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Dylan Marron

Dylan Marron (born May 31, 1988) is an American actor, writer and activist known for his voice work as Carlos in the podcast Welcome to Night Vale and his video series Every Single Word, an art and data visualization project which compiles all the words spoken by people of color in major motion pictures. [1] He is a writer on the third season of Ted Lasso.[2]

Dylan Marron
Dylan Marron as Carlos the Scientist in a live episode of Welcome to Night Vale during their Atlanta 2019 tour
Born (1988-05-31) 31 May 1988 (age 35)
Occupation(s)Writer and actor
Years active1988–present
Spouse
Todd Clayton
(m. 2015)

Early life Edit

Marron was born May 31, 1988, in Caracas, Venezuela.[3]

Career Edit

Acting Edit

On Welcome to Night Vale, Marron plays Carlos the scientist, who is the main character's crush and later husband. Marron joined the podcast in 2013[4] and has appeared regularly since then, and has also featured in all the live shows. Prior to Marron's casting, Carlos was played by Jeffrey Cranor, one of the show's writers. Cranor stepped down from playing the role because, as a white man who is not an actor, he wanted to avoid standing in the way of a talented Latino actor playing a major role in his show.[5] The Night Vale team and Marron knew each other via the Neo-Futurists, and Marron was a fan of the show before he was asked to play Carlos.[3] His casting was well-received among fans of the show.[3] Marron has spoken about the importance of Night Vale in showing that there is a large audience for media with a diverse and non-straight cast. In the show, Carlos is described as having "perfect hair," which Marron, who has curly, "gravity-defying" hair argues helps to redefine the racial politics of hair.[6]

Marron played Ari in Whatever. This. Is., a Kickstarter-funded web series about working in reality television that aired during 2013.[7] In the show, Marron plays a young production assistant with a terrible job. Of the role, Marron says, "I love seeing an out gay character who hasn’t figured it all out. … Ari not only feels flawed, but also a bit like he’s still under construction."[8] The show takes a nuanced approach to gay-relevant themes, including racism in the gay community.[9] Marron brought his experience as a Neo-Futurist to the role. In the Neo-Futurists, performers take the stage as themselves. Marron describes playing Ari with authenticity: "When you’re playing a character like that you just have to access what is true for them and if you want to apply that in the Neo-Futuristic way that I have begun to think about character is that you can’t help but bring yourself into every role that you have."[3]

With Jo Firestone, Marron wrote, performed in, and directed Ridgefield Middle School Talent Nite, a two-person show about a middle school talent show, in which each performer played several roles.[10] The show received a Capital Fringe Festival Director's Award in 2010.[11]

New York Neo-Futurists Edit

Marron is a former member of the New York Neo-Futurists,[12] an experimental theater group. As a participant in their long-running show, Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind: 30 Plays in 60 Minutes, Marron developed a play in which the performers were audience members. He went on to develop this work into a longer, standalone show called The Human Symphony, which ran from January 22 - February 14, 2015.[13] This show consists of stories about online dating. Marron invited six audience members onstage to perform stories while pre-recorded interviews about dating experiences play over the sound system.[14] While audience members were not required to participate, they were asked to introduce themselves to fellow audience members during the show.[14] The Human Symphony was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience.[15]

Video series Edit

Marron stars in several video series produced by Seriously.tv, including Every Single Word, Shutting Down Bullshit, Unboxing, and Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People.

In 2015 and 2016, Marron produced Every Single Word, a video project drawing attention to the lack of representation of people of color in popular films. In this series. Marron selects popular 1-2 hour films, identifies the lines spoken by people of color, and splices those lines together. The resulting clips are very brief, ranging from under ten seconds to fifteen minutes at the most. The project stems from Marron's experience being excluded from productions due to his race and sexuality.[16] Marron chose to highlight the broader lack of people of color in popular film through this video series because he feels that "showing [patterns] without embellishment"[16] is a more effective approach than writing rants about lack of representation. This film series focuses on stories that are not explicitly about race, to highlight how white people are chosen to tell universal stories, while people of color are either left out or cast in very minor roles.[16]

His series, "Shutting Down Bullshit" is an interview show that tackles political myths about marginalized groups. It has featured topics such as mental health, antisemitism, undocumented immigration, and sex work. The series concluded with its thirty-fifth video in April, 2017.[17] Advocates for autistic people criticized the episode about autism ("Shutting Down Bullshit about Autism," January 6, 2017) on the grounds that it reinforced harmful stereotypes about autism and focused more on the autistic interviewee's father's experience than his own.[18] Marron issued an apology for this episode and recorded a follow-up episode in which he interviewed four autistic guests.[19]

In "Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People," Marron interviews trans people in public restrooms in order to protest bathroom bills.[20] This show uses lighthearted gags such as toilet paper ribbon dancing to poke fun at rhetoric suggesting that trans people in public restrooms constitute a threat, but also includes serious conversations to educate viewers about trans issues.[21] Marron, who is not trans but describes himself as an ally, hopes to "humanize the issue" with this series.[22] Guests have included activist Kate Bornstein and YouTube personality Jackson Bird.

Conversations with People who Hate Me Edit

Marron hosts a podcast titled Conversations with People who Hate Me, in which he contacts people who have left negative or hateful comments on his videos or social media. The first season of the podcast included nine episodes, all posted in 2017. The goal of this podcast is to "take hateful conversations online and turn them into productive conversations offline."[23] This podcast was partially inspired by an episode of This American Life in which Lindy West confronts one of her trolls; Marron similarly wanted to engage in productive, nuanced conversations with his guests. Marron's goal is neither to debate his guests, nor to find common ground with them, but to listen to people and be listened to in return.[24] Guests on the podcast are offered whatever level of anonymity they want, in order to facilitate their participation in the conversation.[24] The podcast was featured as a "Podcast Pick" by USA Today.[25] The podcast also won a Webby Award for best individual episode during the 2018 Webby Awards. The format changed in 2018, with the podcast's second season. Instead of interviewing his guests one on one, Marron moderates a conversation between two guests who have had negative online interactions with each other.[26]

In 2022, Marron released a book based on the podcast entitled: "Conversations with People Who Hate Me: 12 Things I Learned from Talking to Internet Strangers."[27]

Personal life Edit

Marron was born in Venezuela.[3] He has been married to Todd Clayton since December 27, 2015.[28]

Marron joined a sketch comedy group at Wesleyan University, not because he was interested in a career in comedy, but because he wanted to work collaboratively on creative endeavors with people who shared his enthusiasm for creative work.[3] Through this sketch group, he met Jo Firestone, his coauthor for the play Ridgefield Middle School Talent Nite.[3]

References Edit

  1. ^ McDonald, Nadia (July 10, 2015). "Meet Dylan Marron, the actor and playwright behind those 'every single word spoken by a person of color' YouTube videos". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  2. ^ "Dylan Marron". Simon & Schuster. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Dylan Marron: "Night Vale" Has a New Carlos". LOGO News. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  4. ^ "Long Day's Journey Into Night Vale | An Interview With Dylan Marron – Pop Mythology". www.popmythology.com. 28 December 2013. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  5. ^ "ch-ch-ch-ch-changes, or: who is carlos?". Jeffrey Cranor. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  6. ^ "Long Day's Journey Into Night Vale | An Interview With Dylan Marron – Pop Mythology". www.popmythology.com. 28 December 2013. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  7. ^ Renninger, Bryce J. (2013-08-02). "Watch: 'Whatever This Is' Shows What It's Really Like to Work on Reality TV". IndieWire. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  8. ^ "'Whatever This Is.' Web Series Debuts 'Nature' Episode". Huffington Post. 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  9. ^ Wong, Curtis M. (2013-08-14). "Dylan Marron, 'Whatever This Is.' Star, On New Web Series, Gay TV Characters And Being A Queer Artist". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  10. ^ "Funny Times At Ridgefield Middle School". C.A.P.S.Love. 2010-07-15. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  11. ^ Ramanathan, Stephanie Merry and Lavanya (2011-07-06). "The Capital Fringe Festival Preview: What to See". Washington Post. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  12. ^ . www.nyneofuturists.org. Archived from the original on 2018-03-25. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  13. ^ "The Human Symphony | New York Neo-Futurists The Human Symphony | The New York Neo-Futurists attempt to take over the world". www.nyneofuturists.org. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  14. ^ a b Soloski, Alexis (2015-02-02). "'The Human Symphony,' From the New York Neo-Futurists". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  15. ^ Cox, Gordon (2015-06-01). "'Hamilton,' 'Curious Incident' Top the 2015 Drama Desk Awards (FULL LIST)". Variety. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  16. ^ a b c McDonald, Soraya Nadia (2015-07-10). "Meet Dylan Marron, the actor and playwright behind those 'every single word spoken by a person of color' YouTube videos". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  17. ^ Seriously.TV (2017-04-28), Shutting Down Bullsh!*t: The Finale, retrieved 2018-03-18
  18. ^ "Shutting Down the Bullshit | crippledscholar". crippledscholar.com. 7 January 2017. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  19. ^ @dylanmarron (2017-01-27). "Being called out publicly when you think you're "woke" sucks. But it's helpful, too. Here's my experience:" (Tweet). Retrieved 2018-03-18 – via Twitter.
  20. ^ "'Sitting in Bathrooms With Trans People' is the most timely talk show possible |". 2016-05-18. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  21. ^ "Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People Web Series Aims to Lampoon Ridiculous Bathroom Laws". www.themarysue.com. 8 June 2016. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  22. ^ "What do trans people really do in bathrooms? Web series flushes fear". MSNBC. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  23. ^ "CONVERSATIONS WITH PEOPLE WHO HATE ME". Dylan Marron. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  24. ^ a b "Behind "Conversations with People Who Hate Me," The Timeliest Podcast Of 2017". Fast Company. 2017-08-10. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  25. ^ "Podcast Pick: Dylan Marron has candid 'Conversations With People Who Hate Me'". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  26. ^ "PRX". beta.prx.org. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  27. ^ "Conversations with People Who Hate Me". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2023-01-17.
  28. ^ Marron, Dylan (2015-12-27). ".@todd_clayton is my husband.pic.twitter.com/mdzNAkTiuo". @dylanmarron. Retrieved 2018-03-18.

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • Dylan Marron at IMDb

dylan, marron, born, 1988, american, actor, writer, activist, known, voice, work, carlos, podcast, welcome, night, vale, video, series, every, single, word, data, visualization, project, which, compiles, words, spoken, people, color, major, motion, pictures, w. Dylan Marron born May 31 1988 is an American actor writer and activist known for his voice work as Carlos in the podcast Welcome to Night Vale and his video series Every Single Word an art and data visualization project which compiles all the words spoken by people of color in major motion pictures 1 He is a writer on the third season of Ted Lasso 2 Dylan MarronDylan Marron as Carlos the Scientist in a live episode of Welcome to Night Vale during their Atlanta 2019 tourBorn 1988 05 31 31 May 1988 age 35 Caracas VenezuelaOccupation s Writer and actorYears active1988 presentSpouseTodd Clayton m 2015 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Acting 2 2 New York Neo Futurists 2 3 Video series 2 4 Conversations with People who Hate Me 3 Personal life 4 References 5 External linksEarly life EditMarron was born May 31 1988 in Caracas Venezuela 3 Career EditActing Edit On Welcome to Night Vale Marron plays Carlos the scientist who is the main character s crush and later husband Marron joined the podcast in 2013 4 and has appeared regularly since then and has also featured in all the live shows Prior to Marron s casting Carlos was played by Jeffrey Cranor one of the show s writers Cranor stepped down from playing the role because as a white man who is not an actor he wanted to avoid standing in the way of a talented Latino actor playing a major role in his show 5 The Night Vale team and Marron knew each other via the Neo Futurists and Marron was a fan of the show before he was asked to play Carlos 3 His casting was well received among fans of the show 3 Marron has spoken about the importance of Night Vale in showing that there is a large audience for media with a diverse and non straight cast In the show Carlos is described as having perfect hair which Marron who has curly gravity defying hair argues helps to redefine the racial politics of hair 6 Marron played Ari in Whatever This Is a Kickstarter funded web series about working in reality television that aired during 2013 7 In the show Marron plays a young production assistant with a terrible job Of the role Marron says I love seeing an out gay character who hasn t figured it all out Ari not only feels flawed but also a bit like he s still under construction 8 The show takes a nuanced approach to gay relevant themes including racism in the gay community 9 Marron brought his experience as a Neo Futurist to the role In the Neo Futurists performers take the stage as themselves Marron describes playing Ari with authenticity When you re playing a character like that you just have to access what is true for them and if you want to apply that in the Neo Futuristic way that I have begun to think about character is that you can t help but bring yourself into every role that you have 3 With Jo Firestone Marron wrote performed in and directed Ridgefield Middle School Talent Nite a two person show about a middle school talent show in which each performer played several roles 10 The show received a Capital Fringe Festival Director s Award in 2010 11 New York Neo Futurists Edit Marron is a former member of the New York Neo Futurists 12 an experimental theater group As a participant in their long running show Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind 30 Plays in 60 Minutes Marron developed a play in which the performers were audience members He went on to develop this work into a longer standalone show called The Human Symphony which ran from January 22 February 14 2015 13 This show consists of stories about online dating Marron invited six audience members onstage to perform stories while pre recorded interviews about dating experiences play over the sound system 14 While audience members were not required to participate they were asked to introduce themselves to fellow audience members during the show 14 The Human Symphony was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience 15 Video series Edit Marron stars in several video series produced by Seriously tv including Every Single Word Shutting Down Bullshit Unboxing and Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People In 2015 and 2016 Marron produced Every Single Word a video project drawing attention to the lack of representation of people of color in popular films In this series Marron selects popular 1 2 hour films identifies the lines spoken by people of color and splices those lines together The resulting clips are very brief ranging from under ten seconds to fifteen minutes at the most The project stems from Marron s experience being excluded from productions due to his race and sexuality 16 Marron chose to highlight the broader lack of people of color in popular film through this video series because he feels that showing patterns without embellishment 16 is a more effective approach than writing rants about lack of representation This film series focuses on stories that are not explicitly about race to highlight how white people are chosen to tell universal stories while people of color are either left out or cast in very minor roles 16 His series Shutting Down Bullshit is an interview show that tackles political myths about marginalized groups It has featured topics such as mental health antisemitism undocumented immigration and sex work The series concluded with its thirty fifth video in April 2017 17 Advocates for autistic people criticized the episode about autism Shutting Down Bullshit about Autism January 6 2017 on the grounds that it reinforced harmful stereotypes about autism and focused more on the autistic interviewee s father s experience than his own 18 Marron issued an apology for this episode and recorded a follow up episode in which he interviewed four autistic guests 19 In Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People Marron interviews trans people in public restrooms in order to protest bathroom bills 20 This show uses lighthearted gags such as toilet paper ribbon dancing to poke fun at rhetoric suggesting that trans people in public restrooms constitute a threat but also includes serious conversations to educate viewers about trans issues 21 Marron who is not trans but describes himself as an ally hopes to humanize the issue with this series 22 Guests have included activist Kate Bornstein and YouTube personality Jackson Bird Conversations with People who Hate Me Edit Marron hosts a podcast titled Conversations with People who Hate Me in which he contacts people who have left negative or hateful comments on his videos or social media The first season of the podcast included nine episodes all posted in 2017 The goal of this podcast is to take hateful conversations online and turn them into productive conversations offline 23 This podcast was partially inspired by an episode of This American Life in which Lindy West confronts one of her trolls Marron similarly wanted to engage in productive nuanced conversations with his guests Marron s goal is neither to debate his guests nor to find common ground with them but to listen to people and be listened to in return 24 Guests on the podcast are offered whatever level of anonymity they want in order to facilitate their participation in the conversation 24 The podcast was featured as a Podcast Pick by USA Today 25 The podcast also won a Webby Award for best individual episode during the 2018 Webby Awards The format changed in 2018 with the podcast s second season Instead of interviewing his guests one on one Marron moderates a conversation between two guests who have had negative online interactions with each other 26 In 2022 Marron released a book based on the podcast entitled Conversations with People Who Hate Me 12 Things I Learned from Talking to Internet Strangers 27 Personal life EditMarron was born in Venezuela 3 He has been married to Todd Clayton since December 27 2015 28 Marron joined a sketch comedy group at Wesleyan University not because he was interested in a career in comedy but because he wanted to work collaboratively on creative endeavors with people who shared his enthusiasm for creative work 3 Through this sketch group he met Jo Firestone his coauthor for the play Ridgefield Middle School Talent Nite 3 References Edit McDonald Nadia July 10 2015 Meet Dylan Marron the actor and playwright behind those every single word spoken by a person of color YouTube videos The Washington Post Retrieved March 29 2020 Dylan Marron Simon amp Schuster Retrieved 2022 11 29 a b c d e f g Dylan Marron Night Vale Has a New Carlos LOGO News Retrieved 2018 01 04 Long Day s Journey Into Night Vale An Interview With Dylan Marron Pop Mythology www popmythology com 28 December 2013 Retrieved 2018 03 18 ch ch ch ch changes or who is carlos Jeffrey Cranor Retrieved 2018 01 04 Long Day s Journey Into Night Vale An Interview With Dylan Marron Pop Mythology www popmythology com 28 December 2013 Retrieved 2018 01 04 Renninger Bryce J 2013 08 02 Watch Whatever This Is Shows What It s Really Like to Work on Reality TV IndieWire Retrieved 2018 01 04 Whatever This Is Web Series Debuts Nature Episode Huffington Post 2013 12 02 Retrieved 2018 01 04 Wong Curtis M 2013 08 14 Dylan Marron Whatever This Is Star On New Web Series Gay TV Characters And Being A Queer Artist Huffington Post Retrieved 2018 01 04 Funny Times At Ridgefield Middle School C A P S Love 2010 07 15 Retrieved 2018 03 18 Ramanathan Stephanie Merry and Lavanya 2011 07 06 The Capital Fringe Festival Preview What to See Washington Post Retrieved 2018 03 18 Alumni New York Neo Futurists Alumni The New York Neo Futurists attempt to take over the world www nyneofuturists org Archived from the original on 2018 03 25 Retrieved 2018 03 18 The Human Symphony New York Neo Futurists The Human Symphony The New York Neo Futurists attempt to take over the world www nyneofuturists org Retrieved 2018 03 18 a b Soloski Alexis 2015 02 02 The Human Symphony From the New York Neo Futurists The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2018 03 18 Cox Gordon 2015 06 01 Hamilton Curious Incident Top the 2015 Drama Desk Awards FULL LIST Variety Retrieved 2018 03 18 a b c McDonald Soraya Nadia 2015 07 10 Meet Dylan Marron the actor and playwright behind those every single word spoken by a person of color YouTube videos Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2018 01 04 Seriously TV 2017 04 28 Shutting Down Bullsh t The Finale retrieved 2018 03 18 Shutting Down the Bullshit crippledscholar crippledscholar com 7 January 2017 Retrieved 2018 03 18 dylanmarron 2017 01 27 Being called out publicly when you think you re woke sucks But it s helpful too Here s my experience Tweet Retrieved 2018 03 18 via Twitter Sitting in Bathrooms With Trans People is the most timely talk show possible 2016 05 18 Retrieved 2018 03 18 Sitting in Bathrooms with Trans People Web Series Aims to Lampoon Ridiculous Bathroom Laws www themarysue com 8 June 2016 Retrieved 2018 03 18 What do trans people really do in bathrooms Web series flushes fear MSNBC Retrieved 2018 03 18 CONVERSATIONS WITH PEOPLE WHO HATE ME Dylan Marron Retrieved 2018 01 04 a b Behind Conversations with People Who Hate Me The Timeliest Podcast Of 2017 Fast Company 2017 08 10 Retrieved 2018 01 04 Podcast Pick Dylan Marron has candid Conversations With People Who Hate Me USA TODAY Retrieved 2018 01 04 PRX beta prx org Retrieved 2018 03 18 Conversations with People Who Hate Me www goodreads com Retrieved 2023 01 17 Marron Dylan 2015 12 27 todd clayton is my husband pic twitter com mdzNAkTiuo dylanmarron Retrieved 2018 03 18 External links EditOfficial website Dylan Marron at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dylan Marron amp oldid 1170586121, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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