Real Life
It’s another week of real life, questionable decisions, and sci-fi tangents.
Does Devon Even Like Being on the Show?
We ask the question no one dared to before—and yes, Devon does like being here. Just… maybe not for the reasons you think.
Ben’s Apology Tour Continues
Ben kicks things off with an immediate apology for this podcast. Again. But he makes up for it by diving into Apple TV’s The Big Door Prize (IMDb link)—a show full of mysteries, midlife crises, and a machine that tells you your true potential. He’s also been watching Zen for Nothing and Piece by Piece, and we learn something shocking: Steven hates LEGO.
Steven’s Space Drama
Speaking of Steven, he’s wrestling with another defeat in Shatterpoint (at the hands of Christina’s husband, again), and somehow this leads to him buying a Camtono. Why does he have one? No one knows. But we do get a heated debate about the LEGO Enterprise and whether Ensign Ro or Tasha Yar had the raw deal in Star Trek.
Devon’s Hive-Mind Obsession
Devon’s been watching Plur1bus on Apple TV and can’t stop talking about how eerily well it captures collective consciousness. For a guy who insists he’s an individual, he sure sounds like part of a hive.
Future or Now
Ben actually brings good news this time. Seriously. His pick is a hopeful piece on how Solarpunk is already happening in Africa—how communities there are skipping the outdated infrastructure of the past and heading straight into a sustainable, decentralized future. Read it here: Why Solarpunk Is Already Happening in Africa
Meanwhile, Steven turns up the heat—literally—with a wild story out of Death Valley. Scientists studying Tidestromia oblongifolia found it doesn’t just survive in brutal heat—it adapts on the fly, rearranging its cells and genes to keep photosynthesizing when everything else would fry. It’s a real-life lesson in evolution under pressure. (ScienceDaily link)
Book Club
This Week: In the Forests of Memory by E. Lily Yu (read here) – a haunting, quiet story about memory, commerce, and humanity told through the eyes of a trader and a stranger. It’s as poetic as it is unsettling.
Next Week: City Grown From Seed by Diana Dima (read here) – content warning for domestic violence and abuse. It’s an eerie, metaphorical story that we’ll unpack next episode.
Between Ben’s apologies, Devon’s hive talk, and Steven’s LEGO rage, it’s another week of chaos, sci-fi, and accidental enlightenment.
You can listen to the full episode wherever you get your podcasts—or watch our faces slowly melt under studio lights on YouTube.


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