Keep the Channel Open

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Keep the Channel Open is a biweekly podcast featuring in-depth conversations with artists from a variety of disciplines, including the visual arts, theater, music, and literature.

Mike Sakasegawa


    • Feb 26, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 1h 7m AVG DURATION
    • 177 EPISODES

    5 from 38 ratings Listeners of Keep the Channel Open that love the show mention: mike's, photographers, artists, craft, rare, process, creative, thoughtful, conversations, knows, topic, interviews, host, work, great, interesting, always, listen, love.


    Ivy Insights

    The Keep the Channel Open podcast is an absolute gem in the world of interview podcasts. From the very first episode I listened to, I was captivated by the thoughtful and introspective conversations that host Mike Sakasegawa engages in with his guests. This show has introduced me to so much new art and provided me with a multitude of perspectives that have enriched my own creative journey.

    What sets Keep the Channel Open apart from other interview podcasts is the level of preparation and intelligence that both Mike and his guests bring to each episode. It's clear that Mike has done his research and truly understands the work of his guests, resulting in discussions that delve deep into their craft, motivations, and life experiences. The generosity of both Mike and his guests is evident throughout the series, creating a warm and welcoming atmosphere that allows for vulnerability and genuine connection.

    One minor criticism I have of Keep the Channel Open is its relatively small guest list. While there are many fascinating artists featured on the show, it would be great to see more diversity in terms of backgrounds, genres, and perspectives. Additionally, some listeners may find themselves wanting more episodes or longer conversations with certain guests.

    In conclusion, Keep the Channel Open is an exceptional podcast for anyone interested in art, creativity, and life's big questions. The thoughtful conversations between Mike Sakasegawa and his guests provide unique insights into their work and process, leaving listeners feeling inspired and enlightened. Despite its small guest list, this podcast remains a valuable resource for artists seeking inspiration and understanding in their own creative journeys.



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    Latest episodes from Keep the Channel Open

    Episode 159: Abbie Kiefer

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2025 58:24


    The poems in Abbie Kiefer's debut collection, Certain Shelter, are, in my reading, about aftermath. They are about grief and loss, whether that is the loss of the speaker's mother to cancer or her hometown's changing landscape. But they are also about change and rebirth, and both the anxiety and the possibility of an unknown future. In our conversation, Abbie and I talked about television as a touch point in her poems, how memory is layered, and how ephemerality is central to the human experience. Then for the second segment, we talked about doing things you're not good at. (Recorded February 7, 2025) Bonus Reading: Subscribers to the Likewise Media Patreon campaign can hear Abbie read her poem “I've Learned to Accept.” Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Abbie Kiefer Purchase Certain Shelter: Print (Portland, ME) | June Road Press (publisher) Abbie Kiefer - Upcoming Events Gee's Bend Quiltmakers While I Yet Live Transcript Episode Credits: Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 158: Marisa DeLuca

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2025 76:45


    The paintings in Marisa DeLuca's series Spectre document the changing urban landscape of the city she lives in—Oceanside, California—mourning spaces made ephemeral by the forces of gentrification. In our conversation we talked about the difference between painting and photography, how process affects the ontology of an art object, how audiences make meaning, and the intersection of art and activism. Then for the second segment, Marisa and I talked about spirit of place and the importance of the commons in communities. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Marisa DeLuca HereIn - Marisa DeLuca with Herein San Diego Union-Tribune - Saving what was: Oceanside artist captures on canvas memories of her fast-changing city Marisa DeLuca - E. G. Dérive Marisa DeLuca - Beloved Marisa DeLuca - Or No Side Marisa DeLuca - Keeper Hauntology Grant Kester Artists in Solidarity Jeanette Winterson Save Our Heritage Organisation The Whaley House Museum Pollock-Krasner House Jacques-Louis David - Portrait of Cooper Penrose Marianela de la Hoz Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 157: Checking In

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2024 76:53


    In the wake of this year's election, I found myself feeling a lot of things, but most of all that what sustains us through difficult times is always relationships and community. So I reached out to some past guests of the show and invited them to share some updates about where they are, who they're connected to, and how they're thinking about their work right now. At the end of the episode, I close by sharing a clip from the latest episode of Hey, It's Me. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Commonplace - Episode 86: Global Roll Call, Part 1 José Pablo Iriarte Jennifer Baker Lisa M. Robinson Susan Rosenberg Jones Gabrielle Bates André Ramos-Woodard Maggie Tokuda-Hall Alanna Airitam Alyssa Harad David Naimon Becky Senf Amanda Marchand Matthew Salesses Rachel Zucker Hey, It's Me - Episode 13: Bring Your Whole Self, Including Your Hopelessness Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Mike Sakasegawa Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 156: Perry Janes

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2024 71:48


    Perry Janes's debut poetry collection, Find Me When You're Ready, follows its speaker from childhood in Detroit to young adulthood in Los Angeles, a coming-of-age story in five acts, told through a series of lyric moments. The poems in this collection confront childhood sexual abuse and the story of what it means to be a man, ultimately reaching toward healing and love. In our conversation we talked about what poetry and prose do differently, how masculinity is presented in these poems, and why it was important to both include trauma but not dwell in it. For the second segment, we talked about attention and how hard it can be to focus. (Recorded November 12, 2024) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Perry Janes Purchase Find Me When You're Ready: Book Soup (Los Angeles, CA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Natalie Eilbert - Indictus Alexander Chee - How to Write an Autobiographical Novel Peter Ho Davies Linda Gregg - “We Manage Most When We Manage Small” Monster (2023 film) Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 155: Sarah Gailey

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 112:21


    Writer Sarah Gailey returns to the show for a discussion about their new novella, Have You Eaten? This serialized story follows four young queer characters as they traverse an America in the process of collapse, taking care of each other along the way. In our conversation, Sarah and I talked about experimentation in fiction, vine-ripened tomatoes, cooking as an act of care, and what apocalypse means. Then for the second segment, we talked about why we re-recorded the second segment, sin-flattening and high-control groups, the necessity of interpersonal repair. (Episode recorded September 27, 2024 and September 30, 2024) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Sarah Gailey Purchase Have You Eaten? (e-book): Kobo | Apple Books | Amazon Sarah Gailey - “STET” Keep the Channel Open - Episode 109: Sarah Gailey (When We Were Magic) Sarah Gailey - “Stone Soup #24: Mending Sauce” Sarah Gailey - “Pantry Cookies” Sabrina Imbler - How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 154: Rachel Edelman

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2024 87:05


    In the opening poem of Rachel Edelman's debut collection, Dear Memphis, the speaker returns to their home city after a long time away, traversing a landscape that is both familiar and foreign, a place to which she belongs but also doesn't. Over the course of the collection, Edelman asks questions about heritage and inheritance; about exile, diaspora, and migration; about home; about marginalization and privilege, oppression and complicity. In our conversation, we talked about acts of care, the importance of self-criticality, what poems do, and the necessary and the possible. Then for the second segment, we talked about corresponding via hand-written letters. (Recorded June 28, 2024) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Rachel Edelman Purchase Dear Memphis: Open Books (Seattle, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Jacob Lawrence - The Migration Series Morgan Parker - Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up At Night Alan Kurdi (The boy on the beach) emet ezell Rachel Edelman & emet ezell - “The Correspondent's Cheeks Are as a Bed of Spices” James Merrill - “Lost in Translation” AGNI 99 Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 153: Jennifer Baker

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 73:31


    Writer, editor, and podcaster Jennifer Baker's debut YA novel, Forgive Me Not, imagines a near-future America in which the juvenile criminal justice system has been “reformed” to allow young people to undergo grueling Trials instead of incarceration. It's an incisive and powerful story about carceral justice, as well as a moving coming-of-age and family story. In our conversation we talked about writing about serious topics for younger readers, how she approached writing her characters, and why it was important for her to focus on systems rather than individual innocence or guilt. Then for the second segment we talked about finding inspiration in other art forms. (Recorded April 3, 2024.) SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Jennifer Baker Purchase Forgive Me Not: Kew & Willow Books (Kew Gardens, NY) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Minorities in Publishing podcast Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah - Chain-Gang All-Stars Kalief Browder Lionel Tate Squid Game Annie Proulx - “Brokeback Mountain” (short story) Brokeback Mountain (film) Rachel Eliza Griffiths Nicholas Nichols Titus Kaphar Kelsey Norris - House Gone Quiet Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 152: Rachel Lyon

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2024 61:03


    Writer Rachel Lyon returns to the show to discuss her latest novel, Fruit of the Dead, a contemporary retelling of the Persephone myth in which a young woman is seduced by wealth and privilege in a story about addiction, class, sexual assault, and power. In our conversation, we talked about how malleable identity can be during adolescence and how that informed how she wrote the character of Cory, how family members do and don't see each other, and why it was important for the characters in this story to have agency. Then for the second segment we talked about stages of life. (Recorded June 28, 2024.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Rachel Lyon Purchase Fruit of the Dead: Broadside Bookshop (Northampton, MA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Rachel Lyon - Self-Portrait with Boy Keep the Channel Open - Episode 79: Rachel Lyon (January 2019) The Holdovers Charles Baxter - First Light Elizabeth Jane Howard - The Long View Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    BONUS: Hey, It's Me — Episode 1: What Are We Doing?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 60:02


    Introducing Hey, It's Me! I'm happy to announce a new podcast from me and my friend Rachel Zucker, Hey, It's Me! Here's the first episode as a bonus for KTCO listeners. Enjoy! Subscribe: Apple Podcasts Pocket Casts Overcast RSS Web

    rachel zucker
    Episode 151: KTCO Book Club - Whereas (with Amorak Huey)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 54:30


    For this KTCO Book Club conversation, poet Amorak Huey joins me to discuss Layli Long Soldier's 2017 poetry collection, Whereas. In our conversation, we talked about the way the poems confront language, what language means in the context of forced assimilation, and how the poems engage with both history and contemporary reality. (Recorded March 26, 2024) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Amorak Huey Purchase Whereas: Gathering Volumes (Parisburg, OH) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase Dad Jokes from Late in the Patriarchy Congressional Resolution of Apology to Native Americans Between the Covers - Layli Long Soldier : Whereas R. F. Kuang - Babel Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    apology book club huey layli long soldier
    Episode 150: KTCO Book Club - The Man Who Could Move Clouds (with Martha Crawford)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 63:14


    For this KTCO Book Club conversation, I'm joined by writer and group facilitator Martha Crawford for a discussion about Ingrid Rojas Contreras's 2023 memoir, The Man Who Could Move Clouds. In our conversation, Martha and I talked about different ways of knowing, how to read across cultures without being extractive, storytelling as healing, and what identity means in the context of forgetting. (Recorded March 9, 2024) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Martha Crawford Purchase The Man Who Could Move Clouds, by Ingrid Rojas Contreras: The Collected Works Bookstore (Santa Fe, NM) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Vine Deloria, Jr. Hildegard of Bingen Thomas Merton - “The Door That Ends All Doors” Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 149: José Pablo Iriarte

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 67:51


    Writer and friend José Pablo Iriarte returns to the show to discuss their debut middle-grade novel, Benny Ramirez and the Nearly Departed. In our conversation, we talked about building stories without antagonists, writing for young readers, and what makes coming-of-age stories such an enduring phenomenon. Then for the second segment, we talked about the importance of storytelling in creating empathy and connection in our incredibly divided society. (Recorded April 6, 2024.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: José Pablo Iriarte Purchase Benny Ramírez and the Nearly Departed: White Rose Books (Kissimmee, FL) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Keep the Channel Open - Episode 23: José Iriarte José Pablo Iriarte - “Proof by Induction” José Pablo Iriarte - “The Substance of My Lives, the Accidents of Our Births” José Pablo Iriarte - “Secrets and Things We Don't Say Out Loud” José Pablo Iriarte - “Life in Stone, Glass, and Plastic” José Pablo Iriarte - “Spirit of Home” Becky Chambers - A Psalm for the Wild-Built A. S. King's Instagram post Celeste Ng - Everything I Never Told You Ryka Aoki - Light From Uncommon Stars A. S. King - Attack of the Black Rectangles Transcript Episode credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 148: Sarah Rose Etter

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 80:16


    Sarah Rose Etter is a writer based in Los Angeles, CA. In Sarah's latest novel, Ripe, a young woman is trapped in a dream-job-turned-corporate-nightmare at a cutthroat Silicon Valley tech startup. Her bosses are capricious and cruel, the city she lives in is crumbling under late capitalism, and everywhere she goes she is followed by her own personal black hole. In our conversation, Sarah and I talked about the relationship between her surrealist fiction and poetry, why visual art is important to her, and what it means for a character to have agency. Then for the second segment we discussed dead authors, reading in translation, and creative insecurity. (Recorded March 2, 2024.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Sarah Rose Etter Purchase Ripe: Skylight Books (Los Angeles, CA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Sarah Rose Etter - The Book of X Keep the Channel Open - Episode 89: Julia Dixon Evans Tommy Pico Lilliam Rivera Kristen Arnett Sarah Rose Etter - “Unpublishable: Censored Emails from Noam Chomsky” Alina Szapocznikow Vija Celmins Nylon - “Sarah Rose Etter's Ripe and the Rotted Underbelly of Capitalism” Sarah Rose Etter - “Inside the Cardboard Box of My Heart” Mark Rothko Louise Bourgeois Donald Judd Sarah Rose Etter - “Girl, What Is Wrong With You?” Parasite Uncut Gems Sarah Rose Etter - “Subglacial Rivers, A Love Poem, Because… & Either/Or” Crane Brinton - The Anatomy of Revolution Brandon Taylor - “living shadows: aesthetics of moral worldbuilding” Tove Ditlevsen - The Copenhagen Trilogy Louise Bourgeois: The Spider, the Mistress and the Tangerine Transcript Episode Credits: Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 147: KTCO "Book" Club - Baldur's Gate 3 (with Maggie Tokuda-Hall)

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2024 78:09


    For this KTCO “Book” Club conversation, writer Maggie Tokuda-Hall returns to the show to talk about the game Baldur's Gate 3. In our conversation, Maggie and I talked about what it's like to experience a story with so many branching paths, how player choices reflect the player's personality, as well as some standout storytelling moments from the game. (Recorded February 9, 2024.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Maggie Tokuda-Hall Purchase Baldur's Gate 3 Purchase The Siren, the Song, and the Spy Preorder The Worst Ronin Pools of Darkness Unlimited Adventures Icewind Dale Baldur's Gate 2 Octopath Traveler The Last of Us The Adventure Zone Dungeons & Daddies Neil Newbon Roger Ebert - “Video games can never be art” The Brothers Sun Sarah Lotz - The Impossible Us Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 146: Olatunde Osinaike

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2024 56:04


    Olatunde Osinaike is a poet based in Atlanta, GA. In his debut full-length poetry collection, Tender Headed, Olatunde explores Black masculinity, both celebrating and interrogating it in his sonically virtuosic poems. We talked about his approach to poetry, what poetic lineage means to him, and the silences inherent in patriarchy. Then for the second segment, we talked about departure albums and André 3000's New Blue Sun. (Recorded January 20, 2024.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Olatunde Osinaike Purchase Tender Headed: 44th and 3rd Booksellers (Atlanta, GA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Akashic Books (publisher) Olatunde Osinaike - Upcoming Events Bonus Reading for Patreon Subscribers: Olatunde Osinaike reads “Being Human Takes a Lot of Nerve” Etheridge Knight - “The Sun Came” Gwendolyn Brooks - “truth” Paul M. Angle - “We Asked Gwendolyn Brooks about the Creative Environment in Illinois” André 3000 - New Blue Sun American Fiction They Cloned Tyrone Tristan Harris Knives Out Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 145: KTCO Book Club - Bianca (with Rachel Zucker)

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 95:06


    For this KTCO Book Club conversation, poet and podcaster Rachel Zucker returns to the show to discuss Eugenia Leigh's poetry collection Bianca. In our conversation, we talked about our approaches to talking about books with their authors, how form shapes how we take in intense subject matter in a poem, and how a book can be a means of connection. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Rachel Zucker Purchase Bianca: Print (Portland, ME) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Eugenia Leigh James Schuyler - “This Dark Apartment” Jack Kornfield - “Transform Your Life Through Jack Kornfield's Most Powerful Stories: A 10 Hour Journey” Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    book club rachel zucker
    Episode 144: Gerardo Sámano Córdova

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 75:39


    Gerardo Sámano Córdova is a writer and artist from Mexico City. In his debut novel, Monstrilio, Gerardo draws from both horror and literary fiction traditions to tell a story about grief, family, and self-acceptance. In our conversation, Gerardo and I talked about genre expectations, genre fiction as a site of art, and what it means to be monstrous. For the second segment, we talked about the tension between fulfilling your own artistic vision and creating work that will sell. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Gerardo Sámano Córdova Purchase Monstrilio: Books Are Magic (Brooklyn, NY) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Paul Semel - “Exclusive Interview: ‘Monstrilio' Author Gerardo Sámano Córdova” At Home with Literati: Gerardo Sámano Córdova & Kelly Link CrimeReads - “Horror Does a Body Good, or, the Story of My Teeth” Chuck Tingle Petite Maman Petite Maman - Official Trailer Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 143: Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2023 67:07


    Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah is a writer based in the Bronx, NY. In his debut novel, Chain-Gang All-Stars, Nana presents us with a dystopian future America where convicted prisoners fight each other to the death in a televised bloodsport. The book is both a blistering critique of the US carceral system and an insistence on the inalienable humanity of every person. In our conversation, Nana and I talked about what satire and dystopia open up for him as a writer, why it's important to him to implicate both the reader and himself in his work, and how he thinks about prison abolition. Then in the second segment, we talked about the seductive nature of success as an artist in a capitalist society. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah Purchase Chain-Gang All-Stars: The Lit Bar (Bronx, NY) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Kendrick Lamar - “The Art of Peer Pressure” Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah - Friday Black Metroidvania (game genre) @america_is_the_bad_place Keep the Channel Open - Episode 128: Anahid Nersessian John Keats - “To Autumn” Starship Troopers (1997 film) John Gardner - The Art of Fiction Ta-Nehisi Coates - “Killing Dylan Roof” Kadhja Bonet - The Visitor Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 142: Rachel Zucker

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2023 107:23


    Rachel Zucker is a writer, podcast, and teacher based in New York and Maine. Her latest book, The Poetics of Wrongness, is a collection of essays (originally written and performed for the Bagley Wright Lecture Series) delving into her own poetics, motherhood, the history of confessional poetry, and the ethics of “say everything” poetry. In our conversation, Rachel and I talked about wrongness as a stance against moral purity, about addiction to doubt, and about poetry as an opportunity to create outside of capitalism. Then in the second segment, we talked about her new project, the Commonplace School for Embodied Poetics. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Rachel Zucker Purchase The Poetics of Wrongness: Print (Portland, ME) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Commonplace Commonplace - Episode 110: The Poetics of Wrongness Adrienne Rich - Of Woman Born Joyelle McSweeney - “Wrong Poets Society” Alice Notley - Disobedience Alice Notley - “The Poetics of Disobedience” Liz Lerman's Critical Response Process Julia Cameron - The Artist's Way Henrik Ibsen - A Doll's House A Doll's House (2023 Broadway production) Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    new york house broadway maine poetics wrongness rachel zucker bagley wright lecture series
    Episode 141: KTCO Book Club - The Scapegracers (with Sarah Gailey)

    Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 63:33


    For our latest KTCO Book Club episode, writer Sarah Gailey joins us for a discussion of H. A. Clarke's YA novels The Scapegracers and The Scratch Daughters. In our conversation, Sarah and I talked about the ways Clarke's novels subvert genre expectations, about the quality of teen girls' rage, and about why these books are “capital-I Important.” Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Sarah Gailey Purchase The Scapegracers: Loyalty (Washington, DC) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase The Scratch Daughters: Loyalty (Washington, DC) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase Just Like Home: Loyalty (Washington, DC) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Subscribe to The Personal Canons Cookbook The Craft Sarah Gailey - When We Were Magic Maggie Tokuda-Hall - Squad Euphoria How different generations react to a gay character being introduced Holly Black - The Cruel Prince Mark Russel & Mike Feehan - Exit Stage Left: The Snagglepuss Chronicles Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 140: Dayna Patterson

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2023 57:41


    Dayna Patterson is a poet, photographer, and textile artist based in the Pacific Northwest. The poems in her latest collection, O Lady, Speak Again, use the voices of the women characters from Shakespeare's plays to talk about patriarchy, motherhood, sexuality, religion, heritage. In our conversation, Dayna and I discussed her creative process and how she finds her way into a poem, her use of persona in O Lady, Speak Again, and how and why she interrogates that same device within the collection. The in the second segment, we talked about play, and how it interacts with the creative process. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Dayna Patterson Purchase O Lady, Speak Again: Village Books (Bellingham, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Keep the Channel Open - Episode 120: Kazim Ali Keep the Channel Open - Episode 137: Gabrielle Bates NaPoWriMo Othello, Act V, Scene ii Jorie Graham The Winter's Tale Emily Dickinson - “Tell all the truth but tell it slant” Rachel Zucker - The Poetics of Wrongness Kristiana Kahakauwila Jehanne Dubrow Mike Sakasegawa - Sheets: A Love Letter Bruce Beasley - Prayershreds Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 139: Joshua Burton

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2023 60:51


    Joshua Burton is a poet and educator based in Houston, TX. The poems in Joshua's debut collection, Grace Engine, ask what grace means in a hostile world of lynchings, mental illness, self-hate, and suicide. These poems offer no solace, yet nevertheless reach toward beauty and peace. In our conversation, Joshua and I talked about what a grace engine is, processing shame through poetry, and what can be unlocked by returning to the same subject in multiple poems. Then for the second segment, we talked about creating mythology as a way of honoring those whom history may have overlooked. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Joshua Burton Purchase Grace Engine: Brazos Bookstore (Houston, TX) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Mike's video review of Grace Engine Jeff Buckley - Grace Mono no aware Lynching of Jim McIlherron Lynching of Mary Turner Lynching of Laura and L. D. Nelson (note: link contains graphic images) Royal Robertson William O'Neal Keep the Channel Open - Episode 108: The Craft of the Literary Podcast Interview Joshua Burton - Fracture Anthology Roland Barthes - Camera Lucida Toni Morrison - Song of Solomon Lupe Fiasco - DROGAS Wave Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 138: KTCO Book Club - The Cruel Prince (with Mel Thomas)

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 57:19


    For our latest KTCO Book Club episode, media critic Mel Thomas joins us for a conversation about Holly Black's YA fantasy novel The Cruel Prince. In our conversation, we discuss the ways that craft in YA fiction is often dismissed or overlooked by both critics and readers, the dynamics of abuse and trauma in the novel, and being able to enjoy art on multiple levels. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Mel Thomas Purchase The Cruel Prince: Carmichael's Bookstore (Louisville, KY) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org David Eddings - The Belgariad Ursula K. Le Guin - A Wizard of Earthsea Nicole Kornher-Stace - Archivist Wasp Kameron Hurley Stephen R. Donaldson - The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant Sarah J. Maas - A Court of Thorns and Roses boygenius - the record Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 137: Gabrielle Bates

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 79:13


    Gabrielle Bates is a poet based in Seattle, WA. Throughout Gabrielle's debut collection, Judas Goat, there is a feeling of quiet, that the poems are almost being whispered to you. And yet it is not a soft or comforting quiet that these poems bring, but rather one that often contains a sense of menace. In our conversation, Gabrielle and I talked about that disquieting feeling, the slipperiness of memory, the poetics of attention, and how important narrative to her poetics. Then for the second segment, we discussed what literature and poetry can do. [Recorded Jan 2, 2023] Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Gabrielle Bates Purchase Judas Goat: Open Books (Seattle, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Keep the Channel Open - Episode 123: KTCO Book Club - Song (with Gabrielle Bates) Between the Covers - Claire Schwartz : Civil Service Keep the Channel Open - Episode 134: Luther Hughes Keep the Channel Open - Episode 120: Kazim Ali Gabrielle Bates - Poetry Comics Kazim Ali - “Know No Name” Abi Pollokoff Erin L. McCoy Keep the Channel Open - Episode 112: Ross Sutherland Benjamin Labatut - When We Cease to Understand the World Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 136: Abby Minor

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 81:00


    Abby Minor is a writer based in central Pennsylvania. In her debut book of poems, As I Said: A Dissent, Abby combines the historical narrative of Ann Lohman—a 19th-century abortion provider in New York City—with personal and family history, creating a collection of poems that challenge the typical notion of an abortion story. In our conversation, Abby and I talked about her approach to documentary poetry, why it was important to her to push back against conventional abortion discourse, and how art and activism intersect. Then in the second segment, we talked about American work culture and the necessity of rest. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Abby Minor Purchase As I Said: A Dissent: Webster's Bookstore (State College, PA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org NPR Arts & Letters - “The Wickedest Woman in New York” Erin Marie Lynch - “Using the Lens of Abortion to Look at Other Things” Abby Minor - “Out On This Red Edge” Abby Minor - “Rooms” Contrary Magazine - Interview with Best of the Net 2018 Winner Abby Minor Abby Minor - “Beyond Choice” Abby Minor - Reframing Abortion to Breathe Life into a “Culture of Death” Steven Stoll - Ramp Hollow: The Ordeal of Appalachia Robin Wall Kimmerer - Braiding Sweetgrass Vaughn Stills - Places for the Spirit: Traditional African American Gardens Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 135: Molly Spencer

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 67:20


    Molly Spencer is a poet based in Michigan. The poems in her collections In the House and Hinge engage with chronic illness, divorce, domesticity, motherhood, and the ways that our lives don't always work out the way we expected them to. In our conversation, we talked about dissolution, the uses of poetry, ways of knowing, and speaking unlovely truths. Then for the second section, we talked about attention—both the kind of attention we'd like to cultivate in our own lives, and what kind of attention we ask of our readers. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Molly Spencer Purchase If the House: Literati (Ann Arbor, MI) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop Purchase Hinge: Literati (Ann Arbor, MI) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop Emily Dickinson - “Make me a picture of the sun” Etel Adnan - Sea and Fog Wallace Stevens - “The Snow Man” Susan Glaspell - “A Jury of Her Peers” Molly Spencer - “On ‘Most Accidents Occur At Home'” Mary Oliver - “Yes! No!” Solmaz Sharif - Customs Dionne Brand - Nomenclature Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 134: Luther Hughes

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 62:44


    Luther Hughes is a poet based in Seattle, WA. The poems in Luther's debut collection, A Shiver in the Leaves, are tender, erotic, vulnerable, erudite, at times dark, and at times ecstatic. In our conversation, we talked about power dynamics in sexual encounters, different forms of love, and writing as a way of understanding oneself. Then in the second section, we talked about why so many sex scenes in popular media are so strange. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Luther Hughes Purchase A Shiver in the Leaves: Open Books (Seattle, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Brooklyn Poets Reading Series - Luther Hughes, Lynn Melnick, Carl Phillips The Poet Salon Lue's Poetry Hour Luther Hughes - “On Power” Seattle Times - “Seattle poet Luther Hughes on ‘A Shiver in the Leaves,' his debut collection” Brandon Taylor - Real Life Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 133: André Ramos-Woodard

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 79:33


    André Ramos-Woodard is a photographic artist originally from Texas and Tennessee. In their series BLACK SNAFU, André combines photographs celebrating Blackness with appropriated illustrations from racist cartoons as a way of confronting the history and present reality of American racism. In our conversation we discussed appropriation, questions of audience and community, and mental health. Then in the second segment, we talked about what inspires us outside of the visual arts. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: André Ramos-Woodard André Ramos-Woodard - BLACK SNAFU Hannah Jane Parkinson - “Instagram, an artist and the $100,000 selfies—appropriation in the digital age” (Article about Richard Prince Instagram images) William Camargo William Camargo's IG post riffing on John Diva's work Kansas City Artists Coalition - André Ramos-Woodard Artist Talk André Ramos-Woodard - African America Roger Ebert - “Video games can never be art” Beyonce - Renaissance Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 132: Amanda Marchand

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 69:38


    Amanda Marchand is a Canadian, New York-based photographer. Amanda's Lumen Notebook series is a body of elegant and strikingly beautiful images that nevertheless layer deep meaning within their seemingly simple compositions. In our conversation, Amanda and I talked about her process in creating these photograms and how working within strict constraints allows her to explore the technique more fully. We also discussed how she uses photography to facilitate connection and presence, and the duality of delight and mortality in her work. Then for the second segment we had a meandering conversation about autism, communication, attention, and using art to process and understand our emotional experiences. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Amanda Marchand Amanda Marchand - The World is Astonishing With You in It Medium Photo - Second Sight lecture with Amanda Marchand Barbara Bosworth - The Meadow Stanley Fish - Is There a Text in This Class? Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal - Louise Bourgeois Linda Connor Kathy Acker Amanda Marchand - Nothing Will Ever Be the Same Again Amanda Marchand - Lumen Circles Keep the Channel Open - Episode 124: Farrah Karapetian Leah Sobsey Mary Oliver - Devotions: The Selected Poems of Mary Oliver Mary Oliver - “The Summer Day” Tara Brach Jenny Odell - How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 131: Fatemeh Baigmoradi

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 53:59


    Fatemeh Baigmoradi is a photographic artist originally from Iran. In her series It's Hard to Kill, Fatemeh works with archival family photos from Iran, using fire to obscure or destroy portions of the image—connecting to the way that her own family and many others burned their photos after the Iranian Revolution to protect themselves or others in the photos. In our conversation we talked about the relationship between photography and memory, censorship, and how violence, healing, and cleansing are all intertwined in Fatemeh's work. Then in the second segment, Fatemeh and I talked about immigration. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Fatemeh Baigmoradi Fatemeh Baigmoradi - It's Hard to Kill Fatemeh Baigmoradi - Subjectivity and Objectivity Medium Festival of Photography - Fatemeh Baigmoradi lecture Keep the Channel Open - Episode 22: Esmé Weijun Wang Keep the Channel Open - Episode 46: Rizzhel Javier Brandon Shimoda Patrick Nagatani Ignant - “Fatemeh Baigmoradi On Censorship and the Fires of Revolution” Mitra Tabrizian Marcel Proust - Swann's Way: In Search of Lost Time, Volume 1 Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 130: Sarah Hollowell

    Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 81:11


    Sarah Hollowell is a writer based in Indiana. Sarah's debut novel, A Dark and Starless Forest, is a YA contemporary fantasy story centered on a family of foster sisters learning about their magic, until suddenly they start disappearing. In our conversation we talked about the difference in process between short stories and novels, how her novel portrays abuse dynamics, and the importance of fan fiction. Then in the second segment, Sarah and I talked about the Alpha Workshop. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Sarah Hollowell Follow @sarahhollowell on Twitter Purchase A Dark and Starless Forest: Viewpoint Books (Columbus, IN) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Alpha Young Writers Workshop Ashley Schumacher - The Renaissance of Gwen Hathaway Rude Tales of Magic Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 129: Ayesha Raees

    Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 88:16


    Ayesha Raees is a poet and hybrid artist based in New York, Miami, and Lahore. In her debut book of poetry, Coining a Wishing Tower, she explores death, grief, culture, religion, separation, and return in a hybrid form that is part poetry, part narrative, part fable, and entirely remarkable. In our conversation, we talked about her book, her writing process, and sustaining a relationship with her work over time. Then in the second segment, we discussed community. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Ayesha Raees Purchase Coining a Wishing Tower: Platypus Press | Bookshop.org Rainier Maria Rilke - Letters to a Young Poet bell hooks - The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 128: Anahid Nersessian

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2022 86:24


    Anahid Nersessian is a professor and critic based in Los Angeles, CA. In her latest book, Keats's Odes: A Lover's Discourse, Anahid takes the reader through close readings of John Keats's six Great Odes, providing cultural context and explicating their themes of sexual violence, melancholy, and the seductiveness of beauty. More than that, though, the book is, itself, a love story. In our conversation, Anahid and I talked about how and why Keats's Odes still resonate with readers today, how personal narrative entered these essays, and how it functions in them. Then in the second segment, we talked about experimental critical writing. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Anahid Nersessian Purchase Keats's Odes: A Lover's Discourse: Skylight Books (Los Angeles, CA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Anahid Nersessian - Utopia Limited: Romanticism and Adjustment Anahid Nersessian - The Calamity Form: On Poetry and Social Life Anahid Nersessian - “Catastrophic Desires” William Shakespeare - “Sonnet 73” Dorothy Van Ghent - Keats: The Myth of the Hero Danez Smith Alexander Pope - “The Rape of the Lock” Walter Jackson Bate - John Keats William Wordsworth - “Preface to Lyrical Ballads” Ingrid Sischy - “Good Intentions” Peterloo Massacre Los Angeles Review of Books - “Of Poets and Critics: A Conversation Between Anahid Nersessian and Michael Robbins” Alexander Chee Anahid Nersessian in conversation with Zoe Kazan Helen Vendler - The Odes of John Keats Wendy's Subway Renee Gladman John Coltrane - “Olé” Rachel Pollack Penny Arcade - “Parabolic” Heather K. Love Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick Rosie Stockton - Pumpjack Rosie Stockton - Permanent Volta Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 127: KTCO Book Club - Piranesi (with Maggie Tokuda-Hall)

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 70:26


    For this installment of the KTCO Book Club, writer and podcaster Maggie Tokuda-Hall joins us to discuss Susanna Clark's 2020 novel Piranesi. A relatively slim volume, Piranesi is surprisingly difficult to summarize but, like its labyrinthine setting, with patience and attention the book will reveal its profound beauty and kindness. (Conversation recorded February 24, 2022.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Maggie Tokuda-Hall Failure to Adapt Purchase Piranesi: Mrs. Dalloway's (Berkeley, CA) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase Also an Octopus: Mrs. Dalloway's (Berkeley, CA) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase The Mermaid, the Witch, and the Sea: Mrs. Dalloway's (Berkeley, CA) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase Squad: Mrs. Dalloway's (Berkeley, CA) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Purchase Love in the Library: Mrs. Dalloway's (Berkeley, CA) | Mysterious Galaxy (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Susanna Clarke - Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell Jon Klassen Mac Barnett Carson Ellis Mac Barnett & Carson Ellis - What Is Love? M. T. Anderson - The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing Kazuo Ishiguro - Klara and the Sun Normal Gossip Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah - Friday Black Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 126: Yanyi

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 69:22


    There's a way in which the end of a serious relationship can shake your entire concept of yourself, and through your grief you have to find yourself again. Yanyi's latest book of poems, Dream of the Divided Field, braids poems about heartbreak and implied emotional violence with poems about transition and immigration. Each has a similar but distinct sense of a loss of self, a search for self, a yearning for connection and belonging, a sometimes violent disconnection—to a partner, to a place or culture, to oneself and one's own body. In our conversation, Yanyi and I discussed his book, deconstruction and reconstruction, attachment to nuance, and the relationship between beauty and violence. Then for the second segment, we talked about grief. (Conversation recorded February 28, 2022.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Goodpods | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Yanyi Yanyi - Dream of the Divided Field Yanyi - The Year of Blue Water Yanyi - The Reading Samuel Ace TC Tolbert Parul Sehgal - “The Case Against the Trauma Plot” Carmen Maria Machado - In the Dream House Keep the Channel Open - Episode 33: José Olivarez Jane Hirshfield - Nine Gates Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 125: Rowan Hisayo Buchanan

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 84:25


    Rowan Hisayo Buchanan is a writer based in London, UK. Rowan’s second novel, Starling Days, is a beautiful story about the complex love between the book’s two protagonists, Mina and Oscar, and their respective challenges in the wake of Mina’s suicide attempt. Starling Days explores family and love in many forms, and how people both connect and separate. In our conversation, Rowan and I discussed the depiction of mental illness in her book, how she approached writing the multifaceted relationships between the book’s characters, and why it was important to her to include multiracial characters. Then in the second segment, we talked about faith and how we make and find meaning. (Conversation recorded March 30, 2021.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Rowan Hisayo Buchanan Purchase Starling Days: Pages of Hackney (London, UK) | Greenlight Bookstore (NYC) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Rowan Hisayo Buchanan - “The Woman Scared of Her Own Kimono” Ruth Ozeki - A Tale for the Time Being Celeste Ng - Everything I Never Told You Violet Kupersmith Violet Kupersmith - Build Your House Around My Body Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    conversations uk rowan hisayo buchanan
    Episode 124: Farrah Karapetian

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 77:56


    Farrah Karapetian is an artist based in California. Known for her large-scale photograms, Farrah’s wide-ranging practice incorporates sculpture, performance, and different forms of mark-making to stretch the photographic medium as she is driven by her intense and rigorous curiosity. In our conversation, Farrah and I talked about the appeal of the photographic medium, the tension between constructing an image and the happy accident, and the ethics of artistic beauty. Then in the second segment, we discussed the Nardal sisters and how we develop a language around issues like exoticization. (Conversation recorded March 24, 2021.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Farrah Karapetian Farrah Karapetian - Muscle Memory Farrah Karapetian - Stagecraft Farrah Karapetian - Slips & Pushes HereIn Journal - “Chantel Paul on Farrah Karapetian” AnomolousCo - Beckett & The Virtual tickets Diane Rosenstein Gallery - Expo Chicago Online 2021 Farrah Karapetian in Conversation with Tracy Sharpley-Whiting Venice Family Clinic Art Walk + Auction 2021 Orange County Museum of Art - 2013 California-Pacific Triennial Erving Goffman - The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Claire A. Warden Paula Riff Thomas Demand Vik Muniz Farrah Karapetian - “The Kitchen” Farrah Karapetian - “Its Negative” Vanessa Beecroft Tino Sehgal James Van Der Zee Rineke Dijkstra Bertholt Brecht Augusto Boal Farrah Karapetian - Relief Farrah Karapetian - Flags & Teleprompters Ingrid Sischy - “Good Intentions” David Levi Strauss - Between the Eyes: Essays on Photography and Politics André Breton - Nadja Anahid Nersessian - Keats’s Odes: A Lover’s Discourse Jeanne Nardal Paulette Nardal Alain Locke W. E. B. Du Bois Steven Y. Wong - Circles and Circuits: Chinese Caribbean Art Mark Sealy - Decolonising the Camera: Photography in Racial Time Robert Rauschenberg - Borealis 1988-92 Marie-Magdaleine Carbet - “Obeah” and Other Martinican Stories Langston Hughes - I Wonder as I Wander: An Autobiographical Journey Lola Álvarez Bravo Setting Sun: Writings by Japanese Photographers Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    From the Archive: Ken Rosenthal

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 69:29


    Tucson-based photographer Ken Rosenthal's work has always stuck in my mind for both its striking visual style and the way that he uses images to represent and explore his internal emotional and psychological state. Whether he's looking at landscapes or family members or familiar objects, his photographs resonate because they represent the personal. We talked about several bodies of work, including his recent series The Forest and a work in progress called Days On the Mountain. For the second segment, Ken and I talked about change, and how when it comes in our personal lives it can spur us to new heights in our work. (Recorded June 22, 2016. Originally released August 3, 2016.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Ken Rosenthal Purchase Days on the Mountain: Book Only | Limited Ed. with Print Ken’s online store Center for Creative Photography - “Why Photography?” event Ken Rosenthal - Photographs 2001-2009 Ken Rosenthal - The Forest Medium Festival of Photography Mary Virginia Swanson Diane Arbus Sally Mann - Hold Still Ken's Instagram Ken's Twitter Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 123: KTCO Book Club - Song (with Gabrielle Bates)

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 83:16


    For this installment of the KTCO Book Club, poet and podcaster Gabrielle Bates joins me for a conversation about Brigit Pegeen Kelly’s 1994 poetry collection Song. In our conversation, Gabrielle and I talked about how Kelly builds the worlds of her poems, how the poems layer metaphor, and how the poems manage to be simultaneously (and paradoxically) both surreal and grounded. (Conversation recorded February 4, 2021.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Gabrielle Bates The Poet Salon Purchase Song: Open Books (Seattle, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org Brigit Pegeen Kelly - “Song” (title poem) Keep the Channel Open - Episode 49: Maggie Smith Maggie Smith - Good Bones Sally Mann - Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs Muzzle - Jeanann Verlee on “Song” by Brigit Pegeen Kelly The Poet Salon - Ada Limón + January Gimlet Keep the Channel Open - Episode 122: Kary Wayson Kenyon Review - “The Slip interview with Kary Wayson” Brigit Pegeen Kelly - “Dead Doe” The Sundress Blog - “Lyric Essentials: Emilia Phillips reads ‘Song’ by Brigit Pegeen Kelly” Keep the Channel Open - Episode 120: Kazim Ali Keep the Channel Open - Episode 121: KTCO Book Club - Tender (with Wm Henry Morris) Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 122: Kary Wayson

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2021 52:00


    Kary Wayson is a poet based in Seattle, WA. The poems Kary’s latest collection, The Slip, are wonderfully slippery in both form and feeling, in a way that demands attention and rewards deep engagement. In our conversation we discussed what a poem can do, how we approach “meaning” in poetry, and how life changes affect our art. Then in the second segment, we talked about time and our human perception of duration. (Conversation recorded January 5, 2021.) Bonus Reading: Subscribers to the Likewise Media Patreon campaign can hear Kary read her poem “Untitled Poem (for a Feeling).” Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Kary Wayson Purchase The Slip: Burnside Review (Publisher) | Bookshop.org | Open Books (Seattle, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) The Stranger - “Falling for The Slip” The Seattle Review of Books - “After years of drought, Kary Wayson is writing poetry again” Keep the Channel Open - Episode 33: José Olivarez Kenyon Review - “The Slip interview with Kary Wayson” Sarah Manguso - “A Glittering” Neutral Milk Hotel - “In the Aeroplane Over the Sea” Robert Capa - “Watching the Tour de France in front of the bicycle shop owned by Pierre Cloarec, one of the cyclists in the race, Pleyben, France” - First Image - Second Image Next KTCO Book Club pick: Song, by Brigit Pegeen Kelly Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Remembering Paula Riff

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2021 52:38


    My friend Paula Riff passed away recently, after having been ill with cancer for two years. Paula was a wonderful, kind, generous, and enthusiastic person, and a brilliant artist whose work pushed the boundaries of the photographic medium. I’m grateful to have had the opportunity to talk with her about that work for the show. In our conversation, Paula and I talked about what photography is to her, why she’s attracted to alternative processes, and how her work is ultimately autobiographical. Then for the second segment, we talked about the value of physical art spaces. In honor of her memory, I’m re-sharing our conversation today. Rest in peace, Paula. (This episode was originally released on January 15, 2020. Conversation recorded December 3, 2019.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Donate via PayPal Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Paula Riff Paula Riff - Blue Is Not the Sky Building Bridges Art Exchange - “All Women Are Dangerous II” Center for Photographic Art - “Winter Blues, Contemporary Cyanotypes” Mark Rothko László Moholy-Nagy Alfred Stieglitz Catalyst: Interviews - Paula Riff Keep the Channel Open - Episode 8: Bryan Ida The Diffusion Tapes - Tape no. 7: Mike Sakasegawa The lemon video Paula Riff - Postcards from Russia Harvey Quaytman at Blum & Poe Gallery Constructed Mythologies: Luis González Palma Mike Sakasegawa - Sheets: A Love Letter Transcript

    Episode 121: KTCO Book Club - Tender (with Wm Henry Morris)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 83:30


    For this installment of the KTCO Book Club, writer Wm Henry Morris joins me for a conversation about Sofia Samatar’s 2017 story collection Tender. The stories in this collection range from fairy tale and folklore to dystopian sci-fi to (almost) contemporary realism, but all have in common Samatar’s impeccable prose, attention to detail, and exceptional readership. (Conversation recorded December 19, 2020) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Sofia Samatar - Tender Wm Henry Morris Sofia Samatar - A Stranger in Olondria Sofia Samatar - The Winged Histories Sofia Samatar - “The Red Thread” Jorge Luis Borges Franz Kafka Karl Ove Knausgård Sofia Samatar - “Selkie Stories Are For Losers” Selkie Kat Howard Amal El-Mohtar Theodora Goss Sofia Samatar - “Honey Bear” Pat Frank - Alas, Babylon Nevil Shute - On the Beach Sofia Samatar - “A Girl Who Comes Out of a Chamber at Regular Intervals” E. T. A. Hoffmann Sofia Samatar - “Meet Me in Iram” Iram of the Pillars Emily St. John Mandel - Station Eleven Sofia Samatar - “Tender” Radium Girls Wm Henry Morris - “Ghosts of Salt and Spirit” Sofia Samatar - “How to Get Back to the Forest” Sofia Samatar - “An Account of the Land of Witches” Sofia Samatar - “The Closest Thing to Animals” Keep the Channel Open - Episode 113: Matthew Salesses Christian Petzhold Barbara (2012 film) Phoenix (2014 film) Transit (2018 film) Anna Seghers - Transit Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 120: Kazim Ali

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2021 68:52


    Kazim Ali is a writer based in San Diego, CA. Kazim’s latest poetry collection, The Voice of Sheila Chandra, uses sound to explode meaning and explore silence and voicelessness, bringing together history, philosophy, spirituality, and personal experience to create something truly profound. In our conversation, Kazim and I discussed the divine in art, what the sound of poetry can embody and enact, and the fundamental oneness of human life. Then for the second segment, we talked about music. (Conversation recorded December 17, 2020.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Kazim Ali Purchase The Voice of Sheila Chandra Pre-order Northern Light: Power, Land, and the Memory of Water Upcoming virtual events with Kazim Ali PoetryNow - “Know No Name” What’s Love Got to Do With It Sheila Chandra Orpheus and Eurydice Alcestis Asian American Writers’ Workshop - The Voice of Sheila Chandra with Kazim Ali, Sheila Chandra, and Rajiv Mohabir The Frost Place Ellen Bryant Voigt Prakriti Festival Kazim Ali - The Far Mosque Cyndi Lauper - At Last Alice Coltrane Qawwali Amjad Sabri Abida Parveen Kirtan Krishna Das Kazim Ali - Bright Felon Keep the Channel Open - Julia Dixon Evans Honorée Fanonne Jeffers Honorée Fanonne Jeffers - The Age of Phillis Phillis Wheatley Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 46 (RERUN): Rizzhel Mae Javier

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2020 78:05


    Rizzhel Mae Javier is a photographer and installation artist based in San Diego, CA. I first met Rizzhel when we were both participating in the portfolio reviews at the Medium Festival a few years ago, and her stop-motion, flipbook-style pieces immediately caught my attention. More recently, Rizzhel was named one of the 2017 emerging artists by the SD Art Prize for her "Unmentionables" project, creating new art out of old mementos. We had a great conversation for the show about her artistic process, what she loves about making mistakes, and her experience as a teacher. For the second segment, Rizzhel chose the Philippines as her topic. (This episode was originally released on August 16, 2017. Conversation recorded July 26, 2017.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Rizzhel Mae Javier The AjA Project - Buy STEAM OnDemand Workshop Box The AjA Project - Apply to Speak City Heights project Rizzhel Mae Javier - Move(meant) Rizzhel Mae Javier - Unmentionables San Diego Art Institute - Millennial Pink SD Art Prize - 2017 New Contemporaries CM Curatorial Keep the Channel Open - Episode 33: José Olivarez ARID Journal - Strange Vistas: The Work of Walter Cotten Richard Keely Duane Michals Eikoh Hosoe Richard Prince Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 33 (RERUN): José Olivarez

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 83:38


    José Olivarez is a poet living and working in Chicago, Illinois, and is also co-host of one of my all-time favorite podcasts, The Poetry Gods. In our wide-ranging conversation we talked about how The Poetry Gods came to be, toxic masculinity in the poetry world, and how discovering poetry allowed José to find his artistic voice. In the second segment, we talked about beginnings and endings. (This episode was originally released on February 15, 2017. Conversation recorded January 1, 2017.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: José Olivarez José Olivarez - Citizen Illegal José Olivarez - The BreakBeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNEXT “In Search of the Ecstatic” Workshop “Revision Is Writing” Workshop The Poetry Gods Jon Sands Aziza Barnes T-Pain: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert Louder Than a Bomb Celeste Ng - Everything I Never Told You José Olivarez - “I Walk Into the Ocean” Young Chicago Authors Urban Word NYC Hanif Willis-Abdurraqib - “Searching for a New Kind of Optimism” Maria Popova - “Hope, Cynicism, and the Stories We Tell Ourselves” Patricia Smith Gloria Anzaldúa - Borderlands Eduardo Galeano - Open Veins of Latin America Keah Brown @_joseolivarez Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 22 (RERUN): Esmé Weijun Wang

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2020 73:48


    Esmé Weijun Wang's debut novel The Border of Paradise was one of my favorite books of 2016. A multigenerational epic centered on an interracial family, the Nowaks, this book touches on so many profound topics, from mental illness to intergenerational trauma to culture clash to the very question of what it means to be a family, all done in stunningly beautiful prose. Esmé and I had a great conversation about her book in the first segment, and in the second segment we chatted about our favorite social media platform: Twitter. (This episode was originally released on September 14, 2016. Conversation recorded July 19, 2016.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Esmé Weijun Wang Esmé Weijun Wang - The Border of Paradise Esmé Weijun Wang - The Collected Schizophrenias The Rawness of Remembering guided e-course (33% off with coupon code GOODBYE2020) Esmé Weijun Wang - With Love and Squalor (e-letter) Heather Havrilesky - Ask Polly Esmé Weijun Wang - “You Are Not Lazy” Esmé Weijun Wang - “I’m Chronically Ill and Afraid of Being Lazy” (elle.com) Esmé Weijun Wang - “Why My Novel Uses Untranslated Chinese” (lithub.com) Junot Díaz - The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 119: Jordanna Kalman

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 68:59


    Jordanna Kalman is a fine art photographer who lives and works in New York. Jordanna’s work explores loneliness, femininity and individuality, and the images are highly personal. In her series Little Romances, she rephotographs prints of earlier images of hers which had been stolen and misused. By considering the prints as objects and adding new elements, she creates a new narrative, examining the anxieties of being a woman and creating a form of protection for the image. In our conversation we discussed prints as still-life subjects, what anger can accomplish, and our mutual dislike of “mean” photography. Then in the second segment we discussed a recent Instagram dust-up between two photographers, and how it’s relevant to our larger society. (Conversation recorded October 21, 2020.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Jordanna Kalman Jordanna Kalman - Little Romances Purchase books and prints from Jordanna Kalman’s online shop 2018 Critical Mass Top 50 Speax - “Jordanna Kalman - Artist & Photographer” Vik Muniz Joseph Beuys Fotofilmic Laura Letinsky Keep the Channel Open - Episode 114: Jessica Eaton Bruce Gilden Martin Parr Rebecca Traister - Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger William Camargo John Divola William Camargo’s Instagram (@billythecamera) William Camargo’s IG post riffing on John Divola’s work John Divola - As Far As I Could Get Killing of Ahmaud Arbery PetaPixel - “Folded Map Project’s Tonika Johnson Confronts Alec Soth and the NY Times” Tonika Johnson - Folded Map Project The Phoblographer - “Martin Parr is Under Fire for a Photo Book Reprint He Edited in 2017” Keep the Channel Open - Episode 110: Maggie Tokuda-Hall Kazim Ali - The Voice of Sheila Chandra Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 118: KTCO Book Club - The True Deceiver (with Alyssa Harad)

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2020 101:32


    For this installment of the KTCO Book Club, I’m joined by writer Alyssa Harad for a conversation about Tove Jansson’s 1982 novel The True Deceiver. Despite the slimness of the volume, Jansson’s novel yet contains a surprising degree of depth and complexity, not to mention psychological tension, in a story that challenges the reader to consider the nature of truth, honesty, and different forms of deception. (Conversation recorded September 22, 2020.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Tove Jansson - The True Deceiver Alyssa Harad Alyssa Harad - Coming to My Senses: A Story of Perfume, Pleasure, and an Unlikely Bride #KTCOBookClub on Twitter Moomin Ali Smith Tove Jansson - The Summer Book Flannery O’Connor Eudora Welty Sherwood Anderson - Winesburg, Ohio Keep the Channel Open - Episode 113: Matthew Salesses Tove Jansson - Fair Play William Faulkner - The Sound and the Fury Christiane Ritter - A Woman in the Polar Night Tove Jansson - Moominland Midwinter Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 117: Maggie Smith

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2020 69:54


    Maggie Smith is a poet and essayist based in Bexley, Ohio. Maggie’s new book Keep Moving: Notes on Loss, Creativity, and Change was born out of a difficult life change; it both discusses and is an example of resilience and hope in the face of an unknown future. In our conversation, we talked about the book’s origins in a series of social media notes-to-self, about becoming an essayist after having been a poet for so long, and about finding agency through language. Then for the second segment, we talked about community and connection via social media. (Conversation recorded September 10, 2020.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Maggie Smith Maggie Smith - Keep Moving Literati Books - At Home With Literati - Maggie Smith & Molly Spencer (October 8, 2020) Books Are Magic - Maggie Smith: Keep Moving w/ Rebecca Soffer (October 14, 2020) Gramercy Books - A Virtual Conversation about Resilience: Maggie Smith and Saeed Jones (October 15, 2020) Maggie Smith - Upcoming Events Keep the Channel Open - Episode 49: Maggie Smith Maggie Smith - Good Bones Maggie Smith - “At Your Age I Wore a Darkness” Maggie Smith - “Tracking the Demise of My Marriage on Google Maps” (NYT Modern Love) Sabrina Orah Mark - “Happily” (The Paris Review) Angel Olsen - Whole New Mess Tove Jansson - The True Deceiver (upcoming KTCO Book Club pick) Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 116: KTCO Book Club - Human Archipelago (with David Naimon)

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 75:42


    In the inaugural KTCO Book Club episode I’m joined by writer and podcaster David Naimon, host of the literary podcast Between the Covers. For our conversation, David selected Teju Cole and Fazal Sheikh’s hybrid photo/prose book Human Archipelago. In their collaboration, Cole’s writing and Sheikh’s images support each other in a way that expands the form of the traditional photobook and provides a potent exploration of human migration, national boundaries, imperialism, the connections between people, and our responsibilities to one another. (Recorded September 2, 2020.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube Show Notes: Teju Cole & Fazal Sheikh - Human Archipelago Between the Covers Between the Covers Patreon Teju Cole Fazal Sheikh Keep the Channel Open - Episode 114: Jessica Eaton Keep the Channel Open - Episode 103: Philipp Scholz Rittermann Keep the Channel Open - Episode 80: Jerry Takigawa Keep the Channel Open - Episode 81: Mike Sakasegawa Teju Cole - On Photography (New York Times Magazine column) Steidl Verlag Teju Cole - “A Too-Perfect Picture” Between the Covers - Philip Metres : Shrapnel Maps Sharon Mizota - “Review: ‘Human Archipelago’ shines light on refugees and our shared humanity” The Family of Man Tanvi Misra - “A New Way of Seeing the Global Migration Crisis” Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Black-and-White Negatives Walker Evans Dorothea Lange Keep the Channel Open - Episode 77: Brandon Thibodeaux Teju Cole - Open City Between the Covers - Molly Crabapple : Brothers of the Gun — A Memoir of the Syrian War Between the Covers - Joe Sacco : Paying the Land Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

    Episode 115: David Adjmi

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 77:17


    David Adjmi is a writer and playwright based in Los Angeles, CA. In his new memoir Lot Six, David tells the story of how he found himself through art and the theater, growing up feeling like an outsider as a gay, atheist, artistic youth in a small and insular Syrian Sephardic Jewish community in Brooklyn. In our conversation, David and I discussed the craft of memoir, the process of constructing one’s own identity, and why his book isn’t structured like the typical gay narrative. Then in the second segment, we discussed how the pandemic is affecting our ability to make narratives, and how art can function as a community. (Conversation recorded August 31, 2019.) Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | RadioPublic | Stitcher | Spotify | TuneIn | RSS Support: Support our Patreon | Review on Apple Podcasts | Review on Podchaser Share: Tweet this episode | Share to Facebook Connect: Newsletter | Email | Facebook | Twitter | Tumblr Show Notes: David Adjmi Purchase Lot Six (bookshop.org) Review Lot Six on Goodreads Elizabeth Hardwick - Sleepless Nights Richard Wright - Black Boy Melissa Febos San Diego Union-Tribune - “Commentary: In the COVID-19 era, I have to tell my patients they are experiencing authentic fear” L’Avventura Keep the Channel Open - Episode 33: José Olivarez Neutral Milk Hotel - “In the Aeroplane Over the Sea” I May Destroy You Transcript Episode Credits Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa Music: Podington Bear Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo

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