We now have a Dr. in the House of Egg! Diane graduated last weekend with her Ph D in Chemistry! Now onto a summer of hunting down the coldest swimming holes and the freshest Eggs.
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@eggs4ears
We now have a Dr. in the House of Egg! Diane graduated last weekend with her Ph D in Chemistry! Now onto a summer of hunting down the coldest swimming holes and the freshest Eggs.
On the wrestling mat, this young woman from an unassuming Indian village fights back against patriarchy and prejudice.
True grit. Go Neetu!
The Case of the Disappearing Egg (Factory)
Hello dear Listeners! Weāre on our way back after a wintry hiatus. This week weāll be back in the studio with one of our last guests for Season One. By summertime youāll have three fresh eggs in your earbuds to enjoy.
While you wait, please listen to this weekās delightful Selected Shorts readings of Alice in Wonderland -- start at 38:00 for Dan Stevens aka Matthew Crawley reading Humpty Dumpty.
Picture from traveltales.wordpress.com.
Episode 9: Sarah on Bacteria, Unicorns, and Being a Good Scientist
I met our ninth guest at a Korean restaurant one Friday night. Sarah Richardson sat next to me while we waited for our mutual friend to show up, and small talk quickly made way to discussions of feral cats (and feral cat ladies), poop jokes, and feminism. I knew I had to get this lady on the Egg Factory! So I tipsily subscribed her phone to the podcast (our primary method of recruiting new listeners) and emailed her the next week.
Sarah chatted with us from Boston, where she was volunteering as a judge for a giant international synthetic biology competition. Sheās a biologist who, on top of pushing the frontiers of computational biology, spends a lot of time and energy recruiting the next generation of scientists.
We loved her vivid, analogy-studded explanations of microbiology and her candid description of working as an ultra-minority in her field. Hope you do, too!Ā
Dr. Sarah Richardson is a post-doctoral fellow at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, where she was recently awarded a Woman @ the Lab award. They wrote up a great Q&A with Sarah that has even more philosophical advice on being a scientist.
Music by Podington Bear. Thanks to David Hanifi for introducing us to Sarah!!
First off, Iād tell them to just do it. Secondlyāand more importantlyādonāt worry about what everyone else has done or is doing. If you constantly think, āSomebody has already made this,ā then youāre never going to make anything. Iām not making things that havenāt been done before. It helps to find a way to differentiate yourself, but you donāt need to know how to do that on the first day. Develop and hone your own voice. If youāre not having fun with what youāre doing, youāre either going to burn out or your audience will. But if you enjoy what you do, that energy becomes infectious.
Deb Perelmanās advice for young folks starting out making things. Her project, Smitten Kitchen, has fed this Egg precisely and generously for the past six years. The rest of the interview can be found here.Ā
Episode 8.5: Margaret on Risks, Writing and Saving the Animals
Hi Eggers, we have been quiet for a while--lost in other work--but we have a special episode for you! Last week, I (Shara) went to see Margaret Atwood in Redwood City and IT WAS SO DELIGHTFUL. Atwoodās on a book tour for her new novel, The Heart Goes Last, and Peninsula Arts and Letters, the non-profit partner of Keplerās Books, brought her to the Fox Theatre. During her Q&A, I turned my phone recorder on just for the hell of it, and then I thought, āThis is so Egg Factory.ā So your earholes now have access to it with permission from Peninsula Arts and Letters!
First of all, I need to tell you that I love Margaret Atwood like I love the scented candle I just bought--I didnāt think that I needed her but now I canāt live without her. Walking into the auditorium, I felt like I knew everyone even though they were all strangers. They were my people: a bunch of cute, nerdy women, who love books, scarves and Margaret Atwood. Most of us were clutching brand new books that we had bought from the table in the lobby--either our favorite Atwoods or new ones that we had yet to read.Ā
Atwoodās books have a huge range of style and subject matter, and one of her most recent trilogies, the MaddAddam series, imagines the world before and after a pandemic. In the theatre, I imagined what a post-apocalyptic society would look like if the only survivors were the people in this audience. We would flounder at first, perhaps, losing a few of the weaker ones. But guided by Atwoodās books and her actual presence, weād rise to the challenge--ripping off the velvet seat coverings for warmth, looting the surrounding restaurants for non-perishables, and hot wiring the cars to drive to San Francisco.Ā
And then when Atwood walked on stage, I teared up! I couldnāt believe it. I have always been fascinated and perplexed by people who start crying when they see a beloved celebrity, but now I understand. I was just so happy to see her in front of me, human and smiling. Like seeing my sister for the first time after two years. And when, over the course of the evening, I learned that she was hilarious, my heart did another little jig.Ā
If you havenāt picked up an Atwood novel, then I highly recommend The Blind Assassin as a starting place. And even if you are not a fan of Atwoodās novels, you may fall in love with her during this Q&A so please sit back, enjoy and save the animals.Ā
Artwork by Oksana ZheliskoĀ
The Great T.G.
Our Eggy Factoid of the week: Terry Gross got her start in radio on a feminist show called Womanpower!
Gleaned from this delightful profile by Susan Burton.
It highlights one of my favorite interviews of all time -- Terry Gross interviewing Maurice Sendak in 2011. Please listen to it this weekend with a few tissues on hand.
Women in the World; news, stories and commentary. Women in the World Summit 2015 at Lincoln Center, hosted by Tina Brown.
Hi Eggers, we wanted to let you know about two days of all women, all the time! Today and tomorrow, women are gathering on stage in London for the Tina Brown Women in the World Summit 2015. You can watch the live stream of the event at the Women in the World homepage. So far, Iāve watched interviews with Yeomin Park about her escape from North Korea, Eniola Aluko about her successful soccer AND sports lawyer careers, and Mhairi Black about being the youngest MP in parliament since the 17th century. Tune in for a few minutes (that could turn into a few hours), and look for our next episode soon!!
Episode 8: Hope
Hello, Eggettes! Our weekly podcast has puttered into a greater-than-monthly-but-not-much one, but we want to let you know: Weāre still here! Weāll be bringing you four more eggs to round out our first season, and hereās the latest.
Hope Boylston is a retired Spanish teacher in Pennsylvania with a surprising past. When she was in her twenties, she drove through South America with her pal Toody and ended up spending much of the next decade living in Chile, participating in a revolution and eventually leaving the country under pursuit by the secret police. Really!Ā
She documented this story in her memoir Hay Locos. We chatted with Hope about the process of looking back on her intense time in Chile, and how her sense of self has developed over the last six decades. Enjoy!
Thanks to listener Luc Weiss for introducing us to Hope!
Music by Javiera Mena.Ā
The San Francisco Improv Festival presents two top-notch comedy improv troupes in one remarkable show. This is just one of the many great offerings in the 2015 festival. For more information, visit www.sfimprovfestival.com. Box Office and Lobby open 1/2 Hour before showtime. . The All Girl Revue (LA) Alumni of Chicago's Second City and the Annoyance Theater, Jane Morris, Mary Wachtel, Dee Ryan, Kathleen Campbell and Eliza Coyle comprise The All Girl Revue, an all woman improv troupe of professional film and television actresses based in Los Angeles. They won the Friars Audience Award at the Boston Women in Comedy festival and travelled to festivals in Los Angeles, Chicago, Austin, San Diego, San Francisco and New York. The All Girl Revue does a half hour set based on one suggestion, the third Friday, every month, at the fanticSalon in Culver City and has for the last 8 years. Cast List: Dee Ryan, Mary Wachtel, Kathleen Campbell, Liza Coyle, Jane Morris . Awkward Dinner Party (SF) A unique, innovative 3-person improv show combining short-form and long-form improv, where we explore the complexities of potentially awkward social interactions, and what underlies them. Never boring, never the same twice, and not your average improv show! Cast: Dave Dennison and Lisa Rowland
Weāre going to an improv show, doo dah, doo dah, weāre going to an improv show and maybe youāll come too.
All you Bay Area eggettes are invited to come out this Sunday night to see Lisa Rowland, our improv guest from Episode 6, perform AND to see an all woman improv troupe from LA!!! We could not have invented a better night.
Episode 7: Hadiseh on Science and Religion
Top of the morning to ya, Eggers! This week, we talked with one of Dianeās former lab mates, Hadiseh Alaeian. She is a physicist from Tehran, Iran, and she truly loves science more than most peopleāor scientists for that matterāweāve met. We learned about how she approaches scientific study and how she views the relationship between science and Islam. Itās a super enthralling episode so enjoy!Ā
P.S. We didnāt talk about this, but we recently learned that Hadiseh had been on Iran Womenās National Football/Soccer Team in high school. Thought you should know the extent of her badass-ness. That is all.Ā
Egglings, we have made a VIDEO!
Hereās a little timelapse of Shara and Diane working real hard behind the scenes to plop out another interview this week. Come back on Thursday to hear what we were so diligently transcribing!
(Nope, we arenāt sponsored by Apple . . . yet??!)
Episode 6: Lisa on Improvisation
Ooo, we got a great egg for you this Thursday! Lisa Rowland is a professional improviser and improv teacher in the Bay Area. She muses about the intersections of improv and daily life, science and gender, and her voice is like smooth honey.Ā
Hope you enjoy the episode, and if you live in or near San Francisco, you can see Lisa perform with Improv Playhouse, Awkward Dinner Party and the BATS improv company. I always leave her shows gasping for breath because I laughed/felt so much. Seriously, so damn good.Ā
Woo, Egg Factory Out!Ā
Weāre back! We took an impromptu summer break the past two weeks for some bridesmaiding, kayaking, wine tasting, and other fabulous but sadly non-egg-producing activities.
But weāre back this Thursday with a fresh interview -- hereās a clue!
via GIPHY
Last weekās guest Natalie Ruiz-Tofano endorsed the work of Laura Poitras, a journalist, filmmaker, and artist who won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature this year for Citizenfour (go see it if you havenāt! It is a film that will shake up your reality, and probably make you turn off your phone as you leave the theater).
Photo by Katy Scoggin. Licensed under CC BY 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
āShe is so gutsy--she's made films about really serious national and global-level issues, and she's just a really powerful lady.ā
Poitras is also founder of the online adversarial journalism publication The Intercept and will have an exhibition next spring at The Whitney Museum of American Art. Also her reporting on NSA surveillance won a Pulitzer Prize in 2014. Also she made a film about gentrification in Columbus, Ohio that I canāt wait to watch which won a Peabody back in 2003. This woman is BUSY and BADASS.
Episode 5: Natalie on Filmmaking
Good morning, Egg Factory! Today, we have an interview with Natalie Ruiz Tofano.Ā
A close friend of our first interviewee, Jenna Tonn, Natalie lives in New York City and works as a producer at a film company.
She brought us a hilarious and thoughtful chat on gender and filmmaking, and left us with some solid life advice.Ā
Please bask in her calming presence during this lovely episode, and then go watch her work on Vimeo!Ā
I want to feel comfortable in my own voice . . . I just want to hear myself the way I feel myself.
A., the subject of Natalie Ruiz Tofano's excellent short documentary "Giving Voice"