4.6 • 836 Ratings
🗓️ 3 November 2023
⏱️ 52 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Pamela is a journalist. For nine years she was the editor of The New York Times Book Review, where she also hosted a weekly podcast, and she’s now a columnist for the Opinion section of the Times where she writes about culture, ideas, society, language and politics. She’s the author of eight books, most recently 100 Things We’ve Lost to the Internet. We had a fun chat about a whole host of topics.
You can listen to the episode right away in the audio player above (or on the right side of the player, click “Listen On” to add the Dishcast feed to your favorite podcast app). For two clips of our convo — on how computers are killing off deep reading, and the growing rate of anorexia among girls — pop over to our YouTube page.
Other topics: growing up in NYC and Long Island with divorced parents; her mom wrote ad copy and her dad was a contractor; Pamela was the only girl among seven brothers; she always wanted to be a writer; studied history at Brown; considered a PhD but didn’t want to focus on an “ism”; spent a year alone in northern Thailand with little tech — “probably best decision of my life”; how a career is not a linear path, especially in your 20s; the benefits of very little Internet; how media today is homogenized across the Western world; the publishing industry; Jon Stewart ambushing me on his show; how non-natives often see a country better than its natives; Tocqueville; how professors have stopped assigning full books; the assault on the humanities; Reed College and Hum 110; the war in Israel and Gaza; the ignorance and hateful ideology against Israel; Jewish liberals waking up to wokeness; how Israeli officials are botching their PR; “the death of Israeli competence”; gender and trans ideology; how gays and trans people are far more persecuted outside the West; Iran’s program of sex changes; what priests and trans activists have in common; Thatcher a much better feminist than Clinton; the decline of magazines and the blogosphere; The Weekly Dish; and Pamela defending the NYT against my barbs.
Browse the Dishcast archive for another convo you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: David Leonhardt on his new book about the American Dream, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira on Where Have All the Democrats Gone?, Cat Bohannon on Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution, Matthew Crawford, and McKay Coppins. Please send any guest recs, dissent and other comments to [email protected].
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0:00.0 | The What up, dish heads? |
0:30.2 | I haven't done that before. |
0:31.7 | Well, anyway, hello. |
0:32.7 | Welcome to the dishcast. |
0:34.0 | It's me again, from Provincetown again. |
0:39.7 | And I'm going to talk a little bit about why because I have contractors coming at me from both ends and right now of course there's always |
0:43.9 | happened in someone there's a delay in the flooring which means I have to wait another week |
0:48.2 | which means I'm not going to be able to get back I don't think to Provincetown until |
0:51.6 | still not Christmas till December which is a mixed news. |
0:57.1 | I mean, it's kind of nice being here when it's all very, very quiet, and it's beautiful. |
1:01.7 | It is beautiful, a little lonely. |
1:03.7 | I wish my dog was still here because that would make it all variable, but it's still, there's something about being at the behest of others with absolutely no control |
1:12.2 | of what they do and the way contractors come into your lives and never really tell you anything |
1:18.3 | and you can't really communicate and don't really ask you what you want ever. And anyway, so I'm, |
1:26.0 | and you're just so grateful for anything to get done that you just tolerate everything and let it go. But I'm all right. I'm fine. I cannot |
1:32.6 | complain. I live in this beautiful place in the free world. And there are many, many, many other |
1:39.0 | people in the world right now living under incredibly worse situation. So I'll shut the fuck up at this point and introduce our guest, who is Pamela Paul. |
1:50.0 | We wanted to have on for quite a while. |
1:52.0 | She's a journalist and currently a colonist at the New York Times where you may be reading her on a regular basis. |
1:59.0 | She, for nine years, was a really brilliant editor of the New York Times book review, |
2:05.0 | which stayed sane throughout the madness of the New York Times. |
2:08.7 | And she also pioneered, actually, and hosted a weekly podcast. |
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