Author Topic: EP350: Observer Effects  (Read 23081 times)

eytanz

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on: June 24, 2012, 03:12:52 PM
EP350: Observer Effects

By Tim Pratt

Read by A Kovacs

---

“Ubiquitous surveillance isn’t the problem. Asymmetrical ubiquitous surveillance is the problem.” The Liberator was playing Chinese checkers against himself and talking, talking, talking, like always. “Who watches the watchmen, after all?”

We were superheroes then. Celebrities, back when there were such things. It was a slow night at orbital headquarters, and Eye-Oh was
sitting at the big screen, watching a couple of people fuck — consensually, or we would have done something about it — in an
alleyway. The screen was green with night-vision enhancements, and Eye-Oh’s strange complicated face was perfectly placid and empty as he observed.

“The problem is that we can watch ordinary people, and they can’t watch us,” the Liberator went on. He looked at me longingly, searchingly, and I thought it might be nice to tweak the inside of his brain and get rid of his earnestness, give him a little taste of what infamous brain-damage victim Phineas Gage got when that iron bar slammed through his frontal lobe, a total personality turnaround, from nice guy to sociopath. Let the Liberator be selfish and impulsive and violent and mercurial for a while, so he could appreciate the way normal avaricious sneaky hungry desperate needy people felt.

But that was supervillain thinking, and I’d gone straight and narrow. In those days I cured neurological damage instead of inflicting it. I fixed people. (Except bad people. Those, I was sometimes still allowed to play with with.) I’d refused to give up my supervillain name though. The Liberator had wanted to call me “Dr. Neuro” when I joined his little boys’ club, but I’d insisted on keeping my maiden name, as it were. Doctor. Please. I was a high-school dropout.

“Do you see?” the Liberator said. “If ordinary people could see us, if everyone could see everyone else, it wouldn’t matter if there were no privacy.”


Listen to this week’s Escape Pod!



Max e^{i pi}

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Reply #1 on: June 24, 2012, 03:29:45 PM
Hmm... not the Tim Pratt heropunk story I was hoping for, but a good one, nonetheless.

Is it wrong that the person I most identified with in this story was the protag, ex-villain turned villain again? I mean, The Liberator is a major tool and IO has a kickass name, but zero personality. Probably comes from knowing everything about everybody.
But that's not just it. He made sense. He thought for himself. He was rational. My only problem with him was that he was rather callous with how he used his powers. Yes, that's what I'd expect from a villain, but still, a little more forethought, perhaps?

However, this (and the previous story) did start an interesting train of thought in my head: were I suddenly bestowed with superpowers, would I be a hero or a villain? (What is commonly referred to in heropunk as a "cape" or a "mask", respectively).
Actually, what really provoked those thoughts was Mur's audio book Playing For Keeps. (You haven't listened to it yet?!)
Whatever it was, the "hero or villain" question always seems too cut and dried.
You can't draw the world in bold swatches of black and white with the occasional red underpants. Real life is far too complicated. People do good things for bad reasons, and bad things for good reasons. Good and evil isn't two sides of a coin but rather a sliding scale. You have to place yourself somewhere along it.
If put on the spot I'd probably say that I would try not to use my powers to cause harm to people, but fight for a "better good"? What the hell is that and who decides what it is?
Most of the hero/villain problems are problems of their own doing. Since there are capes there are masks. It's an arms race. And since the capes try to fight for the "better good" they end up making numbskull decisions like lobotomizing the entire human population of the universe.
Why? Because they believe in some kind of "greater good".
Sure, it's noble and all that, but who decides what it is and what an acceptable cost is? I wouldn't trust someone in spandex who destroys buildings as collateral damage to make that call.
Does that make me a villain? Probably not. But I do know that I occasionally would bend to the temptation to use my powers just to aggravate those goody-two-shoes heroes. Why? Because nobody likes the teacher's pet.
Sure the point of heroes is to hold an icon up to society, something for people to believe in.
But it's also holding up a mirror to society. And often we don't like what we see in the mirror.
« Last Edit: June 24, 2012, 03:36:33 PM by Max e^{i pi} »

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InfiniteMonkey

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Reply #2 on: June 24, 2012, 06:23:50 PM
My biggest problem with the story was the beginning, which sounded too much like a science and morals lecture. It's not that the ideas weren't interesting, I just didn't find they were presented in an interesting way, but rather too much like points on a presentation. I think a lot of this had to do with it being Lesion's internal monologue.

I found the actual implementation of The Liberator's "big plan" more interesting, a great lesson in the law of unintended consequences (a lot like a major plot point of "Leviathan Wakes" which I recently finished). And of course there's the rich irony that it's the "villain", with her less than optimistic view of human nature, who ends up being right.

I do think that the social chaos of everyone loosing facial recognition would be a lot larger than what Lesion talks about at the end of the story. Driver's licenses, passports... it would be nuts...



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Reply #3 on: June 24, 2012, 07:07:29 PM
I do think that the social chaos of everyone loosing facial recognition would be a lot larger than what Lesion talks about at the end of the story. Driver's licenses, passports... it would be nuts...
And then there's the fact that facial recognition is closely linked with patter recognition.
No more math, puzzles, plans, maps, software, law and order.... when you think about it, everything about modern culture is some sort of pattern, order to the chaos. With no ability to recognize those patterns.... pfft.

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Reply #4 on: June 24, 2012, 08:07:56 PM
Prosopagnosia only affects face recognition, not all patterns.  Our social lives are so important, evolutionarily speaking, that we have a whole special segment of our brains JUST dedicated to face recognition.

Honestly, I found both scenarios kind of unbelievable.  The absence of privacy is already occurring, and I can't see it creating the kind of massive, uncontrollable upheavals described herein, even in the accelerated form shown.  And like the Monkey, I can't see worldwide face blindness causing only a minor blip.  Both events, it seems to me, would create significant upheavals, followed by swift adaptation.  If there's one thing humanity does well, it's adapt to changing circumstances.  Heaven save us from what we may one day get used to, as the saying goes.



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Reply #5 on: June 25, 2012, 02:48:17 PM
Some interesting ideas in this one.

As the Liberator was describing his plan for absolute surveillance and what a great world that would be, I kept thinking "This sounds like a precursor to my story The Disconnected!"  Which, a few minutes later, it ended up not at all the same.  But I thought it was interesting how the theoretical ideas were similar.  :)

And wow the Liberator really is a crazy crazy person with no concept of how people would actually behave, and who feels like he has to "fix" everyone in any way that he can, no matter the risk.  That is scary!  I'm not sure that the absolute surveillance would have that kind of a big effect, I think that it would smooth itself out shortly.  

The face recognition worldwide would have a much larger effect, I think.  Honestly, I think that civilization as we know it would completely collapse.  Paranoia would become rampant because no one would know who they could trust.  Family units would fall apart, organizations would collapse, and most of the population would die because of the collapse of all the basic infrastructure that provides our overlarge population with food and medical attention and other things that keep us alive.  The second generation would rebuild from whatever was left, but it would be a much smaller population, with only the ruins of the previous generation to work with.  I think that facial recognition lies at the core of how we think about everything, if you take that away, all the social systems completely fall apart.

"Prosopagnosia" is a very interesting condition.  That you could not even learn to recognize your own face in the mirror is so unsettling, or to recognize your spouse, parent, best friend.  I watched a TV special on that a while back where they discussed the effects on people with that condition.  They also talked about a different condition that's kind of a hyper-recognition, where you can remember any face you see years and years later, and that also had some difficult effects because sometimes they'd greet somebody that they had seen in passing a decade earlier and if they weren't careful how they reacted they'd look like a stalker.



s10wanderer

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Reply #6 on: June 25, 2012, 09:07:53 PM
This story started with so much promise, but I became frustrated once the author started to create a new condition and call it by another name, face blindness does not work the way it was described--it has nothing to do with recognizing emotion. That whole bit about the smile and the character not being able to see it is annoying to put it mildly (I get really annoyed when people generalize what I can and cannot do from a name of a condition). Being faceblind is more like seeing faces the way anyone else sees objects, the small details take a lot more time and work to memorize and the complicated nature of a face makes recognizing faces nearly impossible (yes, I do not always recognize myself in a mirror--and the parts I recognize are not facial structure but makeup and hairstyle). But in the end you do figure out who people are and while it can cause lots of problems, most people don't notice you have a hard time recognizing them until you tell them (or miss something obvious like asking "who is this" and pointing to yourself in a photograph...which does happen).

I agree that the premise is really cool. I would love to live in a face blind culture, but that is because I am face blind and there are ways to get around it (and I know them!). It really is just another way to see the same world. I have to use a lot more information before I can recognize people and this means that I have a more complex view of the world (at least I like to think so). My big complaint with this story is that the author didn't research face blindness (it has nothing to do with reading emotion--and there are a few of us who are face blind out there and we do function fairly well as a generalization--does that mean we get to take over this new world order because we have the power to see the people behind the faces? Face blindness, my new superpower!) or the author could have just make up a new condition to match what is described.



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Reply #7 on: June 26, 2012, 02:06:41 PM
Welcome, s10wanderer, to the forums!  I hope you stick around.  :)

This story started with so much promise, but I became frustrated once the author started to create a new condition and call it by another name, face blindness does not work the way it was described--it has nothing to do with recognizing emotion.

I meant to comment on that, because I'd never heard of it being tied to emotion either, but I forgot to do so.  I love Tim Pratt, but it does seem like he didn't research this well.  I guess one could handwave a little bit and say that the condition that the protagonist induced was not EXACTLY faceblindness but something like it, but I think it'd be a bit of a weak defense.

I agree that the premise is really cool. I would love to live in a face blind culture, but that is because I am face blind and there are ways to get around it (and I know them!). It really is just another way to see the same world. I have to use a lot more information before I can recognize people and this means that I have a more complex view of the world (at least I like to think so). My big complaint with this story is that the author didn't research face blindness (it has nothing to do with reading emotion--and there are a few of us who are face blind out there and we do function fairly well as a generalization--does that mean we get to take over this new world order because we have the power to see the people behind the faces? Face blindness, my new superpower!) or the author could have just make up a new condition to match what is described.

I don't know that I've ever met anyone with the condition, or at least no one that I knew to have the condition.  I am curious:  what do you think the result would be like if the entire world suddenly became faceblind like happened in the story (I mean actually faceblind as the condition exists, not the emotion-recognizing part that was in the story)?  I'm interested in your perspective on it.



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Reply #8 on: June 26, 2012, 02:16:48 PM
While I enjoyed listening to this story, I think it was the weakest of the (only three weeks?!) superhero month stories. My favorite part was Lesion's commentary on how being a super hero is just like being a super villain, only more boring.

I'm going to argue that the Liberator was the *villain in this story. While we were told that the Liberator had an overdeveloped conscience, he certainly made a number of super villain-ish decisions. Based on the detail that the murder rate had dropped essentially to zero at the time the story started, I'm guessing that all of the super villains had either been converted (Lesion) or eradicated. This seems to have created a vacuum and, having no one to save and no evil plots to stop, the Liberator got bored and created new problems where there had been none. Thus: villain.



*the word villain looks really weird if you type it enough times :P



Devoted135

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Reply #9 on: June 26, 2012, 02:20:49 PM
Welcome, s10wanderer, to the forums!  I hope you stick around.  :)

This story started with so much promise, but I became frustrated once the author started to create a new condition and call it by another name, face blindness does not work the way it was described--it has nothing to do with recognizing emotion.

I meant to comment on that, because I'd never heard of it being tied to emotion either, but I forgot to do so.  I love Tim Pratt, but it does seem like he didn't research this well.  I guess one could handwave a little bit and say that the condition that the protagonist induced was not EXACTLY faceblindness but something like it, but I think it'd be a bit of a weak defense.


I agree completely, I've never heard of face-blindness relating to reading emotions. In fact, when Radiolab asked Oliver Sacks that exact question, he said he thought he was perfectly adept at reading people's emotions.
As usual, Radiolab is relevant: http://www.radiolab.org/blogs/radiolab-blog/2010/jun/15/strangers-in-the-mirror/



timpratt

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Reply #10 on: June 26, 2012, 04:06:44 PM
Thanks for all the thoughtful comments. I generally try to avoid stomping in and talking about Authorial Intention (and with a story 5 years old, who even remembers what I intended)? But I did want to say: fair cop on the bit about the Liberator not being able to recognize Lesion smiling. That was sloppy of me, and I should have done better. (I won't claim I did exhaustive research, but what I did involved reading a lot of Oliver Sacks, so I should've gotten that bit right.)



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Reply #11 on: June 26, 2012, 06:10:46 PM
I am so torn!  First of all, I love all of Tim Pratt's stuff (The Marla Mason stories particularly)  so I was excited to see a story here.  But, I have to be honest, I didn't love this story at all.  Maybe it was high expectations, maybe it was that it was told in such a stoic way, or maybe I just couldn't believe someone would allow something like the kiosks to happen,  it just didn't speak to me at all. 

I'll still buy all the Marla Mason stories though, so I at least have that going for me.

-Tim


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Andy C

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Reply #12 on: June 27, 2012, 07:24:12 PM
Hi guys

So I ended up thinking: 'Was this just the exploration of a moderatly interesting idea, or was it a proper story (or both)?' And I think that's more a reflection on me than the story.  :-\

Every time I listen to EP it reminds me of how wide a range of taste there is within the genre. And what I really like is a just a slice of that range. I also do like other stuff that might not appeal to my preference in terms of SF type - if it's really well done (e.g. 'The  Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees' refercened below)

I suspect I am in a minroity because this story (and quite a number of the others on EP) make me end up thinking "where's the story? Where's the arc? Where's the action and the excitement? Is this just going to be a clever idea acted out by a bunch of 2D characters?" And then I think - no that's not fair because what I think would be a good story other people would think of as maybe naive, or old fashioned, or derivative- and I think that might well be a fair criticism of what I like. It may be that superheros are the fantasy end of SF, and I am looking for a little more realism, a bit more 'hard' in my SF.

Also, I've realised that short story is a really tough medium to do well. I listen to other podcasts with short stories that are by the very best authors from all genres writing over the last few decades, these works have a transcendent quality that I only occasionally see on EP. The ones that have gotten close recently are 'The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees' and Siverberg's classic 'Hawksbill Station'

So I ended up thinking this story was okay (2.5 - 3 stars out of 5) but I don't know whether that's just because it's not in a style that I like or because we've lost our way somewhere and are not able to tell very exciting compelling stories any more.

So community, anyone agree with me, or anyone want to put me right?

Thanks

Andy



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Reply #13 on: June 27, 2012, 07:57:32 PM
I don't disagree Andy, you articulated a problem I've been trying to articulate for a while now, most of the stories you're talking about are basically "So, this happened, then this happened, then we did this, then we did this, then this happened."   Which, from all my writing and reading about writing, seems to go against "show, don't tell."  Sure, sometimes that's not possible in a story, especially a short story, but it does tend to wear on you if you hear, or read it, often enough in different stories but different authors.

One of my favorite stories on here was Hawksbill station and I think it's because we saw everything that happened as it happened (for the most part anyway.)  Same thing with Origin and Nemisis, sure there was some telling, mostly to provide background, but the meat of the story was told as it was happening, not afterwards by a narrator.

So, you're not alone Andy, listening to this story I found myself thinking "okay, this is good, but when are going to have a superhero fight?"

-Tim 

Even in failure there can be Nobility! But failing to try brings only shame!
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s10wanderer

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Reply #14 on: June 27, 2012, 10:18:13 PM
Hi Unblinking,


I meant to comment on that, because I'd never heard of it being tied to emotion either, but I forgot to do so.  I love Tim Pratt, but it does seem like he didn't research this well.  I guess one could handwave a little bit and say that the condition that the protagonist induced was not EXACTLY faceblindness but something like it, but I think it'd be a bit of a weak defense.

It is indeed, as Tim Pratt uses the technical term: Prosopagnosia. This makes it a weak defense.

I don't know that I've ever met anyone with the condition, or at least no one that I knew to have the condition.  I am curious:  what do you think the result would be like if the entire world suddenly became faceblind like happened in the story (I mean actually faceblind as the condition exists, not the emotion-recognizing part that was in the story)?  I'm interested in your perspective on it.

I think it would be weird, more so because the sudden loss of facial recognition is much more serious than learning how to cope with it (this is why it was only connect to brain trauma until ten or twenty years ago). The "normal" part of me would say that people would learn to adapt and while most would have their perception-confidence (that the world exists as you see it) severely shaken, humans would adapt quickly, with general levels of paranoia only slightly raised.
But the part of me the loves science fiction knows that cell phone technology and cameras would include retinal scanners or similar identification technology within two weeks.



Unblinking

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Reply #15 on: June 28, 2012, 02:03:17 PM
So I ended up thinking this story was okay (2.5 - 3 stars out of 5) but I don't know whether that's just because it's not in a style that I like or because we've lost our way somewhere and are not able to tell very exciting compelling stories any more.

I'd say it's because it's not in a style you like.  Much of the reason that I say that is because one of the stories that you listed as being awesome, "The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees" was incredibly boring to me.  Escape Pod hits a better like:dislike ratio for ME than almost all magazines do right now.  Drabblecast probably maximizes that ratio, but even then it's not 100% like.  I used to have subscriptions to Analog and F&SF but I let them both lapse, because I just found their stories lacking overall.  They might have one worthwhile story per issue and it was never a novella.  Presumably other people don't feel that way, because alot of those stories are the ones that get Hugo nominations.

Generally an editor will put a pretty characteristic stamp on their magazine.  Escape Pod is Escape Pod and always will be, but there is a distinct feel with Mur as editor that's different than Steve as editor.  My only advice is to find editors who pick stories that YOU like and then read as much of their output as you can, buy or donate to their publications to vote for them with your dollars.




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Reply #16 on: June 28, 2012, 02:06:33 PM
But the part of me the loves science fiction knows that cell phone technology and cameras would include retinal scanners or similar identification technology within two weeks.

I didn't even think of that!  But you are completely right.  Retina scanning technology is already available, as well as facial recognition technology, fingerprint technology etc...  At this point these are used mostly in police investigations and more expensive security systems, but worldwide Prosopagnosia would change these technologies from expensive tech which only appeals to niche markets to a cheap commodity that everyone wants.  The companies that have already invested the effort to make robust systems for doing this will have a huge boom!



Thomas

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Reply #17 on: June 29, 2012, 03:12:59 AM
people seem to have issues with the face memory problem. while a bit farfetched and the particulars being a bit off, what happened in response seems likely and believable.
I especially agreed with the worlds response to the "no privacy" action.

but

I had issue with how Tim introduced the story. I actually quit listening and almost didn't continue.
Observation effect. was initially used to describe what happens when you observe subatomic particles. These particles cannot be observed directly so you do something to them and watch the after effect. you change the particles to observe it.
People have taken this phenomenon and applied to to the observation of human and animal behavior. "The act of observation effects the behavior being observed." Do hidden cameras make people behave differently? If they aware of the cameras presence, sometimes. If they are unaware of their presence, no.

The misuse of this effect and Schrodinger's cat truly bother and irritate me. Excuse my rant.

Enjoy and be nice to each other, because "WE" is all we got.


s10wanderer

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Reply #18 on: June 29, 2012, 03:53:57 AM
But I did want to say: fair cop on the bit about the Liberator not being able to recognize Lesion smiling. That was sloppy of me, and I should have done better. (I won't claim I did exhaustive research, but what I did involved reading a lot of Oliver Sacks, so I should've gotten that bit right.)

Thanks for admitting it. I do get tired of being told what I can and cannot do based on the name of a condition that sounds like something from a science fiction novel (the most recent real life example being that I should not teach because of this... which is what I am in training to do via philosophy grad school right now. But you are not my insulting colleague, so I will spare you my wrath).



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Reply #19 on: June 29, 2012, 01:01:38 PM
Well, I enjoyed it. A fun exploration of the law of unintended consequences, I thought. Plus, the main protagonist was clearly (to my mind, anyway) a sociopath, which was an interesting point of view.

Note to self: don't recruit seemingly reformed villains for my crime-fighting squad, particularly not if much is at stake.



SF.Fangirl

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Reply #20 on: June 30, 2012, 06:46:02 PM
I thought that this was equal parts story and soapbox for moralizing or philosophizing.  It was light on action (which can look a lot like plot sometimes) and heavy on dialog both internal and external.  It was definitely a 2.5/5 for me.  I didn't hate it, but I didn't like it all that much either.  To add to the negative, the protagonist was a villain and the world ended up in a much worse place.  I don't necessarily demand happy ending and victories for good, but my preference (like a lot of others people's) tends toward that.  It had a very interesting ideas, though, even if I am unsure that it accurately describes the action of the human race.

Hi guys

So I ended up thinking: 'Was this just the exploration of a moderatly interesting idea, or was it a proper story (or both)?' And I think that's more a reflection on me than the story.  :-\

Every time I listen to EP it reminds me of how wide a range of taste there is within the genre. And what I really like is a just a slice of that range. I also do like other stuff that might not appeal to my preference in terms of SF type - if it's really well done (e.g. 'The  Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees' refercened below)

I suspect I am in a minroity because this story (and quite a number of the others on EP) make me end up thinking "where's the story? Where's the arc? Where's the action and the excitement? Is this just going to be a clever idea acted out by a bunch of 2D characters?" And then I think - no that's not fair because what I think would be a good story other people would think of as maybe naive, or old fashioned, or derivative- and I think that might well be a fair criticism of what I like. It may be that superheros are the fantasy end of SF, and I am looking for a little more realism, a bit more 'hard' in my SF.

Also, I've realised that short story is a really tough medium to do well. I listen to other podcasts with short stories that are by the very best authors from all genres writing over the last few decades, these works have a transcendent quality that I only occasionally see on EP. The ones that have gotten close recently are 'The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees' and Siverberg's classic 'Hawksbill Station'

So I ended up thinking this story was okay (2.5 - 3 stars out of 5) but I don't know whether that's just because it's not in a style that I like or because we've lost our way somewhere and are not able to tell very exciting compelling stories any more.

So community, anyone agree with me, or anyone want to put me right?

Thanks

Andy



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Reply #21 on: June 30, 2012, 07:01:06 PM
Funny you mention this.  I used to read both Asimov's and Analog.  When I found myself with a huge backlog of unread stories, I choose to cut out Asimov's despite that fact that each year multiple stories from Asimov's kept getting nominated for awards and while Analog had a lot less.  Apparently my taste in sci fi stories is a lot like my taste in wine, unsophisicated. (I like sweet fruity wines and pucker up at the dry wine which seem so popular.)  I think about that a lot in regard to Escape Pod because I believe that I prefer the stories Steve selected as editor than Murr.  I think that I've been disappointed by stories more often since she took over, but I am aware I tend not to agree with the people who pick each year's Hugo and Nebula award winners.

I also think we're all more likely to like a story where good overcomes evil and in this case Liberator didn't even learn a lesson (although he's not the kind of guy to change his mind ever.)


So I ended up thinking this story was okay (2.5 - 3 stars out of 5) but I don't know whether that's just because it's not in a style that I like or because we've lost our way somewhere and are not able to tell very exciting compelling stories any more.

I'd say it's because it's not in a style you like.  Much of the reason that I say that is because one of the stories that you listed as being awesome, "The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees" was incredibly boring to me.  Escape Pod hits a better like:dislike ratio for ME than almost all magazines do right now.  Drabblecast probably maximizes that ratio, but even then it's not 100% like.  I used to have subscriptions to Analog and F&SF but I let them both lapse, because I just found their stories lacking overall.  They might have one worthwhile story per issue and it was never a novella.  Presumably other people don't feel that way, because alot of those stories are the ones that get Hugo nominations.

Generally an editor will put a pretty characteristic stamp on their magazine.  Escape Pod is Escape Pod and always will be, but there is a distinct feel with Mur as editor that's different than Steve as editor.  My only advice is to find editors who pick stories that YOU like and then read as much of their output as you can, buy or donate to their publications to vote for them with your dollars.





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Reply #22 on: July 02, 2012, 02:07:33 PM
Apparently my taste in sci fi stories is a lot like my taste in wine, unsophisicated. (I like sweet fruity wines and pucker up at the dry wine which seem so popular.) 

I prefer the sweet wines as well, and my taste in stories might be similar too.  But I hesitate to use the word "unsophisticated" for my taste in wines or in stories, because that word just seems meant to be derogatory, as if there is a proper kind of story or wine to like and everyone who doesn't like it is wrong.  If one wanted to get derogatory in the other direction, I could say that it's not that my taste is unsophisticated, it's that I prefer the unpretentious.  But either way is derogatory to someone, so I'd rather not use those wordings.

There is no agreed-upon yardstick for fiction quality.  There never can be because it is an art form, and art can only be judged subjectively.  This is a good thing.  Different people will like different kinds of stories the best, and there is enough fiction out there that everyone should be able to find something they like.  The trick is finding what venues publish what you like and encouraging them to continue to exist in whatever way you can.  :)



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Reply #23 on: July 03, 2012, 03:42:24 PM
Well, this one failed to resonate with me. The idea was good, and I enjoyed seeing it from the POV of a "rehabilitated" villain, (I agree with Talia that Lesion is a sociopath, and I like that), and I like that The Liberator was so caught up in his moral superiority that he threw society into chaos rather than utopia.

What I had a hard time with in this story was the heavy narration. In my opinion this story was way too much tell-don't-show. Granted, to show everything that happened the story would end up being a lot longer, possibly novel length. But would that be a bad thing? I wanted to see more interaction between these "superheroes". I wanted to see more of society's collapse, not just be told about it.

I'm curious about how this story was received in 2007, because it hasn't exactly had a warm welcome here. And I appreciate Tim's cameo to apologize for his poor representation of Prosopagnosia. Being ignorant of the condition before today, I didn't find fault with it in the story, but many others did. And I think it was big of Tim to own up to his mistakes.

Finally, I want to echo Devoted135's disappointment: Only three weeks of superhero stories for Superhero Month? I feel victimized by the misleading use of the word "Month" implying four (4) weeks of superhero related tales.

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Reply #24 on: July 03, 2012, 05:54:01 PM
And I appreciate Tim's cameo to apologize for his poor representation of Prosopagnosia. Being ignorant of the condition before today, I didn't find fault with it in the story, but many others did. And I think it was big of Tim to own up to his mistakes.
Seconded.

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Reply #25 on: July 03, 2012, 06:14:41 PM
I neither liked nor disliked the story. I liked that it was short enough that I didn't worry about having to shut it off halfway and missing something good (I'm so far behind on podcasts that I have to make harsh judgments of anything longer than one commute).

I liked Lesion -- liked her voice, her general unhappiness with being a good guy, her ruthless pragmatism. But I didn't really care too much for the storytelling per se -- which is to say, the way the piece was presented. Others have already discussed this in more detail, so I won't.

I enjoyed the narration, although it took a while to ignore the technical artifacts (sound quality).

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Reply #26 on: July 05, 2012, 01:39:27 PM
What I had a hard time with in this story was the heavy narration. In my opinion this story was way too much tell-don't-show. Granted, to show everything that happened the story would end up being a lot longer, possibly novel length. But would that be a bad thing? I wanted to see more interaction between these "superheroes". I wanted to see more of society's collapse, not just be told about it.

I agree with that, mostly just that I found the method of the time jumps disorienting.  A thousand words or more spent on one conversation, and then a paragraph jumps ahead years, and then back to the slower pace again.  I sorted it out, but every time the faster jumps happened I had to rewind in my head and sort out what just happened.



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Reply #27 on: July 06, 2012, 02:49:07 PM
I felt that the biggest problem with this story was the authors reputation. Tim Pratt's work is astounding and stands head and shoulders above a lot of many authors featured on the various PODcasts.

So when I listened to this and found it to be only 'OK' I realised just how much expectation I've placed on Tim. It's terribly unfair but I think he should take it as a compliment. I feel about this as I did about Prometheus and that puts my level of expectation at the same as I have for Ridley Scott, which really, if you think about it isn't an unflattering comparison... :)



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Reply #28 on: July 06, 2012, 09:57:22 PM
I really liked this one.
It did exactly what I want SF to do - which is to follow ideas around, and hang enough story off them to give them a human edge, without cluttering things up with car-chases.

In particular, it fits nicely into a personal SF axis mundi of mine which includes The Dead Past, The Stars My Destination and Wikileaks. I may disagree with Tim Pratt, and agree with the provocatively-named Liberator, about the privacy stuff, but I'm glad he wrote about it so entertainingly.

Incidentally, the dodgy neuropsychology can probably be justified because it's clearly in the Comic Book genre. It's the kind of misunderstanding of science Stan Lee would throw into a story. (Ok, not so great for improving understanding of our fellow man, but it's the first step on a learning curve, and meanwhile LOOK! SPACE DINOSAURS!)



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Reply #29 on: July 07, 2012, 02:25:54 PM
The more i read comments about this story, the more i like the story. people are complaining about the narrative aspect/type, its use or abuse or whatever. the story just works, it is a different perspective. i do not believe i have heard a superhero story as told by a former villain turning to villainy again. other than my first objection to the explanation of the observation effect, i truly enjoyed this one. nay sayers, get over it. the mistating of facts happens. happens all the time in all fiction. you over look that aspect and just enjoy the story.

Enjoy and be nice to each other, because "WE" is all we got.


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Reply #30 on: July 09, 2012, 01:58:38 PM
nay sayers, get over it. the mistating of facts happens. happens all the time in all fiction. you over look that aspect and just enjoy the story.

But what will pedants like myself do with our time?  :)   

The thing about this age of plentiful information is that it's easy to look up shallow information about many topics, such as the basic symptoms of a documented condition like this.  And especially when the condition you're describing is held by some segment of the population who will be very excited if you get their perspective right, that matters.  I'm not saying that a mistake like that makes a story irredeemable, but it is a knock against it.



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Reply #31 on: July 09, 2012, 06:24:50 PM

The thing about this age of plentiful information is that it's easy to look up shallow information about many topics, such as the basic symptoms of a documented condition like this.  And especially when the condition you're describing is held by some segment of the population who will be very excited if you get their perspective right, that matters.  I'm not saying that a mistake like that makes a story irredeemable, but it is a knock against it.


I concede to your point, but the story still works, even with that flaw. if the author had the correct info on this particular condition, there may have been some parts of the story that would be changed to fit the proper data, but the story would work the same. the outcome and how we get there would not have changed, just some of the faces in the scenery would have looked different.

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Reply #32 on: July 10, 2012, 01:57:54 PM
I concede to your point, but the story still works, even with that flaw. if the author had the correct info on this particular condition, there may have been some parts of the story that would be changed to fit the proper data, but the story would work the same. the outcome and how we get there would not have changed, just some of the faces in the scenery would have looked different.

I agree.  This wasn't my favorite story, but that had more to do with the summary sections between the narrative sections than anything.  And, TheFunkeyGibbon hit it on the head, that I have high expectations of Tim Pratt because he has written so many stories that I really love, so when he writes a story that I just think is fair-to-middlin' it looks much worse in comparison.



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Reply #33 on: July 10, 2012, 03:51:45 PM


I have high expectations of Tim Pratt because he has written so many stories that I really love, so when he writes a story that I just think is fair-to-middlin' it looks much worse in comparison.


Let's beat him up.... J/K


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Reply #34 on: July 11, 2012, 04:14:44 PM
TheFunkeyGibbon hit it on the head, that I have high expectations of Tim Pratt because he has written so many stories that I really love, so when he writes a story that I just think is fair-to-middlin' it looks much worse in comparison. 

Pratt's work is usually so very good.  This seemed rushed.  His character development was more wordy than usual, like he did not have time to edit the extraneous stuff.  And the "every body went crazy" was bizarre, meaningless, and took me out of the story.  How about "nobody did anything but stayed home and spied on their friends and neighbors"?   That would be more likely and just as bad.

Thank you.



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Reply #35 on: July 11, 2012, 04:24:06 PM
I thought it was cool that Blind Io (as Pratchett would call him) was named what he was.  "Argus" would have worked as well--The Sioux Falls SD newspaper is called the Argus Leader which I think is neat.  And also creepy.



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Reply #36 on: July 11, 2012, 10:57:10 PM
I usually skip stories with superheros, but I'm glad I didn't do that with this one. It was great; full of really interesting ideas, told at a good pace, and with a nice twist in the tail.

Looks like I'll now be revisiting those other superhero stories. Don't want to miss 'em if they're as good as this.



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Reply #37 on: July 14, 2012, 08:50:30 PM
Didn't like this at all. I assume it was supposed to be humorous, but that didn't stop the ridiculous premise of the story standing out like a sore thumb. The idea that one person would be so self-righteous as to believe they could decide something for all humanity. The total loss of personal privacy... what a surprise to find that people didn't like it the change!

On top of that, the concept of loss of privacy is not new in science-fiction. There was an Outer Limits episode (based on a short story, I think) in which an alien race gives humans the technology to see into the past at any location they choose. This seems wonderful at first, until people realise they can see the actions of people just a fraction of a second in the past. As a result all privacy is lost and everyone looses the will to live (or something... I don't recall the details).

Also, the style of the story seemed immature (or perhaps it was the reader's delivery?), as if it was written in a hurry by a high school student who forgot to do the work at the weekend.
« Last Edit: July 15, 2012, 09:56:00 AM by bluetube »



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Reply #38 on: July 14, 2012, 09:01:43 PM
Some people did like it actually, because people have different tastes in fiction. If you read the thread you'll see its a mix, and everyone had their own reasons for liking or not liking it.

You could probably make the "well, its not new!!" argument of 99.9999999999999999999999999999% of any and all stories written ever. What counts, imho, is the delivery. For me, it worked, for you it didn't. So it goes. :) I just personally don't buy into the "every story has to introduce something new to the field" argument, because I've read plenty of good tales that haven't.





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Reply #39 on: July 15, 2012, 08:05:10 AM
Some people did like it actually, because people have different tastes in fiction. If you read the thread you'll see its a mix, and everyone had their own reasons for liking or not liking it.

You could probably make the "well, its not new!!" argument of 99.9999999999999999999999999999% of any and all stories written ever. What counts, imho, is the delivery. For me, it worked, for you it didn't. So it goes. :) I just personally don't buy into the "every story has to introduce something new to the field" argument, because I've read plenty of good tales that haven't.

I realise that tastes vary. I was merely expressing my thoughts on the story... That's why we're here, isn't it?  ???

I agree that it's not true that every story has to introduce something new, if it's done with style and some added twists.

I generally enjoy EscapePod stories.... this was an exception to the rule.   8)

By the way, I think this is the Outer Limits episode: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O.B.I.T
« Last Edit: July 15, 2012, 08:59:53 AM by bluetube »



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Reply #40 on: July 15, 2012, 10:00:54 AM
Some people did like it actually...

Re-reading my and your posts, I realise you misunderstood the subject of "it" in my phrase "what a surprise to find that people didn't like it?"

The "it" in question was the loss of privacy, not the story itself.  ;D

I guess that explains your assumption that I had not read the thread.  :-X  I've clarified that in my original comment.
« Last Edit: July 15, 2012, 10:02:34 AM by bluetube »



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Reply #41 on: July 15, 2012, 11:16:43 AM
By the way, I think this is the Outer Limits episode: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O.B.I.T

Interesting, that's a very similar story (especially your retelling of it) to Asimov's The Dead Past.

As for one person making a unilateral decision about the fate of mankind - remember, this is a genre which includes Superman and Ozymandias.



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Reply #42 on: July 16, 2012, 03:36:10 PM
I assume it was supposed to be humorous

I didn't make that assumption

The idea that one person would be so self-righteous as to believe they could decide something for all humanity.

I had no trouble believing that AT ALL. There are plenty of people so self-righteous enough to think they know best for everybody.

And they often run for office.



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Reply #43 on: July 16, 2012, 03:55:52 PM
Some people did like it actually...

Re-reading my and your posts, I realise you misunderstood the subject of "it" in my phrase "what a surprise to find that people didn't like it?"

The "it" in question was the loss of privacy, not the story itself.  ;D

I guess that explains your assumption that I had not read the thread.  :-X  I've clarified that in my original comment.

Ah ok. Sorry for misunderstanding.



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Reply #44 on: July 16, 2012, 04:18:35 PM
You could probably make the "well, its not new!!" argument of 99.9999999999999999999999999999% of any and all stories written ever.

Yes, very true.  If we were required to be entirely novel in fiction, then we just wouldn't have any new fiction.  And that would make me sad.   :'(



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Reply #45 on: July 25, 2012, 01:13:19 PM
This one missed the mark for me.  Seemed like an info dump/socratic dialogue more than an actual story to me. It seemed to be a story sprouted from a singular idea(face blindness) rather than something that grew organically.

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Reply #46 on: July 26, 2012, 08:30:16 PM
The biggest flaw about this story for me was that the Liberator, who was supposed to be so moral and uncorruptable that he was made the leader dictator of the group, could be so dumb.

I'm not the brightest bulb when it comes to understanding human motivations and behaviours, but even I could have told you that "spying on demand" and "face-blinding the entire population" were not such a good idea. So, the fact that the Liberator couldn't see this threw me out of my willing suspension of disbelief.



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Reply #47 on: July 27, 2012, 02:01:41 PM
The biggest flaw about this story for me was that the Liberator, who was supposed to be so moral and uncorruptable that he was made the leader dictator of the group, could be so dumb.

I'm not the brightest bulb when it comes to understanding human motivations and behaviours, but even I could have told you that "spying on demand" and "face-blinding the entire population" were not such a good idea. So, the fact that the Liberator couldn't see this threw me out of my willing suspension of disbelief.

I figured that the Liberator might be toward the functional end of the autistic spectrum.  Or an engineer.  Or both. 

I worked with a guy until recently who has a PhD, dozens of published papers, very smart guy, but who has the social niceties of a badger.  After years of working with the guy, I think that he's not actually a jerk in that he's not acting that way through malice or carelessness.  He just doesn't understand how other people will react, at all.  He's very at home with his numbers and computations and algorithms, but he is pretty much guaranteed to offend people on an hourly basis without even realizing it, and if someone explains it to him, he might try to change his actions but doesn't understand why they got the reaction they did.  In some ways he kind of reminds me of Sheldon Cooper, but without a team of writers making sure that what he says would be funny to an outside viewer.

So, the Liberator totally made sense to me, with that kind of personality at his core.  A genius on many levels, who can make amazing new inventions, yet finds himself completely incapable of accurately predicting anyone's reaction to them.



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Reply #48 on: July 27, 2012, 04:17:04 PM
The biggest flaw about this story for me was that the Liberator, who was supposed to be so moral and uncorruptable that he was made the leader dictator of the group, could be so dumb.

I'm not the brightest bulb when it comes to understanding human motivations and behaviours, but even I could have told you that "spying on demand" and "face-blinding the entire population" were not such a good idea. So, the fact that the Liberator couldn't see this threw me out of my willing suspension of disbelief.

I figured that the Liberator might be toward the functional end of the autistic spectrum.  Or an engineer.  Or both. 

I worked with a guy until recently who has a PhD, dozens of published papers, very smart guy, but who has the social niceties of a badger.  After years of working with the guy, I think that he's not actually a jerk in that he's not acting that way through malice or carelessness.  He just doesn't understand how other people will react, at all.  He's very at home with his numbers and computations and algorithms, but he is pretty much guaranteed to offend people on an hourly basis without even realizing it, and if someone explains it to him, he might try to change his actions but doesn't understand why they got the reaction they did.  In some ways he kind of reminds me of Sheldon Cooper, but without a team of writers making sure that what he says would be funny to an outside viewer.

So, the Liberator totally made sense to me, with that kind of personality at his core.  A genius on many levels, who can make amazing new inventions, yet finds himself completely incapable of accurately predicting anyone's reaction to them.

Yeah, the description of your former colleague kinda describes me too. Which is why I am perplexed as to why the Liberator can't see this if I can ;)

Also, the Liberator is supposed to be immensely moral. Even someone who doesn't understand other people's motivations should understand that these actions are not very moral, at best.

BTW, not understanding people often has nothing to do with not being able to predict what they will do in a given situation. More frequently it has to do with predicting up to *thousands* of things that people might do in a given situation and then not being able to figure out which of those is most likely. Given that, the Liberator should have seen all of the many ways his plan could have gone wrong...



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Reply #49 on: July 27, 2012, 04:30:18 PM
Also, the Liberator is supposed to be immensely moral. Even someone who doesn't understand other people's motivations should understand that these actions are not very moral, at best.

I didn't think he was actually supposed to BE moral, rather that he has gone to great pains to represent himself as being moral (and perhaps trying to convince himself as well).  He seemed to be much more interested in trying make society as a whole exist as well as possible, completely disregarding individuals.

BTW, not understanding people often has nothing to do with not being able to predict what they will do in a given situation. More frequently it has to do with predicting up to *thousands* of things that people might do in a given situation and then not being able to figure out which of those is most likely. Given that, the Liberator should have seen all of the many ways his plan could have gone wrong...

That's a very good point.




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Reply #50 on: July 30, 2012, 11:30:00 AM
BTW, not understanding people often has nothing to do with not being able to predict what they will do in a given situation. More frequently it has to do with predicting up to *thousands* of things that people might do in a given situation and then not being able to figure out which of those is most likely. Given that, the Liberator should have seen all of the many ways his plan could have gone wrong...

That's a very good point.


Well, that's *a* way to not understand people. Liberator had more of another issue, which once he formed an idea of what will happen, he didn't stop to think whether it actually made sense. And mostly, I think the liberator had the opinion that it doesn't matter what happens since everything can be fixed.

I think the liberator wasn't so much clever as he was a really effective brute-force technician. He would form an idea, and test it. If it worked, great, if not, he would then tweak it and test again. You can get quite a lot of inventing done like that if you have enough resources and a good understanding of the material you are working with, and especially, when mistakes are low stake - just throw away the bad parts of your work and start again. That doesn't really work for large scale social experiments, though.



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Reply #51 on: July 30, 2012, 03:03:28 PM
Well, that's *a* way to not understand people. Liberator had more of another issue, which once he formed an idea of what will happen, he didn't stop to think whether it actually made sense. And mostly, I think the liberator had the opinion that it doesn't matter what happens since everything can be fixed.

I think the liberator wasn't so much clever as he was a really effective brute-force technician. He would form an idea, and test it. If it worked, great, if not, he would then tweak it and test again. You can get quite a lot of inventing done like that if you have enough resources and a good understanding of the material you are working with, and especially, when mistakes are low stake - just throw away the bad parts of your work and start again. That doesn't really work for large scale social experiments, though.

Ah, makes even more sense!  And sounds like Thomas Edison.  Rather than Nikola Tesla, who probably would've started with a viable solution.



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Reply #52 on: August 07, 2012, 03:10:50 AM
BTW, not understanding people often has nothing to do with not being able to predict what they will do in a given situation. More frequently it has to do with predicting up to *thousands* of things that people might do in a given situation and then not being able to figure out which of those is most likely. Given that, the Liberator should have seen all of the many ways his plan could have gone wrong...
That's a very good point.

Well, that's *a* way to not understand people. Liberator had more of another issue, which once he formed an idea of what will happen, he didn't stop to think whether it actually made sense. And mostly, I think the liberator had the opinion that it doesn't matter what happens since everything can be fixed.

I think the liberator wasn't so much clever as he was a really effective brute-force technician. He would form an idea, and test it. If it worked, great, if not, he would then tweak it and test again. You can get quite a lot of inventing done like that if you have enough resources and a good understanding of the material you are working with, and especially, when mistakes are low stake - just throw away the bad parts of your work and start again. That doesn't really work for large scale social experiments, though.

Interesting take on the Liberator there eytanz.  But, he didn't come across that way to me at all.



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Reply #53 on: September 19, 2012, 07:03:43 AM
This was my favorite story of superhero month, possibly since it felt more Science Fiction than superhero (usual superhero stories would fit better in a fantasy podcast), in that it was more of a 'what-if' and story of ideas  than anything. It also really tapped into the greek mythology aspect of superheroes, with these almost omnipotent but fatally human figures watching humanity from above and wreaking havoc on their lives. I agree that it was lacking in emotional resonance, which prevented me from really involving myself, but at least it was intriguing. 



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Reply #54 on: December 11, 2012, 09:46:04 PM
I expected this thread to be more full of praise. There were a lot of interesting points raised here, and other than the scientific flaw with naming, I didn't see anything in this thread to diminish my appreciation. Like was previously brought up, if Stan Lee can attribute everything to Gamma Rays and my appreciation is not diminshed, I'll give this the same pass. This one's going in my "to re-listen" pile for sure.

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Reply #55 on: December 13, 2012, 03:07:44 PM
Like was previously brought up, if Stan Lee can attribute everything to Gamma Rays and my appreciation is not diminshed, I'll give this the same pass.

Only the Incredible Hulk was created by Gamma Rays.  That is totally different than cosmic rays, radioactive spider bites, natural mutation, or my personal favorite--being electrocuted WHILE being doused in hazardous chemicals (used more than once).   

So I don't think your point of comparison is fair at all.  ;)