Tag Archives: process

Supercontext: Hyperion

Dan Simmon’s 1989 science-fiction novel is acclaimed for its unique structure, references, and style. We take a closer look at how it interrogates our expectations of genre to explore a complex host of themes. Thank you to Chris Marlton for coproducing this episode.

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Supercontext: We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson

This 1962 novel is being reappraised by critics and fans as a creeping meditation on 1950s housewives, agoraphobia, and good old-fashioned New England persecution.

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Supercontext: X-Men: Grand Design (with guest Ed Piskor)


This comic book project stitches together the most important moments from decades (and thousands of pages) of X-Men comics. We talk to cartoonist Ed Piskor about his production process, the comics market and the relevance of the X-Men’s themes in the present day.

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The Podcasting Workshop

I am a sucker for podcasts. Not only do I enjoy the process of subscribing to a bunch of podcasts and creating your on-demand listening playlist (do you binge? Intersperse? Listen to the most recent, oldest, most interesting?), I am delighted by the DIY spirit of podcasting and the unending inventiveness of podcasters as a group of creative artists.

Since last year, I’ve been occasionally running what I call a “podcasting workshop.” Its first iteration was as a session called “Small Audio Dynamite” at a THATCamp. We started from scratch (aka ten people in a room) and by the end of the 55 minute session, we had conceived a podcast, begun the pre-production of a pilot episode, and recorded a promo.

Probably nobody in that group will carry on with this podcast. I wanted to highlight the speed and ease with which you could start a podcast, and I wanted to skip all the technical stuff. I pay a service to handle my RSS feeds; I use open-source, free, simple apps to cut audio; I don’t care much at all about the technical. The creation and the expression is the thing, and you can do it for yourself with very little investment.

Over the past year, I’ve held the workshop five times, refining how to tease out the purpose and format of the podcast, and coming up with a bizarre but delightful set of podcasts: Where is My Mind? about lifelong learning, Terrible Assessments about being a graduate-student teaching assistant, a podcast for a non-profit that I will keep private as they are still putting it together (that one is really going to happen), Frisson about the delights of reading, Burning Questions about pyrokinetic rights advocacy (it doesn’t have to be a real subject for the workshop to work), and Atlanta’s Here about economic growth in the city.

The key to the workshop is leading the group through a series of questions that mimic the process of creating a podcast or radio show. “What’s this podcast about?” flows into “what do we want to say about that subject?” and then “how are we going to say that?” It’s a powerful experience, drawing it out of an audience and then realizing, “I’d like to hear that podcast.”

Terrible Assessments promo:

Burning Questions promo:

Arts & Eats promo (version 1):

Arts & Eats promo (version 2):