Does This Make Me Funny?
Essays
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Narrado por:
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Zosia Mamet
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De:
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Zosia Mamet
From the singular mind of Zosia Mamet, a collection of charmingly witty and achingly vulnerable essays about the challenge and magic of growing up in show business
You may know Zosia Mamet from her role as Shoshanna on Girls, or for being one of Hollywood’s original nepo babies (or as she says, “So if I’m a nepo baby I’m like a B minus one at best and maybe not even a full one. I’m like a nepo baby lite, a nepito baby, if you will”).
What you might not know is that as a toddler she visited theaters where her mom was rehearsing and crawled around on the floor, scrunching herself between seats; that she earnestly believed in Santa Claus for way too long; that she spent years navigating body image issues in hopes of finding elusive self-love; and that she was so overwhelmed and overjoyed when finally meeting her idol David Sedaris that she hid in the bathroom and melted into a “glitter puddle.”
The essays in Does This Make Me Funny? introduce us to Zosia Mamet in all her glory—from her early days growing up in literary and dramatic circles, to her years as a young adult pining for acceptance and love, to her first attempts to make it as an actor, to where she and Shosh are now. A gripping, funny, and earnest look at what it means to be a girl in the world and how to define yourself amid the bustle of show business, Does This Make Me Funny? is a captivating debut from a natural-born storyteller.
©2025 Zosia Mamet (P)2025 Penguin AudioLos oyentes también disfrutaron:
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"Zosia Mamet's essays are sometimes hilarious and sometimes poignant; often, they are both. As an actress and nepo baby—a ‘B minus one at best’—she gives us a front-row seat to what it was like to grow up in the entertainment industry, and somehow manages to make this rarefied experience deeply relatable. Ninety-nine percent of girl readers will wince in recognition."—Naomi Fry, New Yorker staff writer
"Zosia makes you laugh and then breaks your heart and then makes you laugh again in this beautifully honest and brutally hilarious collection of essays. Her tales of relationship and show biz heartbreaks and triumphs are wildly personal and yet incredibly relatable. I didn't want the stories to end!"—Andrew Rannells, actor and writer
"Zosia is an incredible actress in the same ways she shines here as an incredible writer—hilarious, open-hearted, and full of courage…. No matter the love you may have for Zosia Mamet and the roles she has played, her willingness to show you her insides in these essays—the singular way in which she sees the world and how she contends with her own fears, insecurities, and longing for love that come along with her role of simply being human—will make you love her even more."—Stephanie Hsu, actress
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Enjoyed it very much.
Loved this!!
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Every other sentence is, like, a question?
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Does this make you funny?
No. br />First of all, I've never found you funny
But now I find you fully unrelatable.
Every character you've ever played was just an anorexic Woody Allen neurotic knock-off....
Which I thought was just a shtick
But you went out of your way to point out that any industry person that asked you to stretch yourself to be anything other than your authentic self in any way in your show business career was totally traumatizing for you...despite the fact that your chosen career is actress.
I love that Lena Dunham let you play you against the realness of her own neurosis. Brilliant! But also, did anyone ever zoom out...it's kinda just a scripted version of like, young real housewives
And yeah, white privelege is hilarious, but ultimately, it is ridiculous. These are not real problems. These are first world problems. And you talking incessantly about your first world problems in poetry slam cadence is not a good look my dear.
On the other hand, hypocritically, I'm trying to lose 10lbs without Ozempic and your book is giving me great old school anorexia inspo....I'm telling myself I'm gross and fat..and it's working!!! Thanks for the refresh on old school unassisted anorexia!!!
You called your baby "a parasite" and you coulda made that sound funny but you didn't....you said it seriously
You chose your OB based on the recommendation of the pencil thin models you adored, so what did you expect?
Don't try to gaslight us
I can't even find one picture of you the least bit chubby on the internet at any age. So stop acting like this is anything other than your own faux white girl trauma. As you admit, your dysmorphia...what a privelege to delusion yourself a trauma.
I try to read/listen to books to escape the prevalence of this in reality tv, etc. But ok, I got it in book pages; it's got the same audacious quality and I guess that's entertaining at a mid level.
Unrelatable
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