The Anne Levine Show with Michael Over There cover art

The Anne Levine Show with Michael Over There

The Anne Levine Show with Michael Over There

By: Michael Hill-Levine - Originally created by Anne Levine
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A weekly look into the odd, the beautiful, and the nearly interesting: Starring Michael-over-there. Expect ramblings about film, fashion, food, comedy, cinema, and culture along with many questions about the future.

Lovingly dedicated to the one and only Anne Hall Levine, a force of nature, the love of my life, and the one person who could make us all laugh.

© 2026 The Anne Levine Show with Michael Over There
Art Entertainment & Performing Arts Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Backstories
    Jun 29 2026

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    We abandon a planned “believable lies” story when our body refused to cooperate, then follow the real-life weirdness of objects that won’t stay simple. We trace how keys, boxes, marks, and junk drawers turn into evidence, memory, and obsession, especially while packing up a life and deciding what matters.
    • moving stress and the surprising honesty of the body
    • why “backstories” beat price tags for meaning
    • mystery keys as instant narrative machines
    • empty boxes as “ghost objects” defined by absence
    • maker’s marks, hallmarks, initials, and the urge to complete patterns
    • why we keep things, even minimalists
    • family museums and oral labels that drift over time
    • provenance as an object’s biography, clean or messy
    • the emotional hazard of cleaning and sorting keep donate sell trash
    • the phrase “I almost threw it away” as a gateway to treasure thinking
    • misidentification and how belief changes how we treat an object
    • staying curious without getting greedy, using “this might be”
    • The Maltese Falcon and the Holy Grail as object-quest warnings
    • the junk drawer as the most honest museum in the house

    Open a drawer. Not the one you already understand. Open a weird drawer. Take out an object you can't immediately explain and hold it for a second. And just ask what it is. And why you kept it. And what future you was supposed to do with it. And you might not get an answer, but you might get a story.


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    1 hr and 15 mins
  • Hidden In Plain Sight
    Jun 22 2026

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    A kitten on a mountain trail turns into a bobcat. A $4 flea market frame turns into a multimillion-dollar Declaration of Independence discovery. A jar of pickles becomes a roadside legend that refuses to disappear. We built this hour around one idea that keeps proving itself: the biggest breakthroughs are often hidden in plain sight, not because they are invisible, but because we stop asking questions once we think we understand what we’re seeing.

    We bounce from the Blue Ridge Mountains to small-town Iowa’s escaped kangaroo report, then back through history to the Antikythera mechanism, the ancient Greek device now considered the world’s first analog computer. For years it was dismissed as “just a clock” because it did not fit the story people expected. That same bias shows up in archaeology, where Caracol in Belize was known long before LIDAR mapping revealed terraces, causeways, and a 70-square-mile settlement that rewrites assumptions about Maya cities and population density.

    From there, we get practical about curiosity: why truly understanding technology means being able to explain it simply, why “easy” tasks like making coffee are packed with hidden choices, and why documentation and technical writing matter more than most people realize. We even detour into true crime oddities where pants become evidence, then close with a love letter to archives, matchbooks as personal history, and museums as living engines of scientific research behind the glass.

    If something here sparks a memory, share it with us: what’s the most interesting thing you’ve ever found that everyone else overlooked? Subscribe, share the episode with a curious friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    Find our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/447251562357065/

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    59 mins
  • Samba, So Many Bees, and the Great Buffalo Controversy
    Jun 15 2026

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    A capybara sprints into freedom, a buffalo becomes a political lightning rod, and a cemetery turns out to be one of the biggest bee neighborhoods scientists have ever documented. That’s where we start, and it only gets better from there. We’re coming to you from Cape Cod with a grab bag of stories that sound absurd at first, then land with surprisingly real questions about attention, ethics, and what we choose to protect.

    First up: Samba, the missing capybara from England’s Marwell Zoo, who keeps showing up in sightings and AI-generated social posts but still can’t be caught. Then we head to Bangladesh, where a rare albino buffalo draws crowds because it “looks like” Donald Trump, triggering a wave of viral fame, security concerns, and controversy over a zoo sign that doesn’t last long. We dig into why these stories spread, and what gets lost when an animal becomes content.

    Then we slow down for a science gut-punch: researchers near Cornell University find an enormous aggregation of solitary ground-nesting mining bees in an Ithaca cemetery, potentially millions of pollinators living underfoot. From citizen science to pesticide-free habitat, we talk about what this discovery means for biodiversity, agriculture, and how to notice the natural world in places you’d never expect.

    Finally, John from Silver Lake joins us for Waymo driverless car sightings, neighborhood change, indie film talk, and a trivia challenge that pulls real Los Angeles history into the mix. We wrap with books and movies, including “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” and a personal “found object” story that proves old stuff can still surprise you. Subscribe, share this with a curious friend, and leave a review if you like smart stories with a weird edge. What part are you still thinking about?

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    1 hr and 3 mins
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