Episode 658

Morgan Parker, Georgia Cloepfil, and Rogê

Poet and essayist Morgan Parker (You Get What You Pay For) unpacks the highs and lows of therapy... and how crying in The Gap afterwards is cathartic; writer and former professional soccer player Georgia Cloepfil explains how she hustled across the globe as an athlete, while weighing financial gain with her love of the sport; and Brazilian singer-songwriter Rogê performs his song “Existe Uma Voz” from his first US solo album Curyman.

Ep. 658: Morgan Parker, Georgia Cloepfil, and Rogê
Live Wire with Luke Burbank
 

Morgan Parker

Poet, Essayist, and Novelist

Morgan Parker is the author of young adult novel Who Put This Song On?; and the poetry collections Other People’s Comfort Keeps Me Up At Night, There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé, and Magical Negro, which won the 2019 National Book Critics Circle Award. Parker is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship, winner of a Pushcart Prize, and a Cave Canem graduate fellow. Her debut book of essays, You Get What You Pay For, traces the difficulty and beauty of existing as a Black woman through American history, from the foundational trauma of the slave trade all the way up to Serena Williams and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. WebsiteInstagram

 
 

Georgia Cloepfil

Author of “The Striker and the Clock”

Georgia Cloepfil is a writer and former professional soccer player from Oregon. She played professionally for six years, on six teams, in six countries. During that time, the sport became more than a game — it was an immersive yet transient way of life. Living out of a single suitcase, Cloepfil chased better opportunities and the euphoria of playing well. As a writer, her work has appeared in The Yale Review, The New York Times Magazine, n+1, and elsewhere. Her latest nonfiction debut, The Striker and the Clock, is a beautiful examination of the joy and pain of serious athletics and an eye-opening look at the still-developing world of professional women’s soccer. She holds an MFA from the University of Idaho and works at Whitman College. WebsiteInstagram

 
 

Rogê

Samba Sensation

Latin Grammy nominee Rogê is a songwriter, composer, and musician considered to be a principal part of the Brazilian popular music scene revival. He has released seven solo albums and two collaborations with samba legends Arlindo Cruz and Seu Jorge. His latest albums Curyman and Curyman II celebrate the vibrancy of Brazilian culture while tackling the country’s complex history, so that, in Rogê's own words, “we don’t give in to sadness, to laziness, to a lack of desire to move on with life. It’s the certainty that a new day will dawn.” WebsiteInstagram

 
 

Show Notes

Best News

Morgan Parker

Live Wire Listener Question

  • When you were a kid, what is the wildest thing you wanted to be when you grew up?

Georgia Cloepfil

  • As a part of our Speakeasy Series, Luke interviews Georgia at The Sports Bra, a woman-owned, women’s-sports centered bar in Portland, OR.

  • Georgia’s talks about her new book, The Striker and the Clock.

  • Luke and Georgia talk about the concept of arrival fallacy.

  • Georgia cites Naomi Girma‘s transfer to Chelsea as an instance of the improving status of women’s sports.

Rogê

  • Rogê performs the song “Existe Uma Voz” off his first US solo album, Curyman.

Station Location Identification Examination

 
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Episode 657