"Julie the Amtrak God" puts together flesh and steel and comes out with a haunting gem of a radio story. We are sucked into the dialog between a robot who's just doing her job and a girl who barely swallows her pain. At just three minutes, the piece is as lean and well-packaged as a pop song. But Arsarnow delivers a bittersweet, intimate performance that stirs in you long after the piece finishes. Her concept is genius in its simplicity and nearly flawless in its execution.
Comments by Shawn Wen
Comment for "Julie the Amtrak God"
Shawn Wen
Posted on November 07, 2007 at 09:09 PM | Permalink
Review of Julie the Amtrak God
"Julie the Amtrak God" puts together flesh and steel and comes out with a haunting gem of a radio story. We are sucked into the dialog between a robot who's just doing her job and a girl who barely swallows her pain. At just three minutes, the piece is as lean and well-packaged as a pop song. But Arsarnow delivers a bittersweet, intimate performance that stirs in you long after the piece finishes. Her concept is genius in its simplicity and nearly flawless in its execution.