Gretchen McCulloch's Blog
September 8, 2025
April, May, & June 2025: Lauren writes a gesture book!
Back in 2017, when I was deep in the writing process for Because Internet, I was feeling stuck on the emoji chapter and Lauren Gawne, my cohost on the then-baby Lingthusiasm podcast (we were less than a year old!) offered to read the current draft. I’ll never forget her comment that led to me rewriting the whole chapter: “You realize this is all related to gesture, right?”
Immediately, I wanted to dive into the gesture literature, which hadn’t been a part of either of my linguistics degrees....
September 3, 2025
January, February, and March 2025: 100th Lingthusiasm episode
In the first few months of 2025, we celebrated a podcast milestone: 100 episodes of Lingthusiasm, a podcast that’s enthusiastic about linguistics!
To celebrate, my cohost Lauren Gawne and I did a special double-feature: our 100th episode had 100 “fun fact” reasons to be enthusiastic about linguistics (including a few from former guests) and our 101st episode finally tackles that classic “Linguistics 101” format of the micro-to-macro perspective on language.
Plus, we made a special round...
August 28, 2025
2024 Year in Review
In 2024, I traveled to Europe to speak at several events, including the launch of the Spanish translation of Because Internet. I started studying American Sign Language through the Lethbridge Layton Mackay Rehabilitation Centre in Montreal — my first time in a language classroom since university and it’s been really fun! The 2024 lingcomm grants were awarded. And I collaborated with the Crash Course Linguistics team on a research article about the series.
This year the podcast and I got some ...
May 8, 2025
October, November, & December 2024: Lingthusiasm Makes the New York Times Word Nerd Top Five
Lingthusiasm was featured in the New York Times’ list of 5 Podcasts for Word Nerds! And here’s print evidence that it happened.
The show is often as much about social habits as it is about language — one memorable episode had Gawne and McCulloch discuss “lopsided conversations,” those verbal interactions that can go off the rails if one person is either dominating or not contributing enough. It’s a fascinating listen that will change the way you see everyday communications.
The rest of ...
April 22, 2025
July, Aug, Sept 2024: Lo! An un-detached Eurotrip!
This summer I spent time with Finnish, Spanish, Estonian, Dutch, Italian, Latin (unexpectedly!), and… well, okay, kind of all of them, at least in museum exhibit form.
So I did what any linguist would do and made myself into a guinea pig, comparing four different language learning strategies on four languages to see what happened. I’ve written up an Introduction/overview and some highlights and troubleshooting.
On the same trip, I made appearances at some events:
The World Science Fic...June 30, 2024
April, May, & June 2024: LingComm Grants, a paper about Crash Course Linguistics, and boopguistics
In official research news, during the second quarter of 2024, the Crash Course Linguistics team published a case study on how the series came together, called Creating Inclusive Linguistics Communication: Crash Course Linguistics. It was a big collaboration, including co-writers me and Lauren Gawne, fact-checker Jessi Grieser, and several members of the production team at Complexly. You can read it for free along with the rest of the open-access handbook it’s in if you’re into meta on doing ling...
April 9, 2024
Jan, Feb, & Mar 2024: Crossword puzzles and vowel charts
In the first three months of 2024, I attended the annual meeting of the Linguistic Society of America in New York City — home, as always, of the American Dialect Society’s Word of the Year vote. (The winner? Enshittification!)
I also started taking classes in American Sign Language through a local community ASL 101 class offered at the Lethbridge Layton Mackay Rehabilitation Centre, with Deaf instructor Marc Gervais. It’s my first time back in a language class since my university days and it...
January 8, 2024
2023 Year in Review
In 2023, I switched to bluesky from twitter, which is still going strong. I also spent a month at the LSA summer institute, went to assorted other conferences, and kept doing the podcast. In other words, just like, a pretty normal year, which wasn’t nearly as shaped by the pandemic as the previous few years have been.
ConferencesI started the year in Denver, Colorado at the annual meeting of the Linguistic Society of America, where I co-hosted the Five Minute Linguist competition with ...January 3, 2024
Oct, Nov & Dec 2023: there’dn’t’ve and ceiling wax
In the final quarter of 2023, I went to NWAV51 in Queen’s, New York in October and to Patreon’s CreatorFest in Los Angeles in November. No talks from me at either, just attending interesting sessions!
I recorded a dramatic reading of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, Abridged Beyond the Point of Usefulness (i.e. made into couplets) for the audiobook of Zach Weinersmith’s very hilarious book of the same name. This will be released publically…eventually. Stay tuned.
Btw people should totally commiss...
October 2, 2023
August-September 2023: Etymology isn’t Destiny merch and an academic article about lingcomm
I joined onto a fun project this month, Zach Weinersmith of the webcomic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal is running a Kickstarter for his book, The Universe: Abridged Beyond the Point of Usefulness, and one of the bonus rewards is an audiobook of his other book, Shakespeare’s Sonnets: Abridged Beyond the Point of Usefulenss. I’ll be the one reading the highly abridged sonnets, which I’m looking forward to!
I wrote down assorted thoughts about I think about framing a plenary talk, which beg...