Wednesday, May 11, 2016

1x

While I now listen to almost all my podcasts at twice normal speed, a couple employ such carefully constructed soundscapes that their meaning would be obscured, and their impact radically diminished, if their playback were sped up.

One, of course, is Nate DiMeo's The Memory Palace, a faithful celebration of the human beings who populate history books. Every episode is, honestly and truly, beautiful. DiMeo has begun listing credits at the end of the show, but his original practice was to simply let music fade out each story, giving the listener a moment to reflect on the human experience he has just heard. You can't rush The Memory Palace. You have to give heed to every beat, every carefully constructed sentence, and then think. And think.

The only other, at least so far, is The Truth, an anthology of radio drama for the podcast age. In this case, the story is not simply content, but a construct built of sound, pacing, and style. Rush it, and you won't get it.

I'm not sure what would get me to slow down to 0.5 speed. A pharmaceutical advertisement?

Thursday, May 5, 2016

On boycotting

In "Why I Won't Boycott Target," Russell E. Saltzman, a blogger for the First Things website, thoughtfully reflects on who is most adversely affected, and who benefits, from boycotts of large corporations. It's a helpful reminder that our politics should be guided as much by a consideration of the needs of our fellow Church members as the desire to make a statement.