• Women Can Electrocute You
    Jun 16 2025

    In Naomi Alderman’s “The Power” women all over the planet suddenly develop the ability to shoot electrical shocks, to the point of lethality.

    The natural order is entirely inverted, with men easily overpowered by women, and resulting societal tumult.

    Katherine Mangu-Ward joins to discuss.

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    52 mins
  • Time Loops
    May 20 2025

    Getting thrown back to the same place in time, repeatedly, with little you can do about it has become an awesome sub genre in scifi. From Groundhog Day, to The Endless, we discuss time loops and their appeal in science fiction. Brian Brushwood joins to discuss.

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    1 hr
  • Holy Space Capitalism of the Feringi
    Apr 1 2025

    Star Trek’s Feringi are intergalactic traders, merchants, entrepreneurs, and feckless shysters. How did they get to be space capitalists when the Federation outgrew the concept of money altogether? Sean Finnerty joins to discuss Feringinar, the Rules of Acquisition, and the economy of the 24th century.

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    1 hr and 22 mins
  • Cheating with a Sexbot
    Mar 5 2025

    In "Subservience" Megan Fox plays a robot servant who goes off the rails, seduces her owner, and tries to kill his wife. Henrique Couto joins to discuss the ethical implications of cheating on your spouse with a robot, how we ought to treat robots even if they don't really have consciousness, and whether or not we'd buy robot servants in general.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • "Alien" is Dudes Afraid of Getting Knocked Up
    Feb 7 2025

    Fresh after seeing “Alien: Romulus,” Dickie Lynch and Heaton discuss Ripley Scott’s “Alien” franchise: the creepy aesthetics of H. R. Geiger, the deepest fears of the movie, the alien seeding of “Prometheus,” and the most recent installment as a best-of.

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • A Canticle for Leibowitz
    Jan 16 2025

    It's three centuries after the apocalypse, and a small Catholic monastery in the desert is collecting and safeguarding whatever pre-calamite artifacts it can, to preserve knowledge until civilization gets going again. Brian Brushwood joins to discuss this post-apocalyptic "Jesuits in space" novel.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • A. I. As Monkeypaw Slaves
    Dec 16 2024

    How has A. I. been portrayed through history in science fiction, and what's it going to look like as it keeps getting better? Stone Lynch and J. C. Campbell join to discuss.

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    1 hr
  • A Clockwork Orange’s Secret Extra Chapter
    Nov 14 2024

    Anthony Burgess wrote his dystopian novel “A Clockwork Orange” in 1962, but two different versions appeared on either side of the Atlantic. The American version stops at chapter twenty, whereas the British version has an extra twenty-first chapter, which totally changes the book. Brian Brushwood joins to discuss.

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    1 hr and 18 mins
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