Popp Talk with Mary Jane Popp
Popp Talk with Mary Jane Popp Films That Matter, Families That Endure, and the Stories That Still Bring Us Home Guests, Carrie Richey, and Judy Norton from the classic "Walton's" TV Show Searching for Truth Through Film, Family, and Feeling In this episode of Popp Talk, host Mary Jane Popp welcomes two guests from the worlds of film, television, writing, and cultural memory: Carrie Rickey and Judy Norton. The episode opens with Mary Jane reflecting on how technology, movies, television, and artificial intelligence are reshaping the way people receive information and decide what feels real. From there, the hour moves into two connected conversations about meaningful storytelling: first through the life and work of filmmaker Agnès Varda, and then through the enduring emotional legacy of The Waltons. Carrie Rickey on Agnès Varda’s Complicated Passion Mary Jane’s first guest, Carrie Rickey, discusses her book A Complicated Passion: The Life and Work of Agnès Varda. Carrie describes Varda as a Belgian-born, French-raised photographer, filmmaker, and artist whose career lasted 65 years, making her one of the longest-working women in cinema history. Varda worked nearly until her death in 2019, overcame major obstacles as a woman director, and became known for empathy, humor, curiosity, independence, and an unwillingness to accept “no” as the final answer. Carrie explains that while film lovers know Varda well, she wanted American readers to better understand the scope of Varda’s influence. A Filmmaker Ahead of Her Time Carrie explains that Varda addressed subjects such as sexism, abortion, labor exploitation, immigrant rights, race relations, and food insecurity long before many filmmakers were willing to do so. She also notes Varda’s connections to major cultural figures, including Susan Sontag, Simone de Beauvoir, Huey Newton, Harrison Ford, and Gérard Depardieu. The conversation expands into the erased history of early women directors, including Alice Guy-Blaché and Lois Weber, and how the rise of the studio system helped push many independent women filmmakers out of the official record. For Carrie, Varda’s life offers a model of creative persistence, independence, and storytelling rooted in real life rather than spectacle. Real Stories Versus Artificial Answers Mary Jane and Carrie then discuss the state of modern movies, streaming, and artificial intelligence. Mary Jane says she misses films that leave audiences emotionally changed or remembering something meaningful, while Carrie contrasts formula-driven entertainment with films about real people, real communities, and lived experience. Their conversation turns to AI, which Carrie says cannot replace human thought, emotion, or the work of forming one’s own ideas. She shares frustrations with AI-generated student work and a chatbot customer-service exchange, reinforcing the episode’s broader concern that technology should not replace authentic human feeling, memory, and creativity. Judy Norton and the Family That Never Really Left In the second half, Mary Jane welcomes Judy Norton, best known as Mary Ellen Walton from The Waltons. Judy reflects on her long creative life as an actor, singer, director, writer, and performer, saying she enjoys all of these outlets because each offers a different kind of creative energy. She explains that what matters most to her is having goals that inspire her and work that can touch people, whether by offering hope, entertainment, laughter, or a moment of relief from life’s difficulties. She also shares that the Waltons cast remains genuinely close and still feels like family, both personally and to generations of viewers discovering the series for the first time. Behind the Scenes of The Waltons and the Stories That Still Matter Judy talks about her YouTube channel, where she revisits The Waltons, shares behind-the-scenes memories, and answers questions from fans. She says the channel began during the pandemic and became a meaningful community for viewers who found comfort in the series. She discusses favorite episodes, including “The Easter Story,” centered on Olivia’s polio recovery, and “The Firestorm,” which deals with book burning, fear, and prejudice through a powerful moment involving a German Bible. Judy notes that even though The Waltons premiered in 1972, its themes remain relevant because they deal with family, fear, courage, decency, and the human spirit. Hope, Creativity, and Choosing the Good Mary Jane and Judy close by discussing music, travel, family, horses, British mystery shows, L. Ron Hubbard’s fiction, Earl Hamner’s storytelling, and Judy’s continuing desire to choose projects that truly speak to her. Judy says her philosophy of life is rooted in optimism and hope: life can improve, people are mostly good, and giving up is never the answer. She shares a small story about someone who went out of her way to correct a refunded CD payment, using it as an example of everyday character and kindness. Mary Jane ends the episode with her familiar encouragement to live simply, laugh often, love deeply, and dare to dream.
20 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Popp Talk with Mary Jane Popp community!