The Other 51 – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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Podcast The Other 51

The Other 51

Brian Moritz

Société & Culture

Fréquence : 1 épisode/18j. Total Éps: 187

Hosting podcast Spotify for Podcasters

Writing advice? We've got that. A podcast that gets your favorite writers to spill their secrets. Every episode is a new writer: comic artists to Broadway scribes, sports reporters to authors.

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  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - personalJournals

    11/09/2025
    #96

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Score global : 33%


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American Kings with Seth Wickersham

Épisode 200

jeudi 14 août 2025Durée 33:41

“I kept thinking, is there a single quarterback I can write about that I can tell this story through? And no matter who it was … everything felt too small. And so what I wanted to do was write about all of them, in a way, at every level.”

It’s our 200th episode, and we’re celebrating by talking to one of our favorite writers. Seth Wickersham joins Brian to talk about the writing and reporting of his new book, “American Kings: A Biography of The Quarterback.”

Seth discusses what that word “biography” means to him in this context, and talks about how came to write a book about the quarterback position. He talks about how the writing, reporting, and promotion of this book is different than his first book and the lessons he learned from writing about the New England Patriots that applied here. 

Seth describes the different reporting methods he used in writing the book, how he landed on this particular structure and how he chose his anchor characters. He tells us how something being interesting to him was his north star, and the moment his repertorial antenna went up. He also talks about how conversations with his friend Wright Thompson and an ESPN editor helped him crack book’s structure. 

“Having my friends be brilliant writers has just been like, what a blessing. Because it’s like, everyone’s supportive and a teeny bit competitive … You want to have a story that’s worthy of the text thread.”

Links

American Kings: A Biography of the Quarterback (Bookshop.org link)

American Kings (Amazon link)

The Book of a Coach

Feds probing NFLPA actions that ‘may be criminal,’ doc says by Don Van Natta and Kalyn Kahler (the best thing Seth’s read lately)

Untold  by Tom Junod and Paula Lavigne

Support

Support the show at Buy Me a Coffee

Follow us on Instagram.

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Editing Anthologies with Danielle Sarver Coombs and Molly Yanity

Épisode 199

jeudi 31 juillet 2025Durée 37:30

“That’s why I do this. That’s why I’m involved in this. I was one of those young people who was endlessly inspired by female athletes and by women’s sport”

Danielle Sarver Coombs and Molly Yanity join Brian to talk about the two scholarly anthologies they co-edited about the 2023 Women’s World Cup. 

We’ve interviewed writers of all sorts throughout our nine years hosting this show, but this is the first time we’ve ever talked to the editors of an anthology! 

Danielle and Molly talk about that process, how they decided against writing a book of their own and instead landed on editing an anthology. They talk about how their anthology on the 2019 World Cup influenced these books, what about these events make them so ripe for scholarship, and how important it was for them to include voices from outside of the Global North. 

The three of us also get deeply nerdy talking about the books we’ve read lately. 

“We have a responsibility as senior scholars who are also women to help lift the voices of people who have a bigger challenge getting published.”

Links

Politics, Social Issues and the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup

Media, Communication and the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup

2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup: Media, Fandom, and Soccer’s Biggest Stage

The best books we’ve read lately

Great Big Beautiful Summer by Emily Henry

The Creativity Code by Marcus du Sautoy

James by Percival Everett

Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon

Support

Support the show at Buy Me a Coffee

Follow us on Instagram.

Subscribe at: 

Apple Podcasts

Spotify 

Episode 190: Solving That Puzzle with Joe Posnanski

vendredi 13 septembre 2024Durée 34:59

“I feel like my place as a writer is sort of that place between what happened and the mythology of what’s happening.” 

Joe Posnanski joins Brian for a deep dive into his new book, Why We Love Football: A History in 100 Moments. 
Joe talks about how he started with a list of more than 300 football moments and the process of whittling those down. It’s an honest and super nerdy discussion about how early drafts of the book weren’t working, what Joe did to work through those struggles, and how writing about The Drive unlocked the book for him

Joe also talks about how we was able to write a collection of essays while maintaining a central theme, how the Don Beebe-Leon Lett play is the perfect example of why we love football, and what kind of athlete “Brian Moritz” would be. 

“For me as a writer, the moment where the book came alive for me was when I started to think of it as a football game … every play is its own little universe in football.”

Links

Why We Love Football: A History in 100 Moments

Joe Blogs

The Poscast

Destiny of the Republic: A Tale Of Madness, Medicine, and the Murder of a President by Candice Millard (the best thing Joe’s read lately.)

Support

The Other 51 is and will always be free, but if you like my work (and the stuff I do at Sports Media Guy) and want to kick me a few dollars, you can do so here. I really appreciate your support. 

Follow us on Instagram and Threads. We’re on the decaying corpse of Twitter, but only because for some reason sports media won’t abandon the site. 

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Episode 102: Reverse Outlining with Dr. Jennifer Harker

jeudi 19 septembre 2019Durée 29:22

In another episode that recorded at the AEJMC conference in Toronto last month (thanks Apple), Dr. Jennifer Harker from West Virginia University joins Brian to talk about her award-winning paper.

First off, she learns that Brian does not mess around when it comes to Canadian snack food.

Then, Jennifer and Brian do a deep diver into her study on the Alliance of American Football and their use of hashtags before, during, and after the league’s launch in 2019. This presented researchers with a unique opportunity to study a league’s social media use and fan interaction as the league itself was being born. Jennifer discusses her findings and their implications for sports media.

Jennifer also discusses her writing process, the value in being in constant contact with your data, how she reverse outlines her manuscripts, and how she keeps moving while writing — literalliy.

A reminder that you can support Sports Media Guy and The Other 51 here.

Jennifer on Twitter

AEJMC Sport Communication paper abstracts

The Alliance of American Football

Becoming by Michelle Obama

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Episode 101: Writing Defensively with Dr. Mark Coddington

vendredi 30 août 2019Durée 35:15

This episode was supposed to be recorded at the AEJMC conference earlier this month in Toronto. But Dr. Mark Coddington was busy doing conference stuff, and Brian forgot his Mac dongle, so consider this a makeup in a way.

Mark is an assistant professor at Washington and Lee University and the author of the new book, “Aggregating the News: Secondhand Knowledge and the Erosion of Journalistic Authority,” and he joins Brian for a deep dive into the writing process. Mark describes he got interested in news aggregation in the first place, how he picked it for his dissertation topic and then how he turned that dissertation into a book.

Mark and Brian talk a lot about the idea of writing defensively, why that may be one of the reasons why academic writing is often so bad and how hard it was for Mark to switch modalities for the book. They also talk about what aggregation is in news, why it matters, and why the myth of Woodward and Bernstein is so persistent among journalists.

Mark on Twitter

Snippets from the book

Aggregating the News

How News Happens

The MVP Machine: How Baseball’s New Nonconformists Are Using Data to Build Better Players

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Episode 100: The Amazing and the Impossible with Joe Posnanski

jeudi 22 août 2019Durée 46:35

Back when this podcast started, Joe Posnanski joined Brian for Episode 4 to talk about Hamilton, Buffalo sports, and writing.

This week, for our 100th episode, Joe joins Brian again to talk about … Hamilton, Buffalo sports, and writing.

After nerding out about their favorite moments in Hamilton, Brian and Joe get to the main topic — Joe’s upcoming book on Harry Houdini. Joe talks in depth about his writing and research process on this book, particularly how he balanced writing a biography of Houdini and a book about magic and wonder itself. Joe discusses how he reconciled those two ideas and found the center of the book.

Joe and Brian also talk about the importance of finding that thing that your piece of writing is about, and about how being honest with what you don’t know can build your credibility with sources. There is a brief Harry Potter detour, and reporting is compared to roller coasters (one of which, Brian and Joe love). Joe also discusses how he defines wonder and why that is so important to the book and our lives.

Also noteworthy, after this podcast was reported, someone did in fact hit two home runs in a game that day.

Joe Posnanski on Twitter

Joe Blogs

The Life and Afterlife of Harry Houdini

Joe on Amazon

Episode 4: Joe Posnanski

The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead

Episode 99: Knowing the Story's Done with Rion Amilcar Scott

vendredi 12 juillet 2019Durée 31:17

Brian is joined once again by his favorite local* author, Rion Amilcar Scott.

Rion has a new collection of short stories due out on Aug,. 20, “The World Doesn’t Require You.” It’s a followup to his previous collection, Insurrections.

Brian and Rion talk about how the new collection came together, and how both the world it’s set in and Rion’s writing have changed since President Trump’s election. Rion talks about the value of sitting with an idea for a long time until you know it’s ready and how he stretched himself as a writer with this book. How does Rion hope to influence how people see the world with this book? It’s a big question.

They also geek out hard core over SpiderMan.

Rion Amilcar Scott

Rion Amilcar Scott on Twitter

Episode 22: James Baldwin’s Head with Rion Amilcar Scott

Insurrections

The World Doesn’t Require You

A Lucky Man by Jamele Brinkley

Heavy by Kiese Laymon

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Episode 98: What'd Brigadoon Ever Do To You? with Anthony King

mercredi 3 juillet 2019Durée 31:33

Anthony King, the Tony nominated co-writer of the book of Beetlejuice The Musical, joins Brian this week.

Brian and Anthony do a deep dive into the creative process of a Broadway show, as Anthony describes what a book of a musical is and why it is so important.

Anthony discusses the process he and Scott Brown had in writing the show, how Lydia became the main character, how they changed the conception of the Netheworld, and how the Beetlejuice cartoon influences the show. Anthony talks about how they decided what iconic parts from the movie made the musical, and he shares what he wish he could have brought from screen top stage.

Anthony also talks about the rewriting process that the show underwent after previews in Washington, D.C.

In addition, he answers an incredibly specific question about Gutenberg, the Musical!

Anthony King

Anthony on Twitter

Beetlejuice the Musical

The Complete Works of Dashiell Hamett

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Episode 97: Wired to Talk to Everyone with Baxter Holmes

jeudi 27 juin 2019Durée 40:37

Baxter Holmes had one of the best months for a sports features writer in a very long time earlier this year. He published two fantastic stories at ESPN - one on the fancy dinners that San Antonio Spurs coach Greg Popovich hosts, the other detailing the dysfunction of the Los Angeles Lakers.

On the face of it, they are two very different stories. But in his return visit to The Other 51, Baxter tells Brian how the reporting for those stories had a lot in common.

Baxter describes how he first heard about Popovich’s wine dinners and how the Lakers’ dysfunction first got on his radar. He talks about the value of talking to everybody, how writing scenes is a key part of his process, how Robert Caro’s notions of concentric circles help him report, and what it was like the day the Lakers story broke. There was a lot of coffee that day.

Baxter and Brian also discuss how writers are a lot like chefs.

Baxter Holmes on Twitter

Episode 57: Untold Stories with Baxter Holmes

Michelin restaurants and fabulous wines: Inside the secret team dinners that have built the Spurs’ dynasty

Lakers 2.0: The failed reboot of the NBA’s crown jewel

The Day The Music Burned

Work Clean: The life-changing power of mis-en place to organize your life, work, and mind by Dan Charnas

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Episode 96: A Little Kelly Tripucka with Tyler Dunne

jeudi 20 juin 2019Durée 35:39

One of our very first guests on The Other 51 (Episode 3), Tyler Dunne from Bleacher Report returns to kick off our summer season.

Tyler and Brian spend the first several minutes reminiscing about early 1990s NBA basketball, including Brian’s home-economics class gamesmanship involving Chuck Person and Tyler’s origin story as a Charlotte Hornets fan.

Then they get around to the business at hand. What does this time of year look like for an NFL features writer like Tyler? Tyler talks about how this time of year is important to him, helping him lay the foundation for the stories he’ll work on in the fall. Tyler talks about how to approach players as people, not as sources, and how many players appreciate having to think in an interview and having someone really listen to them.

Brian and Tyler then do a deep dive into that fantastic story about the Packers that Tyler wrote in April. What’s it like when Aaron Rogers calls you out? How do you report and write a story like this?

Tyler Dunne’s stories

Tyler on Twitter

What Happened in Green Bay

Tecmo NBA Basketball

INSIDE GANG TERRITORY IN HONDURAS: ‘Either They Kill Us or We Kill Them’

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