Once again, thanks very much indeed to all you listeners who backed Notebook on Cities and Culture‘s fourth season on Kickstarter. The planning begun as soon as the drive ended, and now it pleases me to announce that the season will premiere on Thursday, August 1st. We’ll start off in Los Angeles, then move on to Copenhagen and London in the fall, and then to Toronto in the spring. If you have any suggestions of cultural creators, internationalists, and observers of the urban scene whom you’d like to hear interviewed in those cities, please do let ’em rip (to colinjmarshall at gmail, specifically). Make sure you don’t miss an episode by subscribing on iTunes.
In the meantime, consider tiding yourself over with the interviews I’ve hosted and produced for the Los Angeles Review of Books podcast, including most recently literary historian Loren Glass on Grove Press, Tosh Berman on Sparks, David Shook on translating Mexican novelist Mario Bellatin, and Jeff Weiss with Evan McGarvey on Biggie and 2pac.


Most Americans I know hesitate to embrace all of “American culture.” This makes sense, considering the broadness of any such umbrella, one that would have to cover a population of 300 million with origins across the entire world. So we pick and choose from this country’s bulging social, political, cultural, and aesthetic grab bag, taking what we want and leaving (when not insistently repudiating) the rest. You might follow baseball but dismiss football, dream of your own car but not your own house, or hold one opinion about country music and its polar opposite about rap. This goes as well for the clothing styles we think of as distinctively American. To divide us, just start a debate about the influence of athletic wear on our national dress. The clothes of surfing, skating, and tennis, among other sports, have all since the Second World War greatly influenced everyday wear here — not, I would think, to the approval of every Put This On reader.
We’ve roamed cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Vancouver, Mexico City, Kyoto, Nara, and Osaka. We’ve talked to writers, broadcasters, critics, comedians, designers, bloggers, academics, journalists, artists, editors, and monologists. We’ve planned a fourth season that will reach such fascinating world cities as Toronto, Copenhagen, and London. But Notebook on Cities and Culture’s