Tag: podcasts (page 1 of 1)

Good as Hell

Boss up and change your life.

— Lizzo

Today’s meditation asks, “What does it mean to stand in your power?”

Lately, that has meant trusting my gut (and my head and my heart). It’s meant saying no to some opportunities and jumping at others. It’s been allowing myself to express excitement and show passion in spaces where I’ve tended to be more reserved. It’s been letting more people inside and giving more of myself outside.

Be honest. Be open. Don’t seek permission to do what’s right. Don’t let the fear of disappointing others guide me away from the best choices. Give me the room to think big. Recognize that new challenges also mean lots of change and that new responsibilities require transformation. And trust. Trust in myself and others.

So, pull your shoulders back. Breathe into your diaphragm. Lift from the crown of your head and take up space. Create space for those you want to bring with you on this journey.

Look in the mirror and see that the person staring back at you is feeling good as hell.


Personal growth is perhaps the most important outcome of keeping a work diary. (Sarah Todd for Quartz)

People are generally better persuaded by the reasons which they have themselves discovered than by those which have come into the mind of others. (Olvia Goldhill, also for Quartz)

There is something about a number that implies precision. Accuracy. Certainty. Immutability. The implied message is a problem solved in totality. (Seth Partnow for The Athletic, subscription required)

What age is someone most likely to achieve their peak performance? (Brad Stulberg for Outside)

What to pick up at the Library: Mostly Dead Things by Kristen Arnett

What to listen to on your commute: Football: Should We Cancel it? by Science Vs and Snapchat’s Secret Dossier on Facebook by The Journal

What to Watch: Hip-Hop Evolution on Netflix (great episode about the rise of the cypher in the latest cycle); and, the two CBS shows being led by the former stars of Luke Cage, All Rise & Evil

Bored and Brilliant

Hey you with the pretty face, welcome to the human race.

— Electric Light Orchestra


boredbrilliant.pngboredbrilliant.png

It just so happened that I finished reading Bored and Brilliant the night before a work trip to San Francisco. I decided to do the challenge anyway despite being away from home and out of routine. Why delay? I was still taking my smart devices with me.

SF is a great place to be intentionally using your phone less. Day two of the challenge is to commute with your phone in your bag or somewhere away from your body. Don’t listen to music or a podcast. Just be in the world and the moment. The half-mile walk from my hotel to the office went from Union Square to SoMa. It’s a bustling trek that, without my noise-canceling headphones, was also noisy. I heard a wide range of accents. There was honking from cars and the beeps of trucks warning that they were moving in reverse. Mostly though, there were people to navigate around who were too fascinated with their phones to notice that they weren’t walking in a straight line or that they might slam into the person—me—in their path.

A man was so engrossed in Twitter that he failed to notice the light had changed or that people were walking all around him. I eavesdropped on many a facetime conversation on the street. One woman was so deep in her spirograph game (I’d never seen that one before) that she nearly stepped into oncoming traffic. It was sobering. I felt like I was on the Axiom in Wall-E, everyone so locked into their virtual worlds that we couldn’t see that life was going on right around us.

I’d done this challenge before. It began just a few weeks after I first came across the Note to Self podcast and this book is the outcome of that project. I think host Manoush Zomorodi is hella cool and whip-smart and if you read my weekly gratitude posts you know managing my digital diet is an ongoing obsession of mine.

On average, I spend about two hours a day looking at my phone. That doesn’t include iPad time which is probably another sixty to ninety minutes, if not more. That’s where I play the Star Wars game I’ve been hooked on since The Force Awakens came to theaters a couple of years ago. I wake my phone thirty to fifty times a day. This is actually better than most which is mind-boggling.

Kaufman calls dopamine “the mother of invention” and explains that because we have a limited amount of it, we must be judicious about choosing to spend it on “increasing our wonder and excitement for creating meaning and new things like art—or on Twitter.”

— Bored and Brilliant

Twitter is my nemesis. It steals so much time and rarely do I depart it happier than when I arrived. And yet, I have my current job in part because of the connections made on Twitter. Twitter can be a place where casual relationships deepen or become more nuanced. Much can be said about the benefits of the service. But is it worth all of the time it sucks away? Is it worth not being able to sustain attention in an hour-long meeting? Or to be able to read a book? Or, sit quietly? Or think?

I don’t think it is. It’s no longer on my phone or my iPad—one of the challenges is to delete your most used app—and instead, I finished reading another book and gave some excellent television—American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace—my full attention. I spent time with people IRL. I went to the library. I’m writing this.

I’ve been able to ruminate on some issues I’ve wanted to fix with less itchy smartphone fingers.  

Distraction doesn’t come from devices or people or things, they posited. It is an internal problem.

— Bored and Brilliant

An internal problem. That doesn’t mean it’s easy to solve.  When I did this the first time, I felt great and more in control and then, I found some reason why I had to have twitter on my phone again. I stopped checking to see how much time I was spending idling on my devices. And in the weeks before I picked up the book, I was back to wondering where all my evening time was going. Why wasn’t I using that time to get more fluent in Spanish, or better at cooking, or learning new things, or, you know, talking with my wife or reaching out to a friend or loved one because I’d been thinking about them?

And so, here we are again. Will I use my time brilliantly or will I get sucked back into that dopamine high?

29 in 52: What I read in 2014

“People with so much to say but I’m only hearing the words that you left me with on that day.” Mary J. Blige, Nobody but You

I thought I had read a lot more this year than last because I’ve spent the entire year commuting by LA public transit but because of Serial and my new interest in podcasts, I’ve spent the last month listening rather than reading so I’m only five books up on last year. Boo. There’s too much media to consume.

I read a lot of good stuff this year, particularly in the first three months. I wrote about Americanah and Urban Tumbleweeds in January both of which are still among the most memorable. I finally read Kindred which somebody should make into a film. That time travel story was after I read 11/22/63 which is Stephen King’s excellent novel around the same concept. I love a good time travel tale.

I read a grip of graphic novels this year. The Manhattan Projects and Saga and Hawkeye continue to be great fun. I also read Winter Soldier and Days of Future Past after seeing the movies. On friend recommendation, I checked out Ms. Marvel and Lazarus and was not disappointed. On Amazon recommendation, I read The Wicked + Divine, Black Science, FBP, Velvet, and Sex Criminals and all of those were entertaining and often gorgeous to look at. Image is really hitting it out the park right now.


I think my favorite book of the year, though, was Hatching Twitter by Nick Bilton. The service dominates my every day. It’s birth (and the tools and people that spawned it) coincide with my own growth and participation in our digital culture. I was at those South Bys. In some ways, its history feels a bit like my own history. #relatable

It’s also just a damn good read. I devoured it and wanted to talk about it to anyone who had also read or cared.

I also recommend (in no particular order)

Also, books I acquired this year but have yet to read/finish reading

This Podcast Life

“Play with me and you’ll play with fire.”Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Retreat!

It’s probably been eight or so years since I’ve regularly listened to podcasts. You know, back in the first hey day of the medium. Back then it was Left, Right, and Center and Wait, Wait and a few other shows from KCRW’s line-up that I was usually too busy at work to catch live. But over time, I shifted further and further away from iTunes as my primary music player so, at some point, the podcasts started to pile up and I declared audio bankruptcy and dumped them all and never looked back.

Well, never say never. A few weeks ago, Kevin Smokler tweeted:

Oh. It’s like that now? Serial was the game-changer, huh? One of those transformative efforts that elevates the space. So, I knew I wanted to check it out but first I had to figure out how people were consuming podcasts these days. I landed on Pocket Casts which is the first android app I’ve paid real yanqui dollars for in a long time. Then I asked what I had no idea would be such an involved question:

https://twitter.com/misterjt/status/525132817252904961

This was my most popular tweet this month (thanks Thinkup!) and I’m betting, by far. It was surprising to read how passionate people are about their podcasts. Outside of the occasional mention of This American Life or listening to Planet Money when Tiffany is driving, I hadn’t seen people writetweet much about the podcast but it’s going through a renaissance. Kinda like blogging I guess.

The maturation of these digital forms of expression that seemed to have run their course nearly a decade ago is hella cool. Podcasts, like blogging, were so meaningful to me then, it’s nice to see that we can come home again and find new things to love.

And with that, from all your recommendations, here’s what I’ve sampled and subscribed:

Serial – I can’t recommend this highly enough. It is truly a spectacular listen and obliterated my expectations.

DecodeDC – It’s amazing how difficult it is to decipher what’s happening in Washington these days with all the dark money (something they explained recently) and this weekly breakdown helps. A lot.

99% Invisible – Something about it feels a little hipster-y—an artisanal podcast if you will—but I have thoroughly enjoyed both episodes I’ve heard so far.

Snap Judgment – Out of Oakland, this is a hoot. Nerdy and black and fun, it feels like an old-timey radio hour but with new school freshness.

Planet Money – Like DecodeDC, excellent explainers in a subject I always struggle to understand. It helps that they are also quite funny.

WTF with Marc Maron – He publishes way more often than I can keep up with so I don’t listen to everything but his recent conversations with Larry Wilmore and Andre Royo were both great. 

Call Your Girlfriend – I’m biased because I (humblebrag) occasionally get to hang out with Ann Friedman but this is such a charming show. It’s also intimate. Even though she and Aminatou Sow are allowing us to eavesdrop, I almost feel like I’m not supposed to hear this. Especially as a man. But I will.

I’m also sampling the His and Hers Podcast which I’m not sure I love yet (it’s a little too unstructured) and, of course, This American Life. I still have Song Exploder and a few other recommendations like the TWiB network of shows to try out, too.

The really good podcasts are so compelling that I’m sad when my commute ends before the end of the show. It’s a great way to spend my hour or so on the bus and train to and from work.

I have questions, though: 

  • Do people talk about podcasts online or amongst friends a lot more than I realized until now or not?
  • If not, why not?
  • What makes Serial so transformative?

Oh, and is there something you’d think I’d like that I haven’t mentioned? I could probably listen to a couple more.