podcast – Joho the Blog (original) (raw)
April 1, 2020
Funny podcasts for unfunny times
I spend a lot of time listening to podcasts – maybe a little less than back in Normal Times when I was commuting 1.5-2.0 hours a day, but if I’m putterin’, I’m pod-listenin’.
I find it wearying to envelope myself in coronavirus or political podcasts these days. I’m not sure why. Maybe you have some ideas. In any case, I’ve been turning to comedy more and more.
Here’s a list, in alphabetical order. I am not necessarily proud of any of these.
- Alchemy This. Kevin Pollack – yes, that Kevin Pollack – has assembled a troupe of improvisers who do three scenes in each hour. At their best, they find an absurd narrative coherence that is mindblowing and reminiscent of Firesign Theatre’s scripted pieces. At their worst, I can’t make sense of the flow of the scene – too many of their voices sound the same to me – but still find the moments of it funny.
- Behind the Bastards. Each episode tells the story of some despicable person, often someone I have never heard of. It’s not flatout comedy, but the tone is comedic. Often excellent.
- The Dollop_._ Much like Behind the Bastards, but not focused purely on bastards. One of the two comedians who put it together reads an essay about some odd incident in history while the other reacts while hearing it for the first time. Ranges from hilarious to never quite getting up to comedic speed. And it’s entirely possible that the comic style is not exactly to your taste. It’s not exactly to mine.
- Good One. This is one of my favorites. Each episode interviews a comedian for an hour about one single joke of theirs. The interviewer is a total comedy nerd, and the interviews can be very revealing about the comic process.
- How did this get made? Usually recorded live at a theatre, three funny people riff about some terrible movie. Funny bad taste all around.
- Improv4Humans. Matt Besser’s improv troupe improvs scenes, much like Alchemy This. I personally find it less consistent, but it came be very good. For example, the archival show with Zach Woods, recently re-released, has some very funny stuff on it.
- Mike and Tom Eat Snacks. This ended a couple of years ago, but its hundred episodes of Michael Ian Black and Tom Cavanagh are still available. The two of them, unscripted, review snack foods, a timeless topic. (Spoiler: The snack reviews are just a pretense.)
- Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me. As a tote-bag carrying NPR supporter (and once time serial All Things Considered commentator), this one is obvious. It’s also consistently funny.
- WTF. Marc Maron’s podcast used to focus on comedians but has expanded wildly. Which is good, because he is an excellent interviewer. The recent interview with Dan Ackroyd, for example, is great. It turns out that the real Dan Ackroyd is like a Dan Ackroyd character.
I also listen to many other podcasts that don’t talk about current events but are not comedic. Some are fantastic. But it’s comedy tonight!
What would you add to this list?
Categories: culture, entertainment, humor, podcast Tagged with: comedy • coronavirus • humor • podcasts
Date: April 1st, 2020
September 14, 2013
Interview with John Sundman
John Sundman is a heck of an interesting person. He’s been around the technology circuit from the Old Days (we’re peers in the chronological sense) but he also writes damn good fiction, some of which (Cheap Complex Devices [my review][sf site][goodreads]) is pretty sublime.
So how does a talented writer make a living in the Webby world? He and I have a long conversation about that and many other things.
Categories: culture, podcast Tagged with: fiction • john sundman • podcast • writing
Date: September 14th, 2013 dw
August 7, 2013
Radio Berkman is a Top 9 tech podcast, according to Verge
I’m a little bit proud that Radio Berkman is on The Verge’s list of top 9 technology podcasts.
Radio Berkman is produced by Daniel Dennis Jones (twitter: blanket) who does a fabulous job and deserves the credit for this. The podcasts are generally 20-30 mins, although they go longer when it makes sense to. Generally they are interviews with people passing through the Center. (I am the interviewer in many of them.)
Yay for Radio Berkman!
Categories: podcast Tagged with: berkman • podcasts
Date: August 7th, 2013 dw
June 21, 2013
[lodlam] Kevin Ford on the state of BIBFRAME
Kevin Ford who is a principle member of the team behind the Library of Congress’ BIBFRAME effort — a modern replacement for the aging MARC standard — gives an update on its status, and addresses a controversy about whether it’s “webby” enough. (I liveblogged a session about this at LODLAM.)
[lodlam] Kitio Fofack on why Linked Data
Kitio Fofack turned to Linked Data when creating a prototype app that aggregated researcher events. He explains why.
Categories: interop, libraries, podcast Tagged with: libraries • linked data • lodlam • podcast
Date: June 21st, 2013 dw
[lodlam] Sean Thomas and Sands Fish on getting Open Access into the right hands
Sands Fish [twitter: sandsfish and Sean Thomas [twitter: sean_m_thomas] at MIT are interested in pursuing a project to see if the new wealth of Open Access research is getting into the hands of people who can use it to solve problems. What is the distribution of access to OA?
Categories: open access, podcast Tagged with: lodlam • open access
Date: June 21st, 2013 dw
Debra Riley-Huff on library data from a Webby point of view
Debra Riley-Huff [twitter: huff] explains what some of the library metadata standards (including BIBFRAME and Schema.org) look like from the point of view of a Web developer.
June 20, 2013
[lodlam] Richard Wallis on Schema.org
Richard Wallis [twitter: rjw] of OCLC explains the appeal of Schema.org for libraries, and its place in the ecosystem.
[lodlam] Richard Urban on LOD patterns
At the LODLAM conference, Richard Urban suggests that we build a pattern library so that people can identify common problems and common linked data solutions.
Categories: libraries, podcast Tagged with: libraries • linked data • lodlam • podcast
Date: June 20th, 2013 dw
[lodlam] Corey Harper on designing LOD with users in mind
I videoed the opening of a session (liveblogged here) at LODLAM about trying to get past thinking about Linked Data as a way of stitching together resources, and instead trying to address user needs. Corey Harper led the session. Here are his opening remarks, recorded with his permission but in very low lighting that makes it look furtive.
Categories: libraries, podcast Tagged with: libraries • linked data • lodlam
Date: June 20th, 2013 dw