
The Pulp Fiction Renaissance Podcast is back!
And this time, Richard Barrett and Dr. Breck discuss Man-and-Woman Dynamics in light of Richard’s favorite kind of Women…
The Bimbo!
It’s the kind of strange bizarreness that can only be found at Pulp Fiction Renaissance at the link HERE…
As you’ll learn how Bimbos reveal the secret esoteric key to solving all of society’s problems!
Inside at the link HERE you will find:
- Why people are surprised that Richard Barrett loves Bimbos…
- How Bimbos fit into Neoclassical and Romantic Schools of Art…
- Just what is the Neoclassical School of Art…
- Who is Johann Joachim Wincklemann, founder of Neoclassicism…
- How he influenced Alfred Rosenberg…
- Just what is the Romantic School of Art…
- Why Bimbos embody the Romantic School of Art…
- The Secret Intelligence of Bimbos…
- How Men are the Sun and Women are the Moon…
- The Double Edged Sword of Women’s Lunar Nature…
- How Bodybuilding Destroyed Masculine Physical Culture…
- The Modern Day Trainers keeping Old Time Masculine Physical Culture Alive…
- Richard Barrett’s Different Rules for Men and Women…
- And much, much more!
So saddle up with your favorite podcast hosts, as they take you on the strangest, most bizarre you’ve been on with them yet…
With even more to come!
CLICK THE LINK HERE!
P.S. Don’t forget to see art from the creators who made the title image here…
Pulp Fiction Power to you, my friends!
Sincerely,
Richard Barrett
01-29-2026
Written at 11:53 AM, somewhere in the USA…
Episode shot on 11-27-2026 at an undisclosed underground location…
Sources Cited
Eitner, Lorenz. Neoclassicism and Romanticism, 1750-1850: Volume I: Enlightenment/Revolution. Ed. H.W. Janson. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1970. Series: “Source Documents in the History of Art Series” edited by H.W. Janson.
Eitner, Lorenz. Neoclassicism and Romanticism, 1750-1850: Volume II: Restoration/Twilight of Humanism. Ed. H.W. Janson. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1970. Series: “Source Documents in the History of Art Series” edited by H.W. Janson.