There aren’t narrative, story-telling podcasts anymore, only chat podcasts.
That said, I’ve been getting into audiobooks more via my Spotify Premium subscription, those are essentially narrative podcasts
I’m okay that dining rooms are dying
Families should eat together, but you can eat together at a table, it doesn’t have to be a completely separate room
Rethinking the unbearable weight of author self-promotion (with Tyler the Creator)
Notes on reading/watching/listening
Reading: “Where Are Your Boys Tonight?” by Chris Payne
emo oral history!
Saw this at the bookstore on Monday, got the ebook from the library, but then I liked it so much, I went ahead and purchased the print copy
mostly centers on New Jersey and Long Island in the early 00s
I’ve been flying through this because I’m fans of a lot of the bands and I remember some of them getting big
An observation about art scenes in general:
They push each other with the craft
They refine each other
They show up for each other
Once you see someone you know take off, it gives you confidence to do the same
Reading: “Foster Dade Explores The Cosmos”
Also saw this at the bookstore and impulse purchased it
It’s a whodunnit boarding school novel, told backwards
Nice experimental format with some good reviews
Only $6.99 on Kindle? (aff)
Reading: “Blood In The Garden: The Flagrant History of the 1990s New York Knicks”
now that the NBA is officially over, I still need my fix
These books are good to get random backstories, like how the players almost got into a bunch of fights or stayed out too late gambling
Watching: “Presumed Innocent” on Apple TV+
It’s a TV show remake of that old novel and Harrison Ford movie
I don’t remember that movie, except that it had a crazy ending and I don’t remember what the ending was, so anyway it makes you stay alert, trying to figure out all the clues
Keep going-
- Josh Spilker
I enjoyed perusing this curated list of helpful stuff!
We gave up on Presumed Innocent at our house, having seen the movie twice and read the book ditto. This version's grim, sepia-toned cinematography was off-putting. I'm really tired of directors making their films so visually dark.