EPISODE · Apr 14, 2026 · 55 MIN
April 14, 2026 - Bob Odenkirk and Derek Kolstad on "Nobody," Thanks for Typing, and Say It Loud at the ICA
Actor Bob Odenkirk and writer Derek Kolstad reunite after the Nobody films for Normal, a twisted neo-Western about a bank robbery that shatters the facade of a seemingly quiet small town. They join us ahead of the film’s theatrical release this Friday, April 17. To learn more, go here.At Harvard’s Houghton Library, Thanks for Typing brings long-overlooked women’s labor out of the margins and into the center of literary and artistic history. Christine Jacobson, Associate Curator of Modern Books and Manuscripts at Houghton Library and co-curator of the exhibition, joins us to discuss the typists behind drafts, dictation, revisions, and retyped pages — including work connected to writers like Henry James and Emily Dickinson. To learn more, go here.Say It Loud: AAMARP, 1977 to Now at the ICA traces nearly fifty years of art, activism, and community through the history of the African American Master Artists-in-Residence Program. Meghan Clare Considine, ICA’s Curatorial Assistant and featured artist Bryan McFarlane join us to discuss the larger story the exhibition tells about Black cultural life in Boston and what it means to see that history inside the museum now. To learn more, go here.
What this episode covers
Actor Bob Odenkirk and writer Derek Kolstad reunite after the Nobody films for Normal, a twisted neo-Western about a bank robbery that shatters the facade of a seemingly quiet small town. They join us ahead of the film’s theatrical release this Friday, April 17. To learn more, go here. At Harvard’s Houghton Library, Thanks for Typing brings long-overlooked women’s labor out of the margins and into the center of literary and artistic history. Christine Jacobson, Associate Curator of Modern Books and Manuscripts at Houghton Library and co-curator of the exhibition, joins us to discuss the typists behind drafts, dictation, revisions, and retyped pages — including work connected to writers like Henry James and Emily Dickinson. To learn more, go here. Say It Loud: AAMARP, 1977 to Now at the ICA traces nearly fifty years of art, activism, and community through the history of the African American Master Artists-in-Residence Program. Meghan Clare Considine, ICA’s Curatorial Assistant and featured artist Bryan McFarlane join us to discuss the larger story the exhibition tells about Black cultural life in Boston and what it means to see that history inside the museum now. To learn more, go here.
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April 14, 2026 - Bob Odenkirk and Derek Kolstad on "Nobody," Thanks for Typing, and Say It Loud at the ICA
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