Today’s story comes from Eryc Eyl. Eryc’s story was recorded live on 15 February 2017 at Buntport Theater in Denver, Colorado. The theme of the evening was “Red Handed.”

Thanks so much to everyone who came out to our all-artist special at DINK and our Denver Zine Fest benefit show. If you weren’t able to attend either, take heart— some of those lovely stories will almost certainly be gracing the podcast-sphere sometime soon.

In the meantime, our next live show will take place on Wednesday, 19 April in Denver. The theme will be “Jinx.”

Today’s story comes from University of Denver philosophy professor Sarah Pessin. Sarah’s story was recorded live on 18 January 2017 at Buntport Theater in Denver, Colorado. The theme of the evening was “Dropping the Ball.”

We have four events coming up in April:

  • On Saturday, 8 April in Denver, we’re hosting a special all-artist show at DINK, the Denver Independent Comic Expo at 5pm. The show is free with admission to the expo.
  • On Tuesday, 11 April, we’re hosting a fundraiser for our pals at Denver Zine Fest, where you’ll hear stories, make your own mini-zine, and get a chance to hop on stage and share your creation with the audience
  • Our regular monthly shows take place on Tuesday, 11 April in San Diego and Wednesday, 19 April in Denver. The theme will be “Jinx.”

Please check our website or our Facebook page for all the details. See you there!

Also: We still have a few screenprint posters left, so please stop by one of our live shows to get one of your own. And, if you’re a fan of this podcast but live outside of Denver or San Diego, please email us if you’d like to buy a poster too—we’ll find a way to get it to you.

Today’s story comes from Meghan DePonceau. Meghan is a Denver comedian and the chief of 5280Comedy.com, a top resource for all things comedy in Denver. This story was recorded live on 18 January 2017 at Buntport Theater in Denver, Colorado. The theme of the evening was “Dropping the Ball.”

Thanks so much to everyone who came to our shows this month, especially those of you who piled in for the anniversary show in Denver. We had a full audience of folks that overflowed onto the floor and into the lobby to hear a super-sized lineup with some of our favorite storytellers. It was a real treat to mark our 7th year with all of you, so thanks again. Here’s to another seven years.

In addition to our regular monthly shows, we are hosting a special edition of The Narrators at DINK, the Denver Independent Comic Expo at 5pm on Saturday, 8 April at the Historic McNichols Building in Civic Center Park. The show is free with admission to the expo. We’re also hosting a fundraiser for Denver Zine Fest, in collaboration with our good friends at the Denver Zine Library, on Tuesday, 11 April at Buntport Theater. Come hear stories from local zinesters, make your very own mini zine, and get a chance to share your zine in front of the audience. Keep your eyeballs duct-taped to our Facebook page or website for more details.

In addition to those special events, our next regular monthly shows will be on 11 April in San Diego and 19 April in Denver. The theme will be “Jinx.” See you there!

Also: We still have a few screenprint posters left, so please stop by one of our live shows to get one of your own. And, if you’re a fan of this podcast but live outside of Denver or San Diego, please email us if you’d like to buy a poster too—we’ll find a way to get it to you.

Today’s story comes from Joe Phillips, who, in his own words, “is an actor and bartender approaching middle age,” but we know he’s so much more.  This story was recorded live on 21 December 2016 at Buntport Theater in Denver, Colorado; the theme of the evening was “Parents Just Don’t Understand.”

In addition to celebrating our seventh anniversary this month, we have a few really special shows coming up, so please keep an eye on our Facebook page or our website for more details. Our next two shows are on 14 March in San Diego and 15 March in Denver—Please note that the Denver show starts an hour earlier at 7pm, not our usual 8pm, and we’ll have a super-special lineup in honor of our anniversary. The theme will be “Popular.” See you there!

Also: We still have a few screenprint posters left, so please stop by one of our live shows to get one of your own. And, if you’re a fan of this podcast but live outside of Denver or San Diego, please email us if you’d like to buy a poster too—we’ll find a way to get it to you.

Last October, our friends at From the Hip Photo hosted a small event at Fort Greene, this cool, funky little place in Globeville, and invited The Narrators to share a few stories. The theme of the evening was “Punk’s Not Dead?”

The stage was just the corner of a little concrete-walled room with streamers on the walls. It was part dungeon, part homecoming dance. The audience was tiny compared to our regular monthly shows. The acoustics—as you’ll hear in a minute—were terrible for recording. The stories were all fantastic. That tiny crowd, with their cheers echoing off the walls, sounded enormous. The connection and camaraderie were palpable.

But after the show, I decided that the quality of the audio was too poor for the podcast, so left the file sitting in a folder on my computer.

But, you know what? Fuck quality. As my co-host Robert said to me recently, sometimes quality can be a tool of oppression. Socially imposed standards of what’s good enough or professional enough can sometimes hold back important voices from being heard—or bend those voices simply to please others. At The Narrators, we don’t screen our storytellers or edit their stories not because we want to produce a bad show, but because we believe their stories deserve to be heard in their own voice, without external pressure—and that is the benchmark of a good true story. Maybe we’re getting lucky every month, but after almost seven years and over one-thousand stories shared, it seems that our hypothesis is correct.

This is especially relevant to our current state of affairs, because there are a lot of folks taking action right now, and it’s disheartening to see good people arguing about the right way to protest, the right way to make a difference, the best way to effect change. If you’re a people-pleaser, it’s paralyzing, and can make you sick worrying about what’s good enough. Just get out there, and do something. Tell your story, share your heart, and stop worrying about going big, about changing the entire world in a day. Do a little something, then do a little something more. You are good enough, in your own tiny way.

Today’s story comes from Jim Norris. Jim is a longstanding member of the Denver music scene, founder of 3 Kings Tavern, and owner of Mutiny Information Cafe, one of Denver’s most important cultural institutions disguised as a used bookstore.

We still have a few screenprint posters left but they’re going quickly, so stop by one of our live shows to get one of your own. And, if you’re a fan of this podcast but live outside of Denver or San Diego, please email us if you’d like to buy a poster too—we’ll find a way to get it to you. We have a handful of special shows in the works and our 7th anniversary in Denver is next month, so please visit our Facebook page or here on our website to stay up to date.