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Hail to Bob Fass and Bill Propp for their indomitable spirit to tell the truth and expose epistomological cratamology !
Critic Reviews powered by Metacritic ™
Time Out New York
It's as haunting and heroic as anything you'll see on the big screen this year, even if the film itself has a tendency to traffic in an abundance of dead air. Full Review
A.O. Scott
The New York Times
The charm of Radio Unnameable is, finally, elegiac. It can make you wish - or, if you're lucky, remember - that you were a sleepless New Yorker in 1967, kept from loneliness by a gentle, soulful voice on the radio. Full Review
Bill Weber
Slant Magazine
While crediting free-form radio pioneer Bob Fass with changing the culture of broadcasting, this documentary remains clear-eyed about the decline of community radio and the New Left. Full Review
Joe Neumaier
New York Daily News
Rarely has any film, fictional or documentary, captured the hypnotic effect of voices on the airwaves like this chronicle of Bob Fass. Full Review
Melissa Anderson
Village Voice
Now 79, the man with the snow-white ponytail in the radio booth hasn't flagged; as one of Fass's contemporaries says, "He can let someone go on and on and on." Full Review
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