Highsnobiety Podcasts asks, “How did Ray-Bans become so popular?”

Aux Features Podmass
Highsnobiety Podcasts asks, “How did Ray-Bans become so popular?”

Blood Ties
Family Business

There are perhaps no podcast subjects more beloved than rich people problems and ripped-from-the-headlines true crime stories. Wondery marries the two in its new scripted drama Blood Ties. Siblings Eleanor and Michael Richland—voiced by Gillian Jacobs and Josh Gad, formidable in their respective departures from comedy—head to the Caribbean for a holiday. When they receive news their parents have died in a plane crash and are told to begin making arrangements, the sinister underbelly of their father’s legacy is revealed. The series investigates the conflict between responsibility to one’s family and to the greater good, following both siblings as they grapple with the sprawling ramifications of their father’s actions. You’ll find yourself wanting more of the story after six brief episodes. [Morgan McNaught]


Ghosted! By Roz Drezfalez
Ever Mainard

Drag queen comedian Roz Drezfalez is wishing a happy New Year to ghosts and only ghosts on the latest edition of her paranormal podcast. Each week, Roz reads listener emails about supernatural encounters and welcomes special guests to recount their true-life run-ins with the unknown. Joining Roz this episode is comedian Ever Mainard, who takes listeners back to her childhood in rural Texas, where she had several inexplicable experiences in an abandoned farmhouse that looked like it could’ve been the setting of a chainsaw-based massacre. Mainard also proves that looking for a new place to live is far more stressful than living with a ghost, as she has rented not one but two haunted apartments. Although it is a very funny podcast, Roz and her guests take the supernatural completely seriously. There is never any attempt to look for a “logical” explanation. If you’re a skeptic, debunker, or professional eye-roller, this one’s not for you. But for believers or those who just enjoy good creepy stories, Ghosted! is a fabulously spooky time. [Anthony D Herrera]


Highsnobiety Podcasts
Why It’s Cool #12: Ray-Ban Wayfarers

How did it happen that Ray-Ban Wayfarers became the most timeless sunglasses known to man? Sure, James Dean sporting them in Rebel Without A Cause helped push them into the limelight, as did Tom Cruise wearing a pair in Risky Business. But as Highsnobiety host Ian Servantes will tell you, their origins are far more surprising. Originally designed for the Army, Ray-Ban’s Wayfarers established themselves as classic cool, outlasting decades of general interest and somehow morphing into a fashion and pop cultural staple. Servantes dives deep into Wayfarers’ enduring cultural significance in just under 11 minutes, touching on the sunglasses’ celebrity appeal with stars like the Olsen twins and Bruce Willis. [Kevin Cortez]


Life Kit
Making Art Is Good For Your Health. Here’s How To Start A Habit

Creating is therapeutic. By making something—a piece of writing, a finger painting, a loaf of bread, a dumb doodle—you relieve stress while giving yourself the opportunity to self-reflect, boost your mood, and lower anxiety. If you’re not already, your 2020 resolution should be to simply make art. If you’re not sure how to start, NPR’s latest episode of Life Kit will give you the primer on making the time to do so. Through interviews with people like Oakland poet and comic author Trinidad Escobar, New Yorker cartoonist Liana Finck, and Girija Kaimal, a professor and art therapist, Life Kit provides the hints you need to extend your own artistic expression throughout the week, treating the practice as you would any other healthy habit, like exercising or dieting. You might not feel able to create a masterpiece, but as Kaimal explains, “Everyone is capable of creative expression,” and by simply creating, you’ll feel better in the process. [Kevin Cortez]


My Year In Mensa
IQ And The Average Girl

Jamie Loftus, co-host of The Bechdel Cast, writer for Robot Chicken, and stand-up comedian, planned on taking the Mensa admission test just to write about it. When she passed it, she laughed, wrote an article poking fun at herself, and thought that would be the end of it. However, she then got a message about an unmoderated right-leaning Facebook group endorsed by Mensa and joined to get an inside look. Online harassment in a variety of forms followed. Instead of quitting the group, she accepted an invitation to a weeklong conference in Arizona, where she met her harassers in person. Throughout this four-part series, Loftus doesn’t just critique Mensa; she also takes an in-depth look at the origins of high-IQ societies, the culture of unmoderated forums, and the power of online trolls. She also addresses where she made unfair assumptions, which brings unexpected balance to her personal narrative. My Year In Mensa is vulnerable, anxiety-inducing, informative, and hilarious. A perfect combination with which to start the New Year. [Nichole Williams]


Ok Stupid
A Brief Correspondence On Hinge With Sabina Meschke And Avery Friedman

Starting the year off with a bang, Caroline Doyle and Emily Knob begin this episode of Ok Stupid with a story about overhearing Emily’s girlfriend’s roommate having sex. The hosts then brainstorm ways to make more money in 2020 and list various Christmas gifts received. Per Ok Stupid’s premise, the hosts play matchmaker and facilitate a date/conversation between guests Sabina Meschke and Avery Friedman. They discuss twins, astrology, the struggles of communicating via text and dating app messages, their favorite euphemisms for sex, and more; the four of them riff in a fun, charismatic exchange that might make single listeners hope for friends who will set them up on such energetic dates. The juxtaposition of an extended conversation about orthodontia and finding lost retainers with a segment called “First Kiss, Worst Kiss” makes for a fun bit of nostalgia. In particular, it’s interesting to hear young queer individuals reflect on their first kisses, which happen to have been heterosexual encounters, and then consider their first queer kisses in comparison. [Jose Nateras]


Scene On Radio
Rich Man’s Revolt

“Yesterday’s ‘normal’ was not good enough,” says Scene On Radio host John Biewen near the beginning of this episode. He’s speaking about the idea held by many that, in the Trump era, American democracy has strayed too far from its idealistic roots. Since this is Scene On Radio, however, listeners are primed to expect a hard look at the true nature of things. Over the last three years, Biewen has proven to be one of the most interesting agitators in podcasting, using his program and position of privilege to pick apart the accepted myths of modern American society. Following the show’s previous critically lauded seasons, “Seeing White” and “MEN,” this latest series, called “The Land That Has Never Been Yet,” might prove to be its most interesting to date. In it Biewen is joined once again by Dr. Chenjerai Kumanyika—his co-host from the “Seeing White” series, and of the Gimlet podcast Uncivil—and the two dissect the hidebound myths of American democracy. In this opening entry alone the pair examine Native American egalitarianism through the lens of the Cherokee and take the near godlike status of the founding fathers down a few pegs. [Ben Cannon]


The Explorers Podcast
Hernán Cortés And The Conquest Of Mexico – Part 1

Here’s another independent history podcast created by a man with a lot of time on his hands and a passion for the past. The Age of Exploration is host Matt Breen’s particular poison, and while Cortés’ foray into Mexico is not so much scientific discovery as it is coldblooded conquest, since no one in Europe knew about the Aztecs prior to his exploits, it technically qualifies. Cortés is given new life through detailed narrative more concerned about the how’s and why’s of his actions than the what’s. There are specifics on the young Cortés’ rise to prominence in Spanish-dominated Cuba, technical accounts of the Spanish arsenal brought onto the Mexican mainland, and sketches of all major military action. One interesting granular detail otherwise lost in a general summary of events is the supreme importance of a couple of translators who stumble into Cortés’ path, the first being a Spanish friar who could speak a Mayan dialect followed by a slave fluent in the region’s widely spoken tongues. [Zach Brooke]


WTF With Marc Maron
Brad Pitt & Leonardo DiCaprio

When celebrities have been famous for as long as Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio have, their sense of self-preservation often prevents them from speaking candidly during interviews. Especially when it’s the height of awards season and they’ve already got their press-junket-ready answers locked and loaded. But Marc Maron’s ability to disarm people with his own neurotic, frantic energy has always been one of his biggest strengths, and it comes in handy during this episode, recorded on the fly in a back room at the Hollywood ArcLight Cinemas after a screening of Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood. The two A-listers are more than happy to chat about their early days in obscurity, their individual approaches to performing, and their newfound interest in producing while Maron sweats and curses at his malfunctioning audio equipment, wholly convinced the episode is a disaster from the beginning. It certainly helps that Pitt, a diehard fan of Maron’s IFC show, seems to have shown up just to witness one of the comedian’s patented meltdowns. Hearing the actor cackle with delight at Maron’s neuroses is worth the price of admission. [Dan Neilan]

18 Comments

  • nicky-c-av says:

    Life is hard, listen to Teachers’ Lounge

  • cura-te-ipsum-av says:

    Better question to ask is how one company came to dominate global sunglasses sales in a De Beers type cartel and allows the illusion of choice as they own numerous different brand names including Ray Bans. Look for the name Luxottica in much smaller print as well as the massive markups over cost.https://www.cracked.com/article_26976_6-soulless-companies-that-own-like-everything.htmlThey’re Number Five.

    • daddddd-av says:

      Adam Ruins Everything did a good segment on this (Video is 4 years old so info might be outdated):Not just eyeglasses, but they own most optical stores (Lenscrafters, Pearl Vision, Target Optical, Sunglass Hut). When they had a dispute with Oakley, they removed them from their stores and then when Oakley’s value tanked, bought them out. And they’re the second biggest vision insurer too!They’re basically the reason prescription glasses cost so much for no real reason and why the relatively recent online market (like Zenni and whatnot) are able to undercut them so much. The prices are artificially inflated (De Beers is a great comparison).

      • nilus-av says:

        Yep. I go to Target optical to get my checkup up and script and every time they are like “You have insurance, I’m sure we can match the price you get online”.   Last time they tried they had me out with a pair of glasses with the lens I wanted for $100. For that same price I could(and did) buy four pairs of glasses with same lens from eyebuydirect

        • fever-dog-av says:

          In the late 90s, I got swindled by the Lenscrafters, “glasses for 20 bucks” or whatever scam. Got my eye exam in the store and then went over to the wall of glasses to make my choice. All the frames were $50-150 or something. I asked the clerk “I thought it was 20 bucks (or whatever it was)“ and she said, “yeah the $20 glasses are down there” and pointed at a three or four sad little clunky Buddy Holly type frames. I had no money and needed glasses so “fuck it” I said. I’m not saying I started the trend but less than ten years later those frames were also in the $50-150 range and still are now.

      • fever-dog-av says:

        Pretty late to the game here. I worked for a time in a machine shop that built Ray Ban packaging machines or frame assembly or something. I can’t remember. Those frames (retails over $100) were super, super expendable. I realize they needed a ton of frames to test the machines but jeez they were like packing styrofoam all over the damn shop.

    • weirdstalkersareweird-av says:

      See also: LVMH

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LVMH

    • hamologist-av says:

      I’ve always found Luxottica’s expansion into Brazil particularly interesting.
      An old acquaintance of mine worked at the São Paulo Ray-Ban factory before he emigrated from Brazil to America. His job there was to wrap each lens hot off the assembly line in muslin cloth and drop a heavy ball bearing onto it from the height of about a meter. If a lens didn’t crack under the impact, it was forwarded to assembly with the frames.And every Brazilian I’ve ever known to the point of them telling me their opinion of sunglasses has a sort of national pride around Ray-Ban shades. I get it. My birth state makes paper towels and ballistic missile equipped nuclear powered submarines, and I am quite proud of both.
      I’ve owned two pair of Ray-Bans: One was a post-Luxottica Wayfarer frame, bought new, that broke within five months of daily use — glass held up just fine, but the plastic stretched enough that the lenses eventually started popping out at the slightest touch; the other was a pre-Luxottica green-tint Aviator with the springy earhooks, probably from the late 80s or early 90s, which I bought from Goodwill and were chipped to hell around the edges but held up for five years of daily use before they were stolen.TL;DR: “The next step came in 2011 when Luxottica entered Brazil’s retail segment opening its first 11 Sunglass Hut shops.”[1] You know the rest. . . .[2]
      1. http://www.luxottica.com/en/luxottica-brazil-model-growth-and-integration2. http://careers.luxottica.com/en

    • mosquitocontrol-av says:

      But they don’t, really. They own the premium market, but the vast majority of pairs sold aren’t premium.Which, incidentally, if you remember the early 90s, Ray Bans were considered very outdated, like Members Only jackets. B&L was selling them at non premium prices at gas stations, and they went out of style. By making them premium, they’ve stayed timeless. 

  • dirtside-av says:

    Pictured: Tom Cruise unhingeing his jaw to, I assume, devour some suppressed persons.

  • filthyharry-av says:

    Yeah, the Wayfairers are cool, but if you want super classy cool, go for the half-rim ClubmastersOr if you’re super duper classy cool, you could try them in the tortoise shel, but let’s face it, you’re probably not cool enough to pull these off.

  • mamakinj-av says:

    So I guess “The Blues Brothers” did nothing for Wayfarers…

    • el-zilcho1981-av says:

      They’re why I bought Wayfarers when I was a teen in the 90s.

      • mamakinj-av says:

        And why I bought them as a teen in the 80s. And they were made by Bausch and Lomb, god damnit! Why, back in my day….blah blah blah, things aren’t the way they used to be, after forty years! Get off my lawn!

  • jrhmobile-av says:

    You know, it may be worth considering that they’re pretty good sunglasses. Quality optically-neutral lenses and good quality frames for less than $100 a pair.
    I wore ‘em for a while, until I got into racing and discovered Randolph Optical military sunglasses. They were about the same price, but even better glass lenses and lightweight wireframes which I could put on and take off without removing my helmet. I wore those for years until my eyes started fading and I went to prescription sunglasses …

  • noisetanknick-av says:

    That Pitt and DiCaprio WTF was a treat:
    Pitt: “I’m just trash mag fodder, I dunno, my, uhhh…’cause my disaster of a personal life, probably. [Laughing]”[…]
    DiCaprio: “Like Lil’ Kim said, ‘The paparazzi’s gonna get you one way or another.’ That’s been my motto.”I also enjoyed Marc’s summation of Ad Astra as “Wow, this guy’s really gone above and beyond to deal with his Dad stuff!” 

  • it-has-a-super-flavor--it-is-super-calming-av says:

    Everywhere the twelfth Doctor’s been, so have Wayfarers…

  • theghostofarchieleech-av says:

    I was given a gift certificate for Ray Bans over 20 years ago.  I didn’t get Wayfarers, I got the sportier, sleaker kind – sorry, don’t know the lingo.  The vision and coloring are great, and I’ve had them replaced for free twice with the lifetime warranty.  So there.

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