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1570 lines
95 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3921
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Title: HPR3921: HPR AudioBook Club 23 - John Carter of Mars (Books 1-3)
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3921/hpr3921.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 17:28:50
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,921 from Monday the 14th of August, 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Hacker Public Radio Audio Book Club 23, John Carter of Mars
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Books 1, 2 and 3.
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It is hosted by them, X1-101, Pokey, 5150 and Mark, and is about 109 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, in this episode the Hacker Public Radio Audio Book Club discusses the
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first three books of John Carter of Mars.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of the Hacker Public Radio Audio Book Club.
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This week we have a pretty special contributor to the show.
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We have the narrator of the book that we were assigned last month.
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I'm doing a really poor job of this, this month sorry everybody.
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Okay so the audio book club, if you're not familiar with it, we listen to an audio
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book over a one month period.
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It has to be a book that is freely available so that anyone on the internet can legally
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download it and participate in the audio book club if they want to.
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That means if you're listening to this you're welcome to join us next time.
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We do this over mumble because it is free software, free with a capital F, free as in
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freedom and we use all free software to produce the show as well.
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We publish on Hacker Public Radio, but if you're listening to this you probably already
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know that and I'm getting harassed in our text chat room here.
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I am one of the members of the audio book club, I am Poki and with us this week we have
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a desk J. Marky, did you want me to use your real name on here?
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Well yeah, because you're on the book.
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We have Mark Nelson, the narrator of our audio book this week.
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Hey Mark.
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Konbanwa Minisan.
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And we got Taj.
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What's good everybody?
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Oh hi Okosemasu.
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We got 5150 just popped in and say hi before your connection drops again.
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Yeah, hey guys, I don't know.
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I think, I think what it is, they screwed around on the up point side on the, on the
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provide side with my internet connection and I think it's actually been dropping in and
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out constantly for the last three weeks, but mumbles are a thing sensitive enough to notice
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it.
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Yeah, it's super latency sensitive.
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And we have X 1101.
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Howdy folks.
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So also, if you're not familiar with the audio book club, our format is that we will do
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a, a three part review.
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In the first part, we will review the audio book without any spoilers to our best not
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to spoil anything for you.
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In case you haven't listened and are still trying to decide if you want to.
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In the second part, we will each review a beverage of our choosing, usually a beverage,
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sometimes we cheat and do knife sharpeners or motorcycle intercoms or dumb stuff.
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And in the third part of the show, we will spoil the heck out of the book.
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That's about it.
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I miss anything, guys.
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You didn't actually tell them what book we're talking about a princess of Mars.
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And oh, yeah.
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And uh, she was a cause and a prince of Mars.
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It was the, uh, princess of Mars, god of Mars, gods of Mars, warlord of Mars.
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I remember the last one by Edgar Rice Burrows and red, Mark Nelson.
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That would be me.
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We kind of usually start there anyway.
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So we can start there this week and say you did a wonderful job reading this book.
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It was excellent.
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Well, thank you.
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One of the things we usually hit on is audio glitches, technical stuff like that.
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And I don't know that I heard a single double read in the whole thing, which is really rare.
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Even for, for most freely available audio books, there's always something.
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I don't remember hearing anything.
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It was spot on.
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Well, thanks.
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I do take pride in putting out good product.
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And on the side, I am a professional audio book narrator as well.
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So I'm used to putting out good product.
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Well, then doubly thanks for contributing to the commons.
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If it's what you're doing professionally and you're still doing it outside of that for, you know, just for the commons.
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Twice, I might add.
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Well, I do primarily the free stuff.
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I do a few paid jobs a year.
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It's not something I count on.
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It's not something I make my living on.
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And frankly, most of those aren't nearly as fun as doing the free ones.
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I get a lot of really awful books to narrate for money.
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And thankfully, they are for money.
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But when I want to have a good time,
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I pick good classic free books.
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And I record them for primarily liver box.
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I've done a few for patio books.
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In fact, I think you did one of mine here.
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Yeah, about a year ago, we did down and out in the magic kingdom.
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Yes, I read that book and I thought it was wonderful.
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And I contacted Corey and asked him if it would be okay for me to do an audio book on a patio books.
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And since he's a guy who is really open about copyrights and creative comments and all
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that stuff, he said, sure, no problem.
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And so I put it up on a patio books and it's actually been very well received.
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It was well received by us.
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If I remember, it got only thumbs up and we still say bitch and all the time.
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Indeed.
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Should be a meme.
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It is here.
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If you can have an audio meme, I think we've done it.
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And that brings me to a point I have to make speaking of our audio memes.
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These set of books were absolutely non-stop plot bullets.
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But the only plot bullet they can use were the plot bullets.
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Exactly.
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Once again, I will go back to the comment I made when we were talking about it.
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I could do social.
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We have to take into account that this was during the time where people got paid by the
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word for serialized fiction.
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It's understandable.
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Well, and the other point I want to make, just like when we talked about the Lensman stuff,
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it was, you know, it was, in other words, you're escaping me, it was the thing to do before
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it was the thing to do.
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So, you know, it does, it's not, it's cliche, but it was before it was cliche.
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So it's what started the cliches.
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So.
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Yeah, I get what you're saying.
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This is why this became cliche after you did it.
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Thank you.
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You took what I've rambled through and made it actually clear.
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Yeah.
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People have to remember, these books were written nearly a hundred years ago when the concept
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of going to another planet and other beings and different species were, I mean, it was
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all original at that time.
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Yeah, and, you know, I was, I'll take this opportunity to make a point that I had planned
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on making, you know, ever since I first started listening to this.
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I thought it was incredibly, I want to say impressive, I'm impressed with, with boroughs
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for calling all of the people in this book Men, even the giant, green, forearmed monsters
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with eyes on the side of their head.
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He referred to them as men, and I thought that was incredibly open-minded of him.
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You just, just to think of people as people, you know, no matter what they looked like.
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Maybe that wasn't the point he was trying to make, but I took that away from it, and I
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don't think I'm spoiling anything with that.
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And see, in the first book, I got almost exactly the opposite, since it's before his ending
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up on Mars, I'm going to call it non-spoilers.
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He talks about some experiences with Native Americans, and a lot of the language he uses
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talking about the green Martians has that same kind of almost inherent racism that you
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get from the time period when people talk about Native Americans, and this is definitely
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not lovecraftian kind of racism, but it was definitely still there.
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I was going to make the exact same point.
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I finished the first book, and I thought that I had pinned down, sort of, like, burrows,
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kind of philosophy about, you know, different people in different races, whether it was like
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overt or subconscious, then I read the second book, and it totally turned everything I thought
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on its head, and I was like, well done.
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Yeah, and that's why I made it very clear I met in the first book, because the rest
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of them don't feel like that.
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I didn't mean to say that he was, you know, that he would be admired today as, you
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know, a multi-culturalist.
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I just meant for his time, I think he was incredibly progressive in that respect.
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I think that's true, and if you look at the three books together, you realize that it
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is the red race that is the most advanced.
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It is the white race that is the most evil, and in the end, the black race is as honorable
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as any other.
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Yeah, definitely.
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Yeah, he, he, and there was a couple of things in there where he, you know, mentioned,
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this might sound funny coming from the Southern channel, and that was the only time that
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I had a lapse in that particular respect that I had for burrows.
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So I don't know, Mark, how much of our past shows that you've heard, but what we were
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talking about there with Plot Bullets is a reference to something we talked about before
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where the movie, Dune, the original take on that movie, they used those weirding modules
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they called them, and they, you know, had this incredible power over any other armed forces,
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and it was basically just to speed up the movie.
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So I think it was Taj that coined the phrase Plot Bullets, so that's what we've talked
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about there now is just to move the plot along.
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See, I remember it being from when we were talking about street candles, and it was E.
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Jock's gun that always seemed to have the right bullets for the situation.
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Or Cybrosis where they were literal bullets.
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Okay, point.
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Or in this book where they didn't use the bullets that could shoot, you know, 200 miles
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on an average day, but 300 miles if a guy was a good marksman.
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And exploded.
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I expected them to be used so much more, but they were barely used, and I'm glad they
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weren't used, because it just would have put a stop to a lot of things really early on.
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Yeah, we're just going to go ahead and retcon that those don't exist.
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Um, yeah, about those.
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No.
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I also thought it was really fun that, you know, anytime he talked about guns, he would
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talk about a revolver.
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Like here is this super forward thinking guy envisioning this society, but all he can
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imagine a handgun as a revolver.
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And the 1911 45 automatic had already been invented.
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I was just going to go look that up.
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So thank you.
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My pleasure.
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That's a really good point.
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I didn't even think of that.
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One of the things that struck me is, um, depending on whether you in your head cannon,
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there's another one of our audio means, uh, right off bar zoom as actual Mars or, uh,
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not.
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There are a lot of facts that, I mean, a hundred years ago that they knew about Mars,
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which kind of blew my mind.
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Like, I, it makes sense.
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Technology that they would know something about Mars, but some of the details were like
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pretty spot on even about what we know today.
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And I found that kind of remarkable.
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You talking about like a thin atmosphere.
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Yeah, thin atmosphere.
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We talked about the length of the days being, you know, uh, pretty similar to what actual
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Martian days are.
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And there were just a couple of things that I'm reading it when I was listening to it.
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And I was just like, Oh, that's actually true.
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And it surprised me.
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Like I expected more of it to just be made up, but apparently, um, to do a little research,
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like there had been a little bit of study of Mars.
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And he apparently read some of that and based the book on that.
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Well, as, as Sniere always says, trust the math.
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That's pretty cool.
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You wonder about gravity because that's based on mass and that is roughly, uh, relative
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to size isn't, isn't Mars roughly the size of earth?
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So isn't didn't you get gravity wrong or no, what's way smaller?
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No, it's half the size of earth.
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So the gravity is like one third, the gravity of earth.
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Oh, all right.
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Cool.
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Yeah, it's got those giant, giant mountains, right?
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That are like 20 times taller than our tallest mountains, isn't that something like that?
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It is, but eons ago, there was a lot of volcanic activity on Mars, which died out after the
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core cooled.
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So there was, there was historically, you know, 100 million, 200 million years ago, the
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opportunity to build giant mountains, but then that stopped.
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Okay.
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I learned that on Discovery Channel.
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Thank you very much.
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Nice.
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I've got to ask you, um, Mark, when you read these audio books, did you read the first
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one first and go straight through or did you read them out of order because someone hadn't
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done the third one yet and then backfilled?
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I did them in order.
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The first one was on LibraVox, but it was only a group effort.
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There wasn't a single narrator for the entire book, and I felt there should be, it was
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a book that deserved to have a title in the catalog with a single narrator.
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And so I did that.
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And I think after that, I started getting emails, people encouraged me to finish the series.
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So I picked up the rest of them from there.
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And I think I did, well, no, I did all five that are in the public domain.
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Well, I'm glad you did because the way that I wanted, I knew I wanted to do a Princess
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of Mars because it was one of those books that I neglected reading and it's a classic.
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And I knew I wanted to do that next.
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And I literally went through every version, listened to every chapter.
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And I picked yours because I was like, this is a voice I'm okay with for at least the
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long haul.
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And I noticed you had done all five books.
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And that was important to me because I was like, I'm going to listen to all of these
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books.
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Having not even put together that you had done one of the books we've done earlier.
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So it was impressive enough for me to just pick it based on your voice alone.
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I'm pleased to be okay.
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Yeah, I am really, really impressed with myself as I often am that I recognize your voice.
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That was really, really happy to recognize it.
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And then it didn't take me very long at all to pick out, keep them moving Dan from the
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voice.
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And that was really fun for me.
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Thanks a lot.
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So the reason I asked about the order of them is I noticed in the third book, the audio
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quality for maybe like the first four chapters or if I wasn't long, it was just a few chapters
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I think.
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But something happened, something was different in the audio.
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Was it, do you remember that?
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Well, probably what happened is, so I have an actual recording booth built in my house.
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Unfortunately, it's nice, yes, but it is in the garage.
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And it is subject to the weather.
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And I live in San Jose, so things aren't really radical here, but between November and February,
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the overtime temperature is near freezing.
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And a few times, actually I was planning on doing this in my booth, but today it's a hundred
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degrees.
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So out of the garage, the weather becomes a real problem.
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So I set up a alternate recording mini booth in my little office room, which frankly isn't
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as good.
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Well, it's not nearly as good.
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It's serviceable, but barely.
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So when things are really bad, I can continue to work, accepting the fact that the audio quality
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isn't going to be quite as good because the acoustics aren't quite as good.
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The mic, which is the one I'm using here right now, isn't quite as good as my professional
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recording mic, but at least can continue recording.
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We're pretty much all big audio nerds here.
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Do you mind if we nerd out a bit and talk about your setups, plural?
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Nerd away.
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All right.
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Cool.
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So the first thing I noticed you said you had a better mic out in the garage than you do
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in the house.
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So I imagine that's probably a big setup, like with phantom power and stuff.
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What do you got going on there?
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My primary setup is an audio-technica AT4040, which is a condenser, professional-condenser
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microphone.
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It's patched through an I-track solo interface, and I record directly into my Macbook Pro.
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I record in Reaper, which is a software that there are a few that allow you to do this.
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I edit as I record.
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I don't record through and go back and fix everything.
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I fix every mistake as I record.
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It's called punch recording.
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And when you've been doing this for a long time, it's really much more time-efficient than
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having to record for an hour and a half, than have to listen through and edit an hour
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and a half to edit that down to an hour to take all the mistakes out.
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So that's how I work out there.
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My secondary is a, I have a little thing called a porta-booth, which is a little box basically.
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It's a Velcro thing that you fold up.
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It's about two feet square cube that has acoustic padding inside where you put the microphone,
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which in this case, which I'm talking on now, is an Apple G mic, a USB mic.
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It's actually a very good one.
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So it works pretty well, but it isn't nearly as good, it isn't as good and doesn't sound
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as clean as the pro mic in my recording booth.
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It sounds really good now.
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Right now you sound as good as the recording, you know, the best of the recordings.
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But it was almost as if there was maybe a lot of noise cancellation going on or something
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that kind of deadened it a little.
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No, not at all.
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I'm in a really echoey, noisy, lousy room, actually.
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I can hear my wife talking on the foam outside, but I'm close to the mic.
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And it's got a pretty close pickup pattern, so it doesn't pick up echoes nearly as bad
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as many do, which is the biggest problem with acoustics.
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When you get echoes, it blurs the sound very badly.
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So it becomes very unclear to the listener.
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My booth out in the garage, it's about eight feet, well, six feet by eight, eight feet
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tall.
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All the walls are double, they're double paneled, so there's some sound buff, sound protection.
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And they're all covered with RLX foam, so the sound's very dead, so you don't get any
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echoes at all.
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Nice.
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Now, what did it cost you to build a room like that?
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It, we combined it with a kitchen remodel, but it actually, what it was originally.
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So you told your wife you got the sink for 80 bucks.
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Not quite.
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I mean, she was on board, but I used to do black and white photography.
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So years and years ago, I had a dark room build out there where I did my developing and
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printing, and I kind of fell out of it out of it after a number of years.
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So it's been sitting there.
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We kind of use it as a storeroom.
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And I tried recording in my office, but it's, you know, it's, it's, it's noisy.
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The house is creaky and makes noise, like your traffic, I can hear the dogs drinking
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in other water bowls, every time the phone rings, I got to stop.
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And so one day I went out there and went, Hey, it's really quiet in here.
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Hmm.
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Maybe I need to take the sink out and move out here.
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So that's what I did.
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So it was a cost of basically refurbishing, refurbishing what was a built in dark room
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into a sound booth.
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Oh, nice.
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So you just, now you must have bought foam for that?
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Yeah, I bought the foam, the, the, the walls inside which were sheet rocked were a double
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sheet rock with a stuff in between called green goo, which is a stuff they smear on the,
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the sheet rock, which is a sound deadener and sound repulsor.
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So it's got some, it's got some soundproofing.
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And then the inside walls are all covered with RLX sound acoustic foam.
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And how long can you sit in that room before it becomes a sauna and you have to get out?
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Normally in the mornings when things are comfortable in San Jose, I can be there all morning.
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In fact, part of the afternoon because it doesn't get really hot here.
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You know, you open the door.
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It's big enough that it doesn't get really super stuffy.
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So you open the door once in a while, it's fine.
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I got to take a break every 30 or 40 minutes anyway.
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I mean, you just get tired.
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Like now it's about 85 degrees in there.
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And if you tried concentrating at 85 degrees, it's really hard.
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I had a pro job I did a few years ago that was started in, well, basically right after
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Christmas and had to be done in January.
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The temperature outside was around 29 degrees.
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The temperature in the booth got down to about 41.
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And I can't run a space heater in there because of the noise.
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And I've tried millions of them.
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There are none.
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Do not make noise that we picked up by a microphone.
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And if you ever tried concentrating on text when it's 50 degrees and you're shaking, you
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find out how really difficult that is.
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Oh, yeah.
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Anything like that would be.
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Not even like a radiant one, huh?
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I got one of those.
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But you know what?
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It has a thermostat and it clicks on and off and every time it makes up and every time
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it makes a little think the mic picks it up.
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Of course.
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Of course.
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I mean, there's no, there's no perfect space heater I can have on all the time that won't
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make noise that will interfere with my recording.
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I wonder if you could manually bypass that and click it on and off yourself at spots
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that were convenient.
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Yeah.
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That's a good thought.
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It's plugged into a, I could probably do that.
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Good suggestion.
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Well, now I have to channel Jeser here for a second, tear it apart.
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Hi, I don't think so.
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So just another question down the rabbit hole.
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So how did you get started doing voiceover work?
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Because you're obviously doing it as a profession.
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So that's interesting.
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|
It's just how did that start?
|
|
Well, originally, many, many, many years ago, I got my undergraduate degree.
|
|
He's in radio and TV and theater and in those days, unless because there was no internet,
|
|
there was no cable TV, I'm going to tell you right now, I'm 61.
|
|
So this was way, way back when this is in the 70s.
|
|
If you didn't get a job in a local broadcast radio station or TV station, there was practically
|
|
no other options to get work in that field.
|
|
So after I failed to do that very quickly, I stumbled into the default career for all
|
|
people with worthless degrees.
|
|
So I joined all the English majors and the art history majors and I went into human resources,
|
|
which I did for about 28 years and did very comfortable living at it.
|
|
Then right before Christmas, 2005, I was working for a tech company here in Silicon Valley
|
|
and we had a meeting, an all-employee meeting in which it was announced that we were being
|
|
acquired by a competitor.
|
|
The competitor was simply going to shut us down and fire everybody.
|
|
They just went to take out one of the other competitors and it was a hardware company,
|
|
so it was going to take about a year and a half to shut the company down.
|
|
And since I was a HR director, it felt to me to be the person who would manage all the
|
|
layoffs out to the very end and I would be the last employee and basically flicked.
|
|
Oh, they're going to go to the dogs, they're having fun.
|
|
I would turn the lights out as the last employee of MacStore.
|
|
Well, I thought, do I want to go out and find another HR job at the age of 54 or do I
|
|
want to try doing something else?
|
|
And I decided I wanted to do something close to what I had trained for all those many
|
|
years ago.
|
|
So I started fishing around, I considered different things and looked at options, I thought maybe
|
|
training or the CDs or I didn't know.
|
|
The layoffs started in May of 2006 and the bulk ended in August of 2006 after which there
|
|
would be this long period of a long, long rundown which is a handful of employees left in
|
|
the company and I would finally leave in April of 2007.
|
|
Well, in August, the dogs, me and the spouse decided to take a long weekend off after all
|
|
that work.
|
|
If we went to Seattle, oh geez, oh, Dottie, you terrier, we went up to Seattle for a long
|
|
weekend and it just so happened that my wife bought a New York Times, you know, we're not
|
|
going to buy a local paper when you're out of town, you know, when I hear about the local
|
|
city council meetings and whatnot, it just happened to be the New York Times that had a
|
|
full page story on LibraVox, which was then only one year old.
|
|
And I went, huh, I'm thought about audiobooks.
|
|
I mean, when I was in the field, whoops, sorry gang, hit a wrong key.
|
|
So when I was in training for it, I mean, audiobooks just wasn't a thing.
|
|
I mean, they weren't even cassette tapes when I graduated college, let alone, you know,
|
|
MP3 downloads, people bought audiobooks on freaking records.
|
|
Anyway, so I thought, oh, audiobooks, I thought of that.
|
|
I love books, you know, I read books all the time.
|
|
So when we got back home, I checked out LibraVox, listed, listened to some of the samples and
|
|
went, hey, they're good.
|
|
This isn't some hack outfit.
|
|
I mean, they're good at what they do.
|
|
I'm going to try doing that.
|
|
And when I did, I got completely hooked.
|
|
I just, you know, I just felt like this was a thing I was, I would want to do.
|
|
I did a couple of small, you know, chapters.
|
|
I hadn't done any entire books at this point.
|
|
And then there was a thing on their board where my good friend, Jesse Willis, at SF Audio,
|
|
podcast posted a contest, which was make an audiobook, win an audiobook.
|
|
And he listed some PD texts that if you recorded one and you were the first, you want a prize.
|
|
And I went, hey, well, that might be interesting.
|
|
Somebody else at LibraVox said, oh, I want to do The Green Odyssey by
|
|
Philip Jose Farmer.
|
|
It's in the PD.
|
|
And then he went, oh, no, I can't.
|
|
I'm in England.
|
|
He's still copy right here.
|
|
Well, somebody else do it.
|
|
I said, okay, I'll do it.
|
|
And I did.
|
|
And I won the contest by one day.
|
|
And I've been hooked on basically sci-fi audiobook recording ever since.
|
|
Nice.
|
|
The commercial books I've done have been kind of across the board.
|
|
I've done horror sci-fi.
|
|
A number of nonfiction, including one on the origins of the internet, which has been my best seller.
|
|
But I still, it's still best to come back to LibraVox and do free stuff.
|
|
Because I get to pick the titles and doom, however, I want.
|
|
I don't have to answer to an author or a publisher.
|
|
And it's just a lot more fun.
|
|
It's one of those things where you think, gee, I'm doing this.
|
|
This is a volunteer.
|
|
Would it be great to be paid?
|
|
And when you start to be paid, you go, oh, this is a job.
|
|
That makes perfect sense.
|
|
So today, I do occasional paid audiobooks.
|
|
I think I've done three or four this year.
|
|
It's not something I count on for a livelihood.
|
|
People that do that work like dogs.
|
|
I've known a few.
|
|
I've met Scott Brick.
|
|
Well, in fact, I know Scott Brick.
|
|
I did a couple of workshops with him down in Los Angeles.
|
|
I know firsthand just how brutally hard the people work who try to do this
|
|
and make their entire living from it.
|
|
That's when it goes from being fun to being a chore.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So what drew you to this book?
|
|
What made you want to read this, at least the one?
|
|
And I know you said it was a deserved a single reader version.
|
|
But I mean, what was it about this book that made you think that?
|
|
Well, it was primarily that.
|
|
And it's a classic book.
|
|
I mean, this is one that really deserves that level of attention.
|
|
And I know, you know, and not to diss the other readers at Libravox.
|
|
I do know that listeners much prefer the single reader.
|
|
It does bother them when they get a book where two or three of the chapters are read by somebody
|
|
who is either new or has an accent or, you know, they would listen to a male reader for ten
|
|
chapters and some of these female.
|
|
And it's distracting.
|
|
And I can see that for sure.
|
|
And, you know, of course, I also say that,
|
|
hey, how much did you pay for this book?
|
|
You know, I mean, how higher standard for something you got for free?
|
|
If you want to pay for the book, you can go to Audible and pay 2295 and get a professional
|
|
reading from one reader, but you're getting it for nothing.
|
|
So, you know, back off.
|
|
But still, I thought it was something that deserved a single reader.
|
|
And at the time, I was fishing around for projects because there is a limited amount of
|
|
PD sci-fi and it's getting used up pretty quickly because you've got the pre-1923 stuff.
|
|
Then you've got the window of the pre, like just before 1968 when the rules change stuff,
|
|
that some of it fell into the public domain, including Green Odyssey.
|
|
But more and more, they've all been done.
|
|
So, it's getting harder and harder to find quality sci-fi and fantasy titles that are available
|
|
and that I can do for Libravox.
|
|
So, this one just jumped out.
|
|
It just needed to be done.
|
|
Cool.
|
|
Tosh, this is where you say.
|
|
That book go.
|
|
That book, though.
|
|
So, that's how we transition back to talking about the story itself.
|
|
And yeah, it was a cool story.
|
|
I really got into the second one.
|
|
Like, the first two chapters of the second book really hooked to me.
|
|
If I'm in, I'm glad.
|
|
In retrospect, Tosh made us listen to all three instead of just the first one.
|
|
Because I don't know if I would have listened to the second one after the first one,
|
|
but I'm glad I stuck it out because they did just get better and better.
|
|
The books are really, really creative.
|
|
If you step back and look at them, just the whole idea of races born from eggs and mounds,
|
|
and the circuit or prison, and they're just an amazing amount of inventiveness that went
|
|
into these books.
|
|
And the more you go through them, you realize just how creative they were.
|
|
Unfortunately, the one thing that gets in the way is Burrow's uses just such archaic flowery
|
|
language that some of it is just kind of hard to read.
|
|
It was very verbose, and I often had that thought repeatedly that, wow, he's windy here.
|
|
He's just going on.
|
|
But it made me wonder, was that a pattern of speech that was common at the time,
|
|
or only common in writing at the time?
|
|
I just don't know.
|
|
I don't know if there's a way to even answer it because we only have writing from the time,
|
|
but yeah, it was.
|
|
Or is it an artifact of paperward writing?
|
|
Right.
|
|
I think it's probably the latter.
|
|
I'm working on a book right now for Libberbox that was written in 1911,
|
|
and it really, if you didn't know, you would not know that it was not written just a few years ago.
|
|
It lacks a lot of the floored, you know, over-description stuff that Burrow's relied on.
|
|
So I think it's part his style.
|
|
I think he doesn't overdo it as badly as Lovecraft, which I did some of those as well.
|
|
Oh, which ones?
|
|
Not for Libberbox.
|
|
I did Call of Cthulhu for a professional commercial read, and I remember I had two sentences back-to-back.
|
|
Both of them had 90 words each.
|
|
It's like, wait, wait, you said sentence, not paragraph there, right?
|
|
Sentence before you got to a period.
|
|
It's like, seriously, I mean, 90 words twice?
|
|
See, I've read Call of Cthulhu at least twice, and I don't notice that when reading it, but wow.
|
|
Yeah, but if you tried to read it out loud, you'd get a little lightheaded.
|
|
Well, yeah, I mean, yes, I mean, read it out loud with one lung full of air, and you know you're in trouble.
|
|
I think you guys hit on a point that this book kept striking the back of my head while I was reading it.
|
|
I don't understand how this is in the public domain, and nobody has made anything worthwhile
|
|
or significant with it, because we're talking about the time period.
|
|
I'm a huge Lensman fan.
|
|
Like, I love all the Lensman books.
|
|
I wish they would make Lensman movies, even though they wouldn't sell.
|
|
But Lensman is really dated, because it's sort of that high technology sci-fi, but the fact that
|
|
this is like fantasy slash a little bit steampunky, it's not extremely dated.
|
|
It would be very easy to update that to modern times, especially since the character is from the past.
|
|
So it makes sense like if the speech is a little different.
|
|
But I just can't, I mean, I know Disney tried, and that turned out in a way.
|
|
So I just, I don't understand why nobody else has done anything with it.
|
|
Oh, you know, I wish you had said that while sort of wish.
|
|
No, I'm glad I had my own take on it, but it would be interesting to listen again
|
|
with steampunk in mind, because I didn't even give that a thought.
|
|
First, I think you got a way to generation.
|
|
For many years or so before you try again, remember to last group, all that again.
|
|
And I think as far as the Florida language, transfer, who a movie is John Carter's internal monologue,
|
|
not how he's actually, you really can't bring that forth.
|
|
So what you wind up with, the fun the blanks, is let's normal sci-fi action-need things,
|
|
except Michael Bay.
|
|
Exactly. That's, I was trying to think of the guy's name as I was saying it.
|
|
Exactly. This becomes a Michael Bay movie.
|
|
Well, and I mean, we talked about movies, but I'm not even specifically limiting myself to movies.
|
|
Like, I'll be honest, I've only listened to the audio books that Mark did.
|
|
So that's as far as I've gotten this series, and I know there's more books, but like,
|
|
why hasn't somebody written like new books in this world?
|
|
Because it seems like that is that is a huge opportunity.
|
|
It's just kind of like sitting there on the table.
|
|
It's been almost fully explored for one, but it is literally a whole new world.
|
|
It is an entire planet. We could not have seen everything there is to see.
|
|
The other thing, what I would say, you know, someone going into it saying,
|
|
oh, let's pick up where he left off, if you tried to make a new story along this canon
|
|
for a modern audience, nobody is going to buy the teleportation back and forth.
|
|
That just is not going to fly.
|
|
Other than that, you stand a pretty good chance, but you're going to have to change that somehow
|
|
into he tripped and fell in a wormhole or there's something because it's just not going to fly.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I don't think it's that big of a leap.
|
|
I mean, there's some pretty ridiculous stuff in TV and movies that people are just like,
|
|
all right, and just go ahead and imagine this is any more ridiculous.
|
|
You're right. It's no worse than when the guy goes.
|
|
They never would let him in the justice attribute or jet packet and ray guns,
|
|
but something about he could go back and forward went back pretty much that same way to
|
|
a came back with.
|
|
I would just like to say for the record, take a drink.
|
|
Oh, I have been.
|
|
Wait, what I missed.
|
|
Justice League DC Comics reference.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
I'm going to take us on a tangent.
|
|
So Tyler set a timer for a few minutes before you so you can say that book.
|
|
But my buddy just opened a comic shop and I mean, it was great opening Saturday and it was
|
|
absolutely awesome.
|
|
I went and bought some but the angel comics.
|
|
Deb book.
|
|
Sorry. Good note myself.
|
|
That's fine.
|
|
He was less than a minute.
|
|
We can indulge him.
|
|
Deb book.
|
|
I didn't mean to cut you off.
|
|
X-1-1-1.
|
|
I just it was that he was a bad joke and I can't help myself.
|
|
Well, I will be the first to indulge someone in a bad joke.
|
|
So I saw one last week that even I thought was too much and I still laughed hysterically.
|
|
On the network team's door, there is a little sign that says,
|
|
BOD to the bone.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
I could not approve of that.
|
|
It's so bad.
|
|
It's good.
|
|
But how long has that got to have been hanging there?
|
|
Well, I've walked past it for at least two years and
|
|
not really caught what it said.
|
|
And then I moved my desk closer to there and I'm like,
|
|
oh my god, that says BOD to the bone.
|
|
That's terrible and wonderful.
|
|
Deb book though.
|
|
What about it, Taj?
|
|
This was your book.
|
|
What was it that hooked you in so hard that made you want to bring it onto the show?
|
|
Well, I think I've kind of started to mention it.
|
|
First of all, I've known for a long time that this is like a classic series.
|
|
But I've only recently gotten into like classic sci-fi.
|
|
It's been one of those things that I'm like not wasn't into like my whole reading
|
|
experiences and adult or even as a kid.
|
|
I never got into classic sci-fi.
|
|
I was always the modern sci-fi.
|
|
But I read all the Lensman books and that kind of got me on this kick and I've just been
|
|
kind of devouring classic sci-fi.
|
|
I knew I wanted to read this but it literally something as stupid as this is set on Mars.
|
|
That's ridiculous because there's nothing on Mars.
|
|
It turned me off for this book for years.
|
|
Like the dumbest reason to never read these books.
|
|
But then I caught part of the Disney movie, the John Carter on TV.
|
|
And back in my head, I knew that a lot of people had told me this movie's terrible.
|
|
It sucks.
|
|
And I knew a bunch of people who liked the books did not like the movie and didn't like the fact
|
|
that the movie kind of ruined the chances that any other movie would ever get made.
|
|
Can't confirm.
|
|
But then I saw like 15 or 20 minutes.
|
|
It was just like while we were getting ready to leave and I turned it on.
|
|
I didn't even know what it was.
|
|
And I just sort of watched and I was like, I would watch this movie.
|
|
You know, I had no idea.
|
|
And then I looked on the DVR and saw what it was.
|
|
And John Carter, I'm like, I have no idea what that means.
|
|
Terrible marketing for a movie, by the way.
|
|
So then I looked it up and I found out it was this book.
|
|
And I was like, all right, I'll give it a shot.
|
|
And I'm really glad I did because I really, I am much like Pokey.
|
|
The first book is good.
|
|
The second book is really good.
|
|
The third book is a thing that happened, I guess.
|
|
I really wish that I had taken time to watch the movie before I started it
|
|
because I bet I would have enjoyed the movie.
|
|
Except I tried to do it two days ago and I got about 30 minutes in and just couldn't.
|
|
See, I'm, I don't like modern Disney at all anyway.
|
|
So I wouldn't bother.
|
|
But there were a bunch of times that like my daughter and I would go to the library
|
|
to pick out a DVD or something.
|
|
And I would see this movie there, like John Carter.
|
|
And I'm like, wow, that's interesting if they would just name a movie after a guy's name.
|
|
They don't do that very often unless it's someone who's already famous.
|
|
And so I had no idea what that was.
|
|
And every time I saw it, like I wasn't sure if I had heard,
|
|
you know, that name elsewhere.
|
|
And if it was a big deal and I just didn't understand it or if it was just that movie.
|
|
And I had no idea.
|
|
And when when Todd should pick the book and said, okay, we're doing Princess of Mars.
|
|
Okay, I never made the connection.
|
|
I had no idea that, you know, the lead character was named John Carter or anything like that.
|
|
I didn't look into it at all until 50 emailed me and said, oh, it's, I saw the movie.
|
|
So I should be okay.
|
|
Now I knew he was joking, but still I had no idea what he was talking about.
|
|
But then in the first chapter or so,
|
|
where the guy, the original narrator who is the nephew of John Carter mentions Uncle Jack,
|
|
and then says Carter, I was like, oh, now I get it.
|
|
This is that thing.
|
|
So this really is something somewhere somehow.
|
|
And now I get it.
|
|
It's pretty cool.
|
|
Once again, terrible marketing.
|
|
But I get it because it's probably, they didn't want to market it.
|
|
First of all, it's John Carter of Mars because that's a different book.
|
|
They probably didn't want to call it a Princess of Mars because people would watch it
|
|
and have the same knee jerk reaction I had as a dumb kid.
|
|
Oh, this is set on Mars.
|
|
That's stupid.
|
|
But there had to be a better solution than what they went with.
|
|
Yes, don't make the movie, especially not if you're Disney.
|
|
Fair point.
|
|
Well, I had a similar reaction years ago.
|
|
I think I've mentioned I read that when I was in college.
|
|
Man, this is one of the best books I've ever read.
|
|
This has got to be a movie.
|
|
Years later, Kevin Costner came around and wrote.
|
|
Be careful what you wish for.
|
|
I missed what you said, which movie was that?
|
|
The Postman.
|
|
That is a really good good story, though.
|
|
The Postman's really awesome.
|
|
I hope you mean.
|
|
Yes, no, the movie was terrible.
|
|
But I mean, when I say I'd like to see like Linsman,
|
|
like I love the Linsman books, I would love for there to be Linsman movies.
|
|
Not even so much that I want to see a movie.
|
|
It's that I want more people to experience it and know about it.
|
|
Like I feel like there's this like in club of people who know about Linsman and
|
|
have read it and stuff and it would be nice if more people were there.
|
|
I know full well if they ever made a movie out of it, it would be terrible.
|
|
Just because that's the way it would be.
|
|
But it's still one of those things that I don't even think it's the movie that I want.
|
|
It's just the more popular knowledge of it, just to share it with people would be cool.
|
|
See, most likely you'd say you want a movie, but what you'd get is like a J.J. Abrams and Michael
|
|
Bay movie. You shall not speak the J.J. name.
|
|
See, I feel the exact same way, I feel the exact same way, touch about Mark Twain.
|
|
I wish more people understood what a good writer and what a hilariously funny guy he was.
|
|
Instead, they make you read.
|
|
Yeah, but the, you know, all the movies that I've seen, the books, they don't seem that far off,
|
|
though. I don't, maybe I'm missing the full law of the humor that was in the, again,
|
|
in the internal monologue rather than the good word.
|
|
Well, there is a bit of that, but what I was about to say was that, you know, instead of like
|
|
really good Mark Twain writing, they make you read Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, which, you know,
|
|
while we're important books are not his humorous writing and that's not the funny stuff.
|
|
And being a teacher.
|
|
I agree that probably the only humorous one out of a record you're thinking of is the jumping
|
|
frog of Calvary's County. And I probably, but you're that and that's hilarious.
|
|
Now, I was going to say being a teacher, I can fully confirm that like, we're not allowed to
|
|
teach Mark Twain a lot because people are scared that we might have to have a conversation about
|
|
Rachel racial slurs and books, which is ridiculous.
|
|
Yeah, there is that word. You can't even talk about how, okay, here is this time when
|
|
people even think about saying it and how bad that was. Oh, we're just going to plaster.
|
|
See, I think a lot of people miss the point there too in saying that that's just the way it was.
|
|
And that's it. I don't think that's it at all. When I read his books, you notice that it starts out
|
|
that way, but gradually Huck's mind changes. And, you know, so should the mind of the reader.
|
|
It's a gradual thing that Twain walks you through. It's not, I don't think it's a specific
|
|
timepiece that he intentionally did. I think he, I think he, you know, was trying to accomplish
|
|
something with that, but that's not this book. You almost needed honours class to do something
|
|
like that. Yeah, for sure, but, but that book though. Are we about prespoilered out?
|
|
I think so. Yeah, I think I am. I will take a moment to acquire my average.
|
|
Yeah, I got to run and get mine too. I'm sorry. I didn't open it ahead of time. So I will take a
|
|
brief pause as well. I snuck out and got mine. And I just want to mention that I just finished
|
|
first Lensman for Librevox just a couple of months ago. So it's out there for free.
|
|
You know, I noticed that that popped up and I didn't even look at who narrated it. I actually
|
|
downloaded it. It says it popped up. So I've already got that. I haven't listened to it yet.
|
|
Is that right after the one that we listened to already, Tush? Yes.
|
|
Might I say bitch and bitch and indeed 5,000 Wolfie in the times as they are.
|
|
Seeing how you jump to shark, now you're in a different book. A really good book, but a different book.
|
|
Okay, I'm back too. I don't know if anybody else. I don't know if anybody else just said they were back,
|
|
but I thought it was a good guess. You win your first. So now you're coming. Sounds ridiculous.
|
|
Minus 5,000 Wolfie. See, that's the way you do it. You put in the chats. Nobody knows. And I
|
|
don't have to edit anything out later. Oh, you don't have to edit it back. That can sound silly.
|
|
I don't mind. Mark, you back as well, or did you not leave? I'm still here.
|
|
Awesome. I heard 50 sort of. I saw him light up anyway. I think I talked over to 50.
|
|
That's okay. I talk over everybody else. Well, you want to lead us off then and review a beverage?
|
|
I'll be glad to. This is for most people. It's going to be very bovar beer company, which I had
|
|
these it up in Missouri last spring. I had a alumni event. And then I didn't drive home that
|
|
evening. So I had a hotel room arranged for it. And then I came back the next morning to take the
|
|
plant tour. And I've talked about. Oh, Mark would know, but I have a series on hacker, public
|
|
radio on 50 shades of where I review some some times and stuff like that. So this is first
|
|
establishment. I've actually been sort of larger in a brew pub. Well, they pride themselves on
|
|
being the second biggest brewery in Missouri, the other one, which they refer to as that damned
|
|
horse farm. But I asked one was there. I said, I know we tasted well, they have what they call
|
|
the tasting room, which is wind up the end of your tour. And during the tour, they give you a
|
|
couple bottle cap playing a fallout that you bring the bottle caps back. And they give you about
|
|
a shot and a half of a couple selections that they have there. So, you know, they know they're
|
|
always going to leave in a state where they shouldn't be. And I'd already tasted a few
|
|
there's a cruise the night before. So I've gotten through and but I asked them at the time. Have
|
|
you guys ever considered doing a sour? Because the thing is there's a lot of companies that
|
|
put out a sour, but what they tend to do, they tend to put it out in a four pack at the six pack
|
|
or above price. So in other words, you're paying ten bucks for get the sour. I guess maybe they
|
|
are more. I don't know. What if you've listened to listeners on 51 50 shades of beer, you've heard
|
|
me mention a say song, which is a little bit a sour is way tart. So if you try it, if you've gone
|
|
out and you've looked for a say song, you like that, then you'd probably might you might want to
|
|
try a sour, but if you tried to say song and you said, man, I just don't not like this, you're
|
|
certainly not going to like a sour. This is Boulevard's funky pumpkin spour, sour, I'm sorry,
|
|
sliced sour ale. This is a very strange mashup for a pumpkin spiced ale. I can't think of anything
|
|
as far away from a sour and they've put the, you know, I would have thought they would have started
|
|
out with just a straight sour, but they've mashed these up and it's I guess not bad, but I think
|
|
I'd like to see if just a sour separately. But the nice thing about this, it comes in a six pack
|
|
and that the normal six pack price you'd expect, you know, it's your show. So been listening to me
|
|
talk about sours on the podcast and you want to see if that's something you might like to try.
|
|
This is this will give you at least an impression of it. Like I said, you can probably tell,
|
|
you can probably taste the sour and taste the pumpkin separately. I'd like a good pump ale,
|
|
but I'm not sure I'd like the combination. It does sound odd, but you know, it sounds a little
|
|
complex, I like complex beers. When you mentioned sazon, I've I've had I think two sazon's and
|
|
I like them both. Well, I like you try this. I mean, at least this for listeners, listeners
|
|
will give you an impression on whether a sour is too sour. Poke, have you had the one from Ali
|
|
Gashet? The sazon, I don't think so. My wife really, really digs it. So I mean, if you're into
|
|
that style of beer, I check it out. I like how complex it is. Of course, the unique thing about a
|
|
sour is most of the time you're brewing. You do it in a sealed container because you don't want
|
|
to do so any wild bacteria is going to throw the flavors off. And this is how they get the flavor
|
|
for a sour. They do it. It's fermented and open. Where they're actually inviting wild bacteria
|
|
out of the air in. Of course, it's probably done in somewhat a controlled environment because it
|
|
sort of know what they're going to get. That's the other major distinction between a sour. Is it
|
|
bacteria actually or is it yeast? What are we talking about here? Well, you wouldn't have yeast
|
|
floating around in the hoki. No, it's back there. Sure you do. You have yeast floating around in the
|
|
air. Most of the one I won't say most, but many of the trappist beers use wild yeast. Okay, well,
|
|
I was sticking with Tracy Holtz explaining that it was back here. Here's a ghost and that shows
|
|
Oh, and I don't want to put them on the spot, but I have invited Tracy a few shows on when he's
|
|
got in time. Yeah, that'd be good. So what have you got for us, hoki? Oh, all right. I'll go next.
|
|
Um, I have yellowtail shardonnay. And um, it's kind of odd. I've never tried this one before
|
|
because I do drink yellowtail and off a lot. And if I drink white wine, it's usually a shardonnay,
|
|
but I don't think I ever try to yellowtail shardonnay. So that's what I'm trying. It's very, very yellow
|
|
in color. It's, it's almost off-putting how yellow this is. It's definitely shardonnay though.
|
|
Nothing wrong with that. It's a little sweet up front, a little dry on the back end. And
|
|
I think eventually it balances out the aftertaste is kind of nice. And um,
|
|
next smells kind of hoki standard shardonnay. Uh, not bad. I don't know how much I paid for it,
|
|
but probably decent for the money because the usual yellowtail isn't that expensive. So, uh,
|
|
yeah, kind of like it. I'm not much of a whiner viewer. I like wine. I just don't know how to
|
|
describe it very well. It's all I can do. How about Taj? You always excite us and
|
|
intrigues with your selections of tap water. So yeah, I'm going a little crazy and I have
|
|
a big old talk glass of dehydrogen monoxide as always. Crazy. Um, but, and I've also posted in
|
|
the show notes, uh, a website that will tell you all the facts about the dangers of dehydrogen
|
|
monoxide. You should check that out and send it to everybody, you know, because it's hilarious.
|
|
That is, that is one of my favorite and oldest favorite websites at the same time.
|
|
So I'm going to be totally, uh, me and be a rebel and do something besides a drink. Um,
|
|
I'm going to do another app pick for Android, although it's, it's just sort of a pick for
|
|
something in general. Uh, my daughter has discovered texting. And I'm terrified of that. So,
|
|
and she's, she's very young. She has her own tablet, but she has no internet or she has no like
|
|
cell phone access. So she wanted a way to talk between her and her mother and her grandparents.
|
|
And so I wanted, I was like, well, let's set you up with an XMPP, you know, jabber, uh,
|
|
login. And then we can do texting. But then I thought about my school and I thought about all
|
|
the kids again, trouble when other people get a hold of what they said. And I don't want my
|
|
daughter to be, um, I don't want anything she's doing at this age to be remembered at all.
|
|
So, uh, chat secure, which is a, uh, cool Android client that's made by the Guardian project,
|
|
which makes all kinds of cool open source like privacy apps. So if you don't know who they are,
|
|
go check them out. Uh, it does off the record encryption. So basically I've set up my daughter's
|
|
tablet to where she, if she has internet, she can text her mother, she can text me, she can text
|
|
her grandparents and it's all encrypted on both ends and it's brilliant. So she gets the experience
|
|
of trying this out in a safe place and it's never recorded. So she can send poop emoji all day long
|
|
and nobody will ever know. That's pretty good thinking, helping your kid to be anonymous. I,
|
|
I wish I knew that sooner or, or, or new what was going on a little sooner than I did.
|
|
Yeah, I don't think she's gonna live in my house and not know about internet and an entity
|
|
just because of who I am. So there you go. Uh, think of the children. Do what's right? Wait,
|
|
wait, did you just use think of the children, put it in a non-harmful way? I did. Isn't that crazy?
|
|
I took it back. It's arising in. I took it back. And I know it kind of makes me distrust you now.
|
|
I got to do it with the voice. I'd be like, think of the children. Think of the children.
|
|
Want someone to always think of the children. Mark, have you got a, uh, a beer or a wine or what
|
|
were you drinking tonight? I forgot what you said. Um, well, I started the night off on Merlot,
|
|
but right now I'm drinking a Lagonitas IPA India Pale Ale. Oh, I don't know if this is
|
|
common to you folks or not. It is brewed in Petaluma, California, which is I'm in San Jose.
|
|
So this is a little north of me. And, uh, in fact, my wife just told me today that
|
|
Heineken has bought half of Lagonitas. So that will probably increase their distribution throughout
|
|
the world. And it's a very good beer. It's an IPA. It has the, the traditional hoppy IPA taste,
|
|
but it's not obnoxious about it. There's something about hoppy beers, at least out here in
|
|
California, where they, they've gone like completely batshit. You know, they have things like
|
|
hop stupid and triple hop and hop you in the head and, you know, hop you till you die. And it's like,
|
|
we have, we have that here to X 1101 has, uh, has a word for that. No, no, it's poke. It's 5150s.
|
|
That was 5150s. Oh yeah. Nice one. Yeah. My term is my hops can beat up your hops.
|
|
Yeah. And, you know, there's, I think there's a limit to how much hops you can stick in one bottle.
|
|
This one has the hoppy taste, but it's not obnoxious. Um, so it's, it's, it's balance. So you can
|
|
like right now I can just sip it. Uh, you could also drink it with food because it just won't
|
|
overpower everything you're eating. Um, also want to mention that it, it's 6.2% alcohol,
|
|
which is, it's got a punch to it. I'm, I'm sure my addiction isn't as good now as it was an
|
|
hour ago. Uh, at the same time, it's not over the top. Um, a while back at the local grocery store,
|
|
I was home alone for dinner. So I picked up a takeout and I grabbed a, uh, 22 ounce bottle
|
|
just to have because I had nothing else at home to drink and I picked a double buck which sounded
|
|
interesting and, uh, ate my dinner and I had my two glasses of beer and I noticed that the room
|
|
was spinning rather severely. I go look at the bottle. It's 9.5%, which I just, you know, I did,
|
|
you do the math. That's like drinking five bud lights in a half hour, which I think is a little
|
|
bit much. So it's not, it's, it's got a kick to it, but it's not overly obnoxious. And, uh,
|
|
if you don't see it where you live, now that Heineken is going to distribute it, you may see some
|
|
more of it. It's a very, very nice beer. It's right up there with my, one of my other favorites,
|
|
which is, um, anchor steam, but made right here in San Francisco. Yeah. I've had lagoon,
|
|
something, something ale. Why is happy? I see lagoon. It is all the time. I'm in New Hampshire and
|
|
there's there in every grocery store here. Also in Indiana confirmed. And main. That's one of my
|
|
frequent gripes on the show here is that the selection of beers in the grocery stores has turned into
|
|
IPAs and very little of anything else. And I don't know if you've found that to be the,
|
|
the same over on the West Coast, but, uh, the allegonies is almost always in that lineup of,
|
|
of IPAs. Yeah, the IPAs, I mean, they're good, but come on. I mean, I like other stuff too.
|
|
Yeah, like a black IPA. They can't sell, yeah, probably if they could, the price would,
|
|
the definition of microbo, you'd have far less selection. Yeah, the grocery stores here still
|
|
think of Sam Adams as a microbrew. Shock top. Yeah, it's just, yeah, yeah, it's
|
|
shocked up exactly. Look, we have variety. We have a hard, Chuck's, hard citer, what Chuck's
|
|
whatever the hell it is. And what Chuck's not bad, but I want a couple other kinds of citer too,
|
|
thank you. Yeah, if you're, if you're indecider, for sure. So X-1-1-1, last but not least,
|
|
you've always got something super impressive. You got the good beer store near you. We have lots of
|
|
good beer stores near us. My wife brought home something for me. She said, what do you want? I said,
|
|
an IPA that I haven't had before, which at this point is getting to be a challenge.
|
|
But she brought home a shipyard, which is a local brewery around here. It's out of Portland,
|
|
Maine. Oh, yeah. It is called Shipyard Little Horror of Hops. And it's got the plant from
|
|
little shop of horrors on the bottle. And that's about the extent of it. It says, like, don't fear the
|
|
hop. My hops eight year hops. They heard you 50. It's a nice, like, amberish color. It's a darker
|
|
for a pale ale. X-11-1, I am most impressed. Your wife knows as you have it, have not had.
|
|
But she's had most of them too. For an IPA, it's actually not, not super bitter. There's not a lot
|
|
of the nice, piney floral notes you get with a lot of the better IPAs. It's more of a, it's almost
|
|
tastes like some kind of an amber ale with some extra hops in it, which is still nice.
|
|
Oh, I might like that then, because I don't like that piney taste that a lot of the hopped up beers
|
|
have, like, especially red hook. It breaks my heart that red hook tastes like that, because they're
|
|
they're building the brewery, they're restaurant. It's also nice, and it's right next door,
|
|
and I just I can't drink many other beers. Oh, and I love red hooks long hammer. That could,
|
|
I could drink that starting first thing in the morning all through the end of the day.
|
|
Have you had their porter? It's too hot for a porter, man. It's like 110 degrees or something here.
|
|
I'm dying. I didn't mean this afternoon. I mean, ever. When it gets cold, I'll find one maybe.
|
|
They're decent. It still has that that signature red hook hops. It's also a porter. It was
|
|
actually pretty good. Being a hop lover, I do have to say I really like the tendency to have
|
|
so many IPAs, because it does give me the option to say, I want an IPA, but I want something different,
|
|
but it would be nice to see something else too. I think stones all day IPA, or maybe they're
|
|
go to IPA. One of those has a lot more of the citrus notes to it that I really like.
|
|
Have any of you guys had any of the clown shoe beers? I have actually never even heard of that.
|
|
I might even be getting the name wrong. No, it's not. Clown shoe is one of their brews. I think
|
|
it's happy feet as the brewery. Hoppy feet. No, I think clown shoe is the brewer. And hoppy feet is
|
|
one of the... Anyway, I had one of theirs. It was a Mexican style milkstout, I think. I did not
|
|
like it. It was not for me. And I'm a stout guy. So that's... I don't know. There was something just
|
|
wrong with it. Let's go and say, I can't... I can imagine, usually, think of that as logger
|
|
and milkstout in the same sentence. Yeah, it was weird. They tried to do too much with it,
|
|
and it wound up tasting cheap. They don't make it often. It's a seasonal beer, but once in a while,
|
|
Anker puts out a porter, which is really, really, really good. Ah, to look off. I always love a
|
|
really, really, really good porter. Anker has another stout. Oh, one of my favorites cannot think.
|
|
They should make a Martian cactus milkstout. Is that your attempt to get us back on track?
|
|
No one else was going to do it. That book, though. Nice segue.
|
|
Well, I guess that's it. We are beer club. It was... I don't know. I have to get to bed at some
|
|
point tonight. I'm on my 11th day of 12-hour work days, and I need to sleep. Oh, you poor man.
|
|
That's awful. It was voluntary. I signed up for it. One of the overtime, and I sure got it.
|
|
But tomorrow's day 12 of 12, and then I get four days off, and I'm going to think spend the whole
|
|
first day sleeping, and the second, too, maybe just motorcycling. One thing I'd like to talk about
|
|
start with. Oh, the steampunk technology. There's some stuff very reminiscent of Joel's fern.
|
|
Everybody thinks the Nautilus keep her submarine. Joel's fern had this idea. Their
|
|
selectromagnetic fee harvest. All his stuff had elected the same way, seems like even though
|
|
contemporary, what they have discovered, perhaps that's a development, but they have these
|
|
knowledgeable rays of the sun can be separated out. Number nine can run the giant generator
|
|
on oxygen to the atmosphere. And ray number eight, they essentially are flying craft. Number nine,
|
|
which can lift great weights of battleships in the air. If you're going to build a battleship
|
|
into the side, so that's kind of a problem. Yeah, especially if it gives them 11 for writing
|
|
in the time that he did, sort of had pre-condition of fighters, fighter tactics. Well,
|
|
when he's gotten in the book as a great altitude, he did predict fighters. You're right, 100%
|
|
50 about, you know, why didn't he armor them, especially when they have enough levitation
|
|
power to send the thing accidentally into orbit the first time they did it. Well, I mean,
|
|
they've said that the greats, the great airship, about great huge guns. Why not armor it,
|
|
sit behind your guns, just absolutely look for the enemy from 300 miles where your auto aiming
|
|
cannons work from. It seems like, and maybe I just didn't catch everything. It seems like a lot
|
|
of the technologies left over like it's from a time before they don't really understand it a lot
|
|
of the time. They're just like, Hey, this is here. We'll use it. So I mean, I could see where they
|
|
might not be the most like engineering forward society ever. Maybe the other races besides,
|
|
especially in the first book, besides the red and the green Martians, maybe them, but those two,
|
|
it seems like they're probably not into, you know, being very smart with the engineering stuff.
|
|
Yeah, but it doesn't seem like, oh, well, the whole flip shot down the reds main red city and
|
|
all is lost because we don't have the technology to rebuild it. You would think that would be
|
|
mentioned. Right. And he did mention a couple times that, you know, there were certain machines
|
|
of Martian manufacturer. So they definitely have manufacturing going on. I think he just kind
|
|
of, there were some things he just glossed over because they weren't integral to the plot of
|
|
the story. And, you know, talking about these things now and looking back at some of the earliest
|
|
stuff in the early book like the super long range guns and all that kind of stuff, it makes me think
|
|
that he, it probably sounds stupid to say this, but it makes me, it makes me think he made it up
|
|
as he wrote it. You know what I mean? As opposed to a lot of writers will outline a story and have
|
|
some idea where the plot's going to go if not the entire story. But it, it, it does make me think
|
|
like, okay, he made some of this stuff up and then when it wasn't useful, he's kind of abandoned it.
|
|
Well, let's face it, it shouldn't take down the boring battleships with rifle in the beginning
|
|
and then they're there. Right. And if your, your range weapon technology was so effective,
|
|
a guy that can jump pretty high is, is pretty impotent against such things.
|
|
Well, they didn't say they could shoot through, it was to fill in the blanks. I would say maybe
|
|
that had part telepathically, or perhaps you focus it all pathically. No, I thought he said they had
|
|
an auto aiming device, like a, some kind of scope or something, it almost sounded like he was
|
|
describing, but it sounded like an aiming device. But you're right, it's a little bit of a
|
|
thing as someone we should talk about. See, I thought it was just, they were badass. Well, Brad, I don't
|
|
know, Brad, perhaps thinning linux, they've been hacked. Not this all glad of yearning rifles and
|
|
linux, but the company took down all of the safer security out of linux. You know, anybody can get
|
|
a Wi-Fi connection? Yeah, I heard some stories about that. And it was kind of sad.
|
|
Mark, he looked at you about to say something. No, I just hit a wrong key again.
|
|
So the telepathy that 50 mentioned, I thought was was kind of interesting and it was kind of a
|
|
neat plot device, you know, to where he could not projective his thoughts, no matter how hard he
|
|
tried, but he almost couldn't help but listen in. And that was, again, useful for a while.
|
|
And then abandoned kind of a short time later. In certain places, it was sort of Dayasek
|
|
mock getting out of the huge plant that provides oxygen, the entire planet. And you could tell
|
|
in the administrator's mind that, oh, maybe I should have thought too much that the special
|
|
mental code, nine-motion character, who's afraid that it heard it. Well, the best witness
|
|
sleeps. You know, first he thought, maybe I didn't hear it well enough to get out. And then he
|
|
thanks these things. Um, the Dayasek mock and a thing is also interesting. You bring that up.
|
|
I don't mean to transition away from the telepathy so quickly, but since you brought it up,
|
|
this whole book to me, all three of the books seem like nothing but Dayasek's mock and a,
|
|
the, it was almost like a pendulum that swung the entire time going, oh, this was incredibly
|
|
fortunate. And this was incredibly unfortunate. And then this was incredibly fortunate. There was
|
|
no middle of the road and slam for the story. Did you guys notice that at all? This bad thing happened
|
|
and then the most lucky thing in the world could happen. Yeah, every time, every, every movement
|
|
was like that. That's what I meant by the plot, but bullets earlier. Yeah, that's true. And it goes
|
|
through all of Burrow's books. And it's important you don't think about those too much because
|
|
the coincidences are just too good. I mean, this is a whole planet, right? And in the third book,
|
|
he gets thrown into a jail cell with his estranged son. Hey, how lucky. I also did the
|
|
polluced our books. And there's one where these two guys burrow down into the inner core of the
|
|
world. I forget the name of the, the second guy. And one comes back to the surface. He's on the
|
|
surface for like 12 years. And he finally goes back down again. He burrows through and he meets his
|
|
friend right at the second. He's about to be attacked at that second, at that spot in the entire
|
|
world where he didn't even know where he was. And so you're gonna have to kind of let that stuff
|
|
slide because the coincidences are just sometimes pretty extreme. Yeah, absolutely. And I thought
|
|
the exact same thing while listening as well is that you just had to let it go. And I think maybe
|
|
for that reason that the reason of the incredible luck and the incredible pendulum swings between
|
|
bad luck and good luck, I think that might be why the first book was good. And the second book
|
|
was really great. And the third book was not quite as good as the first one was all about world
|
|
building. And he did build a really cool world there. And then the second book was basically a
|
|
chase scene or our exploration, excuse me, where he's exploring this other world again. And the
|
|
third one was the chase scene where it was all about the luck on and on. And it seemed like the
|
|
only break that you got from luck was when he rested up. And it was like, oh, I just I slept for
|
|
a couple days because you know, that's kind of what I had to do to catch up to them. So you know,
|
|
it wasn't as consistent with the adventure I think of the first two. I might have rambled that
|
|
out too much. But but but Hitchhiker was a spoof. So he I'm sure Douglas Adams was making fun
|
|
of the outrageous coincidences where in the entire galaxy, two spaceships or a spaceship finds two
|
|
guys floating in space who had just been kicked out of their other spaceship just seconds before
|
|
and caught him just before they died. It was kind of part of the in joke.
|
|
I was going to say there was nothing in that series that was done on accident. No, not at all.
|
|
I agree with you. It was definitely all of it floated there right in front of your eyes,
|
|
just like bricks don't. Exactly. It was comedy. I mean, it's it's the same thing as, you know,
|
|
telling the joke of the the three guys, you know, trapped on a desert island who who find the
|
|
genie in the magic lamp. I mean, it's it's comedy. You can any setup is fine. Close enough.
|
|
I'm going to channel at y'all here and say that's how a southerner might say it. Yes, I know.
|
|
I was channeling. Um, yeah. So, uh, I don't know who I feel like I've done most of the talking
|
|
who haven't we heard from? Well, I was going to talk about kind of what I mentioned before about
|
|
how like my whole viewpoint changed about burrows and his his beliefs because at the beginning of
|
|
a princess of Mars, like there was the kind of unfortunate uh, Native American part. And then when
|
|
he gets to Barsoum, it's like, Oh, here comes the white savior here to save all the all the people
|
|
who have colored it's again, you know, warrior culture. And I was like, Oh, this is kind of
|
|
unfortunate, you know, but it's still a good story. And you know, and at least it showed some,
|
|
um, some respect for that culture despite the fact, um, that there seemed to be a difference.
|
|
But then we get to gods of Mars. And it's basically like, Oh, those white gods that came to save you,
|
|
yeah, they're a total sham, uh, basically everything you believe about religion is wrong. And the
|
|
religion that they believe is wrong. And it's just like this continuous like lines of bullshit
|
|
that he just kind of cuts through in this entire culture, like it's this hierarchical uh,
|
|
stack of just wrong thinking. And this one dude just comes through and just cuts it all down. And I,
|
|
I think that's why I like the second one the best is because it's just that's all that book is,
|
|
and it's it's amazing. It's one pissed off southerner ripping apart a global size Ponzi scheme.
|
|
It is excellent. Now do you think the likes of Tars Tarkas?
|
|
The fleet, the lack of a man, the lead act that lack of evolution.
|
|
I, I don't see how it could have been anything other than deliberate because just the language
|
|
he uses to talk about the Native Americans on earth. And the language he uses to talk about the
|
|
green Martians are so similar that if he wasn't deliberately drawing a conclusion, then I,
|
|
I really don't know what was going on. Well, let's face it by Paris and the red Martians are not
|
|
in this whole lot more. They're more like you, they don't seem to have love.
|
|
No, the red Martians are warriors. They're revered for their battle skills. They're not
|
|
particularly advanced beyond the other races. So, so no, they're really not special. They're,
|
|
they're still barbarians. Point is made earlier, they have such limited life,
|
|
has to be, was any race traits were, well, I think when he, when he presents the green Martians,
|
|
they have to be alien because if not, it's going to be too close to just basically Native Americans
|
|
in space. So I think any of those things that are negative are like turned up to 11 just to make
|
|
sure that we know this is an alien place. These, these beings are not like human beings.
|
|
Despite the fact that, you know, we find some that kind of are just having that, I think,
|
|
differentiates. And as we get closer and closer to, you know, the original creatures of the ones
|
|
who think they're the original creatures, they progressively get more and more human like,
|
|
not to say that that means that they're good by any stretch of the imagination, but they do,
|
|
they do tend to take on a more complex state of being almost, to where the,
|
|
oh, I forget the name, the original ones or the old ones or whatever, the first ones,
|
|
whatever they're called, the first born, the first born, that's what it is. They're, they're very
|
|
complex. Way more than I think the other races are. And so I think that that's sort of,
|
|
that that complexity, just going further and further and further, and it helps that they're
|
|
the ones that have the most resources. So maybe they have the luxury of being able to develop
|
|
more fully like that. It's everybody you're ready to take a drink. It's almost like in Star Trek,
|
|
how all of the non human races kind of represent an aspect of humanity versus the whole.
|
|
This compared to like, Hoth, an indoor and this planet with this trait all across it. Yeah,
|
|
that too. Wow, double. Well done, guys. Man, somewhere in there, 50 said something I wanted
|
|
a comment on, but I lost it. Yeah, I had something. Yeah, it'll obliterate you. And I did think
|
|
a little again, John Carter, John Carter is suddenly exposed to that. That also happens in
|
|
Heinland's stranger in a strange land, where a completely human individual is dropped on Mars
|
|
and then develops Martian like abilities. Though I did implicitly have been that all of them,
|
|
they all have topic links, the language and a couple of different subjects. Well, you got to
|
|
thank you talking how much of that opathic one go say and then she thought was, oh except for that
|
|
chick at the end who gave the suicide speech. She said this, this and that and this.
|
|
I didn't use GMT. I used Gmail. It's set to my local time. It translates through GMT. So
|
|
that would be a setting on your end, I think. In any case, I thought it says Wednesday. Yeah,
|
|
I'm looking at it here on my calendar. It's eight o'clock today. It's on there correctly.
|
|
I think you got your Google calendar setting. It didn't show up on my calendar today either. I was
|
|
looking at it earlier today and it just wasn't on my calendar and neither were like the past couple
|
|
of months, but it's there now. So I think that's a Gmail glitch going on there. But if it was telling
|
|
you it was tomorrow, I honestly, I think that's a local setting. Yeah. Well, like I said,
|
|
when I connected to the reason I'm not dropping now, I'm on the phone. Yeah, we're turning the phone
|
|
on. Yeah, you. I remember now it was the Deus Ex Mach and a thing that you were talking about.
|
|
I thought through several points of this story that he almost ruined the story,
|
|
except that it was consistent. So I guess I could live with it for that. But he almost ruined the
|
|
story a couple of times with his Deus Ex Mach and the the one biggest example that sticks out
|
|
in my mind was this this year long tower of torture that that oh, I can't think of her name now.
|
|
The wife, the princess was Deja Thoris. Deja Thoris, thank you. That she was trapped in.
|
|
And I thought that was actually really clever. I thought that was kind of an ingenious thing
|
|
that there's this tower that you're in for a year and it was a pretty clever punishment. But
|
|
then Deus Ex Mach and oh, there's like a hole in the middle where you can just go in anytime.
|
|
But only for extra torture. Yeah, like something like that. I mean, I didn't like that.
|
|
I thought he devised this nearly perfect machine, this nearly perfect device that was
|
|
themed correctly for the setting and the story and all that stuff and then just
|
|
drill the hole through with a plot drill. Well, he was lighter on Mars. So I mean, I guess that's
|
|
appropriate that he should be able to do that, you know. Well, you're right. The green guys who
|
|
would never have been. Yeah, that was another thing that kept. I thought was a little inconsistent
|
|
that, you know, maybe Barrows didn't think of was that if he was so strong that he could jump
|
|
forever, you know, like with 30 feet in the air, I think, or 35 was one of his first jumps,
|
|
and a hundred foot long, like all your muscles in your body are that strong. So he ought to be able
|
|
to just do like hand springs and stuff all over the place. These other guys can't do that. So they're
|
|
like incredibly weak in comparison is what that amounts to. So they shouldn't be able to hold
|
|
the candle to him in a sword fight. He should be able to just knock their swords out of their
|
|
hands, but he, you know, really didn't even address that. Well, in several cases, he killed people
|
|
with a single punch because he was so much stronger than them. But I think what was actually missing
|
|
was so years and years and years go by and he still has this exceptional strength because he
|
|
grew up in earth gravity. At some point, that's going to wear off. Yeah. And as far as killing
|
|
people with a single punch, yes, exactly. So you're making the point that I was trying to make when
|
|
you say that. No, actually, I think he's actually making a bigger point. The original
|
|
like power set of Superman pretty closely matches John Carter before his power has got like
|
|
ridiculous. Well, yeah, but he came from a heavier gravity. Red sun is yellow. It's kind of
|
|
funny that you guys mentioned Superman because I was almost earlier going to make a Superman joke
|
|
when, you know, when we're talking about how he became more Martian
|
|
throughout the years or that they should be more more human in strength. And I was just going to
|
|
say, no, no, it's just because they have a red sun. You came from a yellow one. Again,
|
|
D.O.S. X. Bach and until he needed them. After that, he long after that super cold breath and all
|
|
that stuff. Don't forget bowling ball sneezing. And again, like John Carter, I think at the
|
|
beginning, he fly over in space. He was jumping a little. Yeah, lethal buildings in a single
|
|
bound, which was the original Superman. He could jump over buildings, but he couldn't actually fly
|
|
that came later. Yeah, it's a good point. So John Carter was or Superman was John Carter,
|
|
rather. So first set. Because he's a shape, Jeffrey, he can just make his structures because he
|
|
wants it to be. Because the sun always looks red to him. And when he gets here, it's yellow.
|
|
You damn right, you will. So another thing that I thought about, and I always looking for like
|
|
interesting political angle in any book that I read. And I thought the interesting political
|
|
angle in this book is the one that Burrows never even noticed is the, there should have been
|
|
a power struggle for energy. There should have been some sort of
|
|
struggle over their energy source or sources. And so far as the, oh, what did he call the power
|
|
source of the guns and the and the ships and everything or the motors, at least on the ships.
|
|
As opposed to the, the rays of light, he, he had some
|
|
iridium. Yeah, thank you.
|
|
Radium. Where, where did the radium come from?
|
|
Right. And why weren't they fighting over it? Because if you could control the radium,
|
|
well, you could just wipe out all these other tribes or colors of men. So like he, he completely
|
|
missed that. Maybe he, maybe he didn't want to address it or maybe he didn't envision it. I
|
|
don't know. Well, had it been, or he wouldn't have known of radium. So they do there. It was a
|
|
power. Well, it, at least knew it was something mysterious, but he used it as a power source in
|
|
this book. Yes. And it's not like there were no struggles for energy at the time. I mean,
|
|
you know, Moby Dick described the, the quest for whale oil, you know, when that was the best
|
|
you could get, except they didn't because it was what their bullets were made of.
|
|
Yeah. And in, in 1911, basically, you were talking about coal. So at least in this country,
|
|
there really wasn't like a giant energy competition because it was just cold in 1911.
|
|
Yeah, maybe. So maybe the ushering in of this almost universal energy source kind of
|
|
eliminated the struggle for it. Maybe. And that kind of makes sense because if you think about when
|
|
like energy crisis started to be like a thing that was in consciousness, like you get books like
|
|
Dune, where that's like a major subplot of that book is that, you know, the scarcity of energy
|
|
resources. It was probably not known in the early 1900s, just how relatively rare those
|
|
elements really are. I mean, we know that now because we've been using them for things like
|
|
energy and medicine and stuff. But back then, I mean, it was discovered, but there was no reason
|
|
to not to think that they were ubiquitous in everywhere. And you just dug up a couple of piles and
|
|
you got some more uranium and radium. Better do it. Not as a days prices. Not unless there was
|
|
someone living there we could blow up. You guys are bringing me down with the real talk. We need
|
|
to go back to that book though. I wanted to say another thing. This is, I think this is the
|
|
the thing that 50 was saying. Or it made me think of this. The names in this book were really good.
|
|
A lot of times you hear like a fantasy book and, you know, all the names are made up, the names
|
|
of things and places and all that. And they're made up. And they're just the cumbersome and
|
|
awkward to say. But these were fairly consistent in like the way they felt, the way they
|
|
must feel on the lips and certainly the way they feel in your ears. And I thought they were
|
|
pretty good and pretty creative. I mean, even Barsoom is just a cool, like powerful name for
|
|
this planet that these people revere, you know. Don't know, it's bitching. Sorry, bitching.
|
|
So now I'm totally going to have to edit this and cut those two sound clips out.
|
|
I've marked saying excellent bitching and make those like notification tones on my phone.
|
|
Yeah, that was a pretty good excellent actually. Probably shouldn't have been corrected.
|
|
Does anybody else feel that way about names in this book or names and fantasy books?
|
|
Am I alone in that one? No, I agree with the tasks and things. Clifftouts.
|
|
That's it. I need to click note. Yeah, if I've done a bunch of HB and Piper books and all the names
|
|
were Verkenvall, Huckandoo, Zimmingsall, Shubidoo. And it's like in one chapter, you can't keep
|
|
them straight. But in these books, at least, they were clearly foreign, but they were distinctive,
|
|
and they were also, I thought, pretty consistent as to like tribal name consistencies.
|
|
Yeah. So it was actually much easier to keep the fantasy name straight in these books,
|
|
and I've had in some much later books where it just, I mean, even as a reader, I get confused
|
|
as to who I was talking about. And they were cool names too. Like, I got to believe that everyone
|
|
who's ever written a fantasy book and has used made up names does it because they either think
|
|
they sound cool or because they want them to sound cool, but these did sound cool. Like Taras
|
|
Tarkas, that's a bitch in name if you're a warrior. I mean, the jet-ac of jet-axe, come on.
|
|
If you're at the jet-ac, you know who's in charge. All the races had jet-ac.
|
|
Well, yeah, because all their words were the same, they all spoke the same language,
|
|
so that made sense as well. And yeah, that must be a bad day if you're the jet-ac of
|
|
some race or tribe that thinks you're the hottest shit on Barsoom, and John Carter shows up,
|
|
that's got to be a bad day for you.
|
|
And actually, Jiz, that came later.
|
|
He was pretty much the boss too, except for Granny.
|
|
Well, I mean, that Granny had some balls, but at the end of the day, you never pulled
|
|
you would like to learn.
|
|
How about his kid, Carthoris? How about him? He should have only been a 10-year-old, right?
|
|
Freed me out for a minute.
|
|
Yeah, but when you grow up on Mars, 10 years is a hard 10 years, you know what I'm saying?
|
|
He was the jet-throw of the jet-axe.
|
|
Oh, that makes sense. He was a big boy. Got you.
|
|
Well, you remember the eggs? That's another thing. How do you have an egg?
|
|
Yeah, I was going to say that.
|
|
But I thought only the green Martians had eggs. Have I forgotten already?
|
|
Yes, sir. Yeah, I was at the end of the first book where they were, what, five or ten?
|
|
That was five Martians that stood guard around the high tower with the one small egg in it,
|
|
and that was Carthoris.
|
|
Oh, jeez. I guess I read these too long ago to remember.
|
|
Which means he should have only been five years old, but I do think I remember them standing
|
|
hatched like right away after John Carter disappeared back to Earth.
|
|
Well, remember, again, get ready to drink. Next generation, you know,
|
|
Klingon's grown to adulthood in about 10 years.
|
|
You know, Warf meets his son, and he's like an eight-year-old human.
|
|
And let's don't forget Morgan Mindy's kid hatched as a full grown old man.
|
|
These are hardly presidents for burrows.
|
|
Nobody take a drink for the Morgan Mindy joke. That was not drinkable.
|
|
I'm going to take a drink to try and forget that joke.
|
|
If I could have remembered his name, would you have laughed?
|
|
Possibly.
|
|
You know, you have the strange case of what's his and so popular ago.
|
|
That was from Merlin Benjamin Button.
|
|
Yeah, so everybody go get hammered.
|
|
I think we're a little past that point today, 50.
|
|
I know I am.
|
|
Oh, speaking of getting hammered, Mark, when you had a beer that was worth five
|
|
bloodlights and a half an hour, do you get hung over like that?
|
|
Because I get the worst hangovers if I even have just a little too much.
|
|
Well, fortunately, it was really, really early in the evening.
|
|
So I didn't suffer the next day.
|
|
But boy, I got the spins worse than I have in a long time, even intentionally.
|
|
Oh, I'm glad you didn't suffer the consequences of that.
|
|
So what's next?
|
|
That's all I can think of.
|
|
You wanted a suggestion for a next book.
|
|
Yes, good timing.
|
|
So since this falls to me as to be as Captain Newby, I focused on three.
|
|
I'm not sure about your rule.
|
|
So I'm going to give you a general description of each of these.
|
|
And maybe you can decide from there where you want to go.
|
|
So I've got a book, a sci-fi.
|
|
I heard on patio books some years ago.
|
|
I really liked option A, option B, a book that I have not heard.
|
|
But I know that narrator and the author and I think it would be very good.
|
|
And has been very well received.
|
|
And it's on LibraVox and patio books.
|
|
And third, I have a mystery novel on patio books that happens to be one of my recordings.
|
|
So what do you think?
|
|
Oh man, all three of them are fair game.
|
|
Jeez, I don't know.
|
|
I abstain from the vote.
|
|
I would suggest the mystery one just because it's different
|
|
enough from what we usually do that it will be a nice change of pace.
|
|
Anybody else have thoughts there?
|
|
Well, I hope whichever way we go, we talk about all three.
|
|
They all sound like interesting books I'd like to read.
|
|
Yeah, I was going to suggest that we, like very often, we have a section in our show notes
|
|
where we say if you liked this book or if you liked what we talked about tonight,
|
|
you should check out these other things.
|
|
So whatever book it is you do recommend, we still want the other two.
|
|
Especially for me, especially when you said you really liked.
|
|
Other than that, I don't have an opinion.
|
|
I have no idea.
|
|
It's I can't choose.
|
|
Don't make me choose.
|
|
Okay, so like I said, like I said, but never said it was sci-fi, but
|
|
trappings of sci-fi.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Oh, did you literally mean that the genre is mystery?
|
|
Not that it was mysterious in nature.
|
|
No, the genre is mystery.
|
|
Oh, I see, and that's why I thought it was a good idea,
|
|
because we do tend to stick to sci-fi and fantasy stuff so much here.
|
|
No, the last one was the fantasy mystery.
|
|
It was a fantasy book that also was a mystery,
|
|
but it fell solidly in the sci-fi and fantasy realm.
|
|
So your pleasure is what?
|
|
Let's check it out.
|
|
Let's do the mystery.
|
|
I always like a mystery.
|
|
All right.
|
|
The book is See You At The Morgue by Robert Blockman.
|
|
It's on potty books.
|
|
It's Creative Commons.
|
|
The text was made available by Wonder Audio Books.
|
|
By my good friend, Rick Jackson in Michigan.
|
|
So that would be number one.
|
|
The other two, I had in mind,
|
|
there's Crescent by Phil Rossi, which is on potty books.
|
|
And the other is Badge of Infamy,
|
|
a classic sci-fi by Lester Del Rey,
|
|
read by the excellent Steve Wilson.
|
|
That's both on potty books and Libbervox.
|
|
I am both glad and heartbroken
|
|
that we didn't pick Badge of Infamy,
|
|
because that was the first book we ever did on an audio book club.
|
|
So I bailed you out, I guess.
|
|
Yeah, though Crescent was good too.
|
|
I liked Crescent.
|
|
And Phil Rossi has one of the bitchenest voices in all of voice acting.
|
|
It was very, very well read.
|
|
I was very impressed.
|
|
I enjoyed that a whole lot.
|
|
Badge of Infamy was very good.
|
|
So both sci-fi were good to listen to that.
|
|
And actually now that you mentioned it of the three,
|
|
see you at the morgue is the only one I haven't heard.
|
|
So yeah, excellent.
|
|
So the little backstory on that is the first sci-fi book I ever recorded
|
|
was The Green Odyssey by Philip Jose Farmer.
|
|
It was a result of a contest put up by SFF Audio,
|
|
by Jesse Willis, recorded an audio book,
|
|
Winner Audio Book.
|
|
And that one by one day over Badge of Infamy.
|
|
Oh, what could cool.
|
|
And bitchen, even.
|
|
It was quite bitchen.
|
|
And in fact, that's where I got see you at the morgue.
|
|
It was like from his recorded audio book,
|
|
Winner Audio Book, contest number four.
|
|
So that's how I got a hold of that text and why I ended up making it.
|
|
How can this not be a good book with the first sentences?
|
|
When a jiggle-o is shot to dead.
|
|
It's a death in the bedroom of a beautiful girl.
|
|
That's an awesome beginning to a book.
|
|
Sold.
|
|
Yeah, so that's excellent.
|
|
All right, so that is our next book.
|
|
See you at the morgue.
|
|
Lawrence G. Blachman,
|
|
narrated by a Mark Douglas Nelson.
|
|
The guy's pretty cool, I've heard available on podiobooks.com.
|
|
And we will be recording that.
|
|
Let me check my calendar real quick.
|
|
Wow, I can believe it would be October already.
|
|
October 8th, 8 p.m. Eastern time on our regular mumble server.
|
|
If you want to join in and haven't been able to and don't know where to find us,
|
|
all of our information is available on hackerpublicradio.org.
|
|
You can subscribe to the hacker public radio mailing list
|
|
and or email us at hpr at hackerpublicradio.org.
|
|
And we'll get you on the list and get to the info to get here.
|
|
Before we go, I'm looking at, I'm looking at, I believe,
|
|
the channel I've been following on Facebook is Tales of the Solar Clipper.
|
|
Nathan Lowe, and he is at the beta point of the first trilogy,
|
|
starring our old friend,
|
|
Ishmael Horatio Wang,
|
|
he's three new Ishmael Wang books in the series.
|
|
He's released the first one for people to give comment.
|
|
Unfortunately, I wasn't getting in on the ground.
|
|
Probably they will hit them sort of a tronic book before there's an audio,
|
|
but eventually the plan is for to hit podio.
|
|
There is not enough bitching to describe that news.
|
|
Or Nathan Lowe, in general, true story.
|
|
Let me scroll down see if I can't fuzz.
|
|
There's always stuff in there.
|
|
Let me see if I can't.
|
|
I'm willing to bet that I already have
|
|
see you at the more downloaded,
|
|
because it's such a cool name.
|
|
I'm sure I've downloaded this book before
|
|
and just haven't gotten around to it.
|
|
Now that we've gotten Nathan Lowe writing again,
|
|
we've got to get lost in Bronx back on Star Drifter.
|
|
He's doing all this other stuff.
|
|
He needs to drop it and just get back on Star Drifter.
|
|
Oh yeah, right.
|
|
Oh, wow, there's a neat tie in there
|
|
because I meant to ask Mark about it.
|
|
The, you mentioned the other sci-fi writer
|
|
who had ridiculous names and all of his stuff.
|
|
What was that name again?
|
|
H.B.M. Piper.
|
|
H.B.M. Piper, that's right.
|
|
That was the other book that Nathan Lowe read.
|
|
The one that wasn't his was H.B.M. Piper's book, Time Crime.
|
|
That was a fantastic story too,
|
|
if no one's ever heard that.
|
|
Yeah, I've cut that one up on Lipper Box as well.
|
|
Oh, that's cool.
|
|
I'd like to compare him.
|
|
The group is golden to the floor clipper.
|
|
All right, I need to wrap this up too.
|
|
I'm spent for the day.
|
|
Yeah, me too.
|
|
All right, anybody else get any closing thoughts
|
|
besides being spent?
|
|
I want to thank Mark for coming on.
|
|
It was nice to have you here and just kind of geek out about this stuff.
|
|
It was, you were a great contributor to the Pike Essence Unit.
|
|
Thank you very much.
|
|
Good call, Todd.
|
|
I'd go further and invite him on to
|
|
our group in the future if he has time and the interest.
|
|
Well, of course, that's a good point though for both of you
|
|
because that shouldn't go unspoken, either the thanks
|
|
or the come back any time.
|
|
Surely, not sure how you guys ended up inviting me,
|
|
but it was a surprise when I got it,
|
|
and I'm thoroughly enjoyed it.
|
|
Well, a lot of times we'll invite the author,
|
|
but Edgar Rice Burrows is dead.
|
|
And I'm not quite there.
|
|
Or he's just on Barsoom.
|
|
So thank you all for listening to this show.
|
|
This episode of Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
It's thanks to Hacker Public Radio for hosting us.
|
|
It's a fantastic public service,
|
|
truly a service to the public.
|
|
Anybody can participate in Hacker Public Radio
|
|
or our HPR Audio Book Club.
|
|
And in fact, not only are you invited to do so,
|
|
but it's actually required if you listen.
|
|
You're required to produce a show
|
|
because we need the content.
|
|
We need the help and we need the participation
|
|
from the community.
|
|
And that's you.
|
|
Thanks everyone for listening.
|
|
Thanks to everyone who came on the show.
|
|
Thanks for having me along too.
|
|
And continuing to allow me to be part of the community.
|
|
And thanks everyone there and here and everyone involved.
|
|
Bye-bye.
|
|
Good night, everyone.
|
|
Peace.
|
|
Before we get started, I have to say I tried to watch the movie.
|
|
John Carter.
|
|
I made it 30 minutes before I just got so mad I had to turn it off.
|
|
You can only go so long before you're like wrong,
|
|
wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, before it's just like,
|
|
no, okay, I just can't do this anymore.
|
|
Why is this before we start?
|
|
This is so legitimate and valid to the review.
|
|
Oh, I'll say it again.
|
|
Here's the funny thing about how messed up that movie was.
|
|
There's a whole book about how Disney botched that movie.
|
|
No, that's a different movie, right?
|
|
Oh, no, that's right.
|
|
The John Carter one was the Disney movie and the Princess of Mars was
|
|
another one that got even worse ratings.
|
|
Got terrible ratings.
|
|
As I said, I watched 30 minutes of it,
|
|
but I'm not sure how it can get worse than that movie.
|
|
I ducked out for a glass of Merlot.
|
|
So I missed the lead up to that.
|
|
Um, I did not watch John Carter after I saw the commercial
|
|
and they did the oldest, oldest, oldest sci-fi.
|
|
My name is Virginia, so and so for Virginia.
|
|
Oh, Virginia, I went, oh my God,
|
|
this movie is going to be horrible.
|
|
I was saying that I borrowed it from a friend last weekend.
|
|
Oh, goodness.
|
|
To not poke you had it on the schedule for Wednesdays week.
|
|
Well, he was wrong.
|
|
Okay, I take it back.
|
|
Poke is a bad person.
|
|
No, I looked, I couldn't find it on my calendar at all 50.
|
|
I think there's something going on.
|
|
There's something, there's something erred out there.
|
|
To 50, he left.
|
|
What happened?
|
|
At least it got his old internet connection back up.
|
|
I've been on two podcast with him this week and it was basically the,
|
|
let's just count how long it takes for 50 to drop off game.
|
|
I made it about 30 minutes into the movie before all of the glaring wrongness just made it so I couldn't,
|
|
I couldn't deal.
|
|
Can I just add that I actually kind of liked it in like a terrible totally guilty way?
|
|
I didn't think it was that bad.
|
|
No, I expected to feel that way, but I didn't.
|
|
Anywho.
|
|
See, that's how I feel watching Starship Troopers after having read the book.
|
|
Yeah, but they're totally different and totally awesome in their own respective ways.
|
|
My friend pointed out something that if you watch the movie thinking about this,
|
|
it makes it a lot better, is that they made Starship Troopers as a parody of the book.
|
|
Pretty much every time they're hoven direct something, it's a parody of the original.
|
|
So that's probably kind of the point.
|
|
But if you watch the movie thinking that it's a parody, it gets a lot better.
|
|
Along those same lines, the movie Iraqophobia was originally supposed to be a comedy.
|
|
I thought it was like spoiler still is.
|
|
Parts of it are now.
|
|
I thought it was funny.
|
|
I remember watching that movie as a kid.
|
|
I was terrified.
|
|
That was what last week?
|
|
Week before?
|
|
Wow, is he just going to keep dropping like that?
|
|
I was just trying to figure out how old x1101 was when that movie came out.
|
|
Well, rather than having you take off your socks and shoes and counting on your toes,
|
|
when did it come out and I'll tell you.
|
|
I think that movie was pre-x1101.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I don't even know what it came out.
|
|
Let me look it up.
|
|
I'm going to guess that it was 87 or 88.
|
|
Close, 1990.
|
|
Oh, come on.
|
|
I'm not that young.
|
|
I was born in 86.
|
|
I also can't accept close, even though it was, you know, two years.
|
|
It's a decade.
|
|
You're rounding his bed and you should feel bad.
|
|
Again, bad person.
|
|
Taj, was it you I was talking about Borderlands 2 last time?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
So as part of the in the second one, it's part of the downloadable content that you play after beating the game.
|
|
One of the one of the little side things is quite literally a D&D campaign run by a psychotic 12-year-old.
|
|
What?
|
|
Give me just a second.
|
|
I will pull up a link, but it's ridiculous and wonderful.
|
|
Sorry, Mark.
|
|
Go ahead.
|
|
I didn't mean to push the button over yet.
|
|
I'm not hearing anything from you, Mark.
|
|
Oh, I wasn't saying anything.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
Sorry.
|
|
I thought the lips lit up.
|
|
I thought you were trying to talk.
|
|
Where are my lips?
|
|
Okay.
|
|
So before we start the show proper, because I don't want to promote something non-free on the show.
|
|
Has anybody read the Martian yet?
|
|
I listen to the audiobook and it is wonderful.
|
|
JC Bray is brilliant.
|
|
Get the audiobook, not the book.
|
|
Yeah, I'm about three quarters of the way through the audiobook.
|
|
I'm glad you mentioned that and it is so good.
|
|
I cannot wait for this movie.
|
|
It's going to be great.
|
|
There were several laugh out loud sections in that book.
|
|
I'd be listening to my headphones in the house and suddenly go fall.
|
|
And my wife would look at me and what?
|
|
I love the headphone laugh, especially it worked.
|
|
And people have to like prairie dog over the cubicles to see what you're laughing at.
|
|
I won't spoil the jokes, though.
|
|
My wife wanted to synopsis, because she's interested in seeing
|
|
the movie, but she's a pretty avid reader.
|
|
So she's like, should I read the book?
|
|
And I was like, well, imagine like a really smart me got stranded on Mars.
|
|
And she was like, no, thank you.
|
|
I love that life.
|
|
Well, I haven't read the book.
|
|
And of course, I haven't seen the movie yet, which I may or may not.
|
|
But of the two books that I think I would say get the audiobook over anything else.
|
|
Number one, I legend to the Martian.
|
|
I heard Harry Potter, if you're going to do that, is also better as an audiobook.
|
|
But I'm not going to do that.
|
|
I don't want you guys to think that about me too late.
|
|
Harry Potter, I think I read that already.
|
|
All right.
|
|
I feel really guilty starting before 50 gets his internet connection worked out.
|
|
But I am, I am really eager to start this first.
|
|
I'm really eager to start for a couple of reasons.
|
|
Mostly they're selfish as opposed to any other time.
|
|
Oh, no, I'm usually pretty selfless.
|
|
I think I try to be.
|
|
I'm just giving you a hard time, Bogey.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
It may be a bad person, but not because I'm selfish.
|
|
Stupid question.
|
|
Who's actually in charge here?
|
|
You are.
|
|
You were the one going to assign our next audiobook.
|
|
No, I meant of the discussion.
|
|
It's a round table.
|
|
We like to think of it as controlled chaos.
|
|
Emphasis only chaos, not the control.
|
|
Okay, then.
|
|
It I've been around the longest and a founding member of the audiobook club,
|
|
but I really, really do my best to emphasize that it is not mine.
|
|
It is a community thing.
|
|
Insert, Pokey is old joke.
|
|
Let me go pull those off the stone table.
|
|
I have the written on.
|
|
All right.
|
|
So would you guys mind if we get started?
|
|
No, let's go.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
|
|
at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
|
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
|
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
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an onsthost.com, the internet archive, and our sings.net.
|
|
On this otherwise status, today's show is released on our Creative Commons
|
|
Attribution 4.0 International License.
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