"i'm here because i chose this. And i feel like if i don't do it the way i feel like is the most effective, what am i doing?" "I just felt really confident that, like, here's the story that i feel 100 % confident that i can tell," he says of missing richard simmonds. 'Nobody else wants to talk about this thing,' she adds in a self-penned essay on her process for making the show. "'If you're not happy with your work, there are other people who might be happier than you.' That was my first thought."
Dan Taberski is the host of Missing Richard Simmons and Surviving Y2K.
“Why would you walk into podcasting, where not a lot of rules have been written yet, why would walk into that space and be like, I'm just going to stick to the rules over here. It doesn't make any sense. ... Sourcing, respect for privacy — all these rules are here for a reason. And there's a line you shouldn't cross. But I don't see the point of not walking up to that line and looking over it. Because that is where interesting stuff is happening. ... To be able to earn that ability to cross the line a little bit and then jump back to where you belong, I think that's where beautiful storytelling happens.”
Thanks to MailChimp and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this bonus episode.
@dtaberski
Missing Richard Simmons
Surviving Y2K
[21:30] “‘Missing Richard Simmons’ and the Queasiness of Deep-Dive Entertainment Journalism” (Sarah Larson • New Yorker • Mar 2017)
[21:40] Richard Simmons’s Disappearing Act Inspires a Hit Podcast (Sopan Deb • New York Times • Mar 2017)
[21:40] “‘Missing Richard Simmons,’ the Morally Suspect Podcast” (Amanda Hess • New York Times • Mar 2017)
[34:00] S-Town
[46:15] Longform Podcast #44: Gay Talese
[46:15] Longform Podcast #226: Terry Gross
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