Writer and comedian Ziwe has made a career out of conducting charged and satirical interviews. She joins us this week to discuss her debut essay collection, Black Friend (5:45), the backstory behind her essay WikiFeet (10:19), her early affinity for broadcast news (13:06), the influence of satirists Jonathan Swift and Stephen Colbert (15:10), and her early, formative experiences working in comedy (35:05).
On the back-half, Ziwe reflects on the making of her YouTube series Baited (38:06), a memorable episode with Aparna Nancherla (41:30), her pandemic pivot to IG live (43:30) and the Showtime variety show that followed (46:30). To close, a philosophy on art-making from Ira Glass (50:40) and what Ziwe hopes for in her next chapter (56:15).
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Makings of Writer Hilton Als
Actor and Activist Nazanin Nour Wants to Tell a New Story of Iran
Opening Night with Artist Kehinde Wiley
50 Years After Roe v. Wade: A Conversation With a Texas Abortion Provider
The Road to Actor Ke Huy Quan’s Second Act
Actor Claire Foy Observes the Unobserved
The 2022 Talk Easy Holiday Special
Nobel Peace Prize Journalist Maria Ressa Holds the Line
Actor Lake Bell: 'The Voice is a Roadmap of Your History'
An Interlude with Musician Dev Hynes
Performer Kumail Nanjiani: A New Act
Actor Jonathan Majors: ‘Everything Happens To Me’
An Afternoon at Judd Apatow’s Office
Journalist Kara Swisher Believes in the Future
Writer George Saunders, Moment by Moment
The Homecoming of Director James Gray
Comedian Nick Kroll is Going Through Changes
The Transformation of Actor Eddie Redmayne
How Congresswoman Cori Bush Reimagines Politics
Back to School with Quinta Brunson (‘Abbott Elementary’)
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Just Dumb Enough Podcast
Voices of Misery Podcast
House of Whimsical Terror
Stuff You Should Know
Timcast IRL