Keep the Channel Open – Détails, épisodes et analyse
Détails du podcast
Informations techniques et générales issues du flux RSS du podcast.

Keep the Channel Open
Mike Sakasegawa
Fréquence : 1 épisode/19j. Total Éps: 177

Classements récents
Dernières positions dans les classements Apple Podcasts et Spotify.
Apple Podcasts
🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
14/05/2025#91🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
13/05/2025#65🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
12/05/2025#34🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
11/05/2025#14🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
10/05/2025#8🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
28/12/2024#68🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
27/12/2024#42🇨🇦 Canada - visualArts
26/12/2024#29🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - visualArts
27/10/2024#76
Spotify
Aucun classement récent disponible
Liens partagés entre épisodes et podcasts
Liens présents dans les descriptions d'épisodes et autres podcasts les utilisant également.
See all- https://www.soundofpicture.com/
143 partages
- https://www.vote.org/
135 partages
- http://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=81994&refid=stpr
129 partages
- https://www.twitter.com/ChannelOpenPod
173 partages
- https://twitter.com/gaileyfrey
6 partages
Qualité et score du flux RSS
Évaluation technique de la qualité et de la structure du flux RSS.
See allScore global : 53%
Historique des publications
Répartition mensuelle des publications d'épisodes au fil des années.
Episode 154: Rachel Edelman
Épisode 154
mercredi 25 septembre 2024 • Durée 01:27:05
In the opening poem of Rachel Edelman’s debut collection, Dear Memphis, the speaker returns to their home city after a long time away, traversing a landscape that is both familiar and foreign, a place to which she belongs but also doesn’t. Over the course of the collection, Edelman asks questions about heritage and inheritance; about exile, diaspora, and migration; about home; about marginalization and privilege, oppression and complicity. In our conversation, we talked about acts of care, the importance of self-criticality, what poems do, and the necessary and the possible. Then for the second segment, we talked about corresponding via hand-written letters.
(Recorded June 28, 2024)
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Show Notes:- Rachel Edelman
- Purchase Dear Memphis: Open Books (Seattle, WA) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org
- Jacob Lawrence - The Migration Series
- Morgan Parker - Other People’s Comfort Keeps Me Up At Night
- Alan Kurdi (The boy on the beach)
- emet ezell
- Rachel Edelman & emet ezell - “The Correspondent’s Cheeks Are as a Bed of Spices”
- James Merrill - “Lost in Translation”
- AGNI 99
- Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa
- Music: Podington Bear
- Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo
Episode 153: Jennifer Baker
Épisode 153
mercredi 28 août 2024 • Durée 01:14:01
Writer, editor, and podcaster Jennifer Baker’s debut YA novel, Forgive Me Not, imagines a near-future America in which the juvenile criminal justice system has been “reformed” to allow young people to undergo grueling Trials instead of incarceration. It’s an incisive and powerful story about carceral justice, as well as a moving coming-of-age and family story. In our conversation we talked about writing about serious topics for younger readers, how she approached writing her characters, and why it was important for her to focus on systems rather than individual innocence or guilt. Then for the second segment we talked about finding inspiration in other art forms.
(Recorded April 3, 2024.)
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Show Notes:- Jennifer Baker
- Purchase Forgive Me Not: Kew & Willow Books (Kew Gardens, NY) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org
- Minorities in Publishing podcast
- Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah - Chain-Gang All-Stars
- Kalief Browder
- Lionel Tate
- Squid Game
- Annie Proulx - “Brokeback Mountain” (short story)
- Brokeback Mountain (film)
- Rachel Eliza Griffiths
- Nicholas Nichols
- Titus Kaphar
- Kelsey Norris - House Gone Quiet
- Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa
- Music: Podington Bear
- Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo
Episode 145: KTCO Book Club - Bianca (with Rachel Zucker)
Épisode 145
mercredi 29 novembre 2023 • Durée 01:35:06
For this KTCO Book Club conversation, poet and podcaster Rachel Zucker returns to the show to discuss Eugenia Leigh’s poetry collection Bianca. In our conversation, we talked about our approaches to talking about books with their authors, how form shapes how we take in intense subject matter in a poem, and how a book can be a means of connection.
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Show Notes:- Rachel Zucker
- Purchase Bianca: Print (Portland, ME) | The Book Catapult (San Diego, CA) | Bookshop.org
- Eugenia Leigh
- James Schuyler - “This Dark Apartment”
- Jack Kornfield - “Transform Your Life Through Jack Kornfield’s Most Powerful Stories: A 10 Hour Journey”
- Editing/Mixing: Mike Sakasegawa
- Music: Podington Bear
- Transcription: Shea Aguinaldo
Episode 72: Natalie Eilbert
Épisode 72
mercredi 15 août 2018 • Durée 57:37
Natalie Eilbert's newest collection of poems, Indictus, was published in January of this year, and reading it is a profound and intense experience. In our conversation, Natalie and I talked about Indictus, making amends, and what audiences ask of artists who make work about trauma. In the second segment, Natalie chose social media as her topic.
(Conversation recorded July 17, 2018.)
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Show Notes:- Natalie Eilbert
- Natalie Eilbert - Indictus: Noemi Press | IndieBound | B&N | GoodReads
- Patreon - Natalie Eilbert
- Wisconsin Book Festival
- A Room of One’s Own
- #ChannelOpenPoetry
- Couplet: A Poetry Series + Social
- Keep the Channel Open - Episode 69: Leah Umansky
- Cate Marvin
- Deborah Landau
- Leslie Jamison - The Recovering
- Robert Frost - “Mending Wall”
- Natalie Eilbert - “The Limits of What We Can Do”
- Brandon Taylor
- Brooklyn Museum - David Bowie is
Episode 71: R. O. Kwon
Épisode 71
mercredi 1 août 2018 • Durée 47:47
R. O. Kwon's debut novel, The Incendiaries, was just released last week, and it's one of the best books I've read this year. In our conversation, we talked about her new book, who the first readers she has in mind are, the inherent unreliability of narrators, and how the characters invent themselves for each other. Then in the second segment, R. O. talked about her other passion: rock climbing.
(Conversation recorded July 10, 2018.)
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Show Notes:- R. O. Kwon
- #ChannelOpenFiction
- R. O. Kwon - The Incendiaries: IndieBound | B&N | Goodreads
- R. O. Kwon - "I’m Korean American, And I Can’t Watch The Pyeonchang Olympics"
- R. O. Kwon - "Why I Don’t Leave the House Without Putting on Black Eye Shadow"
- R. O. Kwon - Events
- Christine No - "A Façade of a Woman: R. O. Kwon’s The Incendiaries"
- Clarice Lispector
- T. S. Eliot - "Ash Wednesday"
- Leonard Cohen - "Hallelujah"
- Umberto Eco - The Name of the Rose
- Colin Winnette
- Ancco - Bad Friends
Episode 70: Blue Mitchell
Épisode 70
mercredi 18 juillet 2018 • Durée 01:07:48
Blue Mitchell is an independent publisher, curator, educator, and photographer based in Portland, OR. Blue's work, both as the publisher of Diffusion and as an artist in his own right, focuses on what he calls "artfully crafted" photography—that is, photographic art where you can see the artist's hand. In our conversation we talked about Blue's photographs and his use of a wide variety of techniques to create images that elicit a strong emotional response in the viewer. We also talked about his publishing company, One Twelve, and how Diffusion came about. Then in the second segment, we talked about portfolio review events, and how they can be a great way to connect with the photographic community.
(Conversation recorded June 26, 2018.)
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Show Notes:- Blue Mitchell
- #ChannelOpenPhoto
- One Twelve Publishing
- One Twelve - Shop
- Blue Sky Gallery - 2018 Pacific Northwest Photography Viewing Drawers
- Click! Photography Festival
- Blue Mitchell - Evanescent Energy
- Blue Mitchell - Mythos
- Blue Mitchell - Chasing the Afterglow
- Blue Mitchell - Luminous Flux
- Blue Mitchell - Of Salt and Earth
- Lenscratch - Blue Mitchell
- Zone System
- Diffusion
- AlternativePhotography.com
- Medium Festival of Photography
- Claire A. Warden
- Drew Nikonowicz
- PhotoNola
- Photolucida
- Aline Smithson
- Heidi Kirkpatrick
- Review Santa Fe
- Ken Rosenthal
- Kahn & Selesnick - 100 Views of the Drowning World
- Candela Books
- Gordon Stettinius
Episode 69: Leah Umansky
Épisode 69
mercredi 4 juillet 2018 • Durée 56:48
Leah Umansky is a poet, collage artist, and self-described Game of Thrones and Mad Men super fan. I recently read Leah's latest book, the full-length poetry collection The Barbarous Century, and was struck by the exuberant use of language—it brought me a lot of joy. In our conversation, Leah and I talked about her book, her fascination with pop culture, and the power of story. Then in the second segment, we had a very spoilery discussion about the HBO series Westworld.
(Conversation recorded June 21, 2018.)
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Show Notes:- Leah Umansky
- Vote.org
- Leah Umansky - The Barbarous Century
- Leah Umansky - Events
- Leah Umansky - “Stranger Is”
- Leah Umansky - Domestic Uncertainties
- This Is Just to Say - Kaveh Akbar
- Tori Amos
- Game of Thrones
- Mad Men
- Eyewear Publishing
- Jeanette Winterson
- T. H. White - The Once and Future King
- Vice - "Dolores from ‘Westworld’ Is the New Khaleesi"
- Halfway There
- Westworld
- Melissa Broder - The Pisces
Episode 68: Richard Georges
Épisode 68
mercredi 20 juin 2018 • Durée 01:09:53
Richard Georges is a writer, editor, and lecturer in the British Virgin Islands. In his new collection of poems, Giant, Richard gives us a portrait of the BVI through landscape, through its history and its present. In our conversation, Richard and I talked about his book, the aftermath of empire in the BVI, and the relationship between poetry and myth. For the second segment, Richard talked about the particular moment that the BVI faces today in the wake of Hurricane Irma.
(Conversation recorded June 12, 2018.)
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Show Notes:- Richard Georges
- Medium Festival of Photography - Portfolio Reviews
- Richard Georges - Giant
- Moko
- Percy Bysshe Shelley - “Ozymandias”
- Ramayana
- Saint Ursula
- Soucouyant
- Douen
- Derek Walcott
- Kamau Brathwaite
- Boris Johnson
- Craig Santos Perez
- Craig Santos Perez - From Unincorporated Territory
- Shansi Miller
- Moko Magazine - Paintings by Shansi Miller
- Kei Miller - Augustown
- Shivanee Ramlochan
- Shivanee Ramlochan - Everyone Knows I Am a Haunting
- Forward Prizes for Poetry 2018
Episode 67: Min Jin Lee
Épisode 67
mercredi 6 juin 2018 • Durée 49:13
Min Jin Lee is a writer based in New York. Earlier this year I read Min's latest novel, Pachinko, and it just blew me away. In our conversation, we talked about the book and it's journey to publication, and the importance of making art out of what's true. Then for the second segment we talked about persistence as a writer, dealing with rejection, and learning to be OK with looking foolish in the beginning.
(Conversation recorded May 22, 2018.)
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Show Notes:Episode 66: Hannah Cohen
Épisode 66
mercredi 23 mai 2018 • Durée 01:02:48
Hannah Cohen is a poet and editor based in Virginia. I recently picked up a copy of Hannah's new chapbook Bad Anatomy and the way that the poems encompass both vulnerability and strength really struck me, as did the self-deprecating perspective. In our conversation, Hannah and I talked about Bad Anatomy, about emotional truth in poetry, as well as her work as co-editor of the online poetry magazine Cotton Xenomorph. Then in the second segment we discussed the challenges of working as an artist with a day job, especially a day job that isn't in academia.
(Conversation recorded May 15, 2018.)
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Show Notes:- Christina Riley - Born Kickstarter
- Hannah Cohen
- Hannah Cohen - Bad Anatomy
- Catapult - TinyLetter of the Month: Alvin Park, aspirin and honey
- Hannah Cohen - Di sotto in sù
- Hannah Cohen - The Only Living Girl in a Rock Opera
- Cotton Xenomorph
- Don’t Take Pictures - Rule Breakers
- Berl’s Brooklyn Poetry Shop
- AWP Conference
- Melissa Broder - The Pisces
- so sad today
- Erika L. Sánchez - Lessons on Expulsion