Clown Cast
Your brain does something remarkable when you listen to a story—it synchronizes with the storyteller's neural patterns and even predicts what comes next. This episode explores why humans evolved to need oral storytelling, from West African griots who preserved civilizations through memory alone, to Appalachian porch tales, to modern shows like The Moth. We dive into the brain science (Yuri Hassan's neural coupling research) and ask the uncomfortable question: what have we lost by moving everything to text? Key Timestamps: 0:00 - The Hook: Neural Coupling and Brain Synchronization 2:45 - Brain on FMRI: The Listener's Brain Predicts the Speaker 6:15 - Griots and Memory: How Oral Tradition Preserved Entire Civilizations 10:00 - Appalachian Porches and The Moth: Modern Echoes of Ancient Practice 14:30 - The Literacy Paradox: What Writing Gave Us, What It Cost This podcast episode was fully generated by AI — research, script, voices, and production. Built with Claude, Piper TTS, and automated pipeline tooling.
93 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Clown Cast community!