In this episode (originally aired as Hey, It’s Me #15: “It’s Okay”) Rachel talks with Mike Sakasagawa about why she’s putting Commonplace on a hiatus and how she feels about it.
All content for Commonplace Podcast is the property of Rachel Zucker and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In this episode (originally aired as Hey, It’s Me #15: “It’s Okay”) Rachel talks with Mike Sakasagawa about why she’s putting Commonplace on a hiatus and how she feels about it.
After a brief Commonplace update, Rachel shares episode 143 of Keep the Channel Open with host Mike Sakasagawa and guest Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah is a writer based in the Bronx, NY. In his debut novel, Chain-Gang All-Stars, Nana presents us with a dystopian future America where convicted prisoners fight each other to the death in a televised bloodsport. The book is both a blistering critique of the US carceral system and an insistence on the inalienable humanity of every person. In our conversation, Nana and I talked about what satire and dystopia open up for him as a writer, why it’s important to him to implicate both the reader and himself in his work, and how he thinks about prison abolition. Then in the second segment, we talked about the seductive nature of success as an artist in a capitalist society.
Commonplace Podcast
In this episode (originally aired as Hey, It’s Me #15: “It’s Okay”) Rachel talks with Mike Sakasagawa about why she’s putting Commonplace on a hiatus and how she feels about it.