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The Plot: Conversations on Writing

Podcast af Sean Douglass

engelsk

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The Plot is a biweekly show on writing from arts journalist and playwright Sean Douglass. Join him and his cohosts as they examine the work of writers across mediums, through interviews, roundtable discussions, and other activities. Whether you're into science fiction, modern drama, or even food writing, The Plot is for anyone curious about how our words and stories are shaping the world today.

Alle episoder

14 episoder

episode Adam Segal Calls Us to New Narratives of Masculinity cover

Adam Segal Calls Us to New Narratives of Masculinity

For this episode of The Plot I am joined by my friend Adam Segal. Adam is active with social justice work in Portland; his background is in creative writing, but he is also a cook and food distributor, and he currently facilitates small groups of fellow white people working to address white supremacy on behalf of Portland's chapter of Showing Up for Racial Justice. Most relevant to this episode, however, is that he is also the founder of New Masculinities Group, a four-year-old project to engage men and people of all genders in difficult, yet necessary conversations about masculinity, gender, and sexuality, work he has begun to do professionally as a men’s accountability consultant. In our discussion today, Adam examines how cultural narratives shape our understanding of gender—often without us even being aware of it—and the dangerous ways they can impact our concept of masculinity or expectations of what men are and how they should act. We’ll look at several examples from pop culture, from The Sandlot to Star Wars, to analyze their messages about boyhood and manhood. Then we’ll turn to how notions of masculinity intersect with social and political issues, like consent, food, and even prison abolition. These can be heavy subjects, but Adam expertly breaks them down in words that are clear, approachable, and encouraging. While we’ll acknowledge a variety of dangerous stereotypes, this is not a show about criticizing men, but rather a much more positive message, as Adam invites us to ask who we would be if there were no one telling us who to be. And while we’ll focus on the ways men confront that question, it’s also a question all of us, whether we are men or another gender, can learn to ask ourselves. To Learn more about New Masculinities Group, you can follow it on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewMasculinitiesGroupPDX [https://www.facebook.com/NewMasculinitiesGroupPDX] You can also follow this podcast on Twitter at @_SeanDouglass_ [https://twitter.com/_SeanDouglass_] and @ThePlotPodcast [https://twitter.com/ThePlotPodcast] For more on the issues raised in this podcast, Adam has also provided a reading list: "Books for men who want to get started in working against patriarchal masculinity: The Will to Change, by bell hooks I Don't Want to Talk About It, by Terrence Real Women, Race, and Class by Angela Davis Men Explain Things to Me, by Rebecca Solnit Amateur by Thomas Page McBee Articles and Resources for a Healthier Conversation about Consent and Sexual Communication: From #MeToo to #WeConsented, and The Pleasure Dome: Use Your Words by Adrienne Maree Brown https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/the-pleasure-dome/me-too-reclaiming-consent [https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/the-pleasure-dome/me-too-reclaiming-consent] https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/the-pleasure-dome/use-your-words [https://www.bitchmedia.org/article/the-pleasure-dome/use-your-words] Sex Toys Will Never Be Able to Do the Hardest Work For You, by Fancy Feast https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/fancyfeast/sex-toys-education-consent-positivity-gender [https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/fancyfeast/sex-toys-education-consent-positivity-gender] In The No, by Radiolab and Kaitlyn Prest https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/projects/no [https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/projects/no] Articles for learning about Abolition Feminism: Against Carceral Feminism by Victoria Law https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/10/against-carceral-feminism/ [https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/10/against-carceral-feminism/] Aching for Abolition by Camonghne Felix https://www.thecut.com/2020/10/aching-for-abolition.html [https://www.thecut.com/2020/10/aching-for-abolition.html] Who Wins When We Incarcerate Brock Turner? by Erika Lynn and Lily Zheng https://stanfordpolitics.org/2016/06/10/who-wins-when-we-incarcerate-brock-turner/?fbclid=IwAR0X9NkQiTaRr3a7oCd4L3jYDnwJQV9NSYBqbgjzr-6Uy6Go9X7GQp7FzEw [https://stanfordpolitics.org/2016/06/10/who-wins-when-we-incarcerate-brock-turner/?fbclid=IwAR0X9NkQiTaRr3a7oCd4L3jYDnwJQV9NSYBqbgjzr-6Uy6Go9X7GQp7FzEw]

5. jan. 2021 - 44 min
episode Brian James Polak on Writing, Success, and The Journey that Never Ends cover

Brian James Polak on Writing, Success, and The Journey that Never Ends

Brian James Polak is a playwright, teacher, and host of American Theatre Magazine's podcast The Subtext. I've known Brian on social media for several years, but I'd never sat down for a conversation with him in person (or at least in this case, over the phone). So as one podcaster to another, in this episode I interview him about, well, interviewing, and how he creates his signature show. We also discuss what success means to him, how an ill-fated major in Philosophy led him to theater, and how to navigate the tension between wanting to promote other artists while still developing one's own career. Like many playwrights, Brian also had a production, Welcome to Keene, NH, cancelled due to COVID-19, so he gives us an update on that (hopefully still upcoming!) play and what else he's been working on during the pandemic. As an homage to Brian's monologues at the start of each episode of The Subtext, this episode also begins with some reflections from me on success, and the interview starts at 11:00. To read (or maybe produce) Brian's work, find his plays at https://newplayexchange.org/users/724/brian-james-polak [https://newplayexchange.org/users/724/brian-james-polak] Listen to The Subtext on major podcast platforms, or at www.americantheatre.org/category/audio/the-subtext/ [https://www.americantheatre.org/category/audio/the-subtext/] Follow Us-- Brian James Polak @bejaypea [https://twitter.com/bejaypea] The Subtext @SubtextPodcast [https://twitter.com/SubtextPodcast] Sean Douglass @_SeanDouglass_ [https://twitter.com/_SeanDouglass_] The Plot @ThePlotPodcast [https://twitter.com/ThePlotPodcast]

25. nov. 2020 - 53 min
episode Alex Mohajer on The Comey Rule and the Trump Stories He Wants to See Dramatized cover

Alex Mohajer on The Comey Rule and the Trump Stories He Wants to See Dramatized

In this episode I'm joined by journalist Alex Mohajer, and we’ll be talking about how art should represent and engage with the Trump Administration. How do we feel about the film and TV that has been produced in response to the last four years? And what should be the best approaches going forward to document this uniquely turbulent and corrupt White House across future comedies, dramas, and other genres of art? In particular we’re going to look at The Comey Rule, Showtime’s new miniseries about former FBI Director James Comey’s impact on the 2016 election. The show, written and directed by Billy Ray and starring Jeff Daniels as Comey, is, we both felt, very good, and we’ll look at how its strategies for dramatizing recent current events could serve as a guide for future work looking to retell the myriad stories and controversies of Trump’s presidency. For those not familiar with Mohajer’s work, he is a political writer, commentator, and activist whose coverage of the 2016 election and its aftermath made him one of the most shared contributors at HuffPost. He has been interviewed for or featured on The Fox News Channel, PolitiFact, Washington Post, LA and NY Times, Yahoo News, New York Public Radio, and many other outlets, and in 2018 he received the Excellence in Journalism Award for Excellence in Feature Writing from the National Association of LGBTQ Journalists. He is currently the Public and Media Relations Director of the Stonewall Democratic Club, and he hosts the livestreaming news show The AM Report for Happs. He’s been on the frontlines of covering the events depicted in the The Comey Rule, so after watching it for myself, I knew I wanted to hear his take, too. In addition to that show we’ll also discuss what other Trump-era film and TV has resonated with us, what other events we want to see get dramatized, and how comedies can approach an administration that often seems beyond parody. Watch The AM Report and follow Alex at: Happs.tv/@alexmohajer [https://about.happs.tv/] Twitter.com/alexmohajer [https://twitter.com/AlexMohajer] https://www.stonewalldems.org/rbg [https://www.stonewalldems.org/rbg] And follow this show: @ThePlotPodcast [https://twitter.com/ThePlotPodcast] @_SeanDouglass_ [https://twitter.com/_SeanDouglass_] www.seandouglass.com [https://www.seandouglass.com/]

30. okt. 2020 - 31 min
episode From The Prey to Anime—Is COVID-19 Renewing U.S. Interest in Global Films? cover

From The Prey to Anime—Is COVID-19 Renewing U.S. Interest in Global Films?

Welcome to season 2! Today we’re talking about international film and television, and how the pandemic could be permanently changing peoples’ streaming habits in a way that benefits foreign artists. I’m joined once again by my good friend Lauren McCrimmon, a frequent co-producer on this show, and in particular we wanted to talk about The Prey, the first Cambodian film to receive distribution on Netflix. The Prey, which has been described as Cambodia’s first action blockbuster, is directed by Jimmy Henderson, an Italian-born filmmaker formerly based in London. Henderson’s other work includes RUN!, Hanuman, The Forest Whisperers, and the award-winning Jailbreak, films that helped develop the action, horror, and martial arts genres for Cambodia’s growing film industry. While we don’t officially “review” The Prey with our conversation, and as a pulpy action film there’s not too much to analyze in the plot itself, we’ll still share our thoughts on it, and consider what Netflix’s promotion of it means for the future U.S. presence of films from lesser-known global markets. We’ll also look back on our country’s history of both embracing and ignoring foreign films, other international content we’ve been enjoying lately, and how anime may have been responsible for a generational shift in people’s willingness to watch subtitled content from other countries. This isn’t the heaviest episode we’ve ever done, but it was a fun one, and I hope it offers a look at how our new pandemic lifestyles may be influencing film and television in a way you hadn’t considered. Movies and TV mentioned in this episode: The Prey [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Is92Ww6Xe7k] Shutter [https://www.vudu.com/content/movies/details/Shutter/68897] #Alive [https://www.netflix.com/title/81240831?source=35] Would I Lie to You? [https://www.britbox.com/us/show/Would_I_Lie_to_You_b007r3n8] Follow the Show-- @ThePlotPodcast [https://twitter.com/ThePlotPodcast] @_SeanDouglass_ [https://twitter.com/_SeanDouglass_] www.seandouglass.com [https://www.seandouglass.com/]

27. okt. 2020 - 28 min
episode Why Christopher Shinn Left Twitter for Patreon cover

Why Christopher Shinn Left Twitter for Patreon

For this final episode of season one, I am joined by playwright Christopher Shinn for a conversation on how writers can use Patreon. Shinn has a long list of plays and accomplishments, including a Pulitzer nomination, an Obie Award, and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and some of plays include Dying City, Where Do We Live, Now or Later, Teddy Ferrara, Against, and an adaptation of Hedda Gabler that appeared on Broadway in 2009. While Shinn used to be on Twitter, he became frustrated with the platform and has since instead begun putting his personal reflections on Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/chris_shinn/posts], the subscription-based crowdfunding site. I was curious how this experiment was going; there are, of course, other blogging subscription services out there, like Substack, and I don’t normally think of Patreon as a blogging platform. But could this be the answer to an issue many writers have? The desire to put their writing online, but in a way that can still be monetized, away from the free Wild West of social media? I was also curious about his thoughts on social media more generally. Shinn has written about how he feels these platforms are drawing us into a less loving and intimate society, and while I feel social media has both benefits and harms, I do wonder, too, how it is affecting our personal relationships and our national discourse. Why is it these sites, that on one hand offer such a convenient way for us to keep in touch with one another, are also yet incapable of fulfilling our most seemingly basic expectations, like suppressing toxic and hateful speech or protecting their users’ data. And what impact does this constant interconnectivity have on our attention spans, mental health, and capacity for introspection? While we don’t reach any clear conclusions, I think the questions Shinn raises here are essential for anyone who uses social media, and I hope they will inspire you to think critically about your own online habits. Follow Us: Christopher Shinn's Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/chris_shinn/posts] www.christophershinn.co [https://www.christophershinn.co/] This Show-- @ThePlotPodcast [https://twitter.com/ThePlotPodcast] @_SeanDouglass_ [https://twitter.com/_SeanDouglass_] www.seandouglass.com [https://www.seandouglass.com/]

29. okt. 2019 - 30 min
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