Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Podcasts and the rest of 2020

Podcasts 2020

Podcasts took on a new role in my life this year. More time in the kitchen and more time puzzling at home meant a more frequent need for audio entertainment. I started the year by finishing The West Wing Weekly podcast (and on clicking that link I see that they made a new episode to discuss the recent special to benefit When We All Vote, which I'm now excited to listen to). Between finishing that and discovering my new obsession, You're Wrong About, I dabbled in Ologies, This Podcast Will Kill You, After All: A Mary Tyler Moore Podcast, but none of them stuck.

A neighbor turned me on to You're Wrong About in May, and in under two months I'd devoured all the episodes that had yet come out. I now listen to it every Monday, except on the Mondays where they fail to publish one, which takes me about a week to get over.

Fortunately I have two other podcasts to fill my ears between episodes of You're Wrong About:

I was a listener of both of these podcasts 5ish years ago when I was working at Yeshiva University doing mindless work that left my ears available to receive podcasts. I fell out of the habit of listening to them when I became a copy-editor, and stopped being able to listen to podcasts during the workday. Fortunately they both thrived in my absence and were there waiting for me to pick back up.

When I first started listening to The Greatest Generation, it was a brand new podcast recapping and lambasting the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation. I listened to a few episodes, but did not watch the corresponding episodes of the TV series because the first season of TNG is terrible. They were also a little bit bro-ey, so it was easy to stop listening to it. I picked it back up at the beginning of season three, by which point both the podcast and the TV series had figured themselves out. The hosts were practiced in the art of podcasting and were more complex and interesting than the bros I remembered, and Beverley was back so all was well on the Starship Enterprise. 

I listened to each episode of The Greatest Generation in chronological order, sometimes watching the corresponding TV episode and sometimes not (if I remembered it well enough, or I remembered not liking it, although I did eventually go back and watch all of them). The hosts, Adam and Ben, discuss their lives in addition to Star Trek, and occasionally current events slip in. At the point where I picked it back up, Trump was just gaining steam in the 2016 election, and Trump is a hilarious figure so they'd do impressions of him a lot. After Trump won the election and he became something more to be reviled than laughed at, Adam and Ben stopped doing impressions of him. 

After they finished TNG, they continued with the next series in the canon, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Since I was slightly less familiar with DS9 (although not so unfamiliar as to not have already seen the whole thing, as early posts in this blog record), I have been in the habit watching episodes of the TV series along with the podcast, sometimes watching before listening and sometimes the other way around. The only TV episode I skipped was the series premiere, which I remember really hating. It was really interesting listening as they went through the beginning of the pandemic and reliving that through them (a process I went through in the opposite direction with Judge John Hodgman). By the end of 2020, I'd finished season 6. I am currently three months behind podcast (I'm about to listen to the episode they published on October 5, 2020), and expect to be caught up with them by the time they start Star Trek: Voyager (which they have promised to do, because this podcast is their lives now).

Since I had no idea where I left off with Judge John Hodgman, I decided to start from the most recent episode and work my way backwards, listening to new episodes as they popped up. I remembered listening to an episode of Judge John Hodgman years ago in which Hodgman (or maybe it was bailiff Jesse Thorn) announced that this was the preferred way to listen to a non-serial podcast, as that way you are in the know with the current goings-on of the podcast and the hosts, and can be subject to their pledge drives. At some point in a recent episode they revisited this and disavowed it, but it's too late now as I am stuck in this retrograde listening orbit. As I mentioned above, I got to listen as the pandemic and lockdown became less and less familiar to them until suddenly it was a brand new thing, and then the next episode, completely gone and life was normal again. I also got to hear Hodgman's urging that we get out the vote become less and less urgent and the election vanished completely.

Not podcasts 2020

In addition to the list at the bottom of this post, I also:
  • spent outdoor holiday celebrations with my family at my sister's in Pelham (some birthdays, the High Holy Days, and Chanukah), my parents' in Commack (Thanksgiving), and Mohonk Mountain House (my parents' anniversary)
  • got in some pool time and pre- and post-rehearsal social time at Lindsay & Leslie's in Rahway, NJ
  • oh and by the way MARCHED IN THE MACY'S THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE with The Lesbian & Gay Big Apple Corps, which involved weekly rehearsals on Saturday mornings in Harrison, NJ and a COVID test and tech rehearsal in Manhattan. Chalk that up to one of the coolest things I've ever done, and perhaps you saw me on TV?
  • after a grueling two-week brand launch at work, which involved consecutive 12-hour days including weekends, was treated to a weekend in the country (how delightfully droll) at Cricket's parents' cabin in the Finger Lakes, which included much campfire cookery and a hike past a waterfall (because Ithaca)
  • got to go to the beach (Robert Moses ::tui tui::) a few times with my parents
  • celebrated 7 years of living in Brooklyn
  • went on countless long walks and bike rides, the longest being a bike ride from Sunset Park to Astoria which involved three separate CitiBike rentals, and in general broadened my notion of what is an acceptable distance to walk and what is acceptable weather for walking
  • attended copious Zoom and Google Meet calls, at which JackBox games was a frequent and welcome diversion
  • did much outdoor drinking with neighbors in our backyard and at the sidewalk cafe that Judy's has become 
  • voted
  • got a flue shot
  • got three COVID tests
  • learned to play the ukulele with Holly (well, really watched Holly learn to play the ukulele and answered her questions about music notation and theory)

Saturday, January 2, 2021

2020 Viewing

I covered the first half of the year in my mid-year post, copy/pasted below. Second half of the year has been added in blue.

Series continued:
  • Call the Midwife: seasons 8 & 9
  • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: season 7 (ongoing), continued until I lost HBO in August
  • The Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj: volume 6
  • Steven Universe: season 5, movie, and follow-up series Steven Universe Future
  • Black Mirror: season 5
  • The Good Place: season 4
  • The Crown: season 4
  • Fargo: season 4 (did not finish in 2020)
  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: season 3
  • Star Trek: Discovery: season 2
  • The Politician: season 2
  • Sex Education: season 2
  • Dead to Me: season 2
  • The Mary Tyler Moore Show: rewatched seasons 4-7
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation: various episodes here and there, full rewatch of seasons 3-7 along with The Greatest Generation podcast, with the occasional Netflix Party w/Lindsay, Leslie, Jess, and Kyle
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: rewatched seasons 1-6
  • American Crime Story: The People vs. O.J. Simpson: all (rewatch inspired by You're Wrong About)
Series started and miniseries:
  • Breaking Bad: seasons 1-4 (with Cricket and Mark in person), finished the series
  • Schitt's Creek: seasons 1-3
  • Killing Eve: season 1, and then seasons 2 & 3
  • Big Little Lies: season 1
  • The Good Fight: all (4 seasons)
  • Castlevania: all (3 seasons)
  • Unbelievable: all
  • The Stranger: all
  • Hollywood: all
  • Mrs. America: all (while texting Cricket as we watched simultaneously in our homes)
  • Star Trek: Picard: all
  • Star Trek: Short Treks: all
  • Fosse/Verdon: all
  • Belgravia: all
  • The Great: all
  • Upload: all
  • Outlander: part of season 1 after reading part of the book
  • I May Destroy You: a few episodes before I lost HBO
  • Bridgerton: season 1 (did not finish in 2020)
  • Unorthodox: all
  • Self-Made: all
  • Challenger: The Final Flight: all
  • The Queen's Gambit: all
Movies (streamed unless otherwise noted):
  • The Laundromat
  • Late Night
  • Bombshell
  • Bad Education
  • Whitney Cummings: I'm Your Girlfriend
  • Ilana Glazer: The Planet Is on Fire
  • One Child Nation
  • Ever After (rewatch)
  • Parks & Recreation special
  • Downton Abbey movie (on a plane)
  • Crazy Rich Asians (on a plane)
  • Hannah Gadsby: Douglas (1 and a half times)
  • Star Wars IX: The Rise of Skywalker (in the theater w/Kathryn)
  • Little Women (in the theater w/Page & Popcorn)
  • Ant-Man and the Wasp (Netflix Party w/NYMAAC)
  • The 13th (Netflix Party w/NYMAAC)
  • Just Mercy (Netflix Party w/NYMAAC)
  • Where'd You Go, Bernadette? (via Kast w/Page & Popcorn)
  • West Side Story (via Kast w/NYMAAC)
  • Becoming
  • The Queen (rewatch)
  • Clue (rewatch with friends via Netflix Party)
  • Hello Again (rewatch)
  • Overboard (rewatched simultaneously with Cricket and her parents while we texted)
  • The Hate U Give (via Kast w/Page & Popcorn)
  • The Social Dilemma
  • Enola Holmes
  • Boys in the Band (2020)
  • My Octopus Teacher
  • What the Constitution Means to Me
  • Judy
  • A Life on Our Planet (w/my Parents)
  • The Witches (1990 & 2020 w/Page & Popcorn via Netflix Party and Kast)
  • Coastal Elites
  • Class Action Park
  • A West Wing Special (via Kast w/Kathryn)
  • Sleepless in Seattle (rewatch)
  • What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • Uncle Frank
  • Prom
  • Bel Canto (Amazon Prime watch party w/Sue Ha)
Other things streamed:
  • Jagged Little Pill (via Facebook watch party)
  • Puffs: 3 consecutive Fridays in April of virtual staged readings from the Puffs! canon
  • LGBAC "Home Together" and "Marching With the Band" series, and Yuletide by the Fireside
  • Saturday Night Seder
  • Dar Williams on Susie on Sundays
  • Judy's Live on Instagram
  • @Laurateachesyoga live on Instagram
  • Return to Mostly Sondheim
  • My niece's piano recital
  • Clue live script reading
  • Two episodes of At Home With Rhinestone Gorilla + an online watch party
  • Holidays at Hendricks
  • One Night Only: The Best of Broadway
Live theater:
  • Hamilton on Broadway (2nd time, with family)

Friday, January 1, 2021

Puzzles 2020

This is my first end-of-the-year puzzle recap since it's the first year of my voracious at-home puzzle habit. For years we've had puzzles going at work for people to enjoy between projects. When the work-from-home order came down, I was able to resume the hobby at home thanks to a few puzzles a neighbor left in the lobby.

Above are the highlights. Below is the full list in chronological order, along with some nerdy analysis. Pictures of all the puzzles, including the completed puzzles, in-progress shots, and photos in which my cats have claimed the puzzles for their own, can be seen on my Instagram.

In order

APRIL

  • Eight Arms for You, 1000 pieces, New York Puzzle Co
  • Mammals With Mohawks, 500 pieces, Mudpuppy
MAY
  • Potato Chips, 506 pieces, Bepuzzled (pictured above: right column, center row)
  • Dog Gallery, 1000 pieces, Cobble Hill
  • Légumes, 1000 pieces, New York Puzzle Co (pictured above: center column, bottom row)
JUNE
  • Snowy Owl With Pentagram, 500 pieces, Educa Puzzles
  • NPR Podcasts, 1000 pieces, New York Puzzle Co
  • The New Yorker: View of the World from 9th Avenue, 1000 pieces, New York Puzzle Co (pictured above: left column, center row)
  • NPR Sound Community, 1000 pieces, New York Puzzle Co
  • Brooklyn Magnetic City Puzzle, 100 pieces, GeoToys
JULY
  • Zodiac, 500 pieces (and circular!), Moruska
  • Stag, 1000 pieces, High Quality Wood Products
AUGUST
  • Vintage Cereal Boxes, 1000 pieces, White Mountain Puzzles
  • National Parks, 1000 pieces, Ravensburger (pictured above: right column, bottom row)
  • Disney/Pixar, 1000 pieces, Ravensburger
SEPTEMBER
  • Rainbow, 1000 pieces, Cobble Hill (pictured above: center)
  • Lightning Striking Tree, 1000 pieces, Eurographics (pictured above: left column, bottom row)
OCTOBER
  • National Parks Vintage Puzzle, 1000 pieces, Cavallini & Co
  • Gustav Klimt's "The Kiss," 1000 pieces, Piatnik
  • Icing on the Cake, 1000 pieces, Springbok
NOVEMBER
  • Bibliophile: Book Club Darlings, 1000 pieces, Galison
  • I Had One of Those!, 1000 pieces, White Mountain Puzzles
DECEMBER
  • Phish "Rift" Album Cover Art, 550 pieces, Banana Road (?)
  • The New Yorker: Liberty, 500 pieces, New York Puzzle Co
  • The World of Frida Kahlo, 1000 pieces, Laurence King Publishing (pictured above: right column, top row)
  • The New Yorker: Yellow Brick Roadblock, 1000 pieces, New York Puzzle Co
  • Butterflies of North America, 500 pieces, Mudpuppy (pictured above: center column, top row)
  • Maps, 500 pieces, Rifle Paper Co
  • Summer at the Amusement Park, 500 pieces, Mudpuppy
  • Cat Library, 1000 pieces, Cobble Hill
  • Pop Culture, 1000 pieces, White Mountain Puzzles
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation, 500 pieces, iseeme.com (pictured above: left column, top row)
By piece count

1000 pieces: 19
~500 pieces: 12 (this includes two oddballs of 506 and 550 pieces)
100 pieces: 1 (the magnetic puzzle)

The reason I don't go larger than 1000 is my puzzle table (also known as the kitchen table) is 35" in diameter, which limits the size of the puzzle it can hold. For three puzzles (Cake and two of the White Mountain puzzles), I had to place a 36" x 24" poster frame on the table and work on that.

By brand

New York Puzzle Company created seven of the puzzles I worked on this year, including all of the New Yorker magazine covers, the two NPR puzzles, the Légumes, and the first one I did this year: "Eight Arms for You." I did three each from Mudpuppy (Mammals with Mohawks, Butterflies of North America, Summer at the Amusement Park), White Mountain Puzzles (the three nostalgia ones), and Cobble Hill (Dog Gallery, Cat Library, and Rainbow). The two Ravensburgers (National Parks and Disney/Pixar) were from a neighbor. All the rest were one-offs, including Piatnik and Springbok which I know from office puzzling.

By subject matter
  • Animals: 8 (Eight Arms, Mammals, Dog Gallery, Snowy Owl, Zodiac, Stag, Butterflies, Cat Library)
  • New York: 7 (the 3 New Yorker covers, the 2 NPR puzzles, Brooklyn, Amusement Park)
  • Entertainment: 5 (Star Trek, Disney/Pixar, The Rift, Cat Library, Book Club Darlings)
  • Maps: 4 (Brooklyn, New Yorker's View, National Parks, Maps)
  • Food: 4 (Potato Chips, Légumes, Cereal, Cake)
  • Nature: 3 (Lightning, the 2 National Parks puzzles)
  • Toys: 3 (I Had One of Those, Pop Culture, Disney/Pixar)
  • Fine Art: 2 (The Kiss, Frida Kahlo)
  • Rainbows: 1 (Rainbow)

How'd I do?

I only gave up on two of them: Snowy Owl and Book Club Darlings, both of which were the type of puzzle where every shape is identical (why). In the former, I ended up with 12 pieces that wouldn't fit anywhere (so, clearly not identical enough), and in the latter, I ended up with 70 pieces that were all solid white, and I just decided I wasn't going to put myself through that. 

I cheated to get through the Stag puzzle, another one with identically shaped pieces that was going to be a slog to the end. Fortunately, the pieces were such a tight fit that I could pick the puzzle up and flip it over, where there was a letter pattern that helped me find the spots for the last few pieces.

I finished all the rest without cheating, and in most cases without looking at the image on the box (after the initial look to decide which puzzle to do). The third puzzle I worked on was the potato chip puzzle, which didn't have an image to work off of, so I guess that broke me of the habit early. Potato Chips, Lightning Striking Tree, and The Kiss were probably the hardest ones I finished this year (except the Stag). I suppose you could say I didn't "finish" The Kiss or Butterflies since they came to me with pieces missing, but I got as far as I could. Zodiac I finished despite an extra challenge they threw in the box: two decoy pieces!

Where did all these puzzles come from?

Puzzle swaps: 
  • My friend Holly loaned me Cereal, Lightning, and Cake
  • I got the two Ravensburgers (National Parks and Disney/Pixar) from a neighbor, two of the New Yorker covers (Liberty and Roadblock) from another neighbor, and the Frida Kahlo one from a third neighbor. 
  • Eight Arms and Mammals presumably also came from a neighbor but I don't know who since they were anonymously left in the lobby. I swapped those two away to a stranger (friend of a friend) who gave me Dog Gallery and Snowy Owl, both of which have been sent off to friends. The friend I sent the Owl to sent me The Kiss and Book Club Darlings in return. 
  • My friend Marissa sent me Pop Culture in exchange for one of the NPR ones. 
  • I took The Rift from my parents' house, but we think it was originally my sister's, so that wasn't a swap but it's back with her now anyway.
Gifts (I am very lucky to have such generous parents and friends): 
  • Kathleen gave me Rainbow, and got one for herself so we could puzzle together. 
  • Justine gave me the Stag, Zodiac, and a third one that I'm saving for the winter because it looks hard. 
  • Hillary was my secret gift giver in a holiday gift exchange and sent me Cat Library
  • Kathryn, Courtney, Jess, and Kyle got together and gifted me the New Yorker's View puzzle and the magnetic Brooklyn map for my birthday. 
  • Cricket and Mark gave me the Vintage National Parks puzzle which came in an attractive cylinder box. 
  • I Had One of Those was a kind thank you gift from Jason for working on the band's Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade appearance press release. 
  • Lindsay & Leslie gave me the Star Trek one as a holiday gift. 
  • Finally, an embarrassment of puzzle riches came from my parents for my birthday, Chanukah, and just because: Potato Chips (many years ago), the two NPRs, Légumes, Maps, two of the Mudpuppys (Butterflies and Amusement Park), and another hard one that I'm saving for later.
And where did they go?
  • The swaps were all returned to their owners except for The Kiss and Pop Culture which I was told I could keep, and Book Club Darlings which is a swap-in-progress (the owner is still working on Rainbow). NPR Sound Community and Légumes are still out on loan.
  • Zodiac and View are on loan to my sister for her to do with her kids; the former will be a special challenge for them since that's the one with the decoy pieces.
  • Stag and Potato Chips are pinned to walls in my apartment because they stay together without the use of glue or tape. Brooklyn is still magneted to the magnet board I assembled it on (currently covered with holiday cards).
  • The rest are all still here and most are candidates for swapping if you're interested!