3 Things: Min Jin Lee, Wanda Sykes, and Mario Guevara by Chris Duffy

It's Saturday! Every week, I send out an email with one thing I think is great, one thing that made me laugh, and one thing I found interesting. Feel free to spread the word and share these emails with your friends. If someone forwarded this email to you and you want to start getting them yourself, you can sign up here.

Upcoming Shows

EVERYWHERE:
This week's episode of Wyatt Cenac's Problem Areas looked at for-profit colleges and how they are taking advantage of veterans using their GI Bill benefits. You can stream the episode now on HBO. Link

I visited Paste Studios this week to help my friend Jon Seale with a live concert session. Jon developed an app that lets audiences play along with him during live shows so even tone deaf folks like me can contribute. It was very cool and I love his music. Son of Cloud at Paste Studios

And of course, my podcast You're the Expert continues to exist as well. Three comedians interview a scientist about her work and why it matters. You can listen on any podcast app.  Link

NYC:
Thursday, May 30 at 7 p.m. at the 92nd St Y. Mollie and Liz are doing a talk and book signing for their bestseller No Hard Feelings. Limited tickets are still available. Link

Tuesday, June 4 at 7:30 p.m. at Symphony Space. I will be performing at Uptown Showdown, a comedic debate. This month the topic is thinkers vs feelers and features me, Aparna Nancherla, Bowen Yang, Julio Torres, and more. Link

Saturday, June 8 at 9 p.m. at The Brick. I'm back for another month of Monster Mash, Carley Moseley's super fun show of snacks from a guest chef and improv from NYC's best comedy writers. Link

SEATTLE:
Saturday, June 22 at 7:30 p.m. at Town Hall. Join me in the audience for Liz and Mollie's book talk and discussion about emotions at work for No Hard FeelingsLink

You can find ticket links for all upcoming shows online at my website here.

This week’s list

GREAT:
It took Min Jin Lee, one of my favorite authors, eleven years to sell her first novel. She was in her late thirties before her career as a writer even began. Now, Pachinko is an international best-seller and a television series that will come out on Apple's new streaming service. But it took decades for Lee to get to the place where she could put her work out in the world. She wrote a fascinating essay about the power of "the confidence to speak for yourself." Breaking My Own Silence 


FUNNY:
Wanda Sykes is hilarious as a standup. She's hilarious on television shows. She was hilarious as a judge on Last Comic Standing. And she's hilarious in this interview. But she's also not afraid to grow and to publicly admit when she could have done better, which I think can be particularly hard for comedians. Wanda Sykes makes being self-reflective and thoughtful about social progress look easy, but just as importantly, she also makes you laugh while doing it. Wanda Sykes On Ignoring Michelle Obama and the Roseanne Debacle


INTERESTING:
Mario Guevara is a reporter for Atlanta's largest Spanish-language news organization. He covers immigration and ICE detentions. "Operating alone, shooting his own video, he has built a large local following and a national reputation for his intrepid reporting." As Guevara records ICE agents pulling people into unmarked vans in the early morning hours, the agents shine flashlights into his camera. They attempt to block his view. They threaten him. But he asserts his First Amendment rights and documents what's happening every day in America. It's a reality that many of us would prefer not to see. Watch this op-doc about Guevara's work: The Abandoned Vans of Atlanta.  (And if you'd like to take action on immigration, here are some suggestions for how you could help.)


Thanks for reading. If you like these emails, please forward to a friend. If someone sent you this email but you're not yet on the list, you can subscribe here.

Enjoy the weekend,
Chris

3 Things: Lindy West, Stewart Lee, and Antivenom by Chris Duffy

It's Saturday! Every week, I send out an email with one thing I think is great, one thing that made me laugh, and one thing I found interesting. Feel free to spread the word and share these emails with your friends. If someone forwarded this email to you and you want to start getting them yourself, you can sign up here.

Upcoming Shows

EVERYWHERE:
This week, I wrapped my work on this season of Wyatt Cenac's Problem Areas. I'm looking forward to having time for my own projects this summer, but also if you are a TV person and need a writer, now's a great time to hit up my inbox (especially if you're in LA). In the meantime, the show continues to exist on HBO and online. This week's episode looked at automation and how students are being prepared for a changing workplace where they might have to compete against robots for jobs. Link

Also, if you missed last week's episode about school lunch, the full show is up on YouTube now. Link

On my show You're the Expert, three comedians interview a scientist about her work and why it matters. You can listen on any podcast app.  Link

NYC:
Thursday, May 30 at 7 p.m. at the 92nd St Y. Mollie and Liz are doing a talk and book signing for their bestseller No Hard Feelings. The 92 St Y is an NYC institution and I'm so excited to get to see them onstage there. Tickets are still available! Link

Tuesday, June 4 at 7:30 p.m. at Symphony Space. I will be performing at Uptown Showdown, a comedic debate. This month the topic is thinkers vs feelers and features me, Aparna Nancherla, Bowen Yang, Julio Torres, and more. Link

SEATTLE:
Saturday, June 22 at 7:30 p.m. at Town Hall. Join me in the audience for Liz and Mollie's book talk and discussion about emotions at work for No Hard FeelingsLink

You can find ticket links for all upcoming shows online at my website here.

This week’s list

GREAT:
Lindy West is such an incredible writer, advocate, and public speaker. In the midst of a pretty terrifying week of news about the ongoing legislative war on humans who can get pregnant, I would encourage everyone to watch her interview on The Daily Show. Counteracting Dangerous Myths with "Shout Your Abortion" 

Reading about the draconian laws passed in Alabama, Ohio, and Georgia, I was surprised to learn how far they are from what the voters in those states actually believe. In fact, there is no state in the country where support for banning abortion reaches even 30%. Here's more info on the numbers. That reality makes me think as far as concrete action, we should donate to support reproductive health organizations but also we just gotta vote better politicians into office who will actually represent their constituents and not fanatics. (I keep donating to Elizabeth Warren and you can too.) 


FUNNY:
Talking about the gap between how the powerful act and what regular people believe is a cornerstone of Stewart Lee's comedy. He's one of the best political stand ups of all time and I think he's sadly under-appreciated in the U.S. But this set shows off so much of what makes him special: his wordplay, his intellect, and his joy in getting the audience to rise to his level. Stewart Lee at Just For Laughs (h/t Alingon Mitra)


INTERESTING:
I would not have predicted that a guy who films YouTube videos of himself getting bitten by deadly snakes would turn out to be the key to saving thousands of lives, but what do I know? This article from Outside about a "gifted young immunologist" and the quest to discover a universal human anti-venom is one of the craziest stories I've ever read and also shockingly inspiring. 

"It might one day be to the world's great fortune that Jacob Glanville, a young immunologist trying to make a name for himself in the field of universal vaccines, went online and found Tim Friede, a mechanic who had been shooting lethal doses of snake venom into his bloodstream for going on two decades." Read more here


Thanks for reading! If you like these emails, please forward to a friend. If someone sent you this email but you're not yet on the list, you can subscribe here.

Stay safe and avoid poisonous snakes,
Chris

3 Things: Alice Trillin, Ramy Youssef, and Jonny Sun by Chris Duffy

duffy3things.png

It's Saturday! Every week, I send out an email with one thing I think is great, one thing that made me laugh, and one thing I found interesting. Feel free to spread the word and share these emails with your friends. If someone forwarded this email to you and you want to start getting them yourself, you can sign up here.

Upcoming Shows

EVERYWHERE:
I co-wrote last night's episode of Wyatt Cenac's Problem Areas, where we looked at the big business of school lunch and how Minneapolis is trying to make sure that all kids get healthy, delicious meals. Link

You can listen to You're the Expert on any podcast app. Three comedians interview a scientist about her work and why it matters.  Link

NYC:
Monday, May 13 at 9:00 p.m. at The Magnet. I'm telling a story at the long running and wonderful Nights of Our Lives show. Link

Thursday, May 30 at 7 p.m. at the 92nd St Y. Mollie and Liz are doing a talk and book signing for their bestseller No Hard Feelings. The 92 St Y is an NYC institution and I'm so excited to get to see them onstage there. Come learn about emotions with me! Link

Tuesday, June 4 at 7:30 p.m. at Symphony Space. I will be performing at Uptown Showdown, a comedic debate. This month the topic is thinkers vs feelers and features me and Aparna Nancherla. Link

SEATTLE:
Saturday, June 22 at 7:30 p.m. at Town Hall. Join me in the audience for Liz and Mollie's book talk and discussion about emotions at work for No Hard FeelingsLink

You can find ticket links for all upcoming shows online at my website here.

This week’s list

GREAT:
Calvin Trillin is one of the best nonfiction writers of all time. So much of his work, especially his food writing, featured his wife, Alice, as a muse and a comedic presence. When she passed away, he wrote About Alice, which is one of the most lovely and funny pieces of writing I've ever read. Here's an excerpt. Alice was a writer herself and her article in the New England Journal of Medicine about the experience of being a cancer patient has, for many years now, been used to train doctors. Both Alice and Calvin's work proves that even in the midst of tragedy, it's possible to find beauty and laughter. Of Dragons and Garden Peas


FUNNY:
Ramy Youssef created and stars in a critically acclaimed TV show. He's got an HBO comedy special coming out. In a lot of ways, it seems like he's hitting the traditional path of showbiz success. But he's subverting expectations about what that success should look like. His real life best friend, Steve Way, who has muscular dystrophy, co-stars on the sitcom. And instead of the typical talkshow chitchat, Ramy talked about his faith and his father's immigrant experience with Colbert. "I Wish Muslims Prayed on Sundays"


INTERESTING:
Jonny Sun built a following with his tweets in the character of a very emotional alien who is beginning to understand life on Earth. Now he writes for my favorite TV show, Bojack Horseman, when he's not co-authoring a book with Lin-Manuel Miranda or giving a TED Talk or getting his PhD in urban studies at MIT. How does a person like him manage to be so insanely productive? The NYT found out in his work diary. Correct Spellign Optoinal, Creativity Mandatory


Thanks for reading! If you like these emails, please forward to a friend or come say hi at a live show. If someone sent you this email but you're not yet on the list, you can subscribe here.

Have a great day,
Chris