elisem: (Default)
[personal profile] elisem
This is reminding me of the fortune cookie that told me "The reward of patience is patience."

My wrangler, with whom I have a weekly meeting which I refer to as "renting some executive function", pointed out recently that I have completed three large finance-related To Do things that have been on my list for a long time. This is excellent. Now I move on to the need-to-do things that were on that list fully as long but were not quite as survival-related in terms of direness.

(My wrangler continues to be one of the most high-return things I pay for someone to do.)

The things that have moved to forefront positions involve (mostly) art and the things around art that make the art possible. It's interesting to have a To Do list that doesn't start with "Work on X, Y, and Z financial things until the screaming point, and then go to the workbench until you're OK again."

(Workbench time improves everything except overuse and inflammation in the hands and arms.)

I guess I should think of a thing that's a relief from workbench, in order to have something to rest my hands during the say.

Huh. I've recently begun listening to podcasts, which is a thing I mostly do while watching the live captions on screen, unless the podcasters are really good at enunciation, very cleanly recorded and produced, and in the range of sounds I can hear better. Stuff I don't need to watch captions for quite so assiduously can be played while I am at the workbench, if it's that kind of workbench day. Maybe I could save the challenging ones for breaktime? Rest my hands, ice what needs icing, watch the words while I listen to the podcast?

Do any of you have favorite podcast episodes? I'm a person that loves documentaries and that loved interviewing people about their passions back when I was a small-time journalist.

Date: 2024-05-04 10:19 pm (UTC)
china_shop: Close-up of Zhao Yunlan grinning (Default)
From: [personal profile] china_shop
Podcasts recs: 99% Invisible (bite-sized bits), Classy, Stuff the British Stole.

I also listen to Writing Excuses, and sometimes WTF with Marc Marron (rambling interviews, mostly entertainment industry or adjacent) and The Ezra Klein Show.

Much congratulations on getting those financial things done!!! *\o/*

Date: 2024-05-04 10:34 pm (UTC)
azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)
From: [personal profile] azurelunatic
I like "The Sunday Story" episodes of NPR's Up First; they're about half an hour long on all sorts of miscellaneous current topics.

Date: 2024-05-04 11:16 pm (UTC)
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
From: [personal profile] radiantfracture
Have you ever listened to the Longform podcast? Amazing interviews with journalists of all genres.

Date: 2024-05-06 04:17 pm (UTC)
ellen_fremedon: overlapping pages from Beowulf manuscript, one with a large rubric, on a maroon ground (Default)
From: [personal profile] ellen_fremedon
I've enjoyed the Revolutions series, and I'm currently enjoying The Siecle, which covers the history of France 1814-1914 in very granular and nerdy detail.

The Siecle might be a good choice for accessibility--the podcaster, David Montgomery, has a radio background and enunciates very clearly and the episodes have have full transcripts (with bibliography!) on (the series website).

Date: 2024-05-10 04:05 am (UTC)
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)
From: [personal profile] carbonel
Would you be willing to talk about (in general terms is fine) what sort of things your wrangler does? I have a major executive function problem (i.e., a number of things I would like to have done that are only kind of sort of happening if at all), and this sounds like a very interesting approach.

Podcast recommendations

Date: 2024-06-10 12:12 pm (UTC)
brainwane: My smiling face, including a small gold bindi (Default)
From: [personal profile] brainwane
"Looking Sideways", about many aspects of making things. A favorite episode: an interview with engineering educator Deb Chachra.

"How I Built This" from NPR, focusing on how people built new endeavors. A favorite episode: The story of Jane Wurwand, founder of Dermalogica.

The early season(s) of "Say Why to Drugs" with Dr. Suzi Gage and Scroobius Pip, in which they share the current research on the effects of various drugs. (The bit of the intro where Pip says "pro-truth and anti-myth" has extra reverb or something and I adore it.) A favorite episode: caffeine.

This is not a podcast, but rather a free-to-listen show available from the BBC website: Magnitsky: The Musical! 94-minute radio drama, with songs. "Johnny Flynn and Robert Hudson bring us a musical based on the incredible story of an American venture capitalist, a Russian tax advisor, a crazy heist, the Trump Tower meeting and the very rule of law. Blending music and satire, the story explores the truths and fictions surrounding the origins and aftershocks of the Magnitsky Act; global legislation which allows governments to sanction those who they see as offenders of human rights." I found it interesting, funny, and moving -- and, in particular, a feat of exposition.

I don't listen to "99% Invisible" as much as many do, but I particularly enjoyed the one-hour "The Sound of Sports" episode and think you might like to try it also. Similarly sound-centric: "Song Exploder", by Hrishikesh Hirway -- in each episode, musicians talk about how they made a particular song or score, and you get to hear the early components and drafts, and then you hear the finished piece. A few favorite episodes: Garbage ("Felt"), Weezer ("Summer Elaine and Drunk Dori").

Also, sometimes [personal profile] tealin posts about interesting things being broadcast and netcast on CBC and BBC.

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Elise Matthesen

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