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Read Her Like a Book

Podkast av Read Her Like a Book

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Read Her Like a Book is where literature meets real life. I read books written by women and use them to unpack media narratives and cultural behavior on and off the page.

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11 Episoder

episode We Know Something They Don't cover

We Know Something They Don't

What happens when the audience knows something… the main character doesn’t?This episode of Read Her Like a Book breaks down facades through the lens of dramatic irony—a literary device where the audience is in on the truth before the subject is.But this isn’t just about Romeo and Juliet—this is about real life.From brand pivots that don’t land, to celebrity personas that feel… off, to the subtle ways the internet predicts outcomes before they happen—this video explores what it means to perform an image that people have already seen through.Because facades don’t fail just because they’re fake.They fail because the audience has moved on.In this episode:What dramatic irony actually is (and why it matters outside of books)How facades create tension in culture, branding, and relationshipsWhy some brands and celebrities are always the last to knowThe gap between perception vs reality—and why that gap predicts outcomesIf you’ve ever watched something unfold and thought, “yeah… this isn’t going to end well,” you’ve already experienced dramatic irony in real life.Subscribe for more episodes breaking down the strategy behind culture, media, and the narratives shaping what you see every day.

2. april 2026 - 24 min
episode Repeat It Until You Become It cover

Repeat It Until You Become It

Repetition is a literary device where words, phrases, or ideas are repeated to emphasize meaning and shape how audiences interpret a story. But repetition doesn’t only appear in books — it also shapes celebrity brands, media narratives, and the way we talk to ourselves. In this episode of Read Her Like a Book, we explore how repetition influences perception. Drawing from Bottom of the Pyramid by Nia Sioux, we look at how repeated criticism from Abby Lee Miller influenced how audiences perceived Nia as a dancer. Then we examine the opposite effect through celebrity branding. Artists like Megan Thee Stallion consistently reinforce ideas like “Hot Girl,” confidence, beauty, and success — using repetition to shape her public identity and empower her audience. We also look at how Lil Wayne repeatedly calling himself “the best rapper alive” helped cement that narrative in hip-hop culture. Finally, Olympic champion Alysa Liu shows how repetition works internally. After stepping away from the sport, she reframed the messages she repeated to herself — shifting from perfectionism and self-criticism to learning and growth. The media will feed you messages, but you decide what echoes in your mind.

13. mars 2026 - 13 min
episode Why You Can Predict the Black Character's Death cover

Why You Can Predict the Black Character's Death

In this episode of Read Her Like a Book, we’re talking about foreshadowing — the literary device where authors plant clues early in a story to hint at what’s coming later. But sometimes those clues aren’t subtle. Sometimes the moment a character appears, you already know how their story will end. Today we unpack a pattern many viewers recognize immediately: when you can predict the Black character’s death from the moment they’re introduced. Is that actually foreshadowing, or has it become formula? Using examples like Gayle in Paradise, Rue in The Hunger Games, Ricky in Boyz n the Hood, and a recent television case study, we break down two storytelling patterns that often signal what’s coming: narrative disposability and the humanizing device. Because when the audience can predict your death from your introduction… that’s not foreshadowing. That’s formula. New episodes of Read Her Like a Book drop every Thursday. 📚

6. mars 2026 - 15 min
episode When Ego Becomes Your Downfall cover

When Ego Becomes Your Downfall

Welcome back to Read Her Like a Book — where we learn how to read the media, not just watch it. Today we’re talking about hamartia — the fatal flaw. The trait that feels familiar. Justified. Even harmless. Until it isn’t. In Greek tragedy, a hero’s downfall isn’t random — it’s rooted in who they are. And in real life? It’s no different. This episode explores: • Trauma you refuse to confront • Ego that alienates your audience • Financial habits you won’t examine • Power you won’t take accountability for From fictional case studies to cultural commentary, we unpack how self-sabotage rarely feels dramatic in the moment — it feels normal. And that’s what makes it dangerous. Because your fatal flaw won’t feel fatal. It’ll feel like “this is just how I am.” Warning: This episode discusses themes of intoxication, consent, and power imbalances in media environments. Press play if you’re ready to identify the pattern before it costs you everything.

27. feb. 2026 - 22 min
episode Why the Winter Olympics feels like 'You Can't Sit With Us' cover

Why the Winter Olympics feels like 'You Can't Sit With Us'

There’s a reason the Winter Olympics don’t hit like the Summer Games — and it has nothing to do with the athletes. In this episode of Read Her Like a Book, we’re unpacking allegory — the story within the story. The deeper meaning hiding beneath what we think we’re watching. Today’s allegory? The table. Who gets a seat. Who has to build one. And who decides to leave the room entirely. We move through: • The Scammer by Tiffany D. Jackson — prestige vs. belonging, Yale vs. HBCU, and the quiet exhaustion of always proving you deserve to sit down. • The Winter Olympics — access, geography, class, and why disconnection isn’t the same as apathy. • Cool Runnings — what it means to enter a space no one expected you in. • The Super Bowl stage — what happens when the dominant audience isn’t centered for once. This episode is about class, culture, celebration, exclusion — and the radical choice between building a seat and choosing a different table. Because sometimes thriving isn’t about getting in. It’s about deciding where you belong.

19. feb. 2026 - 12 min
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