<description>&lt;p&gt;On this week’s Organist, two stories about the surprising intimacy of anonymity. In the first, thousands of people sign up for a &lt;a text="service" href="https://callinthenight.com/" target= "_blank" data-linktype="external" data-val= "https://callinthenight.com/" rel= "noopener noreferrer"&gt;service&lt;/a&gt;, created by artist and programmer Max Hawkins, which wakes up thousands strangers with a phone call in the middle of the night then pairs them up at random and records their conversations. The vulnerability of that moment, and the anonymity of having a sleepy and total stranger on the end of the line, leads to recordings of astonishing intimacy. One night, a fighting couple, who have angrily retreated to their separate apartments, wake up to hear the voice of the other on the line, a one-in-four-thousand chance. After talking face-to-face has failed, can this weird art experiment bring them back together?&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;In our second story, Vanessa Lowe—host of KCRW’s &lt;a data-linktype="external" target="_blank" text="Nocturne" href= "https://www.kcrw.com/culture/@@resolveuid/db11f1f46d2b47d486b04668869c4f90" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-val= "/@@resolveuid/db11f1f46d2b47d486b04668869c4f90"&gt;Nocturne&lt;/a&gt;, a sound-rich podcast featuring stories about the night—walks home from her favorite coffee shop to find a handwritten note sitting under a rock on her front porch. It's from an anonymous stranger, who has listened to her every word in the cafe. The note’s contents pull her into a series of increasingly anxious encounters. Has this process made her more sinister, alienated, and critical than the anonymous note-writer him or herself?&lt;/p&gt;</description>

The Organist

Andrew Leland

A Call in the Night

FEB 7, 201921 MIN
The Organist

A Call in the Night

FEB 7, 201921 MIN

Description

On this week’s Organist, two stories about the surprising intimacy of anonymity. In the first, thousands of people sign up for a service, created by artist and programmer Max Hawkins, which wakes up thousands strangers with a phone call in the middle of the night then pairs them up at random and records their conversations. The vulnerability of that moment, and the anonymity of having a sleepy and total stranger on the end of the line, leads to recordings of astonishing intimacy. One night, a fighting couple, who have angrily retreated to their separate apartments, wake up to hear the voice of the other on the line, a one-in-four-thousand chance. After talking face-to-face has failed, can this weird art experiment bring them back together?

In our second story, Vanessa Lowe—host of KCRW’s Nocturne, a sound-rich podcast featuring stories about the night—walks home from her favorite coffee shop to find a handwritten note sitting under a rock on her front porch. It's from an anonymous stranger, who has listened to her every word in the cafe. The note’s contents pull her into a series of increasingly anxious encounters. Has this process made her more sinister, alienated, and critical than the anonymous note-writer him or herself?