Jude Brewer is an American writer, producer, actor, and podcast host, best known for creating and hosting Storybound and Storytellers Telling Stories.[1] Brewer's writing has appeared internationally through literary magazines, and most recently in podcasts and short films.
Jude Brewer | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | (1989-06-13) June 13, 1989 (age 33) |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Writer, actor |
Known for | Storybound and Storytellers Telling Stories |
Website | Official website |
Tania Hershman, author, and judge of the 2017 UK Retreat West Flash Fiction Prize, has described Brewer's writing as "[taking] risks in its structure, going off on tangents, not following a linear narrative, and the risks pay off. It is dark and funny and moving and strange. There is not a word too many or too few, and every word is precisely chosen, the character’s voice never strays… I could read this again and again and again."[2]
Two of Brewer's short literary fiction pieces were adapted for his podcast Storytellers Telling Stories with Brewer narrating. Season 4 of Storybound brought Brewer's voice acting to the forefront for multiple character voices across several episodes.
During a 2021 Film Invasion Los Angeles (FILA) Q&A session with Brewer and director Jake Whiston for their film Your Heart Is Mine, FILA programmer Jeff Howard said, "As the lead, Brewer carried this film beautifully".[3] Brewer won "Best Actor" at the Oregon Scream Week Horror film festival, while Your Heart Is Mine won "Best Dark Drama Film" and received the Programmer's Prize at the Sherman Oaks Film Festival, as well as making Official Selection for the Seattle True Independent Film Festival, the Oregon Short Film Festival, the Short Sweet Film Fest, and the Austin After Dark Film Festival.[4]
An untitled documentary by Self Portrait Films, began production in 2022 with Brewer attached.[5]
Around early 2017, Brewer launched John Plays the Piano, a roundtable film discussion podcast, breaking down and analyzing classic films such as Brazil, Being John Malkovich, and Small Soldiers. Eight episodes were released.[6] Brewer has said John Plays the Piano is on an "indefinite hiatus".[7] In October 2017, Brewer launched the Storytellers Telling Stories podcast as a means to take a break from writing, craving something "more experimental and a little less predictable", toying with different instruments while warping and distorting their sounds.[8] The show has been described as an audio drama "pushing the evolution" of podcasting.[9] The initial concept was to simulate a movie within the listener's mind, to create a sense of total immersion without requiring any visuals.[10] Lights Out has been cited as an influence for Brewer, as was listening to concept albums and following their track listings to outline his stories and novels as a teenager. Storytellers Telling Stories wrapped with its series finale in August 2019, bringing together 27 different writers reading the work of author Traci Foust, as Foust had passed away the previous year.[11]
In October 2019, Lit Hub announced a partnership with The Podglomerate, launching the Storybound, a new podcast created, produced, and hosted by Brewer.[12] Lit Hub announced the show would explore "family life to friendship, relationships to histories, and how everything in life can be impacted by the power of a good story".[13] Season one was sponsored by Powell's Books, including musicians who originally appeared on Storytellers Telling Stories, alongside critically acclaimed and bestselling authors such as Mitch Albom, Lidia Yuknavitch, Matt Gallagher, Kim Barnes, Adelle Waldman, Diksha Basu, Nathan Hill, Caitlin Doughty, Mitchell S. Jackson, as well as a story told by Jack Rhysider, creator of the popular podcast Darknet Diaries.[14][15][16][17][18]
Season 3 incorporated more experimental cross-genre music compositions with sampling created and arranged by Brewer. Storybound's musical shift followed Brewer wanting "to take on more of a defined shape as [Storybound began] understanding [its] place within the dramatic podcast community", and he began sampling breakout artists like Josh Garrels, MAITA, Xander Marsden, Anna Tivel, Oginalii, Marco Pavé, Gil Assayas of GLASYS, Y La Bamba, and other Tender Loving Empire artists like French Cassettes.[19] Storybound season 4 continued to expand and build upon the show's experimental shift, crediting Brewer for "original Storybound remixes" as well as sound design and arrangement. Along with authors such as Chuck Klosterman, Morgan Jerkins, Omar El Akkad, Matt Haig, and Tamara Winfrey Harris. Season 4 features more prominent musicians such as Portico Quartet, Dustin O'Halloran, Jaymay, Au Revoir Simone, Fake Shark, Zola Jesus, The Bright Light Social Hour, and Shook Twins.[20] Season 5 was announced for 2022, bringing on Debbie Millman, Dante Stewart, Stephanie Foo, Tommy Davidson, Dan Chaon, Imogen Binnie, Daniel Olivas and more. Season 5 marked a tonal change for the show, cutting between interviews and author readings, blending styles from previous seasons.
In 2021, Brewer was awarded 1st place in the KCRW Radio Race with the following statement:
They say smell is the strongest sense tied to memory, but here producer Jude Brewer makes a moving case for the evocative emotional potency of sound. In lieu of voicemails, letters, or other tangible keepsakes, the sound of a skateboard remains Brewer's only tie to his late childhood best friend and neighbor, Buzzy. Beyond the piece's beautifully crafted audio design and editing, Brewer wields sound as a character unto itself, taking the listener inside its ability to trigger — and sustain — memories of halcyon days spent perfecting kickflips after school and revelling in the unwritten possibilities and potential of youth.[21]
Judges Julie Shapiro, Nick Quah, Sean Rameswaram, and The Kitchen Sisters praised BUZZY for "its overall ear-catching production, its unusual narration and style of delivery, its fine and original sound design and the heart of the story".