
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Sam Anderson is a master of the essay form whose work spans a huge range of human experience and culture.
As a staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, Sam has interviewed and written about Weird Al Yankovic, writer John McPhee, NBA point guard Russell Westbrook, travel guru Rick Steves, Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami and the people trying to rescue Michaelangelo's David from ruin. He has spent time with the last two white rhinos on Earth and visited the bat volcano in Calakmul, Mexico. And he wrote a book, Boom Town, about Oklahoma City which is both a profile of one Midwestern municipality and a meditation on the dueling forces of rapacious development and "place making" that are at war in every American city, including Beacon.
In each of his projects, Sam brings a trademark personal touch, situating himself in relation to his subjects with a disarming vulnerability. He weaves in his anxiety, depression, body image, feelings of loss and fear of death through introspective asides that illuminate rather than upstage his subjects. That all sounds serious and not very funny, but Sam is a hilarious person so this episode has a good number of laughs in it.
In our interview, Sam talks about his early ambition to be a writer, his creative process, animals, aging, drawing and much more.
By Zachary Rodgers4.9
3535 ratings
Sam Anderson is a master of the essay form whose work spans a huge range of human experience and culture.
As a staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, Sam has interviewed and written about Weird Al Yankovic, writer John McPhee, NBA point guard Russell Westbrook, travel guru Rick Steves, Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami and the people trying to rescue Michaelangelo's David from ruin. He has spent time with the last two white rhinos on Earth and visited the bat volcano in Calakmul, Mexico. And he wrote a book, Boom Town, about Oklahoma City which is both a profile of one Midwestern municipality and a meditation on the dueling forces of rapacious development and "place making" that are at war in every American city, including Beacon.
In each of his projects, Sam brings a trademark personal touch, situating himself in relation to his subjects with a disarming vulnerability. He weaves in his anxiety, depression, body image, feelings of loss and fear of death through introspective asides that illuminate rather than upstage his subjects. That all sounds serious and not very funny, but Sam is a hilarious person so this episode has a good number of laughs in it.
In our interview, Sam talks about his early ambition to be a writer, his creative process, animals, aging, drawing and much more.

90,931 Listeners

38,507 Listeners

29,037 Listeners

27,148 Listeners

1,949 Listeners

10,135 Listeners

112,032 Listeners

56,517 Listeners

7,227 Listeners

59,453 Listeners

16,600 Listeners

15,832 Listeners

237 Listeners

10,716 Listeners