Episodes

  • The Bug in Your Ear: Voices We Love to Listen To
    Sep 13 2023

    Do you love podcasts? It isn’t a surprise that audio programming remains so popular nearly a century after the invention of the television.

    There is a level of intimacy between the voice on the radio and ourselves. There is more room for imagination than visual images offer, and a greater ability to build a connection when compared with reading text.

    Glendalynn reflects on some of her early exposure to classic radio programming and a few of her favourite on air voices - real and fictional.

    Subscribe to this podcast or the companion Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    7 mins
  • The Importance of Downtime
    Aug 17 2023

    Downtime isn’t vacation. It isn’t the weekend. It the time we require to recover, mentally and/or physically, to recover from certain tasks.

    Understanding our unique recovery time enables us to plan ahead. To ensure we build time blocks into our schedule accordingly.

    Glendalynn dives into this topic after a particularly exhausting experience. Luckily, she started noting her recovery time requirements as part of a business review exercise earlier this year. Listen to better understand how to build personal recovery time into your own schedule.

    Subscribe to this podcast or the companion Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    6 mins
  • It’s Just a Movie
    Aug 8 2023

    Oppenheimer is a 3-hour film, not an 18-hour documentary series. Why expect a Ken Burns doc?

    If someone watches Argo, or Bohemian Rhapsody or I, Tonya, and believes what they see on screen to be accurate, whose fault is that?

    Fictionalized accounts are meant to entertain. Yes, hopefully, they spark interest in learning more, but that isn’t their goal. Glendalynn discusses a series of recent films that received criticism for doing exactly this, and why that problem belongs squarely on the audience, not the film makers.

    The history book referenced in this episode is The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Richard Rhodes (1986)

    Subscribe to this podcast or the companion Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    8 mins
  • Dracula, the Found Footage OG?
    Aug 2 2023

    How can a novel written in 1897 be the found footage OG?

    With the upcoming release of The Last Voyage of the Demeter, Glendalynn revisits Bram Stoker’s classic novel, Dracula.

    As with most classics, hardly anyone has read the original, the fictional character having assumed its own mythology. Glendalynn discusses why the epistolary storytelling style and language may be a barrier for today’s readers, and why reading the original depiction of The Count is worth it for fans of both classic fiction and horror.

    See the collection of horror-related posts at Reflections by G

    https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog/tag/Horror

    Subscribe to this podcast or the companion Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    9 mins
  • Malice - Movies that Subvert Expectations
    Jul 27 2023

    When did movie marketers stop taking risks?

    Today’s marketing campaigns have ridiculously long trailers, show audiences far too much and are too afraid to hold anything back. It wasn’t always this way.

    30 years ago, a little movie came out with a campaign promoting it as a legal drama. It was so much more, with a stellar cast bringing Aaron Sorkin’s screenplay to life, Glendalynn revisits Malice (spoiler-free) and laments the loss of subversive advertising.

    Prompted by the post Historical Movie Moments, Historical Meltdowns

    https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog/historic-movie-moments-historic-meltdowns

    Subscribe to this podcast or the accompanying Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    9 mins
  • Books That Made a Scary Lasting Impression
    Jul 21 2023

    What was the first book that really scared you?

    If that experience happened early in life, you might find it surprising just how bad - and not at all scary, some of those books are today.

    The runners-up are written by Dean Koontz and Stephen King. The number one book that left a scary lasting impression on Glendalynn is actually, quite bad. And it contained flies. So. Many. Flies.

    Prompted by the post Nightmares at Grandma’s House

    https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog/nightmares-at-grandmas-house

    Subscribe to this podcast or the accompanying Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    7 mins
  • Problematic Authors, Popular Fiction
    Jul 18 2023

    How do you handle the absolute messiness of popular fiction and the problematic authors that create those books? This isn’t an advice episode. Tackling the elephant in the room directly, J.K. Rowling, alongside two other classic children’s authors, Glendalynn shares her approach to reconciling a beloved novel and the life of the author.

    Prompted by the post Panic, Devilry & the Death of the Publishing Industry

    https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog/panic-devilry-and-the-death-of-the-publishing-industry

    Subscribe to this podcast or the accompanying Reflections by G blog, https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog for more reflections.

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

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    6 mins
  • 5 Non-Fiction Books to Keep You Up at Night
    Jul 12 2023

    What do you find scary? The threat of a cyber attack or dangling by a wire from one of the world’s tallest structures? What if you discovered that the person you see and know to be real is actually a hallucination? Perhaps you’d prefer to curl up with a collection of folk tales from a state rich with cultural history. What if you went to bed, unaware of a deadly leviathan silently approaching your community?

    I break the rule today by creeping past the 10-minute mark (just) to bring you five recommendations that I hope are mostly new to you!

    Subscribe to this podcast or the accompanying Reflections by G blog, for more reflections.

    https://www.glendalynndixon.com/blog

    Intro music: Fairy G, by Dan O’Grady, https://www.patreon.com/danogrady

    Book titles and authors recommended in this episode:

    Gumbo Ya-Ya: Folk Tales of Louisiana by Lyle Saxon, Edward Dreyer, and Robert Tallant

    The Wake: The Deadly Legacy of a Newfoundland Tsunami, Lindsey MacIntyre

    Hallucinations by Oliver Sacks

    This is How They Tell Me the World Ends, By Nicole Perlroth

    Scream: Chilling Adventures in the Science of Fear by Margee Kerr

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    10 mins