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197 lines
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Plaintext
197 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4246
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Title: HPR4246: Bytes, Pages and Screens
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4246/hpr4246.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:59:42
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4246 from Monday 11th of November 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, Bites, Pages and Screens.
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It is hosted by Lee and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Attract Through Some Podcasts, Books and Television Shows.
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Hi I'm Lee.
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Today I'm going to run through some of my favourite books, TV shows and podcasts.
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I'll try to both describe what each one is about and give some context as to how I got
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into it or what it meant to me.
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Our start of podcasts and the best one I can think of all time, present podcast accepted,
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was Linux Outlaws with Fabian Churchill and Dan Lynch, which ran for seven years starting
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in 2007.
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Hacker Public Radio Episode 319 even saw Mollochrome C start a series clear in homage
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called Linux in-laws.
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Linux Outlaws was both a very down-to-earth, informative and then entertaining mix of tech
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news and general chat.
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Although times have moved on, I think I could still go back and listen to any episode
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even today and not be bored.
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I'm also a fan of the Twitch or this week in tech network, which hosts a number of video
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podcasts.
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My favourite Twitch show was called Know How, especially the episodes hosted by ISACTAR
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and also those hosted by Father Robert Ballaker.
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These would get into some really interesting topics and would be fairly practical.
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Another Twitch show, which is still running at the time of this recording, is Security
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now featuring Steve Gibson.
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It's about both current events in cybersecurity as well as some in-depth dives into certain subjects
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and following this show eventually got me into studying cybersecurity at postgraduate
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level.
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Thirdly, there's Floss Weekly about Open Source Software, which I've followed for some
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time with interest.
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Twitch is a bit of a funny name for a podcast network and I confess to walking down the
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street wearing a Twitch t-shirt, only to be on the receiving end of the comment with
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a mixture of typical London humour and possibly some misreading involved, there goes a
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twat.
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Destination Linux was another American podcast I used to listen to and sometimes watch.
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It was characterised by a four-way split screen and the different personalities worked
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well together.
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I was pleased one of the presenters at the time was a Brit, his name was Seb, who I believe
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was associated with Peppamint OS, which I donated my remaining stock of refurbished Ubuntu
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laptops to after I realised I couldn't make a profitable business out of selling them.
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This podcast is still going strong and it seems as good as ever but I haven't watched
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or listened to this for a while.
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In some ways Linux has now become a prevalent and perhaps even mundane part of my everyday
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life to extend I don't even notice I'm using it anymore.
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In which case these podcasts have succeeded in their goal, Linux is no longer a destination
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but my home.
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Knowing that there is one Linux podcast which most HPR listeners will already be familiar
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with that goes into such detail on every episode that I always learn something new.
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This is going to be a world order presented by the HPR presenter Kletto, whose podcasts
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have influenced my life in diverse ways, ranging from drinking coffee to composting and even
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wanting to become an HPR host myself.
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Now, best for books I've read and found resonated with me, I probably don't need to go into
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too much detail about canonical sci-fi and fantasy novels like The Lord of the Rings
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by JRR Tolkien or June by Frank Herbert, both of which I read as a young adult.
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I won't mention War and Peace by Leah Tolstoy about the lives of well off Russians during
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the time of the invasion by Napoleon.
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I read this over 25 years ago but still think about it from time to time.
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For example how the character of Pierre finally can stop living in the trap of his own head
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after befriending a farmer who later dies while they march together as prisoners.
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Or Prince Andrei looking up at the clouds when he's been injured as if he has never even
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noticed them before.
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Or the observation that those who recount traumatic experiences such as being in a battle really
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tell what really happened.
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This novel is famous for being long and I only read this once but think it was worth
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the effort.
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Going from classic literature to comic sci-fi, I have a fondness for the hitch I could
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guide to the galaxy series of books by Douglas Adams.
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I first got into this watching the BBC TV series and later at high school my maths teacher
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lent me the radio series on cassette and I also played the text adventure game, didn't
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get too far with it.
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While at university when my fellow role-plates encouraged me to join the official hitchhiker's
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fan club and that summer I went with her to a weekend event with other fans near Nottingham.
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I also liked the Discworld books by Terry Pratchett that these are so numerous I've
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only read some of them.
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When a particular was mort about a young man who becomes apprentice to a personification
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of death who has the catchphrase I could murder a curry.
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I read this while on a course in Pershort near Nottingham and later saw a play adaptation
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performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.
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More recently I read a couple of books by Neil Stephenson, recommended to me by someone
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who I met a few times while running a meet-up at a local park during the pandemic lockdowns.
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The first book was CryptoNomicon, loosely about code breaking both in the Second World
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War and also more modern times.
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This briefly features a more lighthearted, fictional depiction of Alan Churring which
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is refreshing, given the many works about the import of his work and the tragedy of his
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later life.
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The second book was Anatham, set in a future in a world similar but not the same as ours
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about a brother from a monastery of mass philosophy and science who encounters visitors
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travelling between parallel universes.
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Both of these books have a star that is both high and low-brow, somewhat entertaining
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and also absorbing but they are relatively long and omit to sometimes skipping over parts
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and then having to go back to reread.
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She also recommended I read some high-line novels.
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The ones I read were HaveSpaceItWillTravel, DoubleStar and LaterStrangerAndEstrangeLand.
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The first, set in a future where space travel is common, is about an enthusiastic young
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man who wins a space suit that leads him into adventures in space.
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The second is about an actor who has to pretend to be the president of Earth to resolve
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a diplomatic situation with Martians.
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The third is about a man brought up by Martians who has developed special insight in abilities
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and who are returning to Earth ends up founding a religion.
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These books are of their time, for example the latter one does delve into the free love
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phenomenon as it was emerging in the early 60s which the person who recommended the books
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to me found off-putting.
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StrangerAndEstrangeLand also introduced the word Grop into the English language, a Martian
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concept having no English equivalent but meaning more or less to understand something fully
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as opposed to just knowing it as a fact.
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A few years previously I'd been recommended Orson Scott Cards Enders Game by someone who
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herself had aspirations as a sci-fi author.
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At the time this book was soon to be adapted to film.
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The book has a number of themes, from the political impact of social media, written well
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before social media had even been invented, the practice of training children to be soldiers
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and also whether extremely destructive acts legitimised during the war time.
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Sometime after reading this book I also read some of the sequels.
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These come close in their subject matter to James Cameron's Avatar films and that they
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explore the theme of the living organisms of a planet existing as a spiritual hull.
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I was also somewhat of a fan of the Harry Potter novels by J.K. Rowling, having discovered
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the first book discarded in the dustbin of a psychiatric ward.
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I won't go into here what I was doing there while I was looking in dustbin.
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For anyone somehow not familiar, it's about an orphan boy with abnormal abilities he
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goes to a school that teaches magic.
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My favourite of the series is the third one, the Prisoner of Azkaban, which she's the
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young protagonist to discover about himself, he's not helpless, and might within himself
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be capable of using even lethal force to address the mode of his parents and prevent further
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harms.
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Finally a series of books that I've got part way through, listening to as audio books
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rather than reading are the Frontier Saga by Rick Brown.
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I started listening to these as Steve Gibson talked about them on the security now podcast
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I mentioned earlier.
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They're mainly about interstellar war and borrow a little from Star Trek and Star Wars.
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While they're not necessarily high-brow, they're quite entertaining, suspenseful, with plenty
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of space warfare action as well as some politics, espionage and core technologies.
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Talking of Star Trek, this leads me onto TV shows, and yes, I've watched on my SEVERING
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CONNATION of Star Trek, the as-yet, unconcluded one at the time of recording being strange
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new worlds.
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But here's a TV show that has nothing to do with science fiction.
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It's called Prison Cell Block H, setting a women's prison in Australia in the 1980s.
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I would almost never fail to watch each episode with my mother as it was aired in the UK
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around midnight once a week, even though I'd school the next day.
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I'm not sure how or why this became a favourite, but perhaps her experience has been detained
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in an institution as a young woman had something to do with why appeal to her.
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The lighter side of Australian TV, which would often feature the same actors as the series
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mentioned previously, was their soap operas, and these were especially popular in the
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80s and 90s, and for some years I would always watch these, neighbors being the one that
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preferred over home in a way.
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They're absorbing at the time, but I don't think I would rewatch them now.
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Coming back to recent years, I'll mention Mr Robot featuring Christians later, Rommie
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Malak, and created by Sam Esmel.
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This has a very realistic depiction of hacking, down to details of characters discussing whether
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they prefer KDE Plasma or Nome as a desktop environment.
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At the heart of it though, it's a fantasy, with a character afflicted by some sort of
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psychosis or disassociation, trying to understand the world-changing events occurring around
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him, of which he, without his knowledge, is the prime re-instigator of.
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While I'm tempted now to go back again to talking about TV series of my youth, I think
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I'll skip over the ones that come to mind that have since been rebooted, such as Mission
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Impossible and Lost in Space, move on to something more contemporary.
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The anthology Black Mirror by Charlie Brooker is often about technologies gone wrong.
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It's possibly one of the best, though, also most disturbing TV series of recent years.
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Some of the episodes were produced in my neck of the woods.
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I know someone who has been an extra, and my sister has done work on the series as a
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makeup artist.
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Some of the humour, if you can call it that, is indeed very dark, and while I would say
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watching this might be a cathartic way to deal with trauma, it's perhaps more advisable
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to seek help from a psychiatric professional to deal with that than watch a TV programme.
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While on a dark theme, I'm mentioning a show called Dexter, it had already been running
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some time when it was recommended to me by a friend who was a computer game enthusiast,
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who I used to meet at a neurodiversity group in the Puckney Academy Street in Central
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London.
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Having missed the first couple of series of Dexter, I then had to go back and watch these
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to fully understand the backstory, but I was soon hooked.
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It was really one of those shows I'd anticipate every new episode of, being about a crime
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investigator who has turned vigilante in order to expiate his own demons.
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While featuring James Reema, the eponymous star of Dexter is Michael C. Hall, who is
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also known for six feet under, where he played a funeral director who has similarly led
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a double life, concealing his sexuality prior to his father's death.
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So I don't end an adult now, I'll talk about a TV series called Touch by an Angel.
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This drama is religious with a smaller, much along the lines of the sci-fi series Quantum
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Leap.
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Each episode features a new set of characters and a new drama, which the regular protagonist
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must help resolve.
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The Angel's test and moniker make it contrasting pair, and like the appearance of an ill-fated
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officer wearing a red uniform in Star Trek, whenever Andrew, the Angel of Death, aptly
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played by John Dye, made an appearance, you knew things were not looking good for those
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involved.
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John Dye is also known for playing an idealistic soldier in the Vietnam drama Tour of Duty.
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Angels of Death aside, Touch by an Angel was something light I'd watch with my mother regularly
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for some years, we both liked it.
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Well, in conclusion, this has been a somewhat random and not exhaustive list of my favourite
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podcast books and TV programmes, none of them are too obscure, but I'll try to include
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links to each one in the show notes in case you want to find out more.
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That's all from me now, thanks for listening.
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