Today’s episode is less of a wild-eyed goal-setting session and more a conversation about our perspectives for this year. We share one thing we’re bringing with us from 2019 (everything else can burn), one thing we’re excited about for 2020, and our guiding themes and words for this year. We’d love to hear what you’d share, too!
You can listen right here on this page, or get Marginally on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play, or wherever get your podcasts.
As always, we’d love for you to take a minute to rate and review us in your podcast app, as this helps other listeners find the show.
Find us on Instagram @marginallypodcast. Meghan’s occasionally on Twitter @meghanembee, and Olivia’s @roamingolivia
Theme music is “It’s Time” by Scaricá Ricascá.
Have a question you’d like us to try to answer, or a topic you’d love to have us cover? Interested in being a guest? Contact us here. Thanks for listening, and get to work!
In this episode:
- “‘Fire is medicine’: the tribes burning California forests to save them” by Susie Cagle/photos by Alexandra Hootnick in The Guardian
- How to help Australia handle wildfires
- Marginally newsletter
- Circle of Misse
- Austin Kleon on Hurry Slowly
- Art Spiegelman – Maus
- Lynda Barry
- Kirk Reedstrom
- Keri Smith
- Lindsey Alexander, poet and creator of the Artist’s Devotional newsletter, which I don’t think you can still get into this time around, but you can get her fantastic newsletter and poetry book
- “Can monoculture survive the algorithm?” by Kyle Chayka on Vox
- Mira Jacob – Good Talk and her Hurry Slowly interview
- Jami Attenberg on WMFA