|
Host,
co-founder, producer of This American Life
Benefit for SAL's Education Programs
Tuesday, September 24, 2002, Benaroya Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Radio has always been an integral part of Ira Glasss life. While
growing up in Baltimore, he was advised by his father, who once worked
as a radio announcer, to avoid the medium. But Glass was already hooked
and began his career interning at National Public Radio in Washington,
D.C. when he was 19. He went on to work as a tape cutter, newscast writer,
editor, reporter, producer, and host for shows such as All Things
Considered and Morning Edition. At Brown University,
he majored in semiotics, which he described to The New York Times
as a sadly pretentious body of theory about language and narrative
that comes in handy every day.
This American Life kicked off its first program in 1995 at
Chicagos public radio station, WBEZ. Each episode is divided into
three or four stories or acts, with distinct narrators and styles, and
devoted to a single theme. The diverse topics of his show have included:
The Kindness of Strangers, which described the generosity
of strangers in New York City; When Words Fail, which explored
the effect of deaths in families; and the humorous Poultry Slam,
which looks every Thanksgiving at turkeys, chickens, and other fowl. Like
a collage artist who starts with carefully chosen pieces and combines
them into a single image, Glass manages, through his own commentary, to
connect these segments by the end of the hour. In this way, each reveals
a broader layer of meaning than was apparent when it stood alone,
wrote Brown Alumni Magazine.
Originally, This American Life was called Your Radio
Playhouse. However, when the show went into national distribution,
Glass was asked to change the name of the show. It was horrible.
My staff and I, we generally agree on everything, and on the name there
was tremendous [disagreement], explained Glass. The names
some people would love other people would hate. I was gunning for the
name American Whatever. Cause it seemed to capture what
the show was, if you looked at the content . . . On the other hand, I
have come to agree that its a terrible name.
This American Life is now heard by over 1,000,000 listeners
on 324 stations nationwide. Ira Glass appeared for Seattle Arts &
Lectures as a Special Event on October 28, 2000, at the 5th Avenue Theatre.
Excerpt
Taken from "This American Life," Moving Without Moving,
June 23, 2000, Episode 162
Stories
of people who did not want to move but circumstance forced their hands,
and so they tried to move without really moving.
Prologue. Ben Schrank describes what it's like to work as a professional
mover. He says that people often go sort of nuts when they see all their
worldly possessionsall the stuff that defines them as peoplepacked
into a van. It's a humbling experience for people, and just one of the
reasons people hate to move. The other reasons: it's hard starting in
a new place; it's dreadful leaving an old place; and the process of -moving
itself is a hardship. So today . . . we have stories of people who were
forced to movebut who did not want toand tried to thwart it.
(5 minutes)
Act One. Sleeping in Mommy & Daddy's Room. This is a story of people
wanting to change and not wanting to change at all. A Minnesota family
builds the same 1970's-era suburban house three times, and moves it once,
just so they don't have to live in a house that's different than the house
that contains all their memories. Susan Burton reports. (21 minutes)
Song: The Al Cohn and Zoot Sims Quintet, "You'd Be So Nice to Come
Home To"
Act Two. Deal of a Lifetime. Sarah Koenig tells the story of how her stepsister
Rue bought a houseand moved inbut the former owner did not
move out. And won't move out, until he dies. (16 minutes)
Song: Hi Los, "Love Nest"
Act Three. To a De-luxe Apartment in the Sky. One of the producers of
This American Life, Blue Chevigny, used to have a job that was all about
Moving Day and people who didn't want to move. She worked for an
agency in New York called Project Reachout, part of Goddard Riverside
Community Center, that moved homeless, mentally ill people into their
own homes. She tells the story of one of her favorite clients, George,
and how it took him eight years to get off the streets and into his own
place. Blue records his moving day. (11 minutes)
Songs: Barbara Streisand, "Gotta Move" and Parliament, "Flashlight"
Selected
Works
Lies, Sissies & Fiascoes: The Best Of This American Life (Radio Anthology)
1999
Web
Site Links
This American Life's offical web site
Salon.com interviews
Ira Glass
Ira Glass commencement speech,
Graduate School of Journalism, University of California
Photo:
Lou Russo
|