
Faking It Podcast with Gabe and Mark
Podcast af Gabe and Mark
Hosts Mark and Gabe explore the ways in which they’ve fibbed, fabricated, or outright lied about books they (haven’t) read, movies they (haven’t) seen, and all other manner of cultural object, large and small, trivial and seminal, that they (haven’t) experienced. Join them as they attempt to right past wrongs and explore the ways our anxieties about culture and consumption shape us.
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Alle episoder
16 episoder
Well, here it is, the Season 2 FINALE of Faking It. This one is coming to you late as hell, but Gabe has a new baby, so we'll blame it on them. No special guest for this one, it's just your hosts talking about our present, very real political and epidemiological moment, looking back at the previous nine episodes of the season, and looking to the future of the pod. Tune in one last time! (And also don't forget to like, rate, and review us! It's not too late for that!)

In a shocking turn of events, this week on Faking It we endorse the War on Drugs. No, not the shameful policies that have led to the incarceration of millions of Americans, but the very good band! And most especially its drummer, Charlie Hall, who is here to talk to us about the trials of jazz drumming in San Francisco circa the late 90s, the netherworld of monitor mixes, and why you can't fake it as a drummer. It's another socially distanced episode with an affable friend! Episode edited by Mark and Eavvon O'Neal

Self-isolation continues, but we refuse to give up on the Faking It dream. This week we pulled Kevin Nguyen in to talk about the joys and discomforts of football fandom, the genesis of his novel New Waves, and the downsides of niceness in literary communities. It's a wide-ranging, hilarious conversation between three people starved of in-person social contact who silently realize that all of life is now unsettlingly similar to a podcast. Episode edited by Mark and Eavvon O'Neal

We're all self-isolating in our apartments, but that will not stop the pod. In this very special remote edition, we talk with our editor Eavvon O'Neal about his struggles as an emerging filmmaker, the triumphs and pitfalls of honesty, and learning on the job, including this job, a job for which no one gets paid. It's a very-meta quarantine episode and it's got the bits. It's also got a few sound glitches, but we're all doing our best here! Episode edited by Eavvon O'Neal, duh.

This week on the show we're joined by Tamar Adler, chef, food writer, and host of the podcast Food Actually. Tamar tells us about feeling like, despite being a straight-A student, she never really felt like she learned anything. But perhaps more importantly, she comes in to question some of the very assumptions and premises of this podcast. GASP! Listen as Tamar rearranges the way we think about food and drink, encourages us to discard received ideas about the meaning of eating, and explains why you can't fake it in a kitchen. Tune in and learn how to live that #NagaLife. Tamar Adler is the author of An Everlasting Meal and Something Old, Something New: Classic Recipes Revised. Her podcast Food Actually is produced by the Pushkin Network and is available only on the podcasting app Luminary. Episode edited by Eavvon O'Neal and Mark
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99,00 kr. / måned efter prøveperiode.Ingen binding.
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