TBD - To Be Determined

著者: Bill Williamson Dan Kamm
  • サマリー

  • Classic scifi short stories ... some you know, some you don't. But all of them are worthy of another look.
    2021 - 2024
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あらすじ・解説

Classic scifi short stories ... some you know, some you don't. But all of them are worthy of another look.
2021 - 2024
エピソード
  • Episode 27 - For a Breath I Tarry
    2024/05/21

    Theme: What does it mean to be human?

    Episode Connections
    Authors, stories
    . Roger Zelanzny, Chronicles of Amber. Neil Gaiman, Sandman. The Bible. Isaac Asimov, Bicentennial Man. Jack Williamson, “With Folded Hands.”
    Films. Bicentennial Man. AI. Blade Runner. I, Robot. Finch.
    TV episodes, series. Star Trek: The Next Generation.
    Ideas. Literary sci fi. Mythological connections. Logic is once again the defining characteristic of humankind, even in a post-human world. In that context, the story asks … what does it mean to be human? What role does emotion play in defining humanity?
    Whoa - Hmmm - WTF. Bill says it is designed to be a Hmmm tale. Dan agrees.

    Previous episode: Ray Bradbury, “There Will Come Soft Rains”
    Next episode: Thomas F. Monteleone, “Chicago”

    Music Credit: "Ouroboros" Kevin MacLeod (Incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    Link: Creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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    56 分
  • Episode 26 - There Will Come Soft Rains
    2024/03/20

    Theme: Our house … is a very, very, very smart house

    Episode Connections
    Authors, stories
    . Sara Teasdale, “There Will Come Soft Rains.” Dean Koontz, The Demon Seed. Alan Weisman, The World Without Us. James Tiptree Jr., “The Last Flight of Dr. Ain.” McSweeney’s.com. Fritz Lieber, “A Pale of Air.” Larry Niven, “Inconstant Moon.”
    Films. The Demon Seed. I, Robot. Back to the Future. Mad Max. Planet of the Apes. Winnie the Pooh.
    TV episodes, series. Ray Bradbury Theater. The Jetsons. The Jeffersons. Life After People. Little House on the Prairie.
    Ideas. An automated house that survives a nuclear holocaust. Lots of human routines. Housing automations always fit around human routines, which makes sense. Hues lights. Alexa. Smart thermostats. But the story is really a post-WWII anti-war story rather than one about automated houses. The story puts human ingenuity at odds with human weakness as a warlike species. Once we are gone, nature reclaims the spaces we occupied. What will be the last thing left to represent us when we are gone? The Teasdale poem from which the story gets its title was a post-WWI offering that was published during the 1918 Flu Pandemic. Kitchens are often the center of the house these days. Everyone needs an incinerator in their home. Bill Williamson’s trash rockets … the wave of the future. Vinyl is nostalgia now. But not 8-track tapes. We have now explored a lot of apocalyptic visions with a variety of causes.
    Whoa - Hmmm - WTF. Dan says it is definitely a Hmmm story to begin with, but maybe a little bit a Hmmm - wtf. As in WTF did you humans do? Bill says it is a bit of Whoa because there are no humans.

    Previous episode: James Tiptree Jr., “The Last Flight of Dr. Ain”
    Next episode: Roger Zelazny, “For a Breath I Tarry”

    Music Credit: "Ouroboros" Kevin MacLeod (Incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    Link: Creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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    35 分
  • Episode 25 - The Last Flight of Dr. Ain
    2023/12/20

    Theme: A plague of humans.

    Episode Connections
    Authors, stories
    . Lynn Margulis, the Gaia Hypothesis. Stephen King, The Stand. Richard Matheson, I Am Legend. Richard Preston, The Hot Zone. Albert Robina, The War in the Twentieth Century. Aldo’s Huxley, Brave New World. H.G. Wells, “The Stolen Bacillus.” Nicholas Christakis, Apollo’s Arrow.
    Films. The Matrix. Resident Evil films. The Omega Man. The Last Man On Earth. I Am Legend. 12 Monkeys. The Andromeda Strain. Outbreak.
    Games. Plague Incorporated. The Goliath Virus.
    Ideas. More post-apocalyptic sci fi. Male pseudonyms for female authors. Environmental degradation is an essential element of the background setting for the story. At the core of the story are military efforts to weaponize diseases. Dr. Ain seeks to reboot planet Earth by killing off humans and other higher order primates, thus leaving things to the other animals. Maybe bears. The Gaia Hypothesis. Humans as a threat to life on Earth. On the possibility of weaponized diseases. CoVid 19 and conspiracy theories. We love to make light of apocalypse by virus. Look up Biosafety Level IV. We do not always understand the vectors that spread viruses until it is too late. Our economic connections make us vulnerable to disaster. Monkey Pox. SARS. HIV. And more. We have been writing stories about such things for over 100 years, although the maladies evolve over the years. We also have a lot of stories that anthropomorphize the Earth. Human patterns during crises such as pandemics and plagues. Fear is a mechanism for controlling people. And we have a long history of weaponizing fear and disease. The suicide pact between Alice Sheldon and her husband. Parallels to contemporary events. The continuing arc of disaster stories on TBD. Who gets to join our post-apocalyptic island society? There is a lot of utopic fiction. This one balances that with some apocalyptic vision.
    Whoa - Hmmm - WTF. Dan says Hmmm. A very plausible hmmm. Bill wishes that it could be a WTF story, but it is just too real.

    Previous episode: Larry Niven, “Inconstant Moon”
    Next episode: Ray Bradbury, “There Will Come Soft Rains”

    Music Credit: "Ouroboros" Kevin MacLeod (Incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    Link: Creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

    続きを読む 一部表示
    38 分

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