Skip to main content

The best new podcasts for the week of November 9, 2019: Motive and more

The best thing about podcasts is that you can listen to them while you’re doing other things: Washing dishes, going for a run, coloring, and especially, driving. But there are so many podcasts these days that it’s simply impossible to keep up. New ones are debuting all the time, and it’s hard to know whether they deserve a spot in your feed.

Every week, we highlight new and returning podcasts we couldn’t put down. Whether you’re looking for the latest and greatest or you’re just dipping your toe into the vast ocean of podcasts, we’ll find you something worth listening to. This week, we’ve got podcasts about wine, wrongful conviction and its consequences, a notorious Disney movie, and short stories.

Recommended Videos

Wine School Dropout

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Perhaps one of the greatest descriptions of wine comes from an episode of the early ‘00s British TV show Black Books, in which two of the characters exalt over the farmyard of colors, saying the vintage is like looking into the eye of a duck. The takeaway: old wine is good wine, and expensive wine is good wine.

Conventional but not necessarily correct wisdom, no doubt. If that’s all the knowledge you’ve got, then Tanisha Townsend is here to help expel some of the mythos and mystery around vino. She writes about wine at Girl Meets Glass, and Wine School Dropout distills her expertise into quaffable episodes. In fact, each one ends with a Cliff’s Notes recap. Her main message is that you don’t have to be intimidated to walk into a wine shop; you just need a bit of lingo and the right questions to start a useful conversation with your friendly, local sommelier.

Motive

Image used with permission by copyright holder

In 2005, a burger place with a metal-inspired menu opened in Chicago. At Kuma’s Corner, you can get Mastodon, Metallica, and Iron Maiden burgers, each for around $14. It proved widely popular, and now there are locations throughout the city.

A couple of blocks from the original Kuma’s location, a 19-year-old, Eric Morro, was shot and killed in 1993. The hip burger place is a sign of a changing neighborhood, one which saw a lot of gang activity in the ‘90s. Thaddeus “T.J.” Jimenez was just 13 and was a member of one, the Simon City Royals. A witness to Morro’s shooting said Jimenez pulled the trigger, then recanted over a decade later. The city of Chicago gave Jimenez $25 million for the wrongful conviction, but he was later arrested for shooting a man twice in the legs. Reporter Frank Main covered the case and is now trying to answer what happened to the man who grew up in prison and was given a fortune but not much guidance.

You Must Remember This

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Karina Longworth started You Must Remember This back in 2014, Along the way, she’s covered early Hollywood stars like Marlene Dietrich, Greta Garbo, and Humphrey Bogart. Many seasons are deep dives into particular topics, like the blacklist or Joan Crawford.

For the latest season, Longworth has deeply researched Disney’s Song of the South. The company hasn’t released the controversial film in theaters since 1986, but it still uses its most famous song, Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah, in a variety of ways. You’ve probably heard it, even if you’ve never seen the movie. The six-episode season will cover not only the song but Hattie McDaniel’s role and the ways criticism of the movie started the year it was first created, 1946.

Likewise Fiction

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Daniel T. Willingham, a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, argues that it’s not “cheating” to listen to an audiobook for your book club, and in some cases hearing a text can increase comprehension. It can also just be a soothing experience. Short stories especially lend themselves to the format, especially if they evoke memories of being read aloud to as a child.

Mike Sakasegawa has a great reading voice, and he lends it to a variety of stories from marginalized communities, including women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ authors. The first is “Whale Fall” by Alvin Park, and the second is “How to be Chinese” by Celeste Ng. After reading a story, Sakasegawa offers a few words of analysis about it, which is thoughtful and illuminating. Subscribers to the show’s Patreon will also get bonus episodes, where Sakasegawa interviews the authors.

Jenny McGrath
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
What’s new on Netflix and what’s leaving in November 2024
A group of karate students stand together.

With only two months left in 2024, Netlifx is closing out the year with a bang in November. Of course it helps that Netflix has two prominent originals back with new episodes, including Cobra Kai season 6, part 2, as well as Arcane season 2, which will be split into three acts throughout the month.

There aren't as many new movies as usual in November, but Netflix is adding the first six Fast and Furious films, as well as The Whale, Oblivion, Whiplash, Focus, The Lost City, and Superbad. But knowing Netflix, some unheralded action flick will rise to the top of the movie rankings before the end of the month. You can almost set your clocks by it.

Read more
The best shows on Amazon Prime Video right now (November 2024)
Mads Mikkelsen as Hannibal in bloody shirt

The best shows on Amazon Prime Video right now include a mix of Amazon originals, as well as older shows from other networks. You'll find many shows you might have had on your radar for some time, but never got around to watching, like Hannibal, and The Night Manager. You'll also find exciting new originals like Cross.

Whether you're in the mood for drama, horror, thrills, comedy, sitcoms, or docuseries, Amazon Prime Video has you covered. And we also have you covered with this curated list of the best the streaming service has to offer in all these categories. Every title on this list can be watched with a base Amazon Prime or standalone Amazon Prime Video subscription; no channel add-ons are needed.

Read more
This new slow-burn thriller features one of 2024’s best performances
A group of cardinals sit together in Conclave.

Conclave doesn't just feel like an Agatha Christie mystery -- it also begins like one. The film's opening moments follow its beleaguered protagonist, Thomas Cardinal Lawrence (Ralph Fiennes), as he hurriedly makes his way through the streets of Rome. When he finally arrives at his destination, he is shocked and saddened to discover multiple cardinals gathered around the body of the newly dead pope. Arrangements are quickly made for Lawrence, Dean of the College of Cardinals, to lead and oversee a papal conclave to elect his former superior's replacement.

CONCLAVE - Official Trailer 2 [HD] - Only In Theaters October 25

Read more