Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Sep. 10th, 2021

white_hart: (Default)
I listen to quite a lot of podcasts, mostly while I'm sewing or to distract myself from anxiety enough to fall asleep, but also sometimes while I'm driving or walking to and from work. The podcasts I enjoy tend to be presented by women and non-binary people and have an intersectional feminist slant; most of them are about books and/or SFF, though there are a couple about crafts and one recent addition about swimming (Amber Butchart's Making a Splash). Long-term favourites include Verity!, a Doctor Who podcast; Antimatter Pod, which is about Star Trek; Breaking the Glass Slipper, an SFF podcast which is mainly focused on books; Be the Serpent, which looks at fanfiction alongside written and broadcast SFF; and Our Opinions are Correct, which takes a fairly eclectic approach to topics related to SF and science more generally. More recent additions are the Smart Bitches, Trashy Books podcast; Ali Baker's Fantasy Book Swap, where she and a guest discuss one classic and one newer children's book; and Shedunnit, about Golden Age detective fiction.

There are some podcasts I used to listen to which are no longer running: Galactic Suburbia is one, and As My Wimsey Takes Me, a Dorothy L Sayers read-through which is on indefinite hiatus (though I hope it will return some day).

I do occasionally fall out of love with podcasts. I used to really enjoy Buffering the Vampire Slayer (a Buffy recap podcast with original songs), but by the time it got to Season 4 I felt that it had become very reliant on in-jokes and jingles rather than trying to provide interesting commentary on the series. The Harry Potter podcast Witch Please went the other way, and was too densely academic for me. And I think I'm about to part ways with a Discworld recap podcast which I do generally quite enjoy, but which is peppered with errors (apart from the twenty-something hosts being all wide-eyed at discovering the Annotated Pratchett File, which just makes me feel like Methuselah). I stopped listening for a while after they claimed that "Here's looking at you, kid" was from Dirty Harry, and only restarted recently; but today they said (a) that 'There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis' was by Kate Bush and (b) that Live Aid was held in Hyde Park. And maybe I am Methuselah, and to the hosts this is all ancient history, but really, it's not like Wikipedia isn't right there...

(Actually, I have just looked at their Twitter, and they do acknowledge in the episode tweet that they mixed up Kate Bush and Kirsty McColl, so maybe I'll stick with them for now.)

Profile

white_hart: (Default)
white_hart

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
456789 10
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Page generated May. 23rd, 2025 12:40 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios