

Life in Seven Songs
The San Francisco Standard
What songs tell your life story? Host Sophie Bearman asks this question of some of the world’s most fascinating people. Through seven songs, guests reveal the milestones—and the music—that have shaped their lives. New episodes every Tuesday.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 9, 2025 • 36min
How I Met Your Mother gave Josh Radnor 'identity vertigo.' Ayahuasca set him straight.
This week, we Willkommen actor and musician Josh Radnor! Josh is best known for playing Ted Mosby on the hit sitcom How I Met Your Mother for nearly a decade. But that success came at an unexpected cost: an identity crisis that left him feeling trapped in a character he didn’t create.
In this episode, Josh talks about his formative role as the MC in his high school’s production of Cabaret, his first “almost kiss” (soundtracked by Aretha Franklin), how psychedelics helped him stay centered amidst the whirlwind of fame, and the chance encounter that launched his second career as a musician in his 40s. Here are his songs.
Rocky Mountain High – John Denver
Respect – Aretha Franklin
Willkommen – Cabaret (Joel Grey, original cast recording) “Cabaret”
All I Want – Joni Mitchell
Delicate – Damien Rice
Tara – Dechen Shak-Dagsay
Cmon – Fred Again/Brian Eno
Listen to Josh Radnor's playlist on Spotify. Find the transcript of this episode at lifeinsevensongs.com. Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at lifeinsevensongs@sfstandard.com.

Sep 2, 2025 • 30min
How TV’s favorite couples therapist, Dr. Orna Guralnik, found her interior life through music
Dr. Orna Guralnik broke barriers by bringing actual therapy sessions to millions of viewers through Showtime’s hit docuseries “Couples Therapy” — but her rebellious streak started much earlier.
In this episode, Dr. Guralnik talks about the songs that transformed her into a "real" teenager, the therapist who changed her life, and how music has sparked both connection and conflict in her family. Plus, she draws a surprising line between Kendrick Lamar and Igor Stravinsky—and explains why therapy, like music, is a lifelong process of learning and discovery. Here are her seven songs.
The Beatles - Let It Be
Igor Stravinsky - Rite Of Spring
Lou Reed - Coney Island Baby
Robert Wyatt - A Last Straw
Tuxedomoon - Bonjour Tristesse
Modest Mouse - The Good Times Are Killing Mw
Kendrick Lamar - Sing About Me, I'm Dying Of Thirst

Aug 26, 2025 • 37min
'Everyone’s seen my tits': Keeley Hazell on reclaiming the narrative in her new memoir
Keeley Hazell has lived a life that would make great television – which is probably why she inspired the beloved character Keeley Jones on Ted Lasso. In her new memoir, “Everyone’s Seen My Tits,” Keeley chronicles her chaotic childhood, her conflicted experience as one of Britain’s famous Page 3 topless models, and her journey to shed internalized shame as she reclaims her narrative.
In this episode, Keeley gets real about her internal battle between empowerment and objectification, the time she went to jail at age 14 for punching a cop, and the disastrous interview that launched her journey to become an “unlikely feminist.” Here are her songs.
Pulp - Common People
Mariah Carey - Hero
Eminem - Criminal
So Solid Crew - 21 Seconds
Fish Go Deep ft Tracey K - The Cure and The Cause
Sheryl Crow - All I Wanna Do
Father John Misty - When You Are Smiling And Astride Me
Listen to Keeley Hazell's playlist on Spotify. Find the transcript of this episode at lifeinsevensongs.com. Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at lifeinsevensongs@sfstandard.com.

Aug 19, 2025 • 34min
Amanda Knox survived a living nightmare. Flight of the Conchords helped.
At 20 years old, Amanda Knox found herself alone in an Italian jail cell, falsely accused of a brutal murder, and facing 26 years in prison. She was called “Luciferina” in the courtroom – and far worse in the tabloids. But Amanda never stopped fighting to clear her name and tell her story – most recently, as Executive Producer of a new miniseries on Hulu.
In this episode, Amanda opens up about how music became a lifeline – via the three CDs she was allowed in her cell and a paper keyboard to practice piano. Music connected Amanda to her fellow prisoners, to the outside world, and to the silly, optimistic person she’d always been. Here are her songs.
Gipsy Kings - Hotel California
Dido - Thank You
Regina Spektor - Apres Moi
Cat Power - Maybe Not
Flight Of The Conchords - Hurt Feelings
Florence and The Machine - Shake It Out
Chris Ballew - Troubles Behind
Listen to Amanda Knox's playlist on Spotify. Find the transcript of this episode at lifeinsevensongs.com. Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at lifeinsevensongs@sfstandard.com.

Aug 12, 2025 • 33min
ENCORE: How Robert Reich learned to fight bullies
This week, we’re revisiting a favorite – our conversation with former US Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who just released “Coming Up Short,” a memoir that doubles as a national reckoning. The title is a nod to his height — just under 5 feet — but also to a country that, he argues, has fallen short of its ideals. He offers a blueprint for how to find its way back.
In this episode, Bob reflects on the moments — and music — that shaped his politics: being bullied as a child, narrowly avoiding the Vietnam draft, and his love for Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5.” Here are his songs.
Stardust – Hoagy Carmichael
Unchained Melody – The Righteous Brothers
Chain Gang – Sam Cooke
Baby I Need Your Loving – The Four Tops
Lady Madonna – The Beatles
Metaphor – The Fantasticks
Suzanne – Judy Collins

Aug 5, 2025 • 42min
Mary Louise Kelly: NPR host, war reporter, mother … spy novelist?
You probably know Mary Louise Kelly’s voice as the co-host of NPR’s All Things Considered. But you may not know that the veteran journalist has faced her fair share of challenges – from discovering she had severe hearing loss at 40 to making an agonizing choice between work and motherhood while reporting from a Black Hawk helicopter over Baghdad.
In this episode, recorded live at the 2025 Aspen Ideas Festival, Sophie dives deep with the former national security correspondent, whose tales from the front lines are almost as exciting as her tales of falling madly in love in her fifties. Here are her songs:
Debbie Gibson - Only in My Dreams
James Baskett - Zip a Dee Doo Dah
Aerosmith - Sweet Emotion
Oasis - Champagne Supernova
Natasha Bedingfield - Unwritten
Ylvis - The Fox What Does The Fox Say
Bellamy Brothers - Let Your Love Flow
Tracy Chapman - Give Me One Reason

Jul 29, 2025 • 36min
Biographer of geniuses Walter Isaacson on the songs and city that made him
Walter Isaacson, an award-winning journalist and biographer of icons like Steve Jobs and Leonardo da Vinci, discusses his deep ties to New Orleans and the songs that shaped him. He shares childhood memories tied to the city’s vibrant music scene, reflecting on the significance of tracks like 'Iko Iko' and 'When the Saints Go Marching In.' Isaacson delves into themes of resilience through Irma Thomas's 'It’s Raining' and explores the cultural fusion in Jon Batiste’s 'FREEDOM,' painting a rich tapestry of how music embodies personal and communal narratives.

Jul 22, 2025 • 39min
Best-selling author Jason Reynolds writes the YA books he never had
Jason Reynolds is a #1 New York Times bestselling author and 2024 MacArthur Fellow who writes books for young people – but he didn’t finish a book until he was 17. Instead, Jason found his literary voice in the rap lyrics printed in cassette tape liner notes.
In this episode, Jason traces his journey from a kid disconnected from his assigned reading in school to becoming one of the most influential voices in young adult literature. He opens up about his fraught relationship with his father, spinning Bob Marley records by hand on a broken turntable, and why he doesn’t want to be a parent despite having “dedicated [his] life to kids.” Here are his songs.
Queen Latifah - U.N.I.T.Y.
Goodie Mob - Soul Food
Tracy Chapman - Talkin' Bout a Revolution
Bob Markey & The Wailers - Is This Love
Camp Lo - Luchini AKA This Is it
Billy Joel - Vienna
Clarence Carter - Patches

Jul 8, 2025 • 37min
The music, movie stars and murder trial that shaped actor Griffin Dunne
Griffin Dunne was a Hollywood insider long before he became the successful actor he is today – in fact, he might not have survived childhood if Sean Connery hadn’t pulled him from the bottom of a pool. But Griffin’s story, captured in his memoir The Friday Afternoon Club, is much more than a catalog of celebrity encounters.
In this episode, Griffin opens up about his parents’ divorce, landing his breakout role in An American Werewolf in London, the sudden tragedy that changed his family forever, and the music that has accompanied a life lived in the spotlight’s glare and shadow. Here are his songs:
Volver Volver by Vicente Fernandez
Last Train to Clarksville by The Monkees
Nature's Way by Spirit
Symphony No. 5: IV. Adagietto. Sehr Iangsam by Gustav Mahler
Life During Wartime by Talking Heads
Sailing by Christopher Cross
Cortez the Killer by Crazy Horse and Neil Young
Listen to Griffin Dunne’s full playlist on Spotify. Find the transcript of this episode at lifeinsevensongs.com. Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at lifeinsevensongs@sfstandard.com.

Jun 24, 2025 • 36min
Joan Osborne got famous for 'One of Us' — but finding her own voice took decades
If you’ve ever wondered, “What if God was one of us?” you probably have Joan Osborne to thank. But you might not realize that Osborne didn’t actually write her chart-topping hit.
In this episode, the singer-songwriter traces her evolution from a Catholic girl in Kentucky singing in church choirs, to accidentally discovering her voice at a New York blues bar covering other artists, to finally writing her own songs and sharing hard-won wisdom with her daughter. Here are her songs:
So Long, Farewell - Sound Of Music
I Saw Three Ships - The Oxford Trinity Choir
God Bless The Child - Billie Holiday
How Blue Can You Get - BB King
Shine A Light - The Rolling Stones
Crazy Baby - Joan Osborne
Nobody Owns You - Joan Osborne


