
Episode 24: Touched With Fire, aka the non-hollywood Bipolar movie (with Jossie Williams)
Explicit content warning
02/23/22 • 87 min
3 Listeners
Join Steph and the vibrant Jossie Williams as they dissect the indie Paul Dalio film Touched With Fire. Jossie takes us through her own journey of diagnosis, treatment and life with bipolar disorder and how it compares to the depiction in the movie. We also rag on Silver Linings Playbook a little, soz. Could this be the film that finally fully passes the Psychocinematic test? Does it have to be one that's almost impossible to find on streaming sites goddammit!?
Jossie Williams is a Psychology personal assistant, counselling student, mental health advocate, writer, and all round rad and highly fashionable babe. Follow her on instagram at @shehasafaceforradio.
Access bulk billed online counselling from anywhere in Australia here: Lysn | Online psychology counselling by qualified psychologists. (welysn.com)
CONTENT WARNING: **Major suicide content warning, discussion of suicidal behaviour, ideation and self harm** abortion, description of mania, description of depression, panic attack, drug use and misuse.
Host: Stephanie Fornasier
Cohost: Jossie Williams
Editor: Nicholas Fornasier
Music: Michael Watson
Artwork: Bronte Poynts
REFERENCES:
Bipolar disorder - Information & Resources - Black Dog Institute
Katie Holmes and Luke Kirby Are All Fired Up (honeysucklemag.com)
'Touched with Fire' finds drama, beauty in mental illness | MPR News
Katie Holmes, Luke Kirby Premiere Bipolar Drama 'Touched With Fire' - Variety
Katie Holmes Touched With Fire - Katie Holmes Wants to Humanize Mental Illness (elle.com)
Katie Holmes tackles mental illness in ‘Touched With Fire’ – Orange County Register (ocregister.com)
Touched with Fire Is an Offensive Cartoon of Mental Illness - Movies & TV - Portland Mercury
Bipolar Disorder and Anger: Why It Happens and How to Cope (healthline.com)
Kay Redfield Jamison - Wikipedia
zVTZ5XMyTXyokMGJaPyp
Join Steph and the vibrant Jossie Williams as they dissect the indie Paul Dalio film Touched With Fire. Jossie takes us through her own journey of diagnosis, treatment and life with bipolar disorder and how it compares to the depiction in the movie. We also rag on Silver Linings Playbook a little, soz. Could this be the film that finally fully passes the Psychocinematic test? Does it have to be one that's almost impossible to find on streaming sites goddammit!?
Jossie Williams is a Psychology personal assistant, counselling student, mental health advocate, writer, and all round rad and highly fashionable babe. Follow her on instagram at @shehasafaceforradio.
Access bulk billed online counselling from anywhere in Australia here: Lysn | Online psychology counselling by qualified psychologists. (welysn.com)
CONTENT WARNING: **Major suicide content warning, discussion of suicidal behaviour, ideation and self harm** abortion, description of mania, description of depression, panic attack, drug use and misuse.
Host: Stephanie Fornasier
Cohost: Jossie Williams
Editor: Nicholas Fornasier
Music: Michael Watson
Artwork: Bronte Poynts
REFERENCES:
Bipolar disorder - Information & Resources - Black Dog Institute
Katie Holmes and Luke Kirby Are All Fired Up (honeysucklemag.com)
'Touched with Fire' finds drama, beauty in mental illness | MPR News
Katie Holmes, Luke Kirby Premiere Bipolar Drama 'Touched With Fire' - Variety
Katie Holmes Touched With Fire - Katie Holmes Wants to Humanize Mental Illness (elle.com)
Katie Holmes tackles mental illness in ‘Touched With Fire’ – Orange County Register (ocregister.com)
Touched with Fire Is an Offensive Cartoon of Mental Illness - Movies & TV - Portland Mercury
Bipolar Disorder and Anger: Why It Happens and How to Cope (healthline.com)
Kay Redfield Jamison - Wikipedia
zVTZ5XMyTXyokMGJaPyp
Previous Episode

Episode 23: Silver Linings Playbook, aka David O. Russell’s Bipolar Movie
Welcome to a new year of Psychocinematic deep dives you didn’t know you needed! Today we start a conversation about Bipolar Disorder, by firstly looking at the Oscar bait 2012 film by David O Russell, Silver Linings Playbook. How does Hollywood handle something that has so much stigma and misunderstanding attached to it? Is it as accurate as people seem to believe? And do we like David O Russell?
Content Warning: ableism, sports gambling, institutionalisation, physical violence, sex shaming, brief description of panic attack, body shaming, brief description of sexual assault, use of the term ‘crazy’.
NOTE: This podcast is not designed to be therapeutic, prescriptive or constitute a formal diagnosis for any listener, nor the characters discussed. The host is not representative of all psychologists and opinions stated are her own personal opinion, based on her own learnings and training (and minimal lived experience). Host and co-hosts do not have the final say and can only comment based on their own perspectives, so please let us know if you dispute any of these opinions – we are keen for feedback!
Host: Stephanie Fornasier
Cohost: Michael Watson
Editor: Nicholas Fornasier
Music: Michael Watson
Artwork: Bronte Poynts
Follow Psychocinematic on Instagram!: psychocinematicpodcast and Twitter!: twitter.com/psychocinematic or join our facebook group (search for Psychocinematic Podcast) or email us at [email protected]! AND our Patreon is here.
REFERENCES
ReachOut: What is Bipolar Disorder?
Forbes: Director David O. Russell Talks 'Silver Linings Playbook' And What It Means To Him
Psychology Today: Accuracy, Distortion and Truth in Silver Linings Playbook
Web MD: 'Silver Linings Playbook' OK on Mental Illness?
Sather Health: Review of “Silver Linings Playbook” in the Perspective of Mental Illness
Psychology Today: The Psychopathology of 'Silver Linings Playbook'
NME: Silver Linings Playbook Plays Things So Safe It Becomes Dangerous
Daily Sundial: Crazy, happy and normal, what ‘Silver Linings Playbook’ taught us
Vulture: Ask a Psychiatrist: How does Silver Linings Playbook handle mental illness?
Child Mind Institute: Silver Linings: An irreverent but real look at mental illness
Next Episode

Episode 25: Atypical, and how autism representation has and hasn’t progressed since Rain Man (with Eric Michael Garcia)
Our 25th episode has the brilliant Washington DC based journalist, author and autism advocate Eric Michael Garcia joining Steph to discuss Netflix’s extremely polite series Atypical (2017-2020). We drag it just as politely, and discuss what it does well, what it neglects, and what promising ideas it doesn’t really flesh out. We also discuss the problems with autism parenting culture, and whether we should like Zahid or not (But we should definitely love Casey).
Check Eric’s work out at his website http://www.ericmgarcia.net/. Follow him on Twitter @EricMGarcia where he occasionally pisses off Kathy Griffin, and Instagram @ericmgarcia14 . Order his book ‘We’re Not Broken’ here!
Listen to You’re Wrong About and You Are Good (formally Why Are Dads) too.
Content Warning: ableism, physical violence, abusive behaviour, discussion of cancer.
NOTE: This podcast is not designed to be therapeutic, prescriptive or constitute a formal diagnosis for any listener, nor the characters discussed. The host is not representative of all psychologists and opinions stated are her own personal opinion, based on her own learnings and training (and minimal lived experience). Host and co-hosts do not have the final say and can only comment based on their own perspectives, so please let us know if you dispute any of these opinions – we are keen for feedback!
Host: Stephanie Fornasier
Cohost: Eric Garcia
Editor: Nicholas Fornasier
Music: Michael Watson
Artwork: Bronte Poynts
Follow Psychocinematic on Instagram!: psychocinematicpodcast and Twitter!: twitter.com/psychocinematic or join our facebook group (search for Psychocinematic Podcast) or email us at [email protected]! AND our Patreon is here.
REFERENCES
- Neurotribes, The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity by Steve Silberman | 9780399185618 | Booktopia
- ‘Atypical’ Creator Robia Rashid on Depicting Autism on TV (vulture.com)
- How Season 2 of ‘Atypical’ Improves the Show’s Depictions of Life as an Autistic Person - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
- Growing Up With Autism, She Never Saw Herself On TV. Now On ‘Atypical,’ She Strives To Show Others With Disabilities ‘Characters They Can Relate To.’ (forbes.com)
- Autistic Voices, Community Members, And Experts Look Back (And Forward) At Autism Representation On TV | Decider
- Here's what Netflix's Atypical gets right (and not so right) about autism - ABC News
- Atypical: A Novel Portrayal of Individuals With Autism Spectrum Disorder | American Journal of Psychiatry Residents' Journal (psychiatryonline.org)
- michelle dean – A Is For Aoife Not Autism
- What Netflix comedy Atypical gets right and wrong about autism | US television | The Guardian
- Why Netflix's Atypical Fell Short as Autistic Representation | Time
- 'Atypical' Season 4: Wha...
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