where science meets fact meets fiction

Episode 579: Beautiful Trash

It’s another week in real life for the gang — or at least for most of us. Devon’s down sick, so it’s a two-man show featuring Steven and Ben navigating the bizarre crossroads of tech, food, and VR golf.


🏌️ Real Life

Ben’s been tethered to the job, but he still managed to escape reality long enough to join a virtual round of Walkabout Mini Golf— specifically the new Tokyo DLC — alongside Steven, some friends, and one of our lovely patrons. Turns out, there’s nothing quite like bonding over missed putts in low-poly Japan.

Meanwhile, Steven’s week has been aggressively autumnal. Between a pumpkin painting and apple party (new listeners, it’s a thing), setting up a a pi-hole on a Raspberry Pi 4, and cracking open the Hellboy board game, he’s officially living his best nerd life.

Ben, on the other hand, declared war on Microsoft. With Windows 10 heading toward its end-of-life, he’s switched to Bazzite Linux to avoid the sins of Windows 11. Cue righteous fury: “How dare you do what you do, Microsoft?” Also, the ROG Ally handheld PC is on the horizon — should we be excited or just emotionally prepared?


🍔 Future or Now

Steven dives into a story that’ll make you rethink that bag of chips: ultra-processed foods (UPFs) now dominate the American diet — and they’re linked to chronic inflammation, heart disease, and cancer. According to Science Daily, people who eat the most UPFs show higher levels of hs-CRP, an inflammation marker. The takeaway? Maybe listen when Steven yells, “What’s in your mouth?! DROP IT!”

Ben, ever the tech romantic, went down a rabbit hole about creating your own physical music formats — a nostalgic rebellion against the streaming void. Inspired by this Y Combinator post, he mourns the lost art of DropMix and Rock Band, both now relics of a time when music and play collided beautifully.


📚 Book Club

This week we read “Wikihistory” by Desmond Warzel — a time-travel tale told entirely through wiki edit threads. It’s short, it’s clever, and it’ll make you question what’s really editable in history.

Next week: “Planet Lion” by Catherynne M. Valente — an elegant, surreal journey through alien communication and memory.


👾 Listen now for the perfect mix of VR golf, processed snacks, Linux rebellion, and speculative fiction.
🎧 Available wherever you get your podcasts.


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