Stories and interviews from people on their coding journey.
Ep. 112 - Comedy and Code - Part II (Baratunde Thurston)
In part two of our interview with comedian Baratunde Thurston, we talk about how he brought together product development and comedy to create entertaining apps in his recent role at the Daily Show, how he uses coding and technology as tools in the many unique positions he’s held, and how we should balance our coding responsibility with the simple goal of having fun.
Show Links
- DevDiscuss (sponsor)
- DevNews (sponsor)
- New Relic (sponsor)
- Retool (sponsor)
- Microsoft 30 Days to Learn It (sponsor)
- Twilio
- Collabora
- hierarchical decomposition
- David Malan
- USDS
- Source Forge
- Acumen
- The Daily Show
- March Madness parody app
- AlexaSite wins TechCrunch Disrupt Hackathon
- SquareSpace
- CS50
- Tickets for Codeland, our CodeNewbie conference
- CodeNewbie's Patreon
- Codeland Conf
- Codeland 2019
Baratunde Thurston
Baratunde Thurston is a futurist comedian, writer, and activist who wrote the New York Times best-seller How To Be Black and has been an executive at both The Onion and The Daily Show. He currently operates as an independent rabble rouser, hosts the Comedy Hack Day event series and is a correspondent with NatGeo’s Explorer series. Photo courtesy of Stuart Tracte.