Hidden Brain - Alan Alda Wants Us To Have Better Conversations
Episode Date: December 18, 2018Arguments and bickering can sour family gatherings during the holiday season. This week, we share tips on how to avoid miscommunication from our January 2018 conversation with actor Alan Alda. You mig...ht know him from his roles on television shows like MAS*H, The West Wing and 30 Rock, but in recent years Alda has also focused on helping scientists, and the rest of us, communicate better. His book is If I Understood You, Would I Have This Look on My Face? My Adventures in the Art and Science of Relating and Communicating.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We all experienced miscommunications.
They can range from hilarious to disastrous.
The actor Alan Alda, yes, that Alan Alda from Mash and the West Wing and 30 Rock
wants to help us all communicate better.
And I've noticed that the more empathy I have, the less annoying other people are.
Now, fighting miscommunication might seem like an ironic choice.
For an actor whose comedy
career has been built on all the funny consequences of people misunderstanding one another.
But more recently, Alan has shifted his focus toward helping scientists and the rest of us
say what we mean, mean what we say, and listen better to one another.
I take the conversation with Alan at a live event
in Washington DC about his new book. If I understood you, would I have this look on my face?
Alan Alder, welcome to Hidden Brain. Thank you. I want to start by asking you about an episode in your life some years ago.
You were sitting in a dentist's chair and the dentist had a very sharp instrument, a
couple of inches from your mouth.
What happened next?
He stuck it in and carved my gums. But before he did that, he felt it was important to check
off on his list, something that he had to say to me before he did this operation. The procedure
was one he had invented, and he was kind of proud of it, because he was taking out a front tooth that
was kind of dead, and that would leave a socket, so he had invented this method where he
would draw down some of the gum over the socket to give a blood supply while it healed,
which was a nice idea.
Except he felt he had to explain to me what he was going to do and he
wasn't real clear about it. He had the scalpel really inches from my face and
he said now there'll be some tethering and I said what there will be what? He said, tethering. I said, tethering, tethering, tethering.
He started barking at me.
And I was over the age of 50.
And I should have had the nerve to say, put that knife down
and tell me what you're going to do to me.
And I didn't do that.
I was sort of, I think I was in awe of his surgical gown and he seemed to know what he was
doing.
And so I let him go ahead and do it without knowing what he was talking about.
By the way, to this day, I don't know what tethering meant in that situation.
But he did the procedure and I was making a movie a couple of weeks later and I had a smile in the
scene so I gave this big, hearty smile and after the shot was over the director photography
said I thought you were going to smile. I said I did, he said no you were sneering.
He said no I wasn't, he said go look the mirror. And I looked in the mirror and I smiled. And I was sneering.
So he had done something.
He cut off that little tissue between your upper lip and your gum.
And my lip just sort of hung there.
But the only good thing about that was that I was able to play a whole range of villains
really well.
But I, you know, it's interesting.
There was another example in that situation of not great communicating because I called
him and told him that what had happened and that I was disappointed and he started getting
very defensive. Never said
I'm sorry that you felt mutilated. In fact, he said, I told you there were two steps
to the procedure. I don't really remember if I went back for another step, I was afraid to let him in again. But then he sent me a letter telling me why he wasn't responsible for anything.
It was a defensive letter that set him up for his defense in case I sued him.
And I had no intention of suing him.
It's wanted him to know that one of his customers wasn't happy.
I was driving over in an Uber on my way here, Alan, and I must have found the
most aggressive Uber driver in Washington.
Driving in Washington, D.C. at about 5.45 in the evening is one of the worst experiences
on the planet, but this Uber driver was really aggressive and cutting people off and driving really recklessly.
And I kept thinking, what would Alan Alder tell me?
What should I say?
And I felt it was not my place to be telling her how to drive.
At the same time, I felt like my life was in danger.
And I felt I was wrong in keeping quiet.
And then we were on 15th Street about a block away.
And she made this turn at somewhat high speed,
and she missed a bicycle by maybe a couple of inches.
And it made me think about your story about the tethering,
which is we keep silent in all kinds of situations.
Yes, that's true.
And it really is a good idea to get alert
to what you're feeling and give voice to it.
And I think if you give voice to it.
And I think if you give voice to it with what the other person is hearing in mind,
it doesn't have to be aggressive. You don't have to say, don't drive badly like that.
You could put it in your terms. It's, you're making me crazy. In 1993, you began hosting this show for PBS, where you interviewed various scientists,
scientific, American frontiers, it was called.
And in one of your earlier stories, this might even have been your first story, you interviewed
a scientist who was building a solar powered racing car.
And right out of the box,
you made three communication blunders.
I know, it was my first interview
and I had talked my way into the show.
They said, we want you to host the show
and I thought, oh, they just want me to read a narration
but I want to talk to the scientist's son, Camer,
so I can learn about their work.
And I had done a little interviewing,
taking over as a guest host once in a while,
but I had an interview with scientists before.
So they took a real chance on me when they said they'd do it.
And there was the scientist with a solar panel,
and I just hesitated for a moment before I went in,
and the producer said, go ahead, go in there, this is what you want, right?
So I went in and you're right, I made three blunders
right off the bat. First of all, I told him
something that wasn't true about his own work.
I said, this is amazing how you've built the solar panel
using entirely parts off the shelf.
I don't know what made me think that I was done that way.
And I saw this pained look on his face and he said, it wasn't off the shelf.
Some of these were made with great care.
So I felt a little abashed at that and I wanted to make up for it.
So I wanted to show how familiar and tenderly I felt toward little abashed at that, and I wanted to make up for it, so I wanted to show how
familiar and tenderly I felt toward his work, and I rested my hand on his solar panel.
He said, don't touch that, you could break it.
And then I realized I was making the third blunder about halfway through.
I wasn't asking him questions based on what he had just said to me.
I was asking him questions based on what I had intended earlier to ask him. So it was almost in danger
of getting into that situation where the interviewer says, how's everything going? And you say,
my grandmother just died and the interviewer says, great. Now tell me about your last movie. You know, you've
got to respond to where the person really is and they were good blunders to make because I could
see right, right away that I needed, I needed to relate better to the people I was going to be
talking with. So it turns out Alan, you haven't just made blunders talking to scientists.
You have made blunders talking to your own relatives.
I'm making my blunder right now talking to you.
LAUGHTER
You tell the story in your book about being on a vacation
with your six-year-old grandson in the Virgin Islands.
And he spotted this very unusual looking tree, and he asked you how it came to be that way.
That's right, because we had never seen these trees and bushes and plants that we were
seeing on this walk, because the Virgin Islands is such a paradise and it has so many different
kinds of vegetation.
So we saw this tree that had a long skinny trunk with spikes all
up and down it. It looked like a dragon's back. And Teo said, Cranpa, look at that tree, how did it
get like that? And I thought, oh, this is great. He's asking me about evolution. We can have a talk
about evolution. He was only six years old, but he's asking me this question that I can
I can we can really have this great conversation. So we sat on the ground and
We talked about evolution for 45 minutes
Who is glorious natural selection the whole thing and the next day he was swimming with his cousin and he asked her a question and she said
he was swimming with his cousin, and he asked her a question, and she said, well, that sounds like a science question.
Why don't you ask grandpa?
He said, I'm not making that mistake, I agree.
I'm a font of blunders.
I'm talking with Alan Alder about the high cost of miscommunication and what we can do to become better communicators.
When we come back, we're going to look at some scenes from Alan's acting career that illustrate important ideas related to communication.
Stay with us.
I want to play you some clips from your acting career that I think reveals some interesting questions and themes related to communication.
This first one comes from Mash, where you played a character named Hawkeye Pierce.
And I want to play the clip and then ask you a question.
And carefully cut the wires leading to the clock work
used at the head.
But first, remove the fuse.
You've spent much of your career, Alan, working in scenes which involve comedic timing.
And I want to talk a little bit about the idea of timing
in communication.
Have the skills that you learned as an actor, your timing skills,
helped you in your actual life.
Has it helped you in your relationships
in terms of what you say, knowing what the right time is
to bring something up?
Everything I learned as an actor, it turns out, has been important to me in this phase in
my life when I'm trying to help people communicate better.
And when I'm trying to learn myself out of communicate better, timing for me goes like
this.
There are many people who think timing is waiting before you get to the punch line.
And some people actually think that you're supposed to count to three
silently before you do the punch line or some other number. For me, timing has always
meant a thought process that you're going through and at the end of that thought, that's
when the punch line comes out. Either you're trying to figure something out,
or something, there's some internal conflict,
and something arises from the unconscious,
and that's when you say what it is.
It's not a simple thing.
It's not, timing is not waiting.
Timing is actually going through something,
and what you go through is different from time to time.
But that's kind of technical and it's part, it's based on the idea that
for me anyway, the best kind of acting is going through an experience that's very similar
to real life. And the time it takes to say something is dependent upon the circumstance you're in and your response to it.
So when you say you go through this thought process as you're telling a joke an audience, then you're really aware of
what they're going through moment by moment, and you're aware of their
thought process to a great extent. If you're acting with another actor, the
thought process is the interaction between you and the other actor. You don't
spray your dialogue at the other person. It's really important, this idea, that I don't say my next line in a play,
because it's written in the script, and I've memorized it.
I say it because you do something, you the other actor, do something, or you say something,
that makes me say this next line, and makes me say it in a certain way.
You know, you spend some time as a science journalist, Alan, and I actually have spent
some time very briefly as an actor before I realized that this was not cut out for me
at all.
No kidding.
Yeah, but one of the things...
Comedic timing, ladies and gentlemen.
But one of the things I was always surprised by is when director said you really have to
listen to what the other person is saying and it always struck me as odd because this
is a script.
Everyone's saying their lines.
You know what you're going to say.
Why do you have to go?
I think this explains your exit from that to the end.
But that's the heart of it.
That's really the heart of my book.
The idea that you must listen to the other actor is so fundamental to me that
that's in a way the essence of it. You can't have spontaneity. It's not going to
look like life happening between us if I'm not listening to you and responding to
you. This next clip I want to play for you Alan
actually I think speaks to what you're just talking about because it talks a little bit about how people listen to one another and this comes from 30 Rock.
You're speaking in this scene with Alec Baldwin, and I'll let the clip do the talking.
Do you remember a woman named Colleen Donoggi?
Sure.
That takes me back a few years.
1958?
Yeah, right.
She rented me a room when I was a graduate student.
One month I couldn't pay, so she said maybe there was something else I could give her.
So I gave her my radio.
Then a couple of weeks later we got drunk and had sex.
Oh, OK.
I'm Jack Donoghie, Colleen's son.
I was born around nine months after that.
Oh, my God. Wait a minute.
Is this contest some mama me, is thing?
Milton.
I'm your son.
Who is your wife? I shouldn't have known the minute I saw you. Oh, thank you, I was son! Oh, pure son!
Can I have a death?
They just brought us together, Jack.
They'll open a whole new chapter in my life.
Yeah, isn't it amazing?
You don't know the half of it!
I need a kidney.
So I love that scene. But I also love it not just because it's funny,
because I think it illustrates an idea
that researchers have talked about for a while.
This idea called switch tracking, which is that when you're
having a conversation with people,
sometimes both people can think they're having a conversation,
but they're actually having two different conversations.
Yeah, and I agree.
That's what's happening in this scene.
Alec Baldwin's character thinks he's
found his father and that it means something to both
of them as it does to him.
And he just realized to father just once a kidney.
So he's glad to find his son.
But that you're right.
That happens in less comedic ways and sometimes in tragic ways in real life where we think
we're on the same track and we're really not. If you're really
on two different tracks, you'll actually see in the other person's face that things aren't
really driving here. There are points where contact is missing and they'll start to look
confused or upset at certain points because you know you'll be answering the wrong questions.
Right. Or not reading the subtext of the questions.
Right.
The question is not actually what it seems to be.
It's actually something else.
Which is probably the most common way you're on two different tracks.
You're not noticing the subtext.
Right.
I want to play you a third clip.
This one comes from...
Keep them coming. I love watching this one.
This one comes from the West Wing and the setup here is that two presidential candidates are about to walk on stage for a debate.
Next time you decide to smear me, maybe you'll have the guts to do it yourself?
I didn't think to do it that way. You blow up the debate. It's clear what kind of a campaign you want.
I forgot how eager you were for debates.
And next time you send left-wing lobbyists to my office,
don't forget the gift card.
You want another campaign you're going to get one.
I didn't start this. Now, you had to amend it before you.
Thank you for being here.
You're hitting me on a partial breath tonight, aren't you?
Our next guest is served with enormous things
that are centred from the gold-based. New year.
Presidential campaign, green national debate.
Pounding each other.
And one of the few things we basically agree.
I want to ask you about the present political moment,
Alan, not so much about what's happening specifically
with people in Washington or what's happening in the news, but really about the moment that we're living in, where it
feels like there is so much anger and vitriol on both sides of the aisle.
And I'm wondering whether some of it actually has to do with what's happening here, which
is a lot of Americans might actually not have significant differences of opinion.
I mean, we might disagree with things.
You might think 5% of the budget needs to be for education,
and I think it's 8% of the budget.
But we're not actually casms apart in terms of our views.
But the partisan rancor that we have makes us feel as if
we actually are, you know, poles apart.
And I'm wondering, is this a communication question?
Is part of the anger that we feel to one another in the country,
driven by a kind of miscommunication in some ways,
where we're not reading each other correctly,
and we're seeing the worst in each other.
I think you're probably right.
And what interests me about you're choosing this clip
and playing it right after the previous clip,
is this is almost a mirror image of the other clip
where they're having two different
conversations.
They mean two different things by the same conversation.
And these two people have the opposite problem.
They basically are in agreement and have to fight, nevertheless.
And we are preparing to fight.
They're ready to go out and tear each other to pieces.
And partly, I think, because they belong to two different tribes, and those tribes have been
feuding for a long time. And there isn't much incentive, although there used to be,
it seems, though, was more incentive to find out the common ground, which could solve a lot of these problems.
It's so interesting.
I talk about in the book some extreme examples
of people at each other's throats,
like the Transwar Fair in World War I.
When on Christmas Eve, they realized
they had common ground when they heard each other singing
Christmas carols across No Man's land.
And the next morning on Christmas Day, they got up out of their trenches and met in No Man's
land.
Shook hands, some of them played soccer.
They got to know one another.
And then the officers came and said, there's supposed to be a war happening here.
And they went back into trenches and tried to kill each other again.
But for that moment they had the common ground.
You know, I'm thinking about the days right after the 9-11 attacks in the United States,
where it felt for a week or two that there was an enormous sense of unity.
And again, it was sort of, I guess it's
not quite the same thing, but it's the idea that there's something, the frame shift sometimes.
And you stop seeing yourself as Republicans and Democrats, but you start seeing yourself
as part of a larger group.
That's the way it's supposed to be. There's supposed to be Republicans and Democrats in
order to function well as part of a larger group, which is called the United States of America.
And that's sometimes secondary to aiding your party.
That's an unfortunate thing because in the long run,
it's very costly.
I'm talking with Alan Alder before a live audience
in Washington, DC.
When we come back, I'm going to ask Alan
about some techniques that actors
learn that can help us all become better communicators.
Stay with us.
Applause.
Applause.
Applause.
Applause.
I want to talk about another situation involving a doctor.
This one involved a doctor, I believe, in Chile, where you needed medical attention.
And this doctor treated you very differently than the dentist treated you in the other
situation.
That's true.
It was the best example of communication I had ever heard. I had, my problem was that I had an intestine that had twisted, got caught in something, and
had choked off the blood supply.
And about a yard of my intestine was dying.
And in the middle of the night I was taken to a hospital, and he recognized almost immediately
what was wrong with me.
And he didn't use fancy language.
He explained to me in the simplest, the simplest language.
Here's what's happened, he said.
Some of your intestine has gone bad.
And we have to cut out the bed part and sew the two good ends together.
You can't get simpler than that. And that was absolutely
accurate. There wasn't anything about that as clear as it was. There wasn't true. And by the way,
he wasn't just speaking clearly. I remember so vividly, his leaning down, looking into my eyes, watching my face to see if
I understood him.
That was the essence of good communication.
He was watching me to see if I was getting it.
Did I understand him or did I have that funny look on my face?
And he had the answer to your original notion is,
things I've learned as an actor have made me understand
the importance of how that doctor Nelson Zapata in Chile
and the middle of the night, 13 or 14 years ago,
how he made a real effort to communicate with me
and it made all the difference for me.
I understand the technical term for this procedure is an end-to-end enastomosis,
if I'm saying that correctly. And I can just imagine the doctor had said,
I'm going to perform an end-to-end enastomosis, Mr. Alder,
how that would have made you feel.
Well, I would have felt the way I did with the dentist.
I want to ask you about another thing you mentioned in the book.
You cite Don Hewitt, who was the creator of the television show, 60 Minutes.
And you say that Don had a simple, forward question.
He would ask when people pitch stories for the show that in some ways was the essence
of the success of the show.
Yes, he loved that story, and I know he loved it
because I knew Don for about 30 years,
and he told me that story three times a year.
And the story was that when somebody would
come into his office, a producer,
and say, I got a great idea for a segment on the show,
they'd start to tell about some infraction
of the banking regulations
or something like that. He'd hold up his anisei, wait a minute.
Forwards, tell me a story. And he felt that that was what made the show so successful.
All those years it was number one for a couple of decades, at least. And I think he was right about it being due to the part of the success of the show.
And I think it's because we all tell stories to one another.
We listen better to a story.
We get involved when we hear a story.
And his stories would always have a middle part where the fortunes shifted and you thought
to yourself, this isn't what I thought this was going to be about, this is a deeper question.
Or this look at the turn this took, now this is affecting me in a different way.
The importance of the middle, I think, is so huge.
You know, I was interviewing a researcher at Columbia University,
her name is Shaodong Lin,
and she's done a lot of work looking at
trying to get children interested in science.
And she finds that something really fascinating
that speaks to exactly what you just talked about,
which is the traditional way we have of teaching science,
is to tell people, you know, there was this great physicist,
Albert Einstein, and he was the greatest genius the world has ever known and he came up with theories that
even today many people struggle to understand.
So that's the classic way we tell science stories.
And what she found was that instead of doing that, if you tell a story which says something
along the lines of, you know, there was a time when Einstein was working on a problem
and he got so stuck that he couldn't figure out the math and he needed help to figure out the math and he reached out to somebody
else saying, I can't figure out the math to this, can you please help me? When you tell
stories that involve struggle and obstacles and failures about scientists, not only does
this whole people's attention, but kids are now able to say, I can see myself being a scientist
because I need help with math. I turn to somebody else to get help from math. And this idea
that the obstacle in some ways is what makes the story the story is, I think, what you mean
by the middle. It is. And underneath all of that is trying to be aware of what the listener is going through while you tell them about
this, because you might have the best message in the world, and a lot of people think good
communication is devising a really good message that's logical, clear, clear to you anyway.
The question is how clear is it and how interesting is it to the person
you're trying to tell it to or the the layer of the public you're trying to tell it to.
If you can imagine what they're going through while they hear your story, then you're relating
to them in the same way that I found I related to the other actor when I was on the stage.
One of the really interesting things you did was you have brought in groups of engineering
students and other technical people and you have taught them improv. You've taught them,
you've put them through three hours of improv games. Why in the world would you do that?
Because when I left the science show, I realized that the reason that the show
worked was because we had a real connection between us. It wasn't an ordinary
interview. I never went in with the set of questions, not after the beginning. I
went in just being curious and really good and ignorant. It's good to be ignorant as long as you're curious.
Not so good if you're not curious. So I would be willing to reveal my ignorance to them
so they knew where I was in my understanding of their work. And then if I didn't understand
what they were saying, I'd grab them by the lapels and shake them. I'd just tell me again.
So they forgot about the camera.
They forgot about the lectures they had given on this.
They were just trying to make me understand it.
And I realized that what I was doing was relating to them,
and they were relating to me in the same way
two actors do, where they let each other in
to their field of consciousness.
So I thought the best way to train people to do that
is through improvisation training.
And I tried it out with a group of engineers.
And after three hours, there was so much better
talking about their work.
I thought, I think we got something here.
We can make this work as the basis of training.
And soon after that, we started what's now known as the
Allen Aldecentre for Communicating Science
at Stony Brook University in New York.
And we've taught, in the past eight years,
we've taught almost 10,000 scientists and doctors
to communicate better, starting with classes
and improvisation, and then moving on
to working out the content of what they're going to say.
The thing is, if you really relate to the other person, that has an effect on the content
of what you're going to say to them.
You're not going to use certain words.
You're not going to use certain concepts.
You're going to make sure they're with you along the way.
You have a wonderful story in your book about a moment you were trying to catch a cab.
And one of the things that I didn't know about you is apparently in your 20s, among the
many, many things you've done in your life, you were apparently a cab driver for a brief
period of your life.
And in the story you were trying to catch a cab, and the driver of the taxi basically
asks you where you want to go before he lets you into the cab. Right, because in New York, at around 3.30 or 4.00 in the afternoon, the cabs are heading
home.
The shift is over, and they don't want to take you unless you're going somewhere near
where their garage is.
So I did drive a cab, and I know that the law law is if somebody wants to get in the cab, you
have to let them in whether you want to take them or not.
So I don't like these conversations about where you're going because I know they're not
supposed to ask, they're supposed to take you.
So a cab put, now I had been doing all this work when this cab pulled over. And what the improvising work does is it actually builds up your empathy.
You get very good at being able to figure out what the other person is going through emotionally.
So now this cab driver pulls over, he says, where are you going?
And I start to get crazy mad.
When am I going, you've got to take me no matter where I'm going.
But instead of that, I think, wait a minute.
It's the time of day when he's switching shifts.
He's got to give the cab to somebody else.
I understand why he's saying it.
And it helped me accept it.
So I told him where I was going, gave me the address.
He said, get in. So I thought him where I was going. It gave me the address. He said, get in.
So I thought, OK, so that felt pretty good.
And he says, what's the cross-street?
And I started to get crazy angry again.
He's supposed to know the cross-street.
But now I'm all empathized up, you know?
So I said, do I'm wait a minute?
I'm looking it up on my iPhone.
I'm helping him out.
He said, you know you're a nice person.
People get in this cab.
They don't care about me at all.
I'm really impressed with this.
I said, well, thanks.
He said, I've been trying to go to the bathroom for the last half hour.
I said, well, then just drop me off.
Don't take me to the corner.
Don't go all the way around the block.
He said, no, I'm taking you right where you're going. You're a
nice person. The guy he's giving up his kidneys for me. So it
the funny thing was the exercises that we do in improv give
you a little more empathy. And here was an example that I was
using it in real life. and it was helping in the communication
I had with this guy.
I got where I wanted to go.
I felt so much better about it.
And I've noticed that the more empathy I have, the less annoying other people are.
You came up with a very interesting exercise at one point where you were trying to increase
and train your own ability
to empathize with others.
And you came up with the system to actually
sit down with friends or colleagues.
What did you do?
Well, I realized I couldn't constantly
be going to improv exercises.
And I noticed that my empathy would sort of wane
after a while. This is, we live stressful lives.
And one scientist told me that she felt that stress,
you know, the stress hormones in your body,
when they build up, they kind of damp your empathy, to some extent.
So I had to find a way to build it up again,
because I'm beginning to really like being more empathic.
So I thought it has to do with relating to other people.
So suppose I go through the day,
and people I run into like a cashier at a diner,
or people that I'm friendly with,
and if I spend more than a few seconds with them,
while we're talking, I try to figure out
what they're feeling or what they're going through.
What's their perspective?
Where do they stand inside their head?
And I would find I'd get a little more opened up to them.
And that's what happened by the time I talked
to that cab driver, I've been practicing this so much
that I actually wasn't angry with him anymore.
And I noticed that it seems to happen
even if I don't name the emotion.
I thought it would be important to name the emotion.
And I guess that does,
because you can't always name the emotion,
you don't really know for sure,
but maybe making the effort to name it
Put you in touch with them better, but I also notice if I'm just noticing the color of their eyes and taking it and you have very nice brown eyes
Thank you. I didn't notice that till now
And you know it took me about a half an hour before I knew you had a beard
You know, it took me about a half an hour before and knew you had a beard.
It's which is proof to me that we all can improve
on letting each other in.
Because you can talk to some, I know in my experience,
I'll be talking to somebody for 10 minutes
and I'll say, are you really looking at this person?
And I realize there's a blob where the face ought to be.
And that doesn't help connect with the other person
because I think when I really see you, I think something changes on my face. I think I get
a little more focused on you and a little more related. And then I see something change
on your face. I think it's a dynamic interaction where you're changed by how I'm changed and it goes on and on like that.
And we have a much better chance of getting together on what we're talking about.
And by our connecting, the people watching us have a greater incentive, a greater impulse to pay attention to us.
Because when two people are relating,
it's hard not to look at them.
Alan Alder's book is called,
if I understood you what I have this look on my face,
my adventures in the art and science
of relating and communicating.
Our conversation today was taped before a live audience
at the Edelawage Jewish Community Center of Washington, DC.
Alan Alder, thanks for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you.
Applause
Applause
This episode was produced by Maggie Penman and Tara Boyle,
themselves excellent communicators.
Our staff includes Prat Shaw, Raina Cohen, Jenny Schmidt and Renee Clark.
Our Ronsang heroes this week are Shirley Seratsky, Emily Jilson and Elliot Lanes of the
JCC.
Shirley, Elliot and Emily helped us tape our conversation with Alan Alda.
At one point, while we were playing video clips from Alan's acting career, we had some technical difficulties with the projector. It wouldn't turn off after playing the clips.
So surely held a cardboard UPS mail-er in front of that projector for the next 60 minutes
to ensure the audience wasn't distracted by a square box of light over the stage.
If that isn't the selfless act of an unsung hero, I don't know what
is.
For more Hidden Brain follow the show on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and listen to my stories
on your local public radio station. If you like this show, please communicate it to
a friend, tell people about Hidden Brain and ask them to subscribe to our show. I'm
Shankar Vidantan and this is NPR.
to our show. I'm Shankar Vitanton and this is NPR.