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I was watching a few of Evan Puschak's “Nerdwriter” videos when I heard my own inner voice composing a thank you note to him. In the quiet of my mind, I told Evan that I have always found his analysis of literature, movies, music, photographs, and paintings to be incisive and insightful.IncisiveInsightfulThose two words, back-to-back, hit me so hard that I stumbled and fell backward into a bottomless chasm of grief over the loss of Andrew Cross.Evan Puschak is incisive.Andrew Cross was insightful.“Incisive” conjures the precision of a scalpel as it slices open a surface to reveal what is hidden inside.“Insightful” describes the inner workings of intuition as it quietly assembles a mosaic in the mind.I was going to say that I have a “parasocial relationship” with Evan Puschak and Andrew Cross, but then I decided that I should check to make sure that “parasocial relationship” means what I think it does. Here's what Captain Google told me.“A parasocial relationship is a one-sided, imagined connection or bond a person develops with someone they don't know personally, usually a media figure or celebrity, often feeling a sense of intimacy or familiarity despite the lack of reciprocity.”Yep. It means exactly what I thought it did.
Fiction is an ancient virtual reality technology that specializes in simulating human problems.“Like a flight simulator, fiction projects us into intense simulations of problems that run parallel to those we face in reality. And like a flight simulator, the main virtue of fiction is that we have a rich experience and don't die at the end.”That was Jonathan Gottschall. This is the stunningly brilliant Chris Torbay.“My name is Michelle, and I work for Chapman Insurance. I work in the call center answering the phone. ‘What kind of job is that?' you're thinking. Well, when it's your call, maybe I make a difference for you. Maybe you were dreading another one of those stupid corporate phone things with their ‘press one' and ‘press two' and ‘press six if a palm tree just fell on your doghouse,'… but you get to talk to a person, and you get to tell a real person how worried you are. And I get it because I'm a real person and I do this for a living! And I can see your policy and answer your questions because I know how confusing this can be, and when you hang up, you feel like someone with a heart and a soul, and a pretty awesome understanding of insurance has had the basic human decency to answer the phone and talk to you like a person instead of making you press six!!!!! My name is Michelle!!!! I work with Chapman, and your insurance call matters to me!!!!”[MALE VOICE] Visit cigFlorida.com© Chris Torbay 2023Jonathan Gottschall goes on to say,“Fiction seems to be more effective at changing beliefs than nonfiction, which is designed to persuade through argument and evidence. Studies show that when we read nonfiction, we read with our shields up. We are critical and skeptical. But when we are absorbed in a story, we drop our intellectual guard.”“There is no doubt fiction makes a better job of the truth.”– Doris Lessing, winner of the 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature“Escapist fantasies are laughably superficial. Attaining them isn't what we really want. If we did, they'd no doubt bore or disappoint us. We don't want the fantasy. We want to fantasize.”– Evan Puschak, Escape into Meaning, p.109“The one thing emphasized in any creative writing course is ‘write what you know,' and that automatically drives a wooden stake through the heart of imagination. If they really understood the mysterious process of creating fiction, they would say, ‘You can write about anything you can imagine.'”– Tom Robbins“Fantasy, abandoned by reason, produces impossible monsters; united with it, she is the mother of the arts and the origin of marvels.”– Francisco GoyaBut how does a person become creative?“When you notice a commonality between two or more things, you say, ‘Oh there's something there.' And now we make what's called a charm bracelet: You take these things and you find a way to associate them. So that's the process: I'm thinking about this [one] thing and then remember this [other] thing, and then you go, ‘Oh there's something there — let me connect those 2 things.”– Jerry SeinfeldBrandon Sanderson agrees with Jerry Seinfeld:“The way that human creativity works is by combination. That's what we're really good at. We don't come up with a completely new creature. We put a horn on a horse and go, ‘Look at that, that's cool.' That's how we create on a fundamental level.”And Steve Jobs agreed with both Seinfeld and Sanderson:“Creativity equals connecting previously...
Við förum í heimsókn í vinnustofu í Stykkishólmi í þætti dagsins, og hittum þar Ingibjörgu H. Ágústsdóttur. Ingibjörg sker listilega út í linditré, verk innblásinn af íslenskum þjóðsagnaarfi og fugla sem standa út frá veggjum. Ingibjörg er alin upp í stórhýsinu Tang og Ris í miðbæ Stykkishólms og þar er hún með glæsilega vinnustofu sem er fyrst og fremst slík, en hægt er að heimsækja eftir samkomulagi. Guðni Tómasson ræðir við Ingibjörgu í hólminum í þættinum. Er hægt að hugsa í höfundarverki? Er hægt að vera listamaður sem pælir meðvitað í stóra boganum? Að listaverk eigi að passa inn í stærri mynd sem þarf að hanga saman. Þetta hljómar undarlega, sjálfhverf hugsun eða tilgerðarleg. En í ritgerðarsafninu Escape into meaning frá 2022 er ritgerð um einmitt þetta - Að hugsa í höfundarverki heitir hún eftir bandaríska blaðamanninn, youtuberinn og listpælarann Evan Puschak. Þar dregur hann fram tvo ólíka listamenn, bandaríska kvikmyndagerðarmanninn Quentin Tarantino og írska skáldið William Butler Yeats og sýnir hvernig þeir hugsa báðir á einhvern hátt um sína list meðvitað sem hluta af höfundarverki. Við flettum aðeins í þessari athyglisverðu ritgerð hér á eftir. Aðalheiður Eysteinsdóttir, myndlistarkona, fagnar sextíu ára afmæli í vikunni og ætlar af því tilefni að keyra hringinn í kringum landið með sextíu gjörninga. Með henni í för verður hópur listafólks sem mun taka þátt í gjörningunum sem verða fluttir á hinum ýmsu listasöfnum. Listin hefur alltaf verið samofin lífi Aðalheiðar, en margir þekkja hana sem Aðalheiði í Alþýðuhúsinu. Alþýðuhúsið á Siglufirði hefur verið heimili hennar og vinnustofa síðustu áratugi og þar hefur hún staðið fyrir allskyns viðburðum og sýningarhaldi. Gjörningarnir hafa alltaf verið hluti af hennar starfi en kannski er hún hvað þekktust fyrir tréskúlptúrana sína. Við skulum hringdum norður í morgun og spurðum Aðalheiði hvernig henni hafi dottið þetta í hug, að keyra hringinn með sextíu gjörninga. Og við förum í ferðalag með Guju Dögg arkitekt, sem heldur áfram að deila með okkur ferðasögu sinni um bretagna skagann. Að þessu sinni fer hún meðal annars á slóðir sjómannanna sem sigldu til íslands frá leirugum ströndum skagans.
Við förum í heimsókn í vinnustofu í Stykkishólmi í þætti dagsins, og hittum þar Ingibjörgu H. Ágústsdóttur. Ingibjörg sker listilega út í linditré, verk innblásinn af íslenskum þjóðsagnaarfi og fugla sem standa út frá veggjum. Ingibjörg er alin upp í stórhýsinu Tang og Ris í miðbæ Stykkishólms og þar er hún með glæsilega vinnustofu sem er fyrst og fremst slík, en hægt er að heimsækja eftir samkomulagi. Guðni Tómasson ræðir við Ingibjörgu í hólminum í þættinum. Er hægt að hugsa í höfundarverki? Er hægt að vera listamaður sem pælir meðvitað í stóra boganum? Að listaverk eigi að passa inn í stærri mynd sem þarf að hanga saman. Þetta hljómar undarlega, sjálfhverf hugsun eða tilgerðarleg. En í ritgerðarsafninu Escape into meaning frá 2022 er ritgerð um einmitt þetta - Að hugsa í höfundarverki heitir hún eftir bandaríska blaðamanninn, youtuberinn og listpælarann Evan Puschak. Þar dregur hann fram tvo ólíka listamenn, bandaríska kvikmyndagerðarmanninn Quentin Tarantino og írska skáldið William Butler Yeats og sýnir hvernig þeir hugsa báðir á einhvern hátt um sína list meðvitað sem hluta af höfundarverki. Við flettum aðeins í þessari athyglisverðu ritgerð hér á eftir. Aðalheiður Eysteinsdóttir, myndlistarkona, fagnar sextíu ára afmæli í vikunni og ætlar af því tilefni að keyra hringinn í kringum landið með sextíu gjörninga. Með henni í för verður hópur listafólks sem mun taka þátt í gjörningunum sem verða fluttir á hinum ýmsu listasöfnum. Listin hefur alltaf verið samofin lífi Aðalheiðar, en margir þekkja hana sem Aðalheiði í Alþýðuhúsinu. Alþýðuhúsið á Siglufirði hefur verið heimili hennar og vinnustofa síðustu áratugi og þar hefur hún staðið fyrir allskyns viðburðum og sýningarhaldi. Gjörningarnir hafa alltaf verið hluti af hennar starfi en kannski er hún hvað þekktust fyrir tréskúlptúrana sína. Við skulum hringdum norður í morgun og spurðum Aðalheiði hvernig henni hafi dottið þetta í hug, að keyra hringinn með sextíu gjörninga. Og við förum í ferðalag með Guju Dögg arkitekt, sem heldur áfram að deila með okkur ferðasögu sinni um bretagna skagann. Að þessu sinni fer hún meðal annars á slóðir sjómannanna sem sigldu til íslands frá leirugum ströndum skagans.
Evan Puschak, also known as The Nerdwriter, joins Offline to discuss ChatGPT, the revolutionary artificial intelligence chatbot from OpenAI. In his most recent video essay, “The Real Danger of ChatGPT,” Puschak explores how AI could erode our fundamental ability to understand ourselves and the world around us. He sits down with Jon to discuss that essay, evaluate the strengths and limitations of ChatGPT, and talk about the ways the internet is trying to replace our minds. For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Escape into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions by Evan Puschak Producer, editor, and writer behind the highly addictive, informative, and popular YouTube channel The Nerdwriter, Evan Puschak presents an unconventional and whip-smart essay collection about topics as varied as Superman, politics, and public benches. As YouTube's The Nerdwriter, Evan Puschak plays […] The post Chris Voss Podcast – Escape into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions by Evan Puschak appeared first on Chris Voss Official Website.
CarneyShow 10.28.22 Jay Kanzler, Evan Puschak, Jenna Evans Welch, Reggie Edwards, Jilanne Barnes by
Evan Puschak, the guy responsible for the wildly popular The Nerdwriter channel on YouTube, chats with Trey Elling about ESCAPE INTO MEANING: ESSAYS ON SUPERMAN, PUBLIC BENCHES, AND OTHER OBSESSIONS. Topics include: Coming into his own as a writer (1:46) Lessons learned from Emerson (6:35) Articulating like Jerry Seinfeld (10:03) The brilliance of standup comedy (12:43) Facebook's true customers (15:37) The greatness of public benches (23:38) Why Venice, Italy is Evan's favorite place to sit (28:11) Probing Superman's psyche (30:34) The perfect Superman movie (35:13) Identity with respect to friendship (38:23)
Donald Trump's way of speaking is hard to mistake for anyone else's. On this bonus episode of The New Abnormal, video essayist Evan Puschak, owner of the 3M subscriber YouTube channel Nerdwriter1 and author of “Escape Into Meaning”, joins Molly Jong-Fast to break down how the former president and reality show star came to speak how he does, and the one thing that he doesn't do while speaking that makes the way he talks so effective. Plus! Molly and Evan discuss whether or not Trump is intentionally speaking this way to manipulate. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Escape into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions by Evan Puschak Producer, editor, and writer behind the highly addictive, informative, and popular YouTube channel The Nerdwriter, Evan Puschak presents an unconventional and whip-smart essay collection about topics as varied as Superman, politics, and public benches. As YouTube's The Nerdwriter, Evan Puschak plays the polymath, posing questions and providing answers across a wide range of fields—from the power of a split diopter shot in Toy Story 4 to the political dangers of schadenfreude. Now, he brings that same insatiable curiosity and striking wit to this engaging and unputdownable essay collection. Perfect for fans of Trick Mirror and the writing of John Hodgman and Chuck Klosterman, Escape into Meaning is a compendium of fascinating insights into obsession. Whether you're interested in the philosophy of Jerry Seinfeld or how Clark Kent is the real hero, there's something for everyone in this effervescent collection.
Hosted by Andrew Keen, Keen On features conversations with some of the world's leading thinkers and writers about the economic, political, and technological issues being discussed in the news, right now. In this episode, Andrew is joined by Evan Puschak, author of Escape Into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions. Evan Puschak is the creator of the popular YouTube channel The Nerdwriter, which has more than three million subscribers. He has a degree in film production from Boston University. Find out more at YouTube.com/Nerdwriter1 and @TheeNerdwriter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nerdwriter's YouTube channel has helped me through the lockdown. I especially enjoy the video where he breaks down Louis C.K.'s joke about playing monopoly with his daughter, and how his daughter learned a valuable adult lesson from the game! I have watched that video over and over, more than 10 times! In this episode, I am fortunate enough to have the creator of Nerdwriter, Evan Puschak, an American video essayist, and journalist on to talk about his new book, Escape into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions!It's such a fascinating book! We broke down some of the videos from Nerdwriter, especially Louis C.K.'s video, Darth Vader, Jerry Seinfeld, and also How Donald Trump Answers a Question!! We also talked about what drove Evan to write this book, how he grow his YouTube channel, and what motivates him to keep creating content!Visit Notepd.com to read more idea lists, or sign up and create your own idea list!My new book Skip The Line is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever you get your new book!Join You Should Run For President 2.0 Facebook Group, and we discuss why should run for president.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltucher.com/podcast.Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please subscribe to “The James Altucher Show” and rate and review wherever you get your podcasts:Apple PodcastsStitcheriHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on Social Media:YouTubeTwitterFacebook
Nerdwriter's YouTube channel has helped me through the lockdown. I especially enjoy the video where he breaks down Louis C.K.'s joke about playing monopoly with his daughter, and how his daughter learned a valuable adult lesson from the game! I have watched that video over and over, more than 10 times! In this episode, I am fortunate enough to have the creator of Nerdwriter, Evan Puschak, an American video essayist, and journalist on to talk about his new book, Escape into Meaning: Essays on Superman, Public Benches, and Other Obsessions!It's such a fascinating book! We broke down some of the videos from Nerdwriter, especially Louis C.K.'s video, Darth Vader, Jerry Seinfeld, and also How Donald Trump Answers a Question!! We also talked about what drove Evan to write this book, how he grow his YouTube channel, and what motivates him to keep creating content!Visit Notepd.com to read more idea lists, or sign up and create your own idea list!My new book Skip The Line is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever you get your new book!Join You Should Run For President 2.0 Facebook Group, and we discuss why should run for president.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltucher.com/podcast.Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" and rate and review wherever you get your podcasts:Apple PodcastsStitcheriHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on Social Media:YouTubeTwitterFacebook ------------What do YOU think of the show? Head to JamesAltucherShow.com/listeners and fill out a short survey that will help us better tailor the podcast to our audience!Are you interested in getting direct answers from James about your question on a podcast? Go to JamesAltucherShow.com/AskAltucher and send in your questions to be answered on the air!------------Visit Notepd.com to read our idea lists & sign up to create your own!My new book, Skip the Line, is out! Make sure you get a copy wherever books are sold!Join the You Should Run for President 2.0 Facebook Group, where we discuss why you should run for President.I write about all my podcasts! Check out the full post and learn what I learned at jamesaltuchershow.com------------Thank you so much for listening! If you like this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe to "The James Altucher Show" wherever you get your podcasts: Apple PodcastsiHeart RadioSpotifyFollow me on social media:YouTubeTwitterFacebookLinkedIn
Evan Puschak, known on YouTube as the Nerdwriter, posts videos dissecting topics from Shakespeare and Tarkovsky to Superman; from Martin Luther King, Jr., and Bernie Sanders to Donald Trump. The videos are complex; he may spend weeks editing image, sound, and written narration. He spoke with the Radio Hour's Ngofeen Mputubwele about what drew him to the essay form, and how he's found success online. “The essay is not a treatise. It's not a term paper. It's not something systematically covering everything about a subject,” Puschak says. “It is an inquiry. . . . The cool thing about the video essay is that you are seeing these people's thoughts articulated with a whole new toolbox.” As much as he loves the video form, Puschak is crossing over into print next month with a book of essays titled “Escape Into Meaning.” Plus, the writer Kelefa Sanneh highlights some notable tracks playing on country radio stations this summer.
Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and Epictetus, like all Romans, seemed to have loved the theatre. Seneca, in particular, had a great fascination for what “actors in theatre who imitate the emotions” could teach him about dealing with people in real life. Many actors appear “most dangerous when they redden,” Seneca observed, but “they were letting all their sense of shame escape.” From that, he realized that with Sulla “when the blood mantled his cheeks” it was always “due...to the novelty of a situation.” And “Fabianus also, I remember, reddened when he appeared as a witness before the senate; and his embarrassment became him to a remarkable degree.”Evan Puschak, creator of the wildly popular Nerdwriter YouTube channel, made a great video a couple years ago, titled “Jack Nicholson: The Art of Anger.” The video is not only an eight minute montage of Nicholson’s very entertaining freak outs, it’s a distillation of a very human emotion. Like Seneca, Puschak wanted “to get a sense of the larger shape of anger as a human phenomenon.” Here’s what he learned:For Nicholson—and everybody else, for that matter—anger can be a form of desperation, a noise so loud that you don't have to hear your own insecurities. The larger and louder it is, the closer he is to recognizing a vulnerability in himself. That's the challenge for an actor playing this emotion. You're not just playing anger; you're playing what's under it. Most anger isn't psychotic. It's only a thin veneer for what's brewing below, and you have to be able to turn up the volume while preserving traces of this deeper motivation. This is a really powerful insight. To see that anger is not anger but often a glimpse of what is unresolved underneath. Sulla was revealing his weakness, his inexperience, his uncertainty. Fabianus was revealing his embarrassment. In The Border, Puschak points out, Nicholson was revealing fear. “Fear at what he's gotten himself into. Fear that he won't be able to get himself out.” Although the Stoics spend a lot of time dealing with the symptoms of anger, they don’t spend enough time really looking at what’s underneath. Marcus Aurelius couldn’t remind himself to go to therapy because it didn’t exist then. Seneca couldn’t talk about processing trauma because we didn’t really understand that yet. The Stoics lacked even some of the healing strategies that result from the Christian emphasis on forgiveness. But just because they didn’t have these things, it doesn’t mean you can’t benefit from them now. It’s not enough to just stuff your anger down or cut it off at the pass—you have to figure out what’s going on way before that. You have to look at the root causes. You have to look back at the road you traveled to understand how you got to this place, this moment.Tear off the mask. Look below. Look behind. And deal with it.
We opened by talking about UFC 217. We will not niche down to MMA, but we just might start getting down to making videos and vlogging. Wally and I both make videos on our own. They're very different, but the media is roughly the same. In light of that turn, this week's book is Edit Better by Jeff Bartsch. We had this idea that we'd take some of the lessons in this video editing book and see how we could turn it into general life advice. Actually, here's the convo where I ran through some ideas with Wally (by "convo" I mean it's me writing paragraph texts): That text followed the format we had in mind more than this podcast did. People then respond with righteous indignation, "I will make my own choices because it's a personal thing and I am going to be me and I'm going to create my own editorial reality and who R U to tell me how to make my own personal choices you stupid big obnoxious judgmental person you stop judging me stupid judger I shall now post sarcastic yet contextless updates about you on social media." This is something I lean on too much. I want to do things my way. In every case, I'm wrong. I didn't want to do what some podcasts with higher production value do. When I did start adding some of those elements (structure with some audio signposting, adding some music), the episodes improved. Video-wise, I've been trying to skip some necessary steps for making videos. In the making-of videos I've seen, people making whiteboard videos always start with a script. I've been trying to start with an outline and it leads to problems. I'm okay with this, though. I've learned some things about making videos quickly that I think will pay off in the long run. (Contrasted to skipping standard podcast procedure that just led to worse podcast episodes with no benefits in the long run.) I mentioned some YouTube channels that I really like: PictureFit: Short animated videos on just about every fitness and nutrition topic you can think of. He also did a great livestream Q&A where he shares how he grew his channel. AsapSCIENCE: Similar to PictureFit but instead of fitness and nutrition it's about a broader range of topics. 'Science' is in the title but there are videos like "What if Everyone Lived Like Americans" and "Introverts vs. Extroverts". Extra Credits: I started watching I think around when they just started expanding into other topics like history. I'm excited to see they started doing sci-fi videos. When I first got my iPad I looked to Extra Credits for inspiration for simple, engaging visuals. In the past year they've grown the team and now the illustrations and animations are more elaborate. It's great. Nerdwriter: Some of my favorite content on the internet. Evan Puschak 1.) has interesting ideas and 2.) is good at presenting them in interesting ways. I'd love to have a handle on just one of those two things. If you're all caught up in Game of Thrones, check out his side by side cut of one of the battles in the latest season against clips with similar shots from other classic movies. That reminded me of the side-by-side of the "Let Your Game Speak" commercial with the original shots. Another section in our episode was about the editorial planning rules: Determine your Desired Outcome Determine your Message Determine your Market. Who is your audience?Determine your Media Determine your Method, the driving idea or unifying concept behind your project If you're making videos, check out Edit Better. It's great. If you want loose connections between video editing advice and life, hit play on our podcast episode!
This week Sean and Steven welcome special guest Evan Puschak aka The Nerdwriter to review and discuss the new Wonder Woman movie starring Gal Godot and Chris Pine, directed by Patty Jenkins. Later in the show, Sean and Steven take the opportunity to celebrate female directors and get into their lists of their top 5 favorite movies directed by women. Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, and enjoy! Podcast music - Hudson Parque by Phemale.
The Nerdwriter aka Evan Puschak takes deep thinking to a whole new level. In this episode of Impact Theory with Tom Bilyeu, Evan talks about the importance of critical thinking and why a clear worldview is vital for having a full life. In his smash hit YouTube show The Nerdwriter, Evan crawls inside important ideas like an intellectual archaeologist and roots around, grubby fists and all, until he finds the narrative thread that makes those ideas accessible. In an era where people will tell you the only thing that matters is entertaining people, he's built a wildly successful YouTube channel with roughly one million subscribers. That proves there's still a huge market for depth. His powerful essays on an absurdly wide range of topics from Batman and Rihanna to politics and moral issues provide viewers with the kinds of insights that can truly shape one's worldview. Recognizing his unique gifts, MSNBC snatched him up to produce for them when he was still in his early 20s and the Discovery Channel tapped him to write and host a show on their digital network, Seeker Daily, where he produced a hoard of breakout content. Evan is proving that creators from anywhere, armed with a simple camera and a willingness to work hard, can not only make a living as content producers, but can alter the very direction and flow of cultural discourse. Evan’s entirely self-made treasure trove of content has been viewed more than 48 million times by people all over the world.
On this episode of The Needle Drop Podcast, we're talking with YouTube content creator and culture critic Evan Puschak. We go off on a tangent-laced discussion about the promotion of new albums in the Internet age.