The Therapy Episode
Critics at Large | The New Yorker
The New Yorker
4.4 • 678 Ratings
🗓️ 20 June 2024
⏱️ 48 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
In recent years, as our culture has embraced therapy more widely, depictions of the practice have proliferated on screen. On this episode of Critics at Large, Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz trace the archetype from the silent, scribbling analysts of Woody Allen’s œuvre and the iconic Dr. Melfi of “The Sopranos” to newer portrayals in shows such as “Shrinking,” on Apple TV+, and Showtime’s “Couples Therapy,” now in its fourth season. The star of “Couples Therapy” is Orna Guralnik, whose sessions with real-life couples show how these tools can lead to breakthroughs—or, in some cases, enable bad behavior. Since the series débuted, mental-health awareness has only grown, and the rise of therapists on social media has put psychoanalytic language and constructs into the hands of a much broader audience. Is the therapy boom making us better? “There’s a way in which jargon or concepts when boiled down can be used to categorize both ourselves and others,” says Schwartz. “Maybe what I’m asking for is a reinvigoration of the idea of therapy—not to close down meaning, but to open up meaning.”
Read, watch, and listen with the critics:
“The Sopranos” (1999-2007)
“Couples Therapy” (2019-)
“The Therapist Remaking Our Love Lives on TV,” by Alexandra Schwartz (The New Yorker)
“The Rise of Therapy-Speak,” by Katy Waldman (The New Yorker)
“Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist” (1995-2002)
“The Critic” (1994-95)
“Annie Hall” (1977)
“The Case Against the Trauma Plot,” by Parul Seghal (The New Yorker)
“Shrinking” (2023-)
“Ted Lasso” (2020-23)
The Cut’s Overanalyzed series
“21 Ways to Break Up with Your Therapist,” by Alyssa Shelasky (The Cut)
New episodes drop every Thursday. Follow Critics at Large wherever you get your podcasts.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Welcome to Critics at Large, a podcast from The New Yorker. |
| 0:09.2 | I'm Vincent Cunningham. |
| 0:10.2 | I'm Alex Schwartz. |
| 0:11.3 | And I'm Nomi Fry. |
| 0:13.6 | In each session of this show, we show up. |
| 0:17.3 | We hold space to make meaning out of what's happening in the culture right now and how we got here. |
| 0:25.6 | So today, my friends, it's the therapy episode. |
| 0:29.1 | We've been wanting to do this episode for a while. |
| 0:31.7 | Listeners have written in about it. |
| 0:34.3 | It's obviously a topic that's top of mind for a lot of us. |
| 0:38.8 | The therapy, this thing that famously happens in private, or should happen in private, maybe, or should it, |
| 0:45.9 | has in recent years seeped into so many aspects of our lives. |
| 0:51.2 | Yeah, just down to the level of language, the way people speak to one another. |
| 0:54.5 | Right. |
| 1:02.4 | Has the lingering sort of aspects of, again, like you say, language they learned somewhere else in private. |
| 1:03.4 | Right, right. Yeah, we talk nonstop about, for instance, boundary setting and boundaries. |
| 1:07.1 | Yes. |
| 1:07.5 | That is a term from a certain kind of therapy. |
| 1:27.8 | And here it is, you know, amongst us, another just big change that I've noticed is that when I was young, when I was a wee child, I still thought of therapy as a bit stigmatizing, even though I grew up in New York City on the Upper West Side where therapy was birthright. |
| 1:28.4 | Exactly. |
| 1:28.8 | Yeah. |
| 1:35.2 | And now I think the opposite has become true that it's a bait stigmatizing in a certain group, admittedly, of people. |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The New Yorker, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of The New Yorker and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.

