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Submit ReviewI’ve always had a problematic relationship to the news, and I’ve struggled to navigate that even more since this pandemic began. I talk to my father about the night I yelled at him over his insufficient fear of the virus, and I look back on a 1954 essay by E.B. White about the disparity between his experience of a hurricane and the coverage he hears of that hurricane on the radio.
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The Eye of Edna by E.B. White
Cancel Everything by Yascha Mounk
Like most people, I imagine, I've been having a lot of anxious thoughts these days. And I’ve been wishing I could get those thoughts out of my head. Then I remembered that I used to have a podcast called Anxious Machine.
So here’s my first episode in three years, part of a planned, ongoing audio journal. This episode starts with some thoughts about how this virus first entered my consciousness, how it felt to watch the movie Contagion with my daughter, and trying to stay awake to what's happening.
The House Glows with Almost No Help by Chris Zabriskie
Contagion: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Cliff Martinez
Contagion by Steven Soderbergh
Dana Stevens on the Slate Culture Gabfest
Wesley Morris on On The Media
I'm announcing a whole new podcast, and giving you a listen to the first episode. The podcast is called Before It Had a Theme, and on it, Britta Greene an I discuss and deconstruct old episodes of This American Life. On this episode, we discuss the very first episode of that show, as well as why the show is worth discussing, how we and others became fans of the show, and why we love Ira Glass’s mother.
Clips from following were used in this episode:
Coffaro’s Theme by Bill Frisell
Episode of Tape with Jonathan Mejivar
Episode of Tape with Ben Calhoun
Ira’s talk at the Third Coast Audio Festival
Longform Podcast, Episode 159: Ira Glass
This American Life, Episode 1: New Beginnings
Ira’s talk at the Gel Conference
A year ago, I launched the first of a three-part series about starting a new kind of podcast company. Then I went silent. This is long-delayed follow up, a story I’m almost reluctant to tell, about what it’s like to walk the fine line between an ambitious dream and a delusion.
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CGI Snake by Chris Zabriskie
Divider by Chris Zabriskie
The Sun Is Scheduled to Come Out Tomorrow by Chris Zabriskie
Heavy Flutter by Podington Bear
gaël by johnny_ripper
Cylinder Two by Chris Zabriskie
Respiration by Podington Bear
Massive by Podington Bear
Tea Tea Tea by johnny_ripper
I Am a Man Who Will Fight for Your Honor by Chris Zabriskie
Take off and Shoot a Zero by Chris Zabriskie
The House Glows (with Almost No Help) by Chris Zabriskie
Another Version of You by Chris Zabriskie
Sometimes in your life, you reach a crossroads, go on a men’s weekend, spend too much time alone in the forest, have a mid-life crisis, and start thinking you can change the world with your podcast. This episode is about that happening to me. Part one of a three-part series.
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Opening Credits by johnny_ripper
Divider by Chris Zabriskie
Audrey by johnny_ripper
Mario Bava Sleeps in a Little Later Than He Expected To by Chris Zabriskie
Black Book by johnny_ripper
The Dark Glow of the Mountains by Chris Zabriskie
A Void by johnny_ripper
Program Reverie by Podington Bear
Massive by Podington Bear
Parents of young children have an especially fraught relationship with their smartphones. On the one hand, these devices are indispensable tools for getting things done and staying connected to the adult world while in the midst of childcare. On the other hand, the culture is constantly telling parents, and particularly mothers, that they’re too distracted by these devices, that smartphones are stealing precious attention away from our kids.
But the idea that parents should be focusing so much attention on their kids is itself a modern invention. In fact, our current understanding of parenthood and childhood is, in a very real way, the product of technology.
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Moms, Let Go of Your Smartphone Guilt
Opening Credits by johnny_ripper
Spring Solstice by Podington Bear
Cylinder Three by Chris Zabriskie
The Dark Glow of the Mountain by Chris Zabriskie
Walkin Flags by Sealadder
Button Mushrooms by Podington Bear
Stuck Dream by Podington Bear
88 by Podington Bear
What True Self? Feels Bogus, Lets Watch Jason X by Chris Zabriskie
This past week, my kids went back to school. Summer vacation has come and gone. And that’s gotten me thinking about the very idea of summer vacation because every summer, for the past several years, my wife, her sisters and our families have had this tradition of going to a cabin for a few days to get out of the city. We don’t own a cabin. We have to rent one. And this year, the process of finding it, looking at pictures of all the possible cabins on all the possible lakes, made me wonder about this particular, middle-class American ritual of going into the wilderness for vacation, where that ritual came from, and what it says about our relationship to modern life.
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Special thanks this week to new Patreon supporter Matt Holliday.
Where Was the Birthplace of the American Vacation?
Working At Play: A History of Vacations in the United States
Gentle Chase by Podington Bear
Arrival by North Hive
Tam by LJ Kruzer
Electron by Podington Bear
Halflight by Podington Bear
Tamz by LJ Kruzer
88 by Podington Bear
Since the wide-spread adoption of embalming in the United States, most Americans have turned the process of handling the deceased over to experts in the undertaking business. On this episode, the story of one family who decided that they wanted to be the ones to wash and prepare the body of the son and brother they’d lost.
This episode was previously aired on the podcast Neighbors, one of the podcasts in The Heard.
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Cylinder Five by Chris Zabrinskie
88 by Podington Bear
My older brother Scott lives almost completely outside the network of modern life: he has no internet, no email address, no cable TV or satellite, not even an antenna for his television. Until recently, he didn’t even have a bank account or a telephone. In this episode, I try to get to the bottom of why he hates computers, and especially the internet, even though the internet helped him solve a question he’s had since the day he was born.
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Heavy Flutter by Podington Bear
I Am Running with Temporary Success from a Monstrous Vacuum in Pursuit by Chris Zabriskie
The Sun Is Scheduled to Come Out Tomorrow by Chris Zabriskie
The House Glows with Almost No Help by Chris Zabriskie
The Theatrical Poster for Potergeist III by Podington Bear
The Dark Glow of the Mountains by Podington Bear
88 by Podington Bear
Special thanks to Eric Keys, Cam Hudson, Bradley Dunham, and Gordon Delp for their support of this podcast.
Humans have been reading for thousands of years, but ever since the invention of television, people have been worried that reading is in decline. The latest worry is that, even if the Internet has caused an uptick in the quantity of our reading, we're reading on screens instead of paper, and this seems to degrade the quality of our reading.
On this episode, technology writer Clive Thompson talks about the history of reading as a technology, why we’re worried about its future, and what happened when he tried to read War and Peace on his iPhone.
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Clive Thompson’s essay about reading War and Peace on his iPhone
Clive Thompson’s essay about the novelty effect
Clive Thompson’s book Smarter than You Think
Hanna Rosin’s article for The Atlantic about children and screens
Amaranth Borsuk & Brad Bouse: Between Page and Screen
Curious Process by Podington Bear
Oxygen Garden by Chris Zabriskie
Deeper by Phlox.s
Rythn by Podington Bear
Mensa by Podington Bear
Steppin Intro by Podington Bear
Program Reverie by Podington Bear
Euphoric by Podington Bear
Respiration by Podington Bear
88 by Podington Bear
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