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Jason Reynolds

2episodes
2podcasts

We have 2 summarized appearances for Jason Reynolds so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

Featured On 2 Podcasts

All Appearances

2 episodes

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Design Matters celebrates its 20th anniversary with host Debbie Millman sharing excerpts from memorable interviews that shaped her interviewing approach. Featured guests include Jason Reynolds, Marina Abramović, Chris Ware, Richard Saul Wurman, Rick Rubin, and Roxane Gay, discussing creativity, trauma, vulnerability, and artistic process across 700 episodes since 2005. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Childhood affirmations shape identity:** Jason Reynolds' mother repeated "I can do anything" nightly from age two, creating language that fossilized in his body and eliminated fear around trying new things. He still whispers this mantra during moments of doubt, demonstrating how early verbal patterns become physical anchors that counteract adult insecurities and enable risk-taking in creative careers. - **Normalizing mental health through exposure:** Reynolds' father, a psychiatrist, invited patients with schizophrenia and addiction to family barbecues, teaching children that different brain functions are normal variations rather than abnormalities. This early exposure eliminated stigma and created comfort with neurodiversity, allowing Reynolds' friends to come out to him in seventh grade without judgment or discomfort. - **Public behavior without accountability:** Marina Abramović's Rhythm Zero performance placed 72 objects including a loaded pistol on a table, giving audiences complete freedom for six hours. The experience taught her that crowds can kill when given permission and tools to bring spirits down, but also that artists can provide tools to lift spirits, a lesson that took 25 years to apply. - **Slow punk as innovation:** Rick Rubin identified Flipper as the first punk band playing slow, sludgy music rather than fast tempos, inspiring him to start a slow punk band. Despite selling only 10,000 copies, Flipper influenced Kurt Cobain and demonstrated how niche audiences create disproportionate cultural impact compared to mainstream commercial success measured in millions. - **Hip hop as montage performance:** Rubin started Def Jam because existing rap records sounded like R&B tracks with rapping instead of singing, missing the DJ's role as star. True hip hop involved taking tiny aspects of old music and reinterpreting them through human dexterity and performance, not machines, which he documented because no one else was serving fans properly. → NOTABLE MOMENT Richard Saul Wurman challenged Debbie Millman's questions throughout their contentious interview, creating friction by stating he disliked certain questions and correcting her language repeatedly. Despite the producer wanting to kill the episode, Millman published it anyway. Wurman later wrote to say he thought it was actually a good interview, validating her decision to embrace uncomfortable conversations. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Gelt", "url": "joingelt.com"}, {"name": "Schwab", "url": "schwab.com"}, {"name": "Wise", "url": "wise.com"}] 🏷️ Creative Process, Interview Techniques, Performance Art, Music Production, Childhood Trauma

AI Summary

→ WHAT IT COVERS Brené Brown interviews New York Times bestselling author Jason Reynolds about his book "Ain't Burned All the Bright," exploring his upbringing, creative process, and how childhood experiences shape his writing for young people. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Parental Communication Training:** Reynolds' mother required him from age two to respectfully disagree with her decisions, teaching him to articulate dissent with confidence—standing tall, speaking clearly—preparing him for public expression and professional advocacy throughout his life. - **Grade Acceleration Consequences:** Skipping second grade put Reynolds in seventh grade at age ten, two years younger than peers. This created bullying, academic failure, and social anxiety that became foundational experiences he mines when writing for ages twelve to sixteen. - **The Fish Suspension Lesson:** Reynolds' teacher suspended two students who saved a dying fish despite explicit rules against touching it, demonstrating that doing the right thing often carries consequences and that women historically lead social movements and moral action. - **Therapeutic Secret Life Framework:** Reynolds describes three life layers—public, personal, and secret—with therapy serving as the space to unload the secret life, the "ultimate group text" containing thoughts that would end careers if shared, providing essential emotional release without judgment. - **COVID as Respiratory Attack:** "Ain't Burned All the Bright" structures itself as three deep breaths, recognizing that 2020 attacked respiratory systems physically (COVID, wildfires, tear gas) and metaphorically (George Floyd's murder, social suffocation), using art to restore equilibrium. → NOTABLE MOMENT Reynolds reveals his mother, raised by emotionally distant Southern farmers, learned to hug only after his birth. She deliberately broke generational patterns of withholding affection, ensuring her children experienced physical warmth she never received, transforming family trauma in one generation. 💼 SPONSORS None detected 🏷️ Writing Process, Childhood Trauma, Mental Health, Book Censorship, Parenting Philosophy

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