Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Joshuah Bearman

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American producer Joshuah Bearman.
Last updated on November 9, 2024.
Joshuah Bearman

Joshuah Bearman writes for Rolling Stone, Harper's, Wired, The New York Times Magazine, The Believer, and McSweeney's, and contributes to This American Life. Bearman was a contributing producer on the documentary, The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters. Bearman is an advisory board member of 826LA, a non-profit tutoring organization in Los Angeles. He lives in Los Angeles, California, and is working on a book for Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.

You exist in the minds of other people.
I don't think that the people in my stories are lying to themselves. Well, some of them are - everybody is at some level. But there is something about how they all inhabit a narrative of their own making.
Often my characters have some kind of idealism or grand belief that they're pursuing. — © Joshuah Bearman
Often my characters have some kind of idealism or grand belief that they're pursuing.
I am in communication with almost everybody I've done a story about. I have a fantasy that if I ever strike it rich, I'll have a big party and fly all of these people there, and they'll be roaming around the party - Billy Mitchell, Master Legend, Santa Tim, Rio DiAngelo, Mr. Romance circa 2007, and so on.
I was really struck by all these people who had committed suicide. There are videos of all of them talking about why they're so happy to shed their human existence and exit their "vehicles" and I thought, "Why is that?"
Sometimes, I'll read a news story and there will be one line about something else, and I'll find it interesting and look into it. That can often turn into an entire story on its own.
I don't know if any of the people perceive themselves as having been made fun of.
I'm always reading. And I keep a whole list of stories, often unusual stories. There are a hundred some-odd ideas on that list.
People are really stuck on their ideas about themselves.
I've gotten used to spending more time with heavily narrative stories.
Sometimes you'll read something and think, "What is going on here? There must be more to this." The constraints of the news format didn't allow for more detail, or the writer didn't see it or just wasn't interested.
That's always disappointing when you find a good story and you realize the person has died, because then it's difficult to report.
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