Adam
Carolla’s awesome sidekick gets her own podcast — and it’s an
instant hit.
Keeping up and
matching wits with the entertaining hyper vigilance that is Adam
Carolla is not a job suited to just anyone. His daily complain-fest
(available for free on iTunes) is the most downloaded podcast on the
planet, and for good reason: it’s funny, it moves fast and it is
never, ever boring. That’s thanks to Carolla’s opinionated
brilliance, and his willingness to share personal and professional
issues (parents, kids, show business, LA, airports, cuisine) with
his devoted following of millions of obsessive, devoted
Corolladdicts.
Like the boxer he
once was, he’s quick on his feet and thinks fast. Between breaths,
though, is where Alison Rosen speaks up. She heads Carolla’s news
desk (i.e., reading top stories from an iPad). Reporting the news to
Carolla is akin to poking a big bear with a stick. You are going to
get a reaction, and it’s often unpredictable, dangerous, and so
angry it’s funny. She also puts her two cents in when needed, going
the twelve rounds with Adam and making it look effortless (it’s
not).
“It
doesn’t feel brand-new anymore,” she says of her day job, which
she’s had since January 2011, “but it does still feel like I’m
learning. I feel like I am a big part of the show, and I know that
listeners have a relationship with me as well, but I always want to
be there to help Adam make the show that he wants to make.”
The California
native is immediately likable; smart, funny, knowledgeable and
personable, and balances Carolla like 60 milligrams of Cymbalta. But
is he really the man we hear on our iPhone? Or is he just playing
Adam to the tenth power?
“He’s the same
guy,” she assures us. “It’s not an artificial version of him. It’s
just a more amped-up version of him. [Off the mike], he’s all
different percentages of the same dynamic.”
With the immense popularity of The Adam Carolla Show, it
would only be a matter of time before Rosen was awarded her own
podcast, called Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend
(available for free on iTunes). In contrast to Carolla’s show,
Rosen’s one-on-one talks with guests get deep fast, sometimes even
ditching the funny for the serious (not that it’s not ever seriously
funny). The gift Rosen has in spades: getting people to let their
guard down and open up, even the most superficial and dark people on
earth: comedians. Recent guests, who shed some surprising emotional
baggage, included comedians Jeff Dye, Andrew W.K., Bobcat Goldthwait,
Marc Maron and Chelsea Peretti (it’s still not too late to hear
these joints in the archive). Nothing was off-limits in their chit
chat (which was more chat than chit), from parental issues to former
lovers.
“I have always
been very inquisitive and curious about people,” she says. “My
tendency, when I am talking to people, is to draw them out. I worked
as a journalist for years and I did interviews. So maybe in the
course of that, I’ve honed my technique a little more. But people
say I am a good listener. And I tend to remember a lot of details
about them.”
Part of what
charms the snakes out of the basket is Rosen’s willingness to open
up about herself as well, with an unabashed look at her own
insecurities and shortcomings, of which she claims there are many
(she even features a segment of the show entitled “Is it just me, or
everyone?” For example: Do you feel pressure to buy the hair
products your hair stylist recommends to you?).
“I’m
very open with myself,” she says, “and I’m very honest with the
things that I struggle with, vulnerabilities or things that confuse
me. Because I am that way, I think that it might encourage the
guests to be open about what they are struggling with too. I think
people can pretty quickly tell from my tone that I like to talk
about deep stuff. I’m not judgmental at all, and I think people feel
that.”
The show captures
a mood, a vibe that couldn’t be matched on terrestrial radio or talk
TV, further proving the solid future and increasing logic of
podcasting.
“I really think
that podcasts have replaced books for a lot of people,” she says,
“in the sense that the ideas that you are listening to really get
into your head. It’s almost as if these are your own thoughts that
you are having, these ideas that are penetrating your brain
— as opposed to
watching TV or a movie, where you are experiencing it but it is less
intimate. It’s the slow unfolding of an idea. It’s just a slower
pace and it is more contemplative.”
Her podcast is
striking a chord and growing its audience weekly, and Rosen holds
the connection together steadfastly.
She says, “Part
of the human condition is feeling alone and feeling like a freak.
Everyone walks around feeling insecure, feeling like any exchange
they just had didn’t go exactly as planned. They could have been
smoother; they could have been funnier. But people are so busy
pretending that they don’t feel that way or that they shouldn’t feel
that way. So that’s what I do on my podcast: that thing that you do
that you feel is just you – no, that is everyone. Whatever kind of
freak you are, you are much more normal than you realize.”
A friend indeed.
Subscribe for free to Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend on
iTunes, or
alisonrosen.com
Subscribe for free to The Adam Carolla Podcast on iTunes, or
www.adamcarolla.com
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think.