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Finally getting this baby started!

[livejournal.com profile] twasadark asked me to talk about podcasts, and I am delighted to do so!

If, like me, you like to listen to things—and/or have more time to listen to things than you do to sit down and read—podcasts are awesome. Also, the seemingly DIY, anyone-can-make-one, aspect is very appealing. I’ve linked to the podcasts’ own websites below, but I mostly access them through itunes on my phone, and I kind of love the way you can search the itunes app for a writer you’re interested in, and it will throw up podcast episodes of said writer reading or being interviewed.

Here are some that I listen to regularly, with apologies in advance because they are mostly about books.

But to get the obvious out of the way first: like the rest of the podcast-listening world, I’m addicted to Serial. I eat it up like cake—I find the presentation ridiculously compelling. I also find myself surprisingly interested in all the furor/speculation around it, focusing on Sarah Koenig as a character herself and her construction of the narrative. I don’t read Reddit or any of the blogs about the case, but I do listen to the Slate Serial Spoilers podcast, which often brings in some interesting guests.

I also listen to Welcome to Night Vale, though I have to say my enjoyment of it varies. My kids like it, though, so following it gives us something fun to talk about. I’m not sure I’d carry on with it on my own.

Podcasts about books:

My favorite podcast for readings is the one put out by The Free Library of Philadelphia. The episodes are pretty much unadorned broadcasts of their great, varied, series of readers—from Ann Rice, to Walter Isaacson, to David Mitchell. I like getting a taste of a book I might want to read, or hearing an author answer questions about one I have read.

I also like the podcast from the New York Times Book Review. It is mostly interviews with authors whose books are reviewed in the weekly supplement, but it also has “publishing news” and “bestseller news” features. Like the similar podcast from The New YorkerThe New Yorker Out Loud, which interviews the authors of their long essays, it’s clearly designed to lure you behind the paywall to read more, but there’s no obligation. I already get The New Yorker, and often the interviews on the podcast do get me to read the essays in question.

Others I’ve listened to once or twice, and would again if they featured an author I was interested in: Slate’s Audio Book Club, All Write Already, Book Fight.

Other stuff.

Over the summer, I was listening to Kumail Nanjiani’s The X-Files Files. I loved The X-Files while it was on, but was completely unaware of fandom at that point in my life, so I was enjoying his simultaneous history of the show, its fandom and the television industry. He never has exactly my take on the show, but he’s infectiously enthusiastic about it, and he has good guests. I only stopped listening because I couldn’t keep up with re-watching two episodes a week so as to listen to him discuss them. I’d like to go back to it, though—he’s had some great guests on recently: Darrin Morgan, etc.

The BBC has a bunch of podcasts, always, and I’ve just been listening to their broadcast of Atul Gawande’s Reith Lectures on the Future of Medicine. He’s a fascinating speaker, of course, and the lectures seem to have drawn a lot of other prominent doctors, so the questions he gets asked are interesting, too.

What do you guys listen to? What am I missing?

(and I have room for some more questions, if you want to drop one in the comments)

Date: 2014-12-05 04:34 pm (UTC)
garryowen: (mulder p.i.)
From: [personal profile] garryowen
Aaaaa! Thank you for telling me about the XF Files! I am going to give it a listen. Darin Morgan is the best. I idolized those writers. So good.

Date: 2014-12-05 04:53 pm (UTC)
isis: (la la shep)
From: [personal profile] isis
I am a big fan of Dan Carlin's Hardcore History. I see he's started to charge for the older episodes, but I will say the Death Throes of the Republic series (about the fall of the Roman Republic and its replacement by the Roman Empire) was fantastic. His Wrath of the Khans series (about Genghis Khan's history and legacy) is also very good, and it's free. For a shorter intro among his currently free episodes, Thor's Angels (about the "Dark Ages" and their ending) is really good, and I also liked Prophets of Doom (about the Anabaptist cult led by John of Leiden and the Münster Rebellion of 1534, which be warned is really violent and unpleasant), though his "I am going to tell you something really SENSATIONAL! Be EXCITED!" schtick gets a little wearisome.

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