The Virtual Jewel Box

How we watch The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City - Marcie Young-Cancio

35 min · 17 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio How we watch The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City - Marcie Young-Cancio

Descripción

In anticipation of our symposium on The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City on April 10 [https://tanner.utah.edu/rhoslc/], Marcie Young-Cancio, Robert Carson, and Scott Black discuss the show from a humanities perspective, examining its treatment of faith, femininity, Utah culture, entrepreneurship, fan loyalty, and camp sensibility.  Marcie Young-Cancio is Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Communication [https://profiles.faculty.utah.edu/u0007524] and Founder and Executive Director of Amplify Utah [https://amplifyutah.org/about-amplify/meet-our-board].  See also:  * Receipts, Proof, Timeline: How We Watch the RHOSLC [https://tanner.utah.edu/rhoslc] symposium program  * Heather L. King, “Tanner Humanities Center presents a scholarly deep dive into ‘The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City’” [https://attheu.utah.edu/facultystaff/tanner-humanities-center-presents-a-scholarly-deep-dive-into-the-real-housewives-of-salt-lake-city/] @ the U  * Susan Sontag, “Notes on Camp” [https://archive.org/details/sontag-susan-1964-notes-on-camp_202503]  Episode edited by Ethan Rauschkolb. Named after our seminar room, The Virtual Jewel Box hosts conversations at the Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center [https://tanner.utah.edu] at the University of Utah. Views expressed on The Virtual Jewel Box do not represent the official views of the Center or University.

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26 episodios

episode Real Housewives, Real Humanities - Jordan Rullo, Marcie Young Cancio, and Renato Olmedo-González artwork

Real Housewives, Real Humanities - Jordan Rullo, Marcie Young Cancio, and Renato Olmedo-González

In this episode, we discuss the Tanner Humanities Center’s symposium—Receipts, Proof, Timeline: How We Watch The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City—with Jordan Rullo (Department of Psychology [https://psych.utah.edu/people/adjunct-faculty/rullo-jordan.php] and therapist [https://www.jordanrullo.com]), Marcie Young Cancio (Department of Communication [https://profiles.faculty.utah.edu/u0007524] and founder of Amplify Utah [https://amplifyutah.org]), and Renato Olmedo-González (Salt Lake City Arts Council [https://www.saltlakearts.org]). They explore the underground sophistication of trash TV, toxic communication styles in relationships, and the power of uncomfortable laughter.  You can read more about our April 10 RHOSLC symposium on our website [https://tanner.utah.edu/news/camp-criticism-rhoslc-symposium/], the Salt Lake Tribune [https://www.sltrib.com/artsliving/2026/04/11/university-utah-hosts-real/], the Daily Utah Chronicle [https://dailyutahchronicle.com/2026/04/13/u-tanner-humanities-center-hosts-real-housewives-symposium/], and KUER [https://www.kuer.org/arts-culture-entertainment/2026-04-14/these-academics-gave-real-housewives-of-salt-lake-city-a-scholarly-look].  Episode image: Props table at the RHOSLC symposium, photo by Trish Griffee [https://www.instagram.com/trishgriffeephotography/].  Episode edited by Ethan Rauschkolb. Named after our seminar room, The Virtual Jewel Box hosts conversations at the Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center [https://tanner.utah.edu/] at the University of Utah. Views expressed on The Virtual Jewel Box do not represent the official views of the Center or University.

25 de may de 202645 min
episode Scoring systems, games, and value capture, with Thi Nguyen and Scott Black artwork

Scoring systems, games, and value capture, with Thi Nguyen and Scott Black

How can scoring systems make games feel so joyful, fluid, and alive, yet drain the life from public institutions and everyday work? This is one of the central questions of a new book by University of Utah philosopher C. Thi Nguyen [https://profiles.faculty.utah.edu/u6021584/about]. In The Score: How to Stop Playing Somebody Else’s Game [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/735252/the-score-by-c-thi-nguyen/], published this year by Penguin, Nguyen traces the philosophical and ideological aspects of scoring systems when used outside of play. With Tanner Humanities Center Director Scott Black, Nguyen discusses games as forms of portable agency, the problem of value capture, and the ways gamification and institutional metrics can narrow and impoverish human life. Recent reviews of The Score:  The New York Times — Jennifer Szalai, “Why Keeping Score Isn’t Fun Anymore” [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/13/books/review/why-keeping-score-isnt-fun-anymore.html?unlocked_article_code=1.EFA.VCKZ.-0kkJrzPfaPL&smid=url-share] The Washington Post — Becca Rothfeld, “A philosopher’s case for living playfully without keeping score” [https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2026/01/08/score-c-thi-nguyen-review/]  The Guardian — Tim Clare, “A brilliant warning about the gamification of everyday life” [https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/06/the-score-by-c-thi-nguyen-review-a-brilliant-warning-about-the-gamification-of-everyday-life] The New Yorker — Joshua Rothman, “Is Life a Game?” [https://www.newyorker.com/culture/open-questions/is-life-a-game]  Episode art: Detail from Georges de La Tour, The Cheat with the Ace of Clubs, c. 1630-34. Kimbell Art Gallery [https://kimbellart.org/collection/ap-198106]. Episode edited by Ethan Rauschkolb. Named after our seminar room, The Virtual Jewel Box hosts conversations at the Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center [https://tanner.utah.edu/] at the University of Utah. Views expressed on The Virtual Jewel Box do not represent the official views of the Center or University.

21 de abr de 202644 min
episode Nora Lange, author of Day Care and Us Fools, with Erin Beeghly artwork

Nora Lange, author of Day Care and Us Fools, with Erin Beeghly

Nora Lange, author of Us Fools [https://www.noralange.com/us-fools] (2024), discusses her new collection of short stories, Day Care [https://www.noralange.com/day-care], with Erin Beeghly [https://profiles.faculty.utah.edu/u0977602] (Department of Philosophy). Their conversation touches on female desire, motherhood, mischief, and the strange pressures of contemporary life. They discuss the surreal charge of stories like “Hot Spot,” the autofictional elements of the title story, and Lange’s “careening” prose style, which moves through play, surprise, and sudden transformation without losing emotional depth. Along the way, they talk about siblings, marriage, daycare, deadlines, and the elastic feeling of time in parenting, as well as Lange’s interest in genre, from realism to the snow-globe science fiction of “Dog Star.”  Episode art: Detail from Joris Hoefnagel, Seven Snails (c.1575/1590s), National Gallery of Art [https://www.nga.gov/artworks/69811-plate-63-seven-snails], Washington DC.  Episode edited by Ethan Rauschkolb. Named after our seminar room, The Virtual Jewel Box hosts conversations at the Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center [https://tanner.utah.edu] at the University of Utah. Views expressed on The Virtual Jewel Box do not represent the official views of the Center or University.

2 de abr de 202625 min
episode How we watch The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City - Marcie Young-Cancio artwork

How we watch The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City - Marcie Young-Cancio

In anticipation of our symposium on The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City on April 10 [https://tanner.utah.edu/rhoslc/], Marcie Young-Cancio, Robert Carson, and Scott Black discuss the show from a humanities perspective, examining its treatment of faith, femininity, Utah culture, entrepreneurship, fan loyalty, and camp sensibility.  Marcie Young-Cancio is Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Communication [https://profiles.faculty.utah.edu/u0007524] and Founder and Executive Director of Amplify Utah [https://amplifyutah.org/about-amplify/meet-our-board].  See also:  * Receipts, Proof, Timeline: How We Watch the RHOSLC [https://tanner.utah.edu/rhoslc] symposium program  * Heather L. King, “Tanner Humanities Center presents a scholarly deep dive into ‘The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City’” [https://attheu.utah.edu/facultystaff/tanner-humanities-center-presents-a-scholarly-deep-dive-into-the-real-housewives-of-salt-lake-city/] @ the U  * Susan Sontag, “Notes on Camp” [https://archive.org/details/sontag-susan-1964-notes-on-camp_202503]  Episode edited by Ethan Rauschkolb. Named after our seminar room, The Virtual Jewel Box hosts conversations at the Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center [https://tanner.utah.edu] at the University of Utah. Views expressed on The Virtual Jewel Box do not represent the official views of the Center or University.

17 de mar de 202635 min
episode Enshittification, with Cory Doctorow and Matthew Potolsky artwork

Enshittification, with Cory Doctorow and Matthew Potolsky

In this episode, Matt Potolsky [https://profiles.faculty.utah.edu/u0151879] (Professor of English) talks with writer and activist Cory Doctorow about digital privacy, platform decay, and the politics of monopoly. Drawing on his recent book, Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It [https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/], Doctorow argues that the erosion of privacy is inseparable from the rise of unchecked commercial surveillance, and that many people care deeply about privacy without recognizing it as such. They also discuss * the three-stage collapse of digital platforms * Robert Bork and the Chicago School’s influence on antitrust law * the IBM antitrust case * Yanis Varoufakis’s theory of techno-feudalism * algorithmic wage discrimination * effective altruism and longtermism * AI as a fantasy of boss-without-workers  * the surprising global resurgence of anti-monopoly politics as a source of hope. Cory Doctorow is a journalist, blogger, and the author of numerous works of fiction and nonfiction. He is a longtime contributor to the Electronic Frontier Foundation [https://www.eff.org] and blogs at pluralistic.net [https://pluralistic.net].  Episode edited by Ethan Rauschkolb. Named after our seminar room, The Virtual Jewel Box hosts conversations at the Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities Center [https://tanner.utah.edu] at the University of Utah. Views expressed on The Virtual Jewel Box do not represent the official views of the Center or University.

6 de mar de 202649 min