You can listen to his podcasts at The Chauncey DeVega Show. I recorded a podcast with him a few days ago. This is his most recent podcast can easily be heard in here on Libsyn and as an Apple iTunes podcast. (It's listed as being on Stitcher but this link goes to Pandora and I can't find it on their list.)
Chauncey humbles me by noting that on this pre-election podcast he could have had some "heavy hitters" like well known historians and others who most people have heard of on the podcast. Indeed he could have. A recent podcast was with psychoanalyst and author Justin Frank (Wiki). On Oct. 23rd he talked to M. Steven Fish (Wiki profile), a professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley. His new book is Comeback: Routing Trumpism, Reclaiming the Nation, and Restoring Democracy's Edge. He's interviewed Noble Prize winning economist Robert Reich and MSNBC's Joy Ann Reid.
His podcast interview today begins after a long impassioned monologue where he sings part of Mister Roger's "It's a Wonderful Day in the Neighborhood" two times and talks about his mother and the actual Chicago neighborhood where he lives.
Read a very brief summary of the two hour interview here.
You'll have to scroll through to the end of this podcast when he concludes his talk with Eddie Kingston to hear his unedited 40 minute talk with me.
After his monologue he talks with a well known professional wrestler named Eddie Kingston:
This is from the podcast website:Eddie Kingston (see Wikipedia profile) is an American professional wrestler currently signed with AEW (All Elite Wrestling). Kingston is a twenty-year veteran who has wrestled for and held championships in leading promotions all around the world including New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) and Ring of Honor (ROH).
Eddie Kingston reflects on his life journey and decision to be open and vulnerable about his struggles to be a more mentally and emotionally healthy man as shown by his widely-read and viewed essays, social media posts, and videos in support of mental health and suicide prevention.
After that you can hear our conversation where we talked mostly about mental health rather than politics. He describes this as me reflecting on my four decades of experience as a clinician and sharing some advice and insights about managing our emotions, trying to be healthy, and doing the things that make us happy as a way of fighting back against despair and surrender when our society (and personal lives) often feel so dark and dire.
I can't find a way to post a link to Chauncey's interview just with me. If you want to hear it you have to go to the last 40 minutes after he concludes his talk with Eddie Kingston.
You can read an automatically generated transcript of it. Here's how it begins:
“Next segment, the one, the only Hal Brown here on The Chauncey DeVega Show. Brother Hal Brown, we have been emailing for years, and we got two weeks left, and I said, you and I finally got to talk, but I just wanted to hear your voice and to tell you thank you for all that you've been doing all these years, regardless what may happen, because this is going to be a long fight no matter what happens in two weeks. I just want to thank you.
You're very welcome, and I am humbled that I could help. In this way, what can I do? I was a therapist for 40 years, it's hard to believe.
I'm like the old man here, and it's like I see people like us, we're just struggling with our emotions, with our fears, trying to think, okay, if things go really well, you know what I think is, what the hell am I going to do with my time if things go really well? I was (inaudible) Donald Trump, just 2017, and now with what are we? Am I good enough to write a science fiction short story?”
The automatic transcription above and below isn't entirely accurate.
Addendum:
I could only find one recent photo of Chauncey. His Twitter page has a photo of Redd Fox as Sanford from Sanford and Sons. I forgot to ask him what the top photo meant or where it was from.
When I talked to Chauncy I was on my way to a dinner engagement where my partner Ann and another couple were waiting for me. I was 40 minutes late but they were all forgiving when I explained that I was caught up in the podcast which had a technical glitch in the middle where we had to pause for 10 minutes. I mentioned as an aside to Chauncey at the end of our conversation that at the continuing care retirement community where we live residents often wear simple name tags but I make my own which are more elaborate (see bottom of page for example). I told him that the one I made most recently reflects how I currently feel. You'll recognize the man from Evard Munch's "The Scream."