219 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
219 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4180
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Title: HPR4180: Intro to Science Fiction Series
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4180/hpr4180.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 20:54:15
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4,180 for Friday the 9th of August 2024.
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Today's show is entitled Intro to Science Fiction Series.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 16 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is I'm starting a new series on science fiction and fantasy.
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And this introduces it.
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Hello, this is Ahukah, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in what is going to be a new series.
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Just to bring you up to date on where I am at, we have decided to stop traveling via our
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RV.
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I'm 72 and it's starting to become a little more work than I really am comfortable doing.
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And one of the things that happens when you start getting to be about my age is doing
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things that you don't want to do is something you just stop doing.
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So I just do whatever I want to do now.
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And I have certain interests and one of them I'm going to start talking about is science
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fiction and fantasy.
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I've been a huge fan for a long time.
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In fact, I don't even, I can't even remember when it started.
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I don't recall a time in my life when I wasn't reading science fiction and fantasy.
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It's not to say that I haven't read other things.
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As a child, I certainly remember reading the Walter Farley books about horses and some
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images from that have stuck in my brain.
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But when I think of my early love of here with books, it is about reading science fiction
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and fantasy.
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I lean more toward science fiction, but I enjoy them both.
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Now I was a voracious reader.
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I remember living in Buffalo.
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I would have been about nine or ten.
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And my mother taking me on a weekly trip to the library where I would check out a stack
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of books for my weeks reading or rather my mother would check them out.
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Kids my age were not allowed to check out so many books and most of the ones I checked
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out were considered adult level.
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So she had to do it for me.
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And while we lived in a suburb of Buffalo called Amherst, I remember taking a trip downtown
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to the main Buffalo library and thinking it was the most awesome place I had ever been.
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My own private fantasy involves sneaking into a corner, getting locked in for the night
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and just spending the whole time reading.
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Now I started off with things like the Tom Swift books.
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Now that's been going on for a long time.
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I've got some links in the show notes if you want to learn more about those.
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But they were, you know, they were child books, Tom Swift, Nancy Drew, the hardy brothers,
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you know, hardy boys, sort of typical juvenile books.
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Then I moved to juvenile books by more adult authors.
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And they were always called juveniles.
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I think today they called them young adult and I'm not sure what the difference means
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really.
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A high line wrote a number of juveniles that are still excellent, many of which I have
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re-read as an adult and still enjoyed.
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Asimov did a series called Lucky Star that was a virtual trip through the solar system.
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Like Lucky Star and the Pirates of the Asteroids.
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Lucky Star and the Moons of Jupiter.
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You know, at some point I joined the science fiction book club and I got a copy of the
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foundation trilogy by Asimov in a single volume which I kept for years and re-read many
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times.
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In fact, it was falling apart eventually.
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Then I discovered Doc Smith, EE Doc Smith.
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Now I think his work would definitely look a little old-fashioned now but remember I'm
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72.
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So I'm kind of old-fashioned.
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It was something I fell in love with.
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Now there's a saying in the fandom circles of science fiction that the golden age of science
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fiction is 14 because that is approximately the age when so many of us became lifelong
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fans.
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And still a fan of Doc Smith.
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I have a Domain's Will Nick dot com that comes from his Lensman series.
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I have the Domain Palain dot com which comes from his Lensman series.
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And I think I encountered that by the time I was 14 so that all fits.
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I've read everything of his I could get my hands on.
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I think a book that is not science fiction called have trench coat will travel.
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I would bet very few people have even heard of it and then only the devoted fans of Doc
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Smith.
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He has two well-known major series, the Lensman series already mentioned and the Skylark
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series.
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But he has a couple of two book series and a number of standalone science fiction novels.
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He also contributed ideas or even an initial piece to two series that were picked up by
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other authors.
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The Family Dillon Bear series was based on an idea by Smith but mostly written by Stephen
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Golden.
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Although if you ever get one of the books it's Smith's name is what you see on the cover
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and Golden is in small print down at the bottom.
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Similarly there was a Lord Tedrick series that was based on a novel act by Smith but mostly
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written by Gordon Eklent.
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Smith is what people frequently point to as representing classic space opera, meaning
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science fiction on a large scale, with lots of action and not too much in the way of
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introspection.
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You think of it as the print equivalent of Star Wars and you won't go far wrong.
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And while I'm at it at this point I've been mentioning a lot of names of things.
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The show notes, I've got links to all of these things you can follow up on if anything
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catches your eye or ear in this case.
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So anyway, in addition to science fiction I also read fantasy, I know I read the Lord
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of the Rings trilogy probably several times, the Hobbit several times, another favorite
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author was Andre Norton who wrote both fantasy and science fiction.
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Now as I said I tended to lean more towards science fiction but the good story is the
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most important thing and boundaries can be blurred.
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Heinlein for instance wrote a number of pure fantasies but he is usually considered a
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science fiction writer.
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But novels like Glory Road and Job Accomedy of Justice are pure fantasy.
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Sometimes though what looks like fantasy can turn out to be science fiction as with
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the classic Dragon Riders of Perns series by Ann McAfry.
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Which means it may be a good time to defend my terms.
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I could just say I know it when I see it but I'll try to do better.
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Science fiction is a story that is based on possible technology even if far in the future.
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It does not involve anything magical or anything flat out impossible.
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It may be far fetched in some ways such as involving time travel or faster than light
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travel.
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These are considered to be unlikely but are still being plausibly discussed by real scientists
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as something we may be able to do in some future time.
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Science in a science fiction novel may not age particularly well.
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Doc Smith for instance in the Lensman series had this whole thing about an inertialist
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drive which was his way of getting around faster than light.
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You know that if some of you got rid of inertia you could travel infinitely fast.
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It really doesn't make a whole lot of sense but you know in his day he could get away
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with it.
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Now fantasy on the other hand has no rules.
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Magic is just fine, ghosts are great, the only real requirement is that your story finds
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an audience that likes it.
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Even things that look like science fiction can turn out to be fantasy when looked at this
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way.
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A classic example for me is Star Wars.
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Yeah it's got spaceships and technology in it but when you bring in the force you're
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talking fantasy now.
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In the other direction the dragonwriters of Perne that I mentioned previously initially
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presents itself as high fantasy with people in a medieval like setting riding dragons
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that fly through the air and breathe fire.
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But then later in the series McCaffrey retcons this by having the people be descendants
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of folks who came here on spaceships and they bred the dragons using genetic engineering
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from native life forms and so on.
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Now I use the term retcon.
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That's a term you often hear in science fiction fandom circles and it stands for Retroactive
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Continuity.
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Here's the definition from the dictionary.
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This is Miriam Webster again link in the show notes.
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Retcon is a shortened form of retroactive continuity and refers to a literary device
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in which the form or content of a previously established narrative is changed.
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So in Dallas when you know someone wakes up and it was all a dream that's retcon.
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Now up until now I've just been discussing the print written science fiction you know
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I also enjoy the visual.
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I think probably my first exposure would have been the twilight zone in 1959 1959 I turned
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to eight so it was a long time ago and I was a lot younger and then there was the outer
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limits in 1963.
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I certainly remember lost in space that was in 1965 but the real breakthrough for me and
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for a lot of people was Star Trek which hit the television sets in 1966.
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Now I still love it.
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I have a DVD box set of the original three season series, TOS the original series with
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Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Sulu, all of the original gang at the Enterprise and so I've got the
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whole Shabang and it's great I love watching it.
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I watched it when it first came on.
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I watched it over and over and syndicated reruns and it never gruelled.
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Now I can't say that I've kept up with all of the spin-offs because there's only so
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many hours in the day but I have watched the first two seasons of Picard and have the
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third one waiting as a DVD set.
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I purchased all of them as DVD sets.
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One of the all-time great science fiction movies came out in 1968 that's 2001 a Space
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Odyssey.
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It's based on a story by Arthur C. Clarke and directed by Stanley Kubrick and it felt
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like the first time that a serious science fiction movie for adults had been made and presented
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real turning point.
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Now in the early 70s in Boston I ran across a program, a strange program on a UHF channel.
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This program was something called Doctor Who.
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Now it was clearly a British program with a fellow called the Doctor.
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He had on evening clothes and a cape and he drove around in a yellow classic car he called
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Bessie.
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I fell in love with the program and started to tune in regularly.
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Then one day I tuned in and instead of the Doctor there was some goofy looking guy in
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a floppy hat and a long scarf who claimed to be the Doctor but I wasn't having any of
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it.
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I knew better.
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Some years later I got a clue and have become a dedicated fan of the show and we'll definitely
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talk about that in this series.
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It's still going on and in 2023 it celebrated its 60th anniversary having first aired on
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November 23rd in 1963.
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Now later in the 1970s movies also started to get interesting again.
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In 1977 I saw Star Wars which was very exciting and then I saw the two subsequent ones
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Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi.
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In 1979 Star Trek the motion picture definitely had to watch that.
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That was the original Star Trek team now in a big screen movie production.
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Now after those first three Star Wars movies my interest started to fall off.
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I think I've seen maybe two of the others.
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I've seen most of the Star Trek movies probably missed a few of them.
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Now right now for my fiction reading I'm in the middle of reading the Amber series by
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Roger Zalasni who is a wonderful writer.
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This is a purely fantasy series about the true world amber of which our earth is only
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a shadow.
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And I got to hear him read from his book A Night in the Lonesome October which is another
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fantasy novel at a science fiction convention.
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As for what I am watching right now I am mostly watching Doctor Who.
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At 60 years of material I still haven't seen all of it yet.
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And I recently started under British TV show called Sapphire and Steel from 1979 which
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I would classify as probably fantasy.
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Now while I have ongoing technical and academic interests for interest for for example I'm
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currently and currently being 2024 reading Thomas Piketty's excellent book Capital
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in the 21st century.
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I used to be a professor of economics.
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But when I read fiction it is almost always science fiction or fantasy.
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So I'm going to be discussing many of the things we've just talked about in this introductory
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episode but going into more depth about it and I'll probably bring in some other things.
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And I'd also like to encourage anyone else at Hacker Public Radio that wants to talk
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about science fiction and fantasy to come join the series and make your own contributions.
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So this I hope maybe opens up some possibilities for additional and particularly for new contributors
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to jump in and start offering some shows.
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So this is a hookah for Hacker Public Radio and signing off and is always encouraging
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you to support free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts you click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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The interesting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive
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and our syncs.net.
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On the Sadois stages today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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