
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It’s been thirty years since My So-Called Life premiered—thirty years since Angela Chase fell for Jordan Catalano and quietly redefined what teenage angst looked like. This week, Under the Influence rewinds to 1994 for a nostalgic deep dive into the one-season show that changed how we saw adolescence, parents, and ourselves.
Emily Crandall, a political theorist with a PhD from CUNY who moonlights as an underemployed adjunct and podcast maker (“Yay, capitalism”), and Esme Shaller, a clinical psychologist and professor at UCSF whose middle school daughters are currently reading The Babysitters Club, join the conversation. Together, they explore how My So-Called Life captured the confusion and loneliness of being fifteen, why its portrayal of parents feels so different through adult eyes, and how it laid the groundwork for every coming-of-age show that followed.
It’s a love letter to the nineties—a time before phones, when friendship was analog, music was everything, and watching a boy lean against a locker could still break your heart.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Jo Piazza4.3
798798 ratings
It’s been thirty years since My So-Called Life premiered—thirty years since Angela Chase fell for Jordan Catalano and quietly redefined what teenage angst looked like. This week, Under the Influence rewinds to 1994 for a nostalgic deep dive into the one-season show that changed how we saw adolescence, parents, and ourselves.
Emily Crandall, a political theorist with a PhD from CUNY who moonlights as an underemployed adjunct and podcast maker (“Yay, capitalism”), and Esme Shaller, a clinical psychologist and professor at UCSF whose middle school daughters are currently reading The Babysitters Club, join the conversation. Together, they explore how My So-Called Life captured the confusion and loneliness of being fifteen, why its portrayal of parents feels so different through adult eyes, and how it laid the groundwork for every coming-of-age show that followed.
It’s a love letter to the nineties—a time before phones, when friendship was analog, music was everything, and watching a boy lean against a locker could still break your heart.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

78,688 Listeners

23,774 Listeners

8,787 Listeners

523 Listeners

6,713 Listeners

1,012 Listeners

746 Listeners

14,249 Listeners

4,881 Listeners

7,214 Listeners

4,106 Listeners

15,684 Listeners

15,024 Listeners

9,009 Listeners

2,114 Listeners

11,921 Listeners

6,264 Listeners

2,247 Listeners

9,827 Listeners

16,970 Listeners

1,648 Listeners

1,788 Listeners

714 Listeners

601 Listeners

1,014 Listeners