Please visit the organizers' websites for details.

An Evening Casey Wilson & Jessica St. Clair with Danielle Schneider & June Diane Raphael

Join comedians, actors and self-appointed experts on chit-chat Casey Wilson and Jessica St. Clair as they dispense hilarious and practical advice on how to up your small-talk game. They breathe new life into the lost art of making conversation and their new book THE ART OF SMALL TALK presents simple rules for how to connect with everyone. Learn how to move past idle chatter and start making magic out of the mundane with friends and strangers alike. Wilson, an actress, writer, author, director, and podcaster most recently appeared in "The Shrink Next Door" and "The Righteous Gemstones." Her first book, The Wreckage of My Presence was a NY Times bestseller and is currently being adapted for TV. Actress and writer St. Clair is a Upright Citizens Brigade alum in both LA and NYC. She co-created and co-starred in NBC's "Best Friends Forever" and has started in not one, but two, space comedies: "Space Force" with Steve Carrell and "Avenue 5" opposite Hugh Laurie. VIRTUAL EVENT TICKETS,May 25, 3pm PT/6pm ET (click here)TICKETS:$35 Virtual Admission + audio book*Includes access to watch the event on video-on-demand for five days after it airs. Audiobook will be emailed on the morning of the event, May 25.

Purchase Required

Eric Weiner in conversation with Rainn Wilson (Virtual)

Eric Weiner and Rainn Wilson will discuss Weiner's THE GEOGRAPHY OF BLISS, which is now a new docuseries on Peacock hosted by Wilson. It is based on the NY Times bestselling book, which is part travel memoir, part humor and part twisted self-help guide, and takes the traveler around the globe searching for the secrets to the happiest societies on earth. In addition, they will discuss Weiner's BEN & ME: IN SEARCH OF A FOUNDER'S FORMULA FOR A LONG AND USEFUL LIFE. Not a conventional biography, the author follows Franklin from Philadelphia to Paris, and Boston to London, in an attempt to uncover Ben's life lessons, including a psychological phenomenon known as The Ben Franklin Effect, the printing press and of course, electricity. Weiner argues we'd all be better off if we acted and thought a bit more like Ben when it comes to curiosity, diligence and self-improvement.

Purchase Required

This website's content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You are free to share and adapt with attribution.