Trampoline Hall

Trampoline Hall is a barroom lecture series started by Canadian author Sheila Heti in Toronto. It has been sold out consistently since 2001.

Format

Trampoline Hall is held every month at The Garrison, a club in Toronto's west end. The program consists of three talks each followed by a question-and-answer period, and is hosted by improv teacher and consultant Misha Glouberman.[1]

Lecturers may speak on any subject from the mundane to the arcane, but are forbidden to speak on any area in which they are professionally expert. As a result, talks vary from the well-informed to the unstructured, with the lecturer's level of comfort and degree of preparation emerging as part of the "performance". Over a few months in 2010-2011, representative topics included "The History of 3D," "Suicide Notes," "Cultural Entropy in the Internet Era," "The Perfect Baguette," and "Being an Asshole."

Reception

The show went on a 10-city tour of the US in 2002 and has played numerous shows in New York and San Francisco. It has been written about favourably in The New Yorker, The Village Voice,[2] the National Post,[3] the Globe and Mail, and other publications.[4]

gollark: For instance, via [REDACTED], it's able to reflash parts of the EEPROM while running.
gollark: Oh, tons.
gollark: It's too late, I already reverse-engineered ridiculously specific details of the processor via extrapolating from your current messages about it and GTech™️ orbital scans via our future prediction engines, then wrote code which does cool things but is highly dependent on weird implementation quirks.
gollark: No idea, it was some weird issue under heavy server load I think.
gollark: <@331320482047721472> retroactively.

References

  1. "Misha Glouberman's Terrible Noises for Beautiful People", Eye Weekly, November 05, 2008
  2. "Lecture Hall. A speech series from Toronto tries its best to make New Yorkers smart", by Tricia Romano, The Village Voice, Jul 6 2004
  3. The National Post
  4. "The Talking Trampoline", Indie Week, November 13, 2002; "Eclectic Lectures Bounce from Topic to Topic" by Gary Shampiro, New York Sun, Jul 9, 2004
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