Curated by Chance

Neal E. Fischer and Lauren Tagliaferro

Join filmmaker Neal E. Fischer and art curator Lauren Tagliaferro as they dive into the unpredictable world of ‘Curated by Chance,’ a podcast where creativity meets serendipity. Each episode, Neal and Lauren harness the power of a randomizing algorithm named Chance to generate unique prompts that drive their discussions. From exploring the unexpected intersections between film and visual art to dissecting the curious ways randomness shapes artistic expression, this dynamic duo invites listeners to ponder the influence of chance in the creative process. Whether dissecting a random film scene or analyzing an art piece through a whimsical lens, ‘Curated by Chance’ promises a fresh perspective with every episode.

  1. 2D AGO

    Princely Magnificence

    Episode 82: Princely Magnificence This Week's Prompts: 1600, Divine, Royal Purple With Neal out (we miss you, sir), Lauren brings in a guest co-host whose name is… suspiciously close. Enter Dr. Nile Blunt — museum professional, early modern historian, maximalist icon, and longtime friend — for an episode that begins at Wegmans and ends with a beheading. Nile takes us deep into the life of Charles I of England, the famously ill-fated monarch who quite literally lost his head — but before that? Built one of the most astonishing art collections Europe had ever seen. From fake-beard diplomacy missions in Madrid to being absolutely gobsmacked by the Spanish Habsburg art hoard, we follow young Prince Charles as he travels incognito to woo a Spanish princess… and instead falls in love with something else entirely: power expressed through art. After witnessing Philip IV’s jaw-dropping collection (Titian, Raphael, Caravaggio, Bosch — the greatest hits of Western painting), Charles returns to England determined to build something even grander. And he does. Lauren and Nile unpack how Charles’ obsession with collecting wasn’t just aesthetic — it was political. In the Caroline era, “good taste” equaled moral authority. Magnificence wasn’t just décor; it was divine-right propaganda. Surround yourself with beauty, and people might believe your soul is beautiful too — and maybe that you deserve to rule. Spoiler: Parliament disagreed. Along the way, the two explore:• Why Charles River and the Carolinas are named after this doomed art bro• The concept of princely magnificence (and why it mattered)• How collecting art became a political loyalty test• Fake beards, royal cringe, and the world’s most dramatic failed proposal• Why London briefly became the Vatican–Louvre–Prado of the 17th century It’s a story about power, ego, aesthetics, absolutism, and what happens when you mistake artistic discernment for political wisdom. Plus: maximalism solidarity, pandemic friendships, and whether fake-beard diplomacy should make a cinematic comeback. Next Week's Prompts: Teal, Leg, 1960 Check Out Lauren’s Substack:https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Follow the show and its creators on Instagram:The Show – @curatedbychanceLauren – @paisleyloNeal – @nealefischer E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 29m
  2. Magic Mike Walked so Heated Rivalry Could Run

    FEB 18

    Magic Mike Walked so Heated Rivalry Could Run

    Episode 81: Magic Mike Walked so Heated Rivalry Could Run This week’s prompts: Blue, Twitch, 15 Lauren flies solo — but not really — as she welcomes her longtime partner-in-podcast-crime Julia from Miss Information: A Trivia Podcast for a full-throttle celebration of the cinematic masterpiece that is Magic Mike XXL (2015). What begins as a prompt-inspired detour quickly becomes a passionate thesis: this is not just a stripper sequel. It’s The Odyssey. With abs. The two dive into the eight-and-a-half-hour road trip that somehow takes three days, from Tampa to Myrtle Beach’s gloriously unnamed “Stripper Convention.” Along the way: Mad Mary’s voguing chaos, a gas station Backstreet Boys breakdown for the ages, Jada Pinkett Smith presiding over a velvet-draped Savannah hedonism palace, and Andy MacDowell hosting a Charleston book club that accidentally turns into foreplay. Lauren argues that the film’s true message is simple and profound: stripping is healing. Julia charts the logistical madness of the Froyo truck crash, the montage sewing session, and the conference room glow-up that somehow transforms Resurrection into the 10:20 p.m. moneymaker. And yes — they break down that final mirror routine from Channing Tatum and the late Stephen “Twitch” Boss in reverent, breathless detail. They also tackle the deeper questions:Why is everyone littering?How long are these women at the convention?Why does no one slip on the dollar bills?And why did the third movie even exist? PLUS:The Stripper Convention as American mythJoe Manganiello’s Cheetos-fueled Backstreet Boys meltdownDomina, Rome, and subscription-based beautySex swings, Nine Inch Nails, and the most romantic wedding ever stagedMagic Mike Live in Vegas and the $87 spiritual awakeningWhy you can skip Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey and just watch this instead No death. No brooding. Just friendship, fireworks, and finely crafted choreography. Next week’s prompts: 1600, Divine, Royal Purple Join us at Patreon for more fun: www.patreon.com/curatedbychance Check Out Lauren’s Substack:https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Watch Julia on Trivial Pursuit and listen to Miss Information Follow the show and its creators on Instagram: The Show – @curatedbychanceLauren – @paisleyloNeal – @nealefischer E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 5m
  3. Dr. Dermis: A Brief History of Nudity in Film

    FEB 11

    Dr. Dermis: A Brief History of Nudity in Film

    Episode 80: Dr. Dermis: A Brief History of Nudity in Film This week’s prompts: Nude, Mirror, 2193 Neal flies solo this week — juggling book deadlines, radio producing, directing gigs, and on-camera classes — and takes the prompts “nude” and “mirror” as an invitation to dive headfirst into one of cinema’s most controversial, complicated, and endlessly fascinating subjects: nudity on screen. From the silent era’s flesh-colored body stockings and allegorical “Truth” figures to the Hays Code crackdown that scrubbed Hollywood nearly clean for three decades, Neal traces how filmmakers have used (and misused) the naked body for art, shock, comedy, horror, politics, and pure box office bait. Jane Mansfield makes mainstream movie history. Blow-Up and Midnight Cowboy help dismantle the Production Code. The ’70s explode with art-house extremity and exploitation excess — from Last Tango in Paris to Carrie. The ’80s normalize teen sex comedies and birth the erotic thriller, giving us Phoebe Cates in slow motion, Richard Gere in full frontal, and the rise of the femme fatale as both fantasy and threat. And then the ’90s detonate the culture wars. Sharon Stone’s leg-cross in Basic Instinct becomes the most paused moment in VHS history. Showgirls tests the limits of NC-17. The Crying Game uses nudity as narrative revelation. Schindler’s List reminds audiences that nudity can devastate rather than titillate. Through it all, Neal examines the power dynamics behind the camera — from Maria Schneider’s traumatic experience on Last Tango in Paris to Sharon Stone’s later revelations about consent and deception. This isn’t just a history of skin on screen. It’s a history of censorship, power, vulnerability, gender politics, commerce, shame, and spectacle — and how cinema keeps holding up a mirror to all of it. Next week's prompts: Twitch, Blue, 15 Join us on Patreon to help support our efforts: www.patreon.com/curatedbychance Check Out Lauren’s Substack: https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Follow the show and its creators on Instagram: The Show – @curatedbychance Lauren – @paisleylo Neal – @nealefischer E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now! Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 34m
  4. Whose Cah We Gonna Take?

    JAN 28

    Whose Cah We Gonna Take?

    Episode 78: Whose Cah We Gonna Take? This week’s prompts: Holy, New England, 530 Neal and Lauren welcome listeners to the deep winter doldrums with an episode that starts cozy and conversational… and then quietly spirals into bank robbers, nun masks, American realism, and one of the most haunting paintings of the 20th century. It’s a classic Curated by Chance hang: warm, thoughtful, and gloriously meandering. Neal takes Holy and New England straight into The Town (2010), Ben Affleck’s Boston-set crime thriller that doubles as a love letter to place, loyalty, and impossible escape. He breaks down how Affleck reshaped a bloated studio script into a lean, character-driven heist film; why Charlestown functions as both setting and prison; and how real Boston crime lore — from codes of silence to armored car robberies — found its way into the movie. Along the way, Neal highlights Jeremy Renner’s Oscar-nominated performance, the infamous nun masks, the jaw-dropping Fenway Park climax, and why The Town belongs in the modern heist-movie canon alongside Heat. After the break, Lauren also follows New England, but through art history, with a rich and moving portrait of Andrew Wyeth, one of America’s most iconic — and most misunderstood — painters. She traces Wyeth’s upbringing under illustrator father N.C. Wyeth, his frail childhood and intense artistic training, and the profound impact of loss, isolation, and landscape on his work. Lauren digs deep into Christina’s World: its real-life subject, its emotional ambiguity, and why viewers can read hope, despair, or quiet endurance into the same image. She also explores Wyeth’s mastery of watercolor and egg tempera, the tension between “illustration” and “fine art,” and the controversial, secretive Helga paintings — a body of work that shocked the art world and complicated Wyeth’s legacy. PLUS:Nun masks, Fenway Park, and Boston as a cinematic characterJeremy Renner’s breakout performance and Affleck’s growth as a directorChristina’s World and why it refuses a single interpretationNew England landscapes as emotional terrainAndrew Wyeth, watercolor wizardry, and the thin line between intimacy and obsession Next week’s prompts: Nude, Mirror, 2193 Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/CuratedByChance Check out Lauren's Substack: https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Follow the show and its creators on Instagram: The Show – @curatedbychanceLauren – @paisleyloNeal – @nealefischer E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 11m
  5. Betty Spaghetti

    JAN 21

    Betty Spaghetti

    Episode 77: Betty Spaghetti This week’s prompts: Peach, Necktie, 309 It’s a solo mission this week as Neal takes the wheel for a heartfelt, history-rich deep dive into one of the most beloved sports movies ever made — a film that still makes audiences laugh, cheer, and maybe tear up just a little. Neal takes Peach straight to A League of Their Own (1992), Penny Marshall’s classic underdog comedy about the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League during World War II. He walks through the film’s origins, from its real-life inspiration to its journey to the big screen, and explains why it remains one of the most enduring sports movies of all time. From John Lovitz’s fast-talking scout and the formation of the Rockford Peaches to the unforgettable chemistry of Geena Davis, Tom Hanks, Madonna, and Rosie O’Donnell, Neal breaks down what makes the movie such a perfect balance of comedy, heart, and history. Along the way, he digs into Penny Marshall’s legendary direction style, the intense baseball boot camp that put the cast through their paces, and the behind-the-scenes stories that gave us iconic moments like “There’s no crying in baseball!” Neal also explores the real women behind the story — the trailblazing athletes who kept professional baseball alive on the home front and whose legacy finally received long-overdue recognition at the Baseball Hall of Fame. It’s a love letter to teamwork, sisterhood, representation, and the kind of feel-good storytelling that never goes out of style. PLUS:⚾ The real All-American Girls Professional Baseball League👒 Rockford Peaches, Racine Belles, and the best team names in sports history🎬 Penny Marshall’s boot camp, bruises, and baseball realism💄 Charm school, skirted uniforms, and playing hard in a “ladylike” world🏆 Why A League of Their Own belongs in the sports-movie hall of fame Next week’s prompts: Holy, New England, 530 Join us on Patreon: CLICK HERE Check Out Lauren’s Substack https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Join The Curated By Chance Music League (RD 5!) https://app.musicleague.com/l/3d2c21ad32fd4e58add97006df33d0c9/ Follow the show and its creators on Instagram: The Show – @curatedbychanceLauren – @paisleyloNeal – @nealefischer E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now! Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    59 min
  6. A Pod Full of Tangents

    JAN 14

    A Pod Full of Tangents

    Episode 76: A Pod Full of Tangents This week’s prompts: Peach, Necktie, 309 Neal and Lauren lean fully into chaos this week with an episode that earns its title the old-fashioned way: by going absolutely everywhere. What starts as a quick check-in spirals into a joyful, free-range conversation about internet conspiracies, parasocial fandom, doomscrolling, poetry whispered in the middle of the night, Roman fruit paintings, French Impressionists, and the eternal question of whether Doctor Who has queer time-travel fan fiction (spoiler: obviously). Lauren takes Peach and turns it into an art-history fever dream, beginning with drunken T.S. Eliot recitations (“Do I dare to eat a peach?”) and winding through ancient Roman still lifes, fuzzy fruit symbolism, and the unexpectedly rich visual history of peaches in painting. From there, she launches into a deep, deliciously nerdy deep dive on Pierre-Auguste Renoir — the Impressionist painter of glowing skin, soft pastels, and famously gravity-defying nudes. She traces his journey from porcelain factory apprentice to founding Impressionist, his crisis of confidence after seeing Raphael and Titian in Italy, his pivot toward classical modeling, and the voluptuous excess of works like The Large Bathers. Along the way: invisible corsets, painterly filters, imposter syndrome, arthritis rumors, nepo-baby descendants, and one of the best art quotes ever: “The pain passes, but the beauty remains.” By the end, the episode has become exactly what it promised: a pod full of tangents, powered by curiosity, affection, and the belief that sometimes the long way around is the most fun. PLUS:🍑 Ancient Roman peaches and pre-cultivation fruit history📜 Drunk T.S. Eliot poetry as a lifestyle choice🎨 Renoir’s glow, his gravity-defying nudes, and Impressionist rebellion🩰 Invisible corsets, painterly filters, and the fantasy of beauty🧠 Imposter syndrome, artistic reinvention, and why Raphael ruins everything📱 Doomscrolling, fandom conspiracies, and the last good corners of the internet Next week’s prompts: Peach, Necktie, 309 Join us on Patreon! www.Patreon.com/curatedbychance Check out Lauren's Substack: https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Join our Music League (Volume Five launches This Friday!)https://app.musicleague.com/l/3d2c21ad32fd4e58add97006df33d0c9/ Follow the creators on Instagram 🎧 The Show – @curatedbychance🎨 Lauren – @paisleylo🎬 Neal – @nealefischer 📧 E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com 🎙️ Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!🎧 Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! 🌐 And for more Neal in your life:www.linktr.ee/nealefischer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    53 min
  7. To Couture a Mockingbird

    JAN 7

    To Couture a Mockingbird

    Episode 75: To Couture a Mockingbird This week's prompts: Paper White, 1962, Glasses Neal takes 1962 straight to To Kill a Mockingbird, the landmark film adaptation of Harper Lee’s novel that somehow manages to be both gentle and devastating. He talks about Gregory Peck’s towering, quietly radical performance as Atticus Finch; why the movie still holds emotional power decades later; and how its moral clarity feels almost shocking in a modern landscape full of irony and cynicism. Neal also touches on the book’s long history of bans and challenges, why that still matters, and how the film’s restraint — its refusal to sensationalize — is exactly what gives it weight. Meanwhile, Lauren unspools the life and legacy of Yves Saint Laurent, the fashion prodigy who permanently changed how women dress. From his early paper-doll designs and meteoric rise at Dior to the creation of ready-to-wear as a democratizing force, Lauren breaks down how Saint Laurent blurred gender lines, mainstreamed women in pants, and fused art, business, and rebellion into a single brand. She digs into his partnership with Pierre Bergé, his friendships and rivalries (Warhol, Lagerfeld), and the darker side of genius — addiction, burnout, and a career that flickered between brilliance and collapse. Along the way, we get couture history, fashion-week mechanics, and why Saint Laurent’s influence still shapes what hangs in our closets today. PLUS:📚 Why To Kill a Mockingbird still lands — and still gets banned⚖️ Gregory Peck’s Atticus Finch as moral north star👖 Yves Saint Laurent and the radical act of putting women in pants🧵 Couture vs. ready-to-wear, and how fashion actually makes money🎨 Genius, excess, and the cost of changing culture Next week’s prompts: Peach, 309, Necktie Join our show on Patreon: www.patreon.com/curatedbychance Lauren's substack: 👉 https://ltlikesthis.substack.com/ Follow the creators: 🎧 The Show – @curatedbychance🎨 Lauren – @paisleylo🎬 Neal – @nealefischer 📧 E-mail us: curatedbychance@gmail.com 🎙️ Hear Neal each week on Triviality Podcast – Subscribe now!🎧 Listen to Lauren on Miss Information Podcast – Subscribe now! 🌐 And for more Neal in your life:www.linktr.ee/nealefischer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 24m
4.6
out of 5
17 Ratings

About

Join filmmaker Neal E. Fischer and art curator Lauren Tagliaferro as they dive into the unpredictable world of ‘Curated by Chance,’ a podcast where creativity meets serendipity. Each episode, Neal and Lauren harness the power of a randomizing algorithm named Chance to generate unique prompts that drive their discussions. From exploring the unexpected intersections between film and visual art to dissecting the curious ways randomness shapes artistic expression, this dynamic duo invites listeners to ponder the influence of chance in the creative process. Whether dissecting a random film scene or analyzing an art piece through a whimsical lens, ‘Curated by Chance’ promises a fresh perspective with every episode.

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