart of Blackwater Swamp comes a nightmare of deathless tribes and ghastly sacrifice! When Paul Lawton’s fevered wound turns green and a woman’s body hangs riddled with ancient arrows, the swamp’s unholy secrets crawl once more into the light of day!
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2 months ago
21 minutes

Classic Pulp
By Night They Creep [1]
IT BEGINS [1/6] From the black, stinking depths of Blackwater rises a horror the Wampanoags dared not name! When Paul Lawton’s camera catches the ghastly truth—a human face behind the green glow—madness and murder slither from the slime to claim the living!
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2 months ago
19 minutes

Classic Pulp
Veronica Talks Horror Stories Magazine
Horror Stories was Popular Publications’ most unabashed “weird-menace” showcase, launched in January 1935 as a sister to Terror Tales and Dime Mystery Magazine and ending in April 1941. Conceived under editor Rogers Terrill, the magazine codified the pulps’ shudder formula: an apparent supernatural outrage, relentless peril, and ultimately a (barely) plausible human explanation. Its appeal was intensified by lurid covers—often by John Newton Howitt—whose tableaux of bondage, masks, and mad science became a visual shorthand for the genre’s feverish stakes. Across its run, Horror Stories courted specialists in menace and momentum: Hugh B. Cave, Arthur J. Burks, Arthur Leo Zagat, Norvell W. Page, and Ray Cummings. The blend of breathless pacing and stagey shock made it a newsstand phenomenon in 1935, monthly at first and then bimonthly from 1936 through its wartime demise. Within the Popular Publications line, it functioned as the purest expression of Terrill’s “mystery-horror-credibility” rule, pushing physical hazard and eroticized threat as far as censors and readers would tolerate, yet keeping the solutions rooted in human depravity rather than ghosts. Historically, the magazine matters for crystallizing the weird-menace aesthetic at its peak, training a generation of writers in compressed, high-torque storytelling and providing iconic imagery that later bled into 1940s crime and 1950s horror comics. Today its issues—especially 1935–1937 numbers—are prized by collectors for content and cover art; and its tales remain case studies in how pulp technique manufactures dread: the swift hook, the escalating trap, and the last-page unmasking that converts the monstrous into the monstrous-human. Here are my five standout tales from Horror Stories “Her Lover — Death!” — Wyatt Blassingame — January 1935. A marquee piece from the inaugural issue that fixed the magazine’s house style of feverish menace with rational unwind. “Mate for a Monster” — Hugh B. Cave — March 1935. Early cornerstone by one of the line’s most prolific masters; repeatedly cited in contents lists and reprints. “Death Rocks the Cradle” — John H. Knox — October 1935. A fan-favorite Knox showcase that appears front-and-center on dealer and reprint notes for this issue. “The Dead Hate the Living” — Wayne Rogers — December 1936–January 1937. The lead story in the winter double-date number; its unforgettable title keeps echoing in later horror culture. “The Mole Men Want Your Eyes” — Frederick C. Davis — April–May 1938. Notorious even among shudder-pulp aficionados; later issued as a chapbook and often singled out in histories.
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2 months ago
3 minutes

Classic Pulp
You'll Always Remember Me
HE MAY BE AFTER YOU! As chilling a masterpiece of psychological derangement as any story published in an American magazine in the 20th century!
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2 months ago
42 minutes

Classic Pulp
Veronica Talks Black Mask Magazine
Black Mask debuted in April 1920, launched by H. L. Mencken and George Jean Nathan to help subsidize their higher-brow monthly The Smart Set.  In its earliest years it ran a grab-bag of adventure, romance, and occult yarns, but the magazine’s identity snapped into focus when Joseph T. “Cap” Shaw took over as editor in 1926. Shaw cultivated a spare, kinetic prose style and a stable of writers—Dashiell Hammett, Earl Stanley Gardner, Raoul Whitfield, Frederick Nebbel—that forged the hard-boiled idiom and the modern private-eye template.  Shaw's 1926–1936 tenure is widely seen as the magazine’s golden age. After Shaw’s resignation in 1936, Fanny Ellsworth steered the magazine toward more subjective, psychologically driven crime fiction and brought in voices like Cornell Woolrich and Steve Fisher. Popular Publications acquired Black Mask in 1940, installing Kenneth S. White as editor; the pulp finally ceased publication in 1951, with the brand and backlist later absorbed by Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and periodically revived in anthologies and reissues. Black Mask’s significance is hard to overstate: it incubated serials later issued as landmark novels (from Red Harvest to The Maltese Falcon), set the tone for American noir on page and screen, and professionalized a fast, streetwise realism that still shapes crime writing today. Here's a somewhat subjective list of the top 5 black mask stories! Number 5. “Finger Man” — Raymond Chandler, October 1934. This is vintage early Chandler—it has FIRST-PERSON BITE, crooked politics, and the moral weather that soon becomes Philip Marlowe’s world. 4. “Blackmailers Don’t Shoot” — Raymond Chandler, December 1933. Chandler’s print debut; the template for his wise, weary voice and the Hollywood-corruption vein he’d mine for decades. 3. “Knights of the Open Palm” — Carroll John Daly, June 1923. First Race Williams story; establishes the shoot-first hard-boiled private eye and pits him against the Klan—hugely influential. At number 2 is “Red Harvest” (Part 1: “The Cleansing of Poisonville”) — Dashiell Hammett, November 1927. The Continental Op’s gang-war clean-up; a proto-noir masterpiece of institutional rot and ruthless tactics. You can listen to our pilot episode for our Continental Op SERIES right here on the Pulp Preservation Project podcast. And the number one story HAS TO BE Sam Spade’s debut, “The Maltese Falcon” (Part 1) — Dashiell Hammett, September 1929. This serial is TRULY "the stuff that dreams are made of." It is the story that crystalized hard-boiled detection and became one of crime fiction’s canonical novels, not to mention an iconic movie.  Hammett's style continues to influence contemporary crime novelists. Writers like James Ellroy and Sara Paretsky are heirs to the hardboiled tradition that Hammett pioneered.
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2 months ago
3 minutes

Classic Pulp
Atrakin and the Man
FLESH v. METAL Hunted by machine-men and betrayed by science, one father and son hold the only key to humanity’s survival. Can flesh and blood outwit Atrakin, the immortal metal tyrant who would rule the universe?
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2 months ago
13 minutes

Classic Pulp