Tuesday, August 05, 2025
Professional Left Podcast Episode 923: Fantastic 4, Dems Fight Back, AI Convos.
Thursday, July 24, 2025
Professional Left Podcast Episode 920: President Queeg
Tuesday, July 22, 2025
Professional Left Podcast Episode 919: Superman and Hamlet, Plus The News Of The Week
Thursday, July 10, 2025
Professional Left Podcast Episode 916: Hot Take Time Machine
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Professional Left Podcast Episode 901: They're All Jeff Gannon Now (Plus Love to St. Louis)
The storm is up, and all is on the hazard." -- William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, 5.1.72
Tuesday, January 21, 2025
Tuesday, December 03, 2024
Professional Left Podcast Episode 858: Pardon This, Republicans
Thursday, October 10, 2024
Professional Left Podcast Episode 845: "No One Could Have Predicted Hurricane Trump"
Tuesday, July 09, 2024
Tuesday, May 28, 2024
Tuesday, April 30, 2024
Monday, April 15, 2024
A Peak Science Fiction Nerd Moment
It happened today as we were driving back from a short trip to northern Illinois to visit relatives old and new.
My wife was in the car, on her Space Age phone, simultaneously FaceTiming with two younglings, one in a different state, one halfway around the world. At that exact moment we were driving through one of Illinois' many wind farms: a widely spaced forest of bright, white windmills that tower 400 feet from their base to the apex of a blade at 12 o'clock.
To make this happen we had to pause the science fiction audiobook we had been listening to on our trip (Andy Weir's "Project Hail Mary", which is pretty terrific so far) because we weren't listening to the novel on via terrestrial radio or satellite radio, but via some science fiction dark magic that allowed my wife's phone to talk to the car's media center so that we could listen to the story of a man in a spacecraft traveling at .9-something of the speed of light, while we sailed down this smooth highway (Thanks, Biden!) at a constant speed slightly above the limit, knowing that the alert system on my phone would tell us of any speed traps ahead.
At that moment I was transported back to the late 1970s, to our Volkswagen Fastback with Mom and my brother, driving down the same I-80 we had just left to take us back to Springfield. That would have been summer -- she was a teacher, so we were all on summer break -- and ungodly early because Mom always had us up and on the road well before sunrise so that we could make camp before it got too hot outside.
Our nav system was a paper map, which, unless we took side trips, we didn't really need since we knew the way. Our entertainment was the License Plate Game, a magnetic chess board, a deck of cards, AM/FM radio, and an 8-track tape player with played one of the four or five tapes Mom had on hand. Not sure what listening to the cast album of "Cabaret" and "Fiddler on the Roof" over and over had on my me and my brother, but I'm sure it had some.
The car was packed so tight with sleeping bags, tent, cooler, food, clothes and essential whatnots and dog bowls and doggie provisions, that my brother and I (and our very good dog) sort of wound ourselves into whatever space remained. The first time we made this trip this way, the Coleman stove Mom had just bought just would not fit. And we were excellent packers. If we'd been in charge of packing the Apollo missions, I'm almost positive we could have found room to provision the astronautes with some extra bologna sandwiches, Hi-C, and a nice sheet cake. But our little stove just would not go in...until we took it out of the box. Just that little bit of space-saving allowed it to drop into the slot we had for it like a Tetris piece.
Front seat co-piloting duties consisted of keeping Mom supplied with hard candies (Brach's Butterscotch) and coffee from the Girl Scout thermos (being careful not to drop it because it was glass lined.) Mom drove with a tea towel draped over her left arm -- the sunward arm -- to avoid sunburn.
We'd picnic off the road somewhere, use the toilets, walk the dog, stretch, and then power on. Before sundown we'd be at some campsite -- usually a Jellystone -- get the tent up quick, fire up the little Coleman stove and make something for dinner. Next morning, make breakfast, feed and walk the dog, strike camp. Then back to the road and "Cabaret" or whatever was on local radio.
And I was almost always packing a book. Science fiction, no surprise. Probably by Bradbury or Asimov. I'd read in the back seat when my brother and I swapped the co-piloting duty. And here I was, all these years later, older than my Mom was then, driving through a world that is now so casually upholstered with wonders (any one of which could have been its own Golden Age science fiction short story) that most people barely notice the miracles all around them.
Tuesday, April 02, 2024
Tuesday, March 05, 2024
Professional Left Podcast Episode #783: Let's Talk About Dune 2!
“Arrakis teaches the attitude of the knife - chopping off what's incomplete and saying: 'Now, it's complete because it's ended here.'” -- from "Collected Sayings of Maud'Dib'' by the Princess Irulan.
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
Tuesday, January 30, 2024
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
Tuesday, October 31, 2023
Tuesday, September 26, 2023
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
-
It takes a truly world-class species of cosseted, legacy media asshole to stand atop the smoking rubble of his own decades of failed pr...
-
Children no longer obey their parents, and everyone is writing a book." The quote, in case you didn’t know, is not from nattering m...