Dubious Scrapbooks

Jeff Myers

Conversations about how we think and how we manage the accumulation of our personal experience

Episodes

  1. 04/10/2023

    Actors and Memory with Jacqueline Antaramian

    Actors must memorize a great deal of text in order to prepare for a role, but when that production is complete, where does all of that go? Having spent so much time working to memorize something, do actors find it easier to access those memories if they happen to reprise a particular role? Jacqueline Antaramian, is a talented actress who has captivated audiences on both stage and screen. She has earned critical acclaim for her versatility and range as an actor, from her work in classical theater to her appearances in hit television shows such as "American Gods" and "Homeland". Jacqueline and I discuss her experiences as she has been asked to reprise more than a few roles over the course of her career. How does returning to a role change the process of learning or in this case relearning something previously put into memory? Learn more about Jacqueline Antaramian: IMDb - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0030751/ Playbill - https://www.playbill.com/person/jacqueline-antaramian-vault-0000059576 Join the Dubious Scrapbooks community: Send me a voice message using the Anchor messaging tool on the show’s homepage at https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dubscrap/message. Follow me on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/dubsrapbooks/ Visit the website - https://dubiouspod.show/ Check out the Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/dubiousscrapbooks Send an email to host@dubiouspod.show * You can find Joshua Foer's book, Moonwalking with Einstein, for sale on Amazon - https://a.co/d/9EONkMm ** There are a few things mentioned in the interview that were edited due to time constraints, for example we talked a bit about muscle memory and playing the piano, but it didn't make it into the final edit.

    34 min
  2. 07/01/2022

    Flashbulb Memories with Melissa Mann

    How accurate are your autobiographical memories? In this episode, I take some time to check in on my own memories with my guest, Melissa Mann, currently director of donor communications for Reason Foundation, a national media organization and think tank that publishes Reason magazine, produces original videos, and uses in-depth public policy research to educate policymakers, journalists, and option leaders on the ideas of individual liberty, free markets, and the rule of law. (She writes a lot about a wide variety of political and cultural trends.) She started at Reason in 2001, took a detour in 2018 to let her hair go gray, and rejoined the organization in 2020. Mann earned a bachelors' degree in diplomacy and world affairs at Occidental College in Los Angeles and attended graduate school at Kaiser-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Germany, where she also worked as a policy analyst in the German federal parliament. She has been, at various times, a drive-time terrestrial radio personality, a commercial voiceover actress, a journalist, a homeschooling parent, and a screwer-on of factory cogs. She is mom to Rook, who lives in the Seattle area, and the hu-mom to Charlie, a generally disinterested but sweet husky mix. She and her husband Michael Johnson, a retired movie propmaster, recently joined the California exodus and moved to a temperate rainforest in the Blue Ridge mountains of western North Carolina.  Melissa and I discuss episodic memory, focusing primarily on our memories of the death of John Lennon. For more information, visit the Dubious Scrapbooks Podcast at https://dubiouspod.show/.

    19 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Conversations about how we think and how we manage the accumulation of our personal experience