S1E18: Historic Detente with Andy Bowers

Published: April 30, 2012, 8 a.m.

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Colin Marshall sits down at NPR West in Culver City with Andy Bowers, Executive Producer of Slate\'s podcasts and fourth-generation Angeleno. They discuss his status as a "secret Angeleno"; what it takes to introduce microphones into entertaining conversations without things getting tiresome; the difference between podcasts as podcasts and podcasts as imitation radio; discovering the joy of biking in Los Angeles; the city\'s troubled downtown bike lanes and what they emblematize about local civic projects; what problems arise when you try to get anything accomplished in a city with 88 distinct municipalities; Roger Rabbit, Chinatown, and the allure of mythical Los Angeles malice; whether or not you can really move into a Woody Allen movie; his youth in Los Angeles and his return which converted the city from an adolescent one into an adult one; the various placements and interpretations of Los Angeles\' great east-west divide; his time at National Public Radio bureaus in London and Moscow, and the accessibility of those cities\' cultural institutions; his time producing Day to Day, and the loss of public radio\'s old eclecticism; podcasting as radio\'s skunkworks, especially in this podcasting Mecca of southern California; podcast listeners connecting with hosts even more than with content; and why Stephen Metcalf stirs so many people up, anyway.

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(Photo: Steve McFarland)

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