Jesse Michael Gabriel Thorn[2] (born April 24, 1981) is an American media entrepreneur and public radio and podcast host/creator. He is the founder of the Maximum Fun podcast network, and the host and producer of the podcasts Judge John Hodgman and Jordan, Jesse, Go![3] and the radio show and podcastBullseye. Bullseye (formerly The Sound of Young America), is distributed by National Public Radio[4] to several hundred public terrestrial radio stations.[5] In addition to his work in radio and podcasts, Jesse Thorn also hosted the television program The Grid, which formerly aired on IFC, and The Sound of Young America, which aired on Current, and runs a blog and web video series devoted to men's fashion called Put This On.[6] As an actor, he has appeared on stage with the sketch comedy group Prank the Dean and on IFC's Comedy Bang Bang.[7]
Near the end of 2004, Thorn began to make his show, The Sound of Young America, available as a podcast. A few months later, Thorn received a call from the director of programming at PRI, who had heard one of the podcasts and expressed interest in distributing the show.[10] In 2006 WNYC-FM, a public radio station in New York City, picked up the show, and PRI decided to distribute it.[9] By September 2008 the show was carried on 18 public radio stations, in addition to the podcast.[5][9] This was the beginning of Maximum Fun, which Thorn still owns, although he now has an administrative team. [12]
In 2006, Thorn and former Sound of Young America co-host Jordan Morris launched another podcast, Jordan, Jesse, Go![9] Thorn has also produced several other podcasts for MaximumFun.org, including Elizabeth Gilbert's Magic Lessons, the scripted comedy series Bubble, Coyle & Sharpe: The Imposters[citation needed] and The Kasper Hauser Comedy Podcast.[16] He was also a part of sketch comedy group Prank the Dean,[17] along with Morris, Lauren Pasternak and Jim Real.
Over time, The Sound of Young America (now Bullseye), which had had a variety talk show, became more focused on interviews. Thorn has interviewed many notable personalities on his show, including Dolly Parton, Greta Gerwig, Jay Leno, Antonio Banderas, Jeff Goldblum and E-40. Thorn also interviewed Stephen Colbert as a part of iTunes's Meet the Author series.[10]
Thorn has become notably identified with a philosophy he calls "New Sincerity." A USA Weekend article cited the "New Sincerity" segment of the show as a listeners' favorite, and quoted Thorn's explanation of the concept as "a rejection of irony."[18] Thorn has promoted New Sincerity on his program, in his blog[19] and in interviews,[17][20][21][22][23] and was named as a popularizer of New Sincerity in a scholarly work discussing the similar novaia iskrennost' concept in Russian post-Soviet aesthetic theory.[24]
Thorn has been an important leader in the podcast business. Fast Company called him "the most important person in entertainment you've never heard of" and "the Zelig of modern culture."[25] In 2011, the magazine chose him as one of the 100 most creative people in business.[26] In 2009, Jesse helped comedian and podcaster Marc Maron to set up the microphones and software necessary to produce his WTF with Marc Maron podcast from his garage. Maron thanked Jesse again for this on the podcast's 300th episode.[27] Jesse is also the coproducer of the public radio broadcast version of Maron's podcast.
In 2012, The Sound of Young America was renamed Bullseye while continuing to have much of the same format as before.
In 2017 and 2018, Thorn released a podcast series on the art of interviewing, entitled The Turnaround. It featured interviews with interviewers on interviewing, including guests such as Dick Cavett, Katie Couric, Werner Herzog, Larry King and Terry Gross.[28]
In 2008, Thorn married Theresa Hossfeld.[9] They have three children.[29][30][31][32]
From 2013 until the pandemic finally prompted her to step down in spring of 2022, Theresa Thorn co-hosted the Maximum Fun podcast One Bad Mother with Biz Ellis.[33]
^Alexei Yurchak, "Post-Post-Communist Sincerity: Pioneers, Cosmonauts, and Other Soviet Heroes Born Today," in Thomas Lahusen and Peter H. Solomon, What Is Soviet Now?: Identities, Legacies, Memories (LIT Verlag Berlin-Hamburg-Münster, 2008), ISBN978-3-8258-0640-8, p.258 n.3, excerpt available at Google Books. Andrew W.K.(Noting that "the turn to post-postmodern sincerity . . .is associated with the events of 9/11" and "'new sincerity' has been popularized since 9/11 by some youth media (for example, by Jesse Thorn, the host of a popular music program Sound of Young America, on New York's National Public Radio station WNYC).