Notification on my phone through the Substack app had no transcript. Notification on my tablet had no transcript. Navigated to vpostrel.substack.com and was able to access a transcript with seemingly random timestamps. It was fun, though, in a way, to try to guess who was speaking. I guessed wrong a couple of times. Finally, I checked my regular email, which had the much clearer transcript, though I nearly missed it by initially failing to scroll down far enough. I realize more than ever that I am vastly ignorant and uncouth. I don’t write in my books, or set bookmarks, or listen to audiobooks (or podcasts, if I can help it). Having the transcript, even the lower quality one, is very beneficial to me. The information about publishing was very interesting. The interview was helpful in another way, too: I realized that, yes, I, too, have a book in me!; but I also had a bunch of gallstones and nobody wanted to see those either, not even me. Well, I was a little curious about the gallstones
Notification on my phone through the Substack app had no transcript. Notification on my tablet had no transcript. Navigated to vpostrel.substack.com and was able to access a transcript with seemingly random timestamps. It was fun, though, in a way, to try to guess who was speaking. I guessed wrong a couple of times. Finally, I checked my regular email, which had the much clearer transcript, though I nearly missed it by initially failing to scroll down far enough. I realize more than ever that I am vastly ignorant and uncouth. I don’t write in my books, or set bookmarks, or listen to audiobooks (or podcasts, if I can help it). Having the transcript, even the lower quality one, is very beneficial to me. The information about publishing was very interesting. The interview was helpful in another way, too: I realized that, yes, I, too, have a book in me!; but I also had a bunch of gallstones and nobody wanted to see those either, not even me. Well, I was a little curious about the gallstones