Hey everyone,
The sun is finally shining in New York, and Iâm reminded that Spring is the best time of year. This is the second straight year Iâve been out of the city for February and March, so I canât really complain about the worst of Winter. But still. This is the moment when you start to love New York again, before the mad sweltering heat of July-August. (Fall is the other best time. The in-between seasons.)
But sunshine is just objectively better. It carries with it happiness and possibility and good vibes.
I get it now.
I get why people move to LA. âIt was the light that brought everybody to L.A. to make films in the early days,â David Lynch writes in Catching the Big Fish.
Light is powerful. Light is good.
Anyway.
Thoughts
I've been thinking about podcasts and theatre a lot, and how they interrelate. I have a theory about their paradoxical relationship.
I started listening to podcasts in high school. Most of them werenât very slick, just a couple people talking into microphones. The form has grown and evolved since then, with many successful shows having a slick finish. But it also strikes me that many of the most successful podcasts (like Joe Rogan or Marc Maron) are still just people having conversations into a microphone.
And I think this notable, because itâs something podcasts are great for.
Sure, I do like podcasts like Serial, or This American Life, or Reply All. Narrative podcasts with a bit more âoomphâ. There will always be a place for them.
But recently I was listening to Comedy Bang Bang, one of my original favorite podcasts. And I realized that what they do on that podcast â great comedic actors doing great character work, playing wildly on the imagination â only works because of the form. I like the TV show, but it is a qualitatively different type of experience. In a podcast, your brain fills in the rest. You imagine these ridiculous characters having these ridiculous conversations, and you go with it. On TV, a medium that can struggle with being too literal, you donât get that. You donât get that when you know itâs crafted and you can see everything.
And via podcast, you feel a type of intimacy. The relationship is warm. I feel like I know all these people on Comedy Bang Bang, despite not having seen any one of them live. But I know their comedy, and I know their laugh, and I laugh with them. When I listen, I feel like Iâm having a secret conversation with them, even though Iâm obviously not. (And I think this is different from the radio of old â podcasts feel more intimate.)
This is also why I donât really like live episodes of podcasts. I donât want to hear other people responding. I want to own this experience myself, I want to be the sole arbiter. So it can be frustrating, and somewhat dissociating, listening to a group of other people respond to what have, up to this point, jus been voices in your head.Â
It also speaks to this idea of the âritual economyâ. Comedy Bang Bang has put out at least one new episode every week for as long as I can remember. I know they are going to be there for me. I donât listen to every episode. Thatâs not the point. The point is that I know itâs there, and I know I can trust them. That, coupled with podcastsâ intimacy, is very powerful.
So recorded podcasts, I think, are best left raw. I donât want to hear prepared comedy on a podcast. I want to hear something raw that is improvised, making it all the more wonderful to drop in on. Because, like most people, I listen to podcasts while doing other things, like commuting or doing laundry. So I actually donât want to have the laboriousness of preparation weighing me down. I donât want to feel like I need to listen to every word or I have missed something. (This is part of why audiobooks frustrate me.) Instead, I want the podcast to play fast and loose, allowing me to zone out for a minute and drop back in.
On the other hand, the inverse is true with theatre.
Theatre is live. It wants to feel improvised, but it actually wants to be totally crafted.
That is, theatre needs to impress me. My favorite theatre often starts with what seems like a raw, empty space, seeming to show that a production doesnât have any tricks up its sleeves. But then it pulls out tricks anyway. For me, this is what The Thin Place and How to Defend Yourself did at Humana. As Simon Stone puts it: âshow the audience how impossible an idea is, then do it right in front of their eyesâ. I want to be swept away and have a guttural, emotional experience. Theatre is its own, completely unique experience.Â
So while theatre is live, it should be rigorously prepared. And while podcasts are recorded and prepared, they should feel live and raw. Recorded and raw, live and crafted. Itâs an idea Iâve been thinking about.
This is why I believe podcasts and theatre are perfect corollaries. Together, they form a great barbell -- two extremes that are held together (quick and dirty digital podcasts on one side, slow and labor-intensive analog theatre on the other) -- for a young theatre company. ;-)
Learnings
Translations and The Odyssey
I finally finished Emily Wilson's translation of The Odyssey. A strong recommend from me, and I'm going to move on to her Seneca translations next. She has a way of writing with startling clarity. It's a terrific translation.
Translations and adaptations are fascinating to think about. They filter down how we perceive a work. For instance, what does it mean that this is the first translation of The Odyssey into English by a woman?Â
"Tell me about a complicated man," the text begins. Stories, and the nature and politics of how they are told, infect our consciousness. They matter.
Wilson has done a tremendous job on Twitter at providing insights into the challenges of translation. Here's a collection of her threads.
Her work is really inspiring, as adaptations in theatre are something I want to work on myself.
Lucas Hnath profile
Hnath had a big profile in The New Yorker, largely discussing his new plays Hillary and Clinton (on Broadway now) and The Thin Place (premiered at Humana).
There was some fun stuff in the profile. The best line:
One advantage he had was that he wrote easily and quickly, and deleted and rewrote just as quickly. âWriting is like feces,â he told me. âYouâre going to make it one way or another. Thereâs more where that came from. For me, itâs more about, like, the shaping of the stuff.â
???
Assorted
âWhy We Spend Our Brief Lives Indoors, Alone, and Typingâ by Tim Kreider
Sara Holdren is always great, but sheâs been on a tear recently: a critique of Hillary and Clinton, Taylor Macâs new show, and an evisceration of Roundaboutâs straight-out-of-the-1950s All My Sons (like, why are you doing that play in nyc and doing nothing with it except lazily casting Tracy Letts and Annette Bening?)
The WGA vs Agents battle has been fascinating. Over 7000 writers have fired their agents. Collective action works. Someone tell that to Jon Robin Baitz. đ€Šđ»ââïž
Iâve really enjoyed T Magazineâs America 2024 series, where they asked playwrights to imagine America five years into the future (notably Jeremy OâHarris - who also performs his monologue, Jackie Sibblies Drury, and Lynne Nottage). Itâs an impressive, interactive experience online.
Photo of the week
This bike was sitting in front of an apartment with a âfree bikeâ sign. So we took it.
Thatâs all for this week! If you liked this, you can forward it to friends, or tell them to sign up here.
-Gus