logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: Amy-Poehler
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
text 2019-07-11 16:41
Yes Please
Yes Please - Amy Poehler

I would definitely recommend listening to this, since it's "read" (performed?) by Amy Poehler. There is plenty in here that seems odd, and, as mentioned in other reviews, a bit rambling, that I imagine seems less odd when she reads it. There are some asides that acknowledge this, but I'm not sure all of that is in the book. I have no idea if the people on the audiobook were real — Carol Burnett, Seth Meyers, her parents — or just Amy doing imitations, but regardless, it was very entertaining. Her writing about the early days of her career and growing up in general provided some embarrassing (earbuds in, walking alone on the middle school track) laugh out-loud moments.

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2018-05-29 19:30
Fun, insightful, and surprising
Yes Please - Amy Poehler

I wanted to shake things up a bit on my daily commute so I thought I would give a few audiobooks a shot. The one I started with is one that has been on my TRL for ages but for some reason I never got around to picking it up. Yes Please by Amy Poehler got some major press and accolades but was especially recommended to me as an audiobook and now I totally get why. This is the first audiobook I've read in a long time and I'm so glad that I chose this one to delve back into that medium. Having experienced it in this format, I highly advise you to do the same because it was so much fun. Amy had multiple guests join her in the recording booth (which she mentioned was built at her house well before she wrote the actual book). From her parents and Seth Myers to Carol Burnett and PATRICK STEWART it was like a variety show for the ears. I especially loved the parts where it was Amy exchanging dialogue with the people she had asked to record for her because it felt more authentic and like a gag reel. (It was hilarious, ya'll.) I learned so much about Amy from her childhood in Massachusetts to her creation of the Upright Citizens Brigade in NYC. Amy's refreshing honesty coupled with the format she chose to tell her story...it almost makes me wish it didn't exist as a print book at all because I think audio is the way it was truly meant to be enjoyed. 10/10 highly recommend if you love awesome ladies doing awesome things.

 

What's Up Next: Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman

 

What I'm Currently Reading: The Outsider by Stephen King

Source: readingfortheheckofit.blogspot.com
Like Reblog Comment
review 2018-04-01 00:00
Yes Please
Yes Please - Amy Poehler My apology to women authors (with an assist from Amy Poehler)

I have to start this review with a confessional sidenote.

As I went to choose my next read after Nick Harkaway’s Tigerman, I ended up with a pool of five potential books, eventually settling on the second in the series of memoirs by Ngugi wa Thiong’o. I’d read the first last year and wanted to get to this next one before I let too much time pass. But as I started to read, something was nagging at me, so I went down my list of CBR reads so far this year and made an upsetting discovery: the ratio of male to female authors wasn’t just bad, it was bad. 14:3.

Blerg.

I can honestly say this wasn’t out of some conscious effort to ignore women writers, but that may be the problem: I didn’t make a conscious effort to include women, either. I was just going to my shelves to find what sounded good at the time and then went with my gut. I’d been patting myself on the back for diversity of background and nationality in my choices this year, but that’s totally undone by the shame of shutting out women.

I tried to brush it off as coincidence, that I would have eventually evened things out anyway, but this led me to a second upsetting discovery: my bookshelves are heavily weighted towards male writers. I haven’t done an actual count, but I’d be surprised if the ratio weren’t similar to my CBR reads.

Unacceptable.

I’m a gay man, so having more gay male authors could reasonably account for some imbalance. I’ve long counted Margaret Atwood and Toni Morrison and Iris Murdoch and Virginia Woolf and Kiran Desai (please please please publish another novel) among my favorites. Three of my top five from last year were by women. I’m just not that guy.

Annnnnnd there it is. I’m just not that guy. Some of my best friends favorite authors are women. I don’t see gender (in books). Even as I try to apologize, I’m still defensive, still making excuses.

Here’s the real apology: It’s my fault. I’m sorry I’ve been careless. I’m sorry I didn’t pay attention to my personal biases. I’m sorry I got defensive. I will do better.

So now I have three goals for the year: (1) immediately restore the ratio to 1:1 by reading 11 books by women in a row; (2) end the CBR year with at least as many books written by women as by men; and (3) buy (mostly) books by women to improve the ratio on my bookshelves. I’ve added a huge new wishlist to my Goodreads account with mostly authors I’ve never read, many I’d never heard of, and I’m ready to go out and learn a whole mess of new.

I started the process by choosing to listen to Amy Poehler’s Yes Please last week while driving back and forth between the Denver airport and my hometown in the Deep Midwest. I haven’t reviewed an audiobook yet, and I have to say it’s been really hard. I take notes when I’m reading a book so I’ll remember quotes and plot points and my own reactions, which I couldn’t do while driving, and there were a lot of quotable moments in this book, of which I remember exactly none, and that makes me sad enough that I’ll probably go buy the physical book.

This listen was one of my favorites, though, and made the long, monotonous drive easy and breezy. I’ve watched Parks and Recreation, start to finish, at least three full times, and I feel like Amy and Leslie are two of my best friends. I loved that she spent a good long time talking about the show, and she even had Mike Schur join her for additional commentary during that section. I loved that she talked about her friendship with Tina Fey but didn’t dwell on it too long. I love that she asked Seth Meyers to the chapter that he contributed to the book. I love that she had Kathleen Turner, Carol Burnett, and Patrick Stewart introduce chapters and read some lines here and there and that Amy’s parents both read their own contributions. All of these voices helped to break things up and keep it from being too much of a good thing with eight solid hours of just Poehler.

The one section that stuck with me the most was also very timely. Amy talks about one of her few regrets, a sketch she performed on SNL where the punchline was that young Dakota Fanning was making a Very Serious Movie about a disabled girl. A prop action figure of the disabled girl was handed to Amy at the last second that made the girl look really disfigured, and Amy later found out that the movie they were making fun of was not only real but was also based on a true story.

She received a letter from Chris Cooper’s wife (yes, that Chris Cooper), telling her how upset they were at her joke at the expense of disabled children, a cause near and dear to the Coopers, who helped write and produce the TV movie the sketch had lampooned. Amy went into full defensive mode, and the fallout is what she truly regrets.

I recognized so much of myself in this story. I often joke that no one hates me more than I hate myself, but it’s more truth than joke. I only recently learned that much of this is probably a result of my lifelong struggle with depression and am really trying to turn that around. The other side of that coin, however, is that I get really defensive when criticized in any way, big or small, even when I know I’ve screwed up. I go through all of those rationalizations and deflections and whataboutisms and eventually become so embarrassed that I internalize even more and avoid the person I’ve wronged until it’s just too late to say anything at all. It’s one of my ugliest traits, and I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to fully change it.

So when I listened to Poehler tell her own story, I could only step back and give myself a break. It’s a weird “I’m not alone” moment, but it really made me think about my own reactions, how I need to work on this, how it’s also never too late to do the right thing, even if it’s painful and embarrassing. And after giving myself a break, I could also think about ways to change how I react to criticism, and I could rethink my “apology” to women authors.

I already had so many reasons to be thankful for Amy Poehler. This book made that list even longer.

(This review was originally posted as part of Cannonball Read 10: Sticking it to Cancer, One Book at a Time.)
Like Reblog Comment
review 2018-04-01 00:00
Yes Please
Yes Please - Amy Poehler My apology to women authors (with an assist from Amy Poehler)

I have to start this review with a confessional sidenote.

As I went to choose my next read after Nick Harkaway’s Tigerman, I ended up with a pool of five potential books, eventually settling on the second in the series of memoirs by Ngugi wa Thiong’o. I’d read the first last year and wanted to get to this next one before I let too much time pass. But as I started to read, something was nagging at me, so I went down my list of CBR reads so far this year and made an upsetting discovery: the ratio of male to female authors wasn’t just bad, it was bad. 14:3.

Blerg.

I can honestly say this wasn’t out of some conscious effort to ignore women writers, but that may be the problem: I didn’t make a conscious effort to include women, either. I was just going to my shelves to find what sounded good at the time and then went with my gut. I’d been patting myself on the back for diversity of background and nationality in my choices this year, but that’s totally undone by the shame of shutting out women.

I tried to brush it off as coincidence, that I would have eventually evened things out anyway, but this led me to a second upsetting discovery: my bookshelves are heavily weighted towards male writers. I haven’t done an actual count, but I’d be surprised if the ratio weren’t similar to my CBR reads.

Unacceptable.

I’m a gay man, so having more gay male authors could reasonably account for some imbalance. I’ve long counted Margaret Atwood and Toni Morrison and Iris Murdoch and Virginia Woolf and Kiran Desai (please please please publish another novel) among my favorites. Three of my top five from last year were by women. I’m just not that guy.

Annnnnnd there it is. I’m just not that guy. Some of my best friends favorite authors are women. I don’t see gender (in books). Even as I try to apologize, I’m still defensive, still making excuses.

Here’s the real apology: It’s my fault. I’m sorry I’ve been careless. I’m sorry I didn’t pay attention to my personal biases. I’m sorry I got defensive. I will do better.

So now I have three goals for the year: (1) immediately restore the ratio to 1:1 by reading 11 books by women in a row; (2) end the CBR year with at least as many books written by women as by men; and (3) buy (mostly) books by women to improve the ratio on my bookshelves. I’ve added a huge new wishlist to my Goodreads account with mostly authors I’ve never read, many I’d never heard of, and I’m ready to go out and learn a whole mess of new.

I started the process by choosing to listen to Amy Poehler’s Yes Please last week while driving back and forth between the Denver airport and my hometown in the Deep Midwest. I haven’t reviewed an audiobook yet, and I have to say it’s been really hard. I take notes when I’m reading a book so I’ll remember quotes and plot points and my own reactions, which I couldn’t do while driving, and there were a lot of quotable moments in this book, of which I remember exactly none, and that makes me sad enough that I’ll probably go buy the physical book.

This listen was one of my favorites, though, and made the long, monotonous drive easy and breezy. I’ve watched Parks and Recreation, start to finish, at least three full times, and I feel like Amy and Leslie are two of my best friends. I loved that she spent a good long time talking about the show, and she even had Mike Schur join her for additional commentary during that section. I loved that she talked about her friendship with Tina Fey but didn’t dwell on it too long. I love that she asked Seth Meyers to the chapter that he contributed to the book. I love that she had Kathleen Turner, Carol Burnett, and Patrick Stewart introduce chapters and read some lines here and there and that Amy’s parents both read their own contributions. All of these voices helped to break things up and keep it from being too much of a good thing with eight solid hours of just Poehler.

The one section that stuck with me the most was also very timely. Amy talks about one of her few regrets, a sketch she performed on SNL where the punchline was that young Dakota Fanning was making a Very Serious Movie about a disabled girl. A prop action figure of the disabled girl was handed to Amy at the last second that made the girl look really disfigured, and Amy later found out that the movie they were making fun of was not only real but was also based on a true story.

She received a letter from Chris Cooper’s wife (yes, that Chris Cooper), telling her how upset they were at her joke at the expense of disabled children, a cause near and dear to the Coopers, who helped write and produce the TV movie the sketch had lampooned. Amy went into full defensive mode, and the fallout is what she truly regrets.

I recognized so much of myself in this story. I often joke that no one hates me more than I hate myself, but it’s more truth than joke. I only recently learned that much of this is probably a result of my lifelong struggle with depression and am really trying to turn that around. The other side of that coin, however, is that I get really defensive when criticized in any way, big or small, even when I know I’ve screwed up. I go through all of those rationalizations and deflections and whataboutisms and eventually become so embarrassed that I internalize even more and avoid the person I’ve wronged until it’s just too late to say anything at all. It’s one of my ugliest traits, and I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to fully change it.

So when I listened to Poehler tell her own story, I could only step back and give myself a break. It’s a weird “I’m not alone” moment, but it really made me think about my own reactions, how I need to work on this, how it’s also never too late to do the right thing, even if it’s painful and embarrassing. And after giving myself a break, I could also think about ways to change how I react to criticism, and I could rethink my “apology” to women authors.

I already had so many reasons to be thankful for Amy Poehler. This book made that list even longer.

(This review was originally posted as part of Cannonball Read 10: Sticking it to Cancer, One Book at a Time.)
Like Reblog Comment
review 2017-06-02 19:45
A funny book about a funny person
Yes Please - Amy Poehler

I must confess that I'm a latecomer to appreciating the talent of Amy Poehler. I first saw her during her stint on Saturday Night Live, though she was on during a time when I pretty much never watched the show, so much of it was filtered through clips of her "Weekend Update" performances and her (amazingly perceptive) Hillary Clinton impersonation. I've also enjoyed her voice work (especially as Joy in Inside Out), but  this alone wasn't necessarily enough. It was only when I finally discovered Parks and Recreation for myself earlier this year that I realized how gifted she is as an actress and writer, and once I was done watching the series I felt that I wanted more of her brand of humor.

 

This is what brought me to this book. I remember reading some less-than-glowing reviews of it when it was first published, and to be fair some of their points are valid. The text consists of a choppy and episodic collection of chapters about Poehler's experiences as a daughter, student, comedienne, actress, mother, and celebrity. The structure is a little disjointed, and the text is padded out with visual jokes that can be cute but seem to be more about filling space. At the start of the book she comments that writing one is hard, and this exercise seems to be proof of the sincerity of that statement.

 

It's especially unfortunate given how funny she is as an author. Her book is a great read, one that had me laughing at nearly every page. As an author she is wry, self-deprecating, and has a good sense of the absurd. She is also incredibly generous, with only praise for the many people she mentions throughout its pages. It's the kind of thing that makes me happy for the success that she earned over many years of grinding effort, much of which she describes in very funny detail. In many ways it's a typical story of working in the service industry (she is refreshingly proud of her skills as a waitress) while learning the craft of comedy performance from some of the best teachers around, followed by unpaid performances in whatever spaces could be found for staging them. Fame in her case was not the matter of a big discovery but of friends who used their own success to open up opportunities for her. In this respect her gratitude is both understandable and a testament to her values, as I suspect not every star is as willing to acknowledge the help they received along the way.

 

Yet Poehler describes more than just her path to fame and fortune. Her book is leavened with the lessons she has drawn from her experiences, which she conveys though anecdotes that are among the best parts of the text. Though it is impossible to establish their veracity, whether we get the "real" or "complete" Poehler in its pages, I certainly want to believe that we get a reasonably accurate approximation. Life just seems better knowing that someone like her is around.

More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?