POSTED BY

Brandon Boyer

AT 1:24 PM
Monday March 16, 2009

Culture

Listen: your time is well spent listening to A Life Well Wasted

robashley.jpgA confession and a high, high recommendation: for as thorough a radio junkie as I am (it was, in fact, my teenage career choice before veering wildly off onto the path that led me here), I find it almost impossible to get into a podcast groove.

Part of that is the nature of the beast itself: the usual podcast fare is limited to people I don't know having a conversation I can't participate in, making for an experience about as compelling as watching two amateurs gracelessly toss a frisbee back and forth for an hour.

Here's where everything changed: the recent sale of Ziff Davis's former games press unit to Hearst let loose one Robert Ashley, who took the opportunity to pursue his own radio journalist leanings and create his new podcast, A Life Well Wasted.

Really, podcast's not the right term -- it's never been more apt to call something "internet radio," because, despite the format, Ashley's clearly a graduate of the Ira Glass school of production, and has put together as close to gaming's version of This American Life as we'll likely ever get.

The two episodes put together so far (the production work involved for a one-man team is so heavy that Ashley isn't committing to more than an episode a month) aren't about gamers and their opinions, it's about the personal stories of This Gaming Life: the first episode introspectively devoted to the aforementioned Ziff Davis sale and the closing of U.S. games mag legacy EGM, and the second to "collectors and archivists" obsessively devoted to games.

And it's that second in particular where you should start -- near the end, Ashley pitch perfectly calls forth one of those fabled NPR 'driveway moments' with a tearful farewell from a game developer about to pull the final plug on an MMO server. Right there is where I knew Ashley got "it," and where he set the high watermark for both games radio and for his own future episodes -- I can't wait to see where he goes next.

A Life Well Wasted [episode links, see also: the accompanying blog]

5 Comments

Chris Furniss

#1 – 2:24 PM March 16, 2009

Listening now, this is great! I agree with you about *most* podcasts. I can't listen to them, I always want to participate and I get so antsy I have to turn them off. Maybe it's just because I have my own podcast and I am an asshole? Who knows!

Tiff Chow

#2 – 2:26 PM March 16, 2009

Yup. I'm not a podcast person, but I'm 15 minutes in and I'm hooked.

Samit Sarkar

#3 – 2:37 PM March 16, 2009

Yep, A Life Well Wasted is absolutely fantastic -- I was led to it by another great new podcast, Rebel FM (from the guys who used to do 1UP FM), which had Robert Ashley on as a guest. The man knows how to put together a great internet radio show!

leebenningfield

#4 – 4:50 PM March 16, 2009

Robert Ashley was also a guest on the latest Gamers With Jobs podcast, they talked a bit about ALWW and "gamer culture" in general. I'm so glad he's continuing to something in audio format after GFW Radio ended, I really enjoy listening to him talk about games, and even whatever random topics would come up on the other podcasts.

Anonymous Anonymous

#5 – 5:22 PM March 16, 2009

This show is currently the best anything that I make a point of catching. As much as I enjoy radio, there are always those moments where the host tries to reach outside of familiar territory in to an area more comfortable to me as a listener and misses the mark just enough to make me cringe. It's nice to have a show that is hosted by someone as passionate about the subject matter as those he caters to.

I can't think of another show out there that doesn't water things down by trying to avoid gaming stigmas while still maintaining a broad appeal.

I can't think of anything in the gaming stratum that does such a service to the medium.

It's obviously still early and I don't want to be too hyperbolic, but in a general sense I see this kind of angle being the catalyst for broadening the creative perspective of the gaming industry.

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