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The Other Story

The Other Story

By Jennifer Gottesfeld

The Other Story is podcast about the stories we live by. Each episode, we will examine a dominant narrative in our society and ask how it came to be, how it might be changed, and the role the entertainment industry has played in reinforcing or deconstructing it.

You can find a transcription of each show as well as resources related to the topic of the episode at: theotherstory.substack.com/
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Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) narratives, with Jaimie Woo

The Other StoryApr 05, 2021

00:00
54:34
Masculinity with Dr. Jackson Katz
Jun 24, 202156:03
Trans narratives with Dr. Susan Stryker

Trans narratives with Dr. Susan Stryker

Only 20% of Americans know someone who is transgender. That reality has meant the majority of the public learned all they know about Trans people from media depictions. This is a problem, since historically there has been little to no Trans representation in writers rooms. This has led to Trans characters often being portrayed in ways that perpetuate simplistic, stereotyping, and even transphobic narratives, with storylines only focused on their gender, rather than their whole self as an individual.

While there has been progress in increasing Trans visibility in Hollywood with popular shows like Pose and Transparent, there is also the persistent reality that the ignorance manufactured by decades-old tropes in the media has fueled the disproportionate violence, poverty, and systemic discrimination that the Trans community continues to face.

In this episode, we talk with Dr. Susan Stryker about the legacy of Hollywood’s portrayal of transgender people in film and TV. We will also explore how some of those narratives are beginning to be challenged and changed, and the work ahead still to be done.

Jun 10, 202101:03:53
Black mental health narratives with Abraham Sisay

Black mental health narratives with Abraham Sisay

We're going to be talking with Abraham Sisay about the portrayal of black mental health in the media. Abraham is the founder and lead strategist of Alkamba Company, a modern day content distribution agency based in Kansas City. He started his company to help create a bridge between cultures through storytelling. Abraham is also the creator and executive producer of Freedom Project, a documentary series that takes viewers inside the journey of individuals as they cope with mental illness.

May 27, 202138:42
Women's mental health narratives with Jessica Good

Women's mental health narratives with Jessica Good

Hysterical - that was an actual medical diagnosis used to describe women experiencing any type of mental health condition. Looking at women’s mental health through that bianary - the happy woman with no opinions or the insane, wild woman - has been the hallmark of how women’s mental health has been portrayed in film and television since the beginning.

This reductive dismissal by the media of the spectrum of women’s mental health needs and experiences has led women to believe that in order to be “normal” they had to be unemotional, and programmed men to believe that any woman who expressed their feelings must be “crazy.”

In this episode, we speak with with Jessica Good about where those narratives originated, why they have persisted and the deprogramming work that is being done to change them.

May 20, 202158:54
Mental health narratives with Ruhi Bhalla

Mental health narratives with Ruhi Bhalla

Hollywood has a long history of misrepresenting, well, just about everything having to do with mental health. A recent USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative study found that it is rare to find content with a mental health storyline, and those storylines are often disparaging, satirizing, or trivializing when made. These types of portrayals create fear and shame around even talking about mental health, even though more than 50% of us will experience a mental health condition in our lifetime. We talk with Ruhi Bhalla, who works on the Social Impact team across the MTV Entertainment Group at ViacomCBS, to understand those narratives and unpack them.

May 13, 202151:08
Youth mental health narratives with John MacPhee

Youth mental health narratives with John MacPhee

According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, one in five American youth experience a mental health condition, but as many as half will not seek out support. The way young people are conditioned to understand and respond to their experiences is often influenced by the media. So when programs about young people glamorize suicide, mock asking for help, or delegitimize their feelings as being hormonal, it can leave anyone, and especially youth, feeling shame, isolated, and prone to conceal what they are experiencing for fear of ridicule and judgement. In this episode, we speak with John MacPhee, CEO of The Jed Foundation, about how Hollywood is working to deconstruct these narrtiaves. 

May 06, 202139:47
Native American narratives with Maya Rose Dittloff

Native American narratives with Maya Rose Dittloff

In this episode, we speak with Maya Rose Dittloff, a Blackfeet, Mandan, and Hidatsa writer, director, and activist. We discuss the the essential role of narrative sovereignty in narrative change, and the growing world of Indigenous cinema as a response to that need. We’ll try to better understand how to identify and deconstruct these pervasive dominant narratives, the new narratives movement leaders like Maya are introducing, and how Hollywood has played a role in perpetuating and challenging these narratives.

As always, you can find the resources we mention in this episode as well as more information and the transcript at The Other Story substack. 

Apr 12, 202157:12
Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) narratives, with Jaimie Woo

Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) narratives, with Jaimie Woo

The anti-Asian hate occurring across the US is finally shining a light on what has been a long history of oppressive and discriminatory narratives about the AAPI community. We speak with Jaimie Woo, Emmy-nominated creative producer, New York Times best-selling author, and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion consultant, about the dominant narratives that have persisted around Asians and Asian Americans, how activists like herself are working to reframe and deconstruct those narratives, and Hollywood's role in this work. You should also check out her podcast, Are You There, Universe? 

You can check out the transcript of this episode, as well as find all the resources mentioned in the interview and more at The Other Story substack - https://theotherstory.substack.com/

Apr 05, 202154:34
What is Narrative Change?

What is Narrative Change?

Jee Kim, founder of The Narrative Initiative, and Romain Vakilitabar, founder of PathosLabs, speak with Jennifer Gottesfeld about what narrative change actually means and how that work intersects with the entertainment industry.

Mar 07, 202146:47