What You Do
The podcast What You Do is a series of brief interviews with academics, students, dog walkers, mail carriers, gravediggers and other ne'er-do-wells on why they chose to do what they do. podcast url: http://feeds.feedburner.com/whatyoudo
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Thursday, April 13, 2006
Post mortem on Episode 1.
Okay, I knocked this together in maybe an hour all total. So there was very little editing done on the interview track, and some pretty crappy mixing done on intro music, intro track, and outro. Some problems I had with episode 1 could be fixed by spending more time at Audacity, but there are some stylistic/aesthetic issues which Audacity can't really fix:
* Me. Interview style, pace, etc. I didn't have any questions prepared, which you can see about halfway through when there's one point where I just go 'durr' and then think of something to say. Should have cut that out, natch. Plus I engaged in something pretty typical for me when I'm talking normally -- speed mumbling. It's like regular mumbling, only five times as irritating. Plus we spent an inordinate amount of time talking about the paper process -- which really is interesting, don't get me wrong -- and not enough about how he got where he got. Also, at a half-hour, the show is pretty meaty -- especially if you're not thrilled with paper science to begin with. This could be fixed with judicious editing.
*The location. This was one of the group study rooms at the library -- this is why you have the weird crappy echo-y kind of thing happening. No insulation or anything means sounds go bouncy-bouncy. Supposedly next year we'll have a somewhat proper sound room -- in the meantime, maybe I can find a space that isn't so bad.
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Okay! Episode 1 is up. In this episode, I interview Aaron Yonka, a paper science safety engineer at a paper mill in Florida. We talk about how he stumbled into paper science, and how trees turn into toilet paper... er, bathroom tissue.
Direct link is here. As always, the podcast subscription link is http://feeds.feedburner.com/whatyoudo .
Comments? Bad things, good things? Please let me know.

