"Paul Levinson's It's Real Life is a page-turning exploration into that multiverse known as rock and roll. But it is much more than a marvelous adventure narrated by a master storyteller...it is also an exquisite meditation on the very nature of alternate history." -- Jack Dann, The Fiction Writer's Guide to Alternate History

Friday, June 30, 2023

Silo 1.10: Three Truths


Well, it's there in Silo 1.10 -- the season one finale -- but it's precious little.  The truth that we see, that is.

[Spoilers ahead ... ]

So let me make sure I have this right.  Juliet goes outside the silo, but she doesn't die, because the tape that Martha used to seal Juliet's suit sealed it from the poison gas that's just outside the silo.  But it's not in the air all the time. The world outside the silo is apparently not completely barren and dead (but see the next-to-last paragraph of this review).  The poison is sent outside by Bernard, to kill anyone who leaves.

But Juliet also discovers that what she's seeing outside, and what the people inside the silo are seeing outside, is an illusion.  The green grass and the birds -- illusion.  The former sheriff and his wife lying there, dead -- illusion.  But that raises even more questions.

Did Sheriff Holston and his wife die or not?  If they didn't have the protective tape that Martha provided for Juliet's suit, then, presumably they did.  But if they did, then why put up a bogus image of them lying there dead on the green hill?  Why not show them really dead?  And if they're alive, where are they?  For that matter, if they're dead, where are their bodies now?

The three truths are that Juliette is alive, the landscape is bleak, and there are many silos.

About which we'll no doubt learn much more in the next season, which I'll no doubt be watching and reviewing here.

See also Silo 1.1-1.2: A Unique Story, Inside and Out ... Silo 1.3: Like Chernobyl, Repaired ... 1.4: Truth, Not Quite ... 1.5: Revelations ... 1.6-1.7: The Book and the Water ... 1.8: What Really Happened ... 1.9: I knew It! But What Then?

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Outlander 7.1-7.2: The Return of the Split


Outlander is back for its seventh and next-to-final season, with two superb and very different kinds of episodes, 7.1 and 7.2, on Starz last week and this.

[And big spoilers ahead ... ]

Episode 7.1 was a rip-roaring adventure, as Jamie does all in his power to save Claire, but she's saved by good old Tom Christie, who makes the ultimate sacrifice to go the gallows instead of Claire. It was great to see Jamie back in action, and though I'll miss Tom as a strong character, that was certainly a noble way to go.

Episode 7.2 was something else entirely, so sad I almost couldn't write this.  Brianna and Roger's decision to go back to the 20th century to save their new baby was 100% logical, but I don't think there was any other episode in all of Outlander quite so worthy of tears, borne of Jamie and Claire thinking they may never see their daughter again, and she thinking the same about them.  Optimist that I am (I haven't read the books), I'd bet that they would, but it's still something to see the pain all three were going through, and hats to Sam Heughan, Caitríona Balfe, and Sophie Skelton for their really fine acting.  And while I'm at it, here's a shout out to Andrew and Matthew Adair for playing an excellent little Jemmy.

The story will take on -- or take on again -- an exciting multiple dimension, as we see the family, now expanded, split again between two times -- spanning two hundred years, as Claire correctly says.  There are all kinds of possibilities here, and I'm glad I have no idea how they'll play out.  But based on these two two top-notch episodes of this penultimate season, I'm confident we'll be in for a breathtaking, heartbreaking, heart warming story.

See also Outlander 6.1: Ether That Won't Put You to Sleep

And see also Outlander 5.1: Father of the Bride ... Outlander 5.2: Antibiotics and Time Travel ... Outlander 5.3: Misery ... Outlander 5.4: Accidental Information and the Future ... Outlander 5.5: Lessons in Penicillin and Locusts ... Outlander 5.6: Locusts, Jocasta, and Bonnet ... Outlander 5.7: The Paradoxical Spark ... Outlander 5.8: Breaking Out of the Silence ... Outlander 5.9: Buffalo, Snake, Tooth ... Outlander 5.10: Finally! ... Outlander 5.11: The Ballpoint Pen ... Outlander Season 5 Finale: The Cost of Stolen Time

And see also Outlander 4.1: The American Dream ... Outlander 4.2: Slavery ...Outlander 4.3: The Silver Filling ... Outlander 4.4: Bears and Worse and the Remedy ... Outlander 4.5: Chickens Coming Home to Roost ... Outlander 4.6: Jamie's Son ... Outlander 4.7: Brianna's Journey and Daddy ... Outlander 4.8: Ecstasy and Agony ... Outlander 4.9: Reunions ... Outlander 4.10: American Stone ... Outlander 4.11: Meets Pride and Prejudice ... Outlander 4.12: "Through Time and Space" ... Outlander Season 4 Finale:  Fair Trade

And see also Outlander Season 3 Debut: A Tale of Two Times and Places ...Outlander 3.2: Whole Lot of Loving, But ... Outlander 3.3: Free and Sad ... Outlander 3.4: Love Me Tender and Dylan ... Outlander 3.5: The 1960s and the Past ... Outlander 3.6: Reunion ... Outlander 3.7: The Other Wife ... Outlander 3.8: Pirates! ... Outlander 3.9: The Seas ...Outlander 3.10: Typhoid Story ... Outlander 3.11: Claire Crusoe ...Outlander 3.12: Geillis and Benjamin Button ... Outlander 3.13: Triple Ending

And see also Outlander 2.1: Split Hour ... Outlander 2.2: The King and the Forest ... Outlander 2.3: Mother and Dr. Dog ... Outlander 2.5: The Unappreciated Paradox ... Outlander 2.6: The Duel and the Offspring ...Outlander 2.7: Further into the Future ... Outlander 2.8: The Conversation ... Outlander 2.9: Flashbacks of the Future ... Outlander 2.10: One True Prediction and Counting ... Outlander 2.11: London Not Falling ... Outlander 2.12: Stubborn Fate and Scotland On and Off Screen ... Outlander Season 2 Finale: Decades

And see also Outlander 1.1-3: The Hope of Time Travel ... Outlander 1.6:  Outstanding ... Outlander 1.7: Tender Intertemporal Polygamy ...Outlander 1.8: The Other Side ... Outlander 1.9: Spanking Good ... Outlander 1.10: A Glimmer of Paradox ... Outlander 1.11: Vaccination and Time Travel ... Outlander 1.12: Black Jack's Progeny ...Outlander 1.13: Mother's Day ... Outlander 1.14: All That Jazz ... Outlander Season 1 Finale: Let's Change History

 



Friday, June 23, 2023

Silo 1.9: I Knew It! But What Then?

I knew it!

[Spoilers ahead ... ]

I said in my review of episodes 1.1 and 1.2 of Silo (I haven't read the books) that the display of what was outside the silo might have been what we would in our world, off the streaming screen, call a deep fake.  And it makes sense -- the best way of keeping people inside is to convince them that what was outside was death, almost immediate.

And this of course raises all kinds of questions.  Who else is outside?  Everyone else who left the silo and maybe the children of some of these escapees?  Maybe also people who survived the catastrophe that led to the creation of the silo in the first place, if that's indeed the reason it was created.  Not that much time has passed from when the sheriff and earlier his wife went outside.  But people in the silo had been doing just that for a long time.  What happened to them?

And in particular, how come they never came back to the silo, to let their loved ones know that there was a beautiful world, with birds flying, outside.  I guess there's a possibility that what Juliet saw on the screen was itself a fake, but I doubt that.

One thing is very clear.  Whatever is going on outside, it hasn't resulted in the silo being liberated.  Why not? That big question mark may or may not be fully answered, or answered at all, in next week's episode 1.10, finale of this first season.  But that's what second seasons are for.  And I have a feeling there will be many more seasons to come in this riveting narrative.

See also Silo 1.1-1.2: A Unique Story, Inside and Out ... Silo 1.3: Like Chernobyl, Repaired ... 1.4: Truth, Not Quite ... 1.5: Revelations ... 1.6-1.7: The Book and the Water ... 1.8: What Really Happened

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 2.2: Racism and Fascism in the Courtroom



One of the great things about the original Star Trek back in the 1960s was how it addressed then current issues like racism and fascism.  The crew encounters a humanoid species with faces that have two colors, black and white, and which was left and which was right determined which was the superior variant of the species ("Let That Be Your Last Battlefield").  Or, in another episode, Kirk and Spock go to a planet with a Nazi-like regime ("Patterns of Force").  Kirk has to pretend to be a Nazi, and Shatner plays the part perfectly with some casual sieg heils.

Well, sadly, as we know all too well, fascists and Nazis are still very much a part of this world, and Strange New Worlds takes a different kind of crack at addressing this in episode 2.2, with Lt. Commander Una put on trial because she hid her Illyrian genetic modifications, illegal in Starfleet.  So, yes, Star Fleet is the vehicle of the fascism and racism, including a Vulcan lawyer who is able to recite the policy chapter and verse.

The trial itself is a venerated plot device in TOS, most notably in "The Menagerie," the two-part blockbuster with introduced Pike himself in the Star Trek universe.  The courtroom at Starfleet headquarters in San Francisco is adeptly presented, with the SNW crew watching the proceedings via video on their ship.  Hey, our Supreme Court should get a clue about the value of video, not to mention the upcoming trial of Trump.

TOS excelled in its mix of action and heady philosophic issues, and it was a real pleasure to see SNW going forward with this tradition.  I think more than ever that Strange New Worlds is the very best of the new Star Treks that are now with us.

See also Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 2.1: Nurse Chapel

And see also Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 1.1-1.2: Great Characters, Actors, Stories ... 1.3: "Instead of terraforming planets, we modify ourselves ..." ... 1.4: The Gorn and the Wub ... 1.5 Going to the Chapel ... 1.6: Two Stories ... 1.7: The Kiss ... 1.8: Ends of the Continuum ... 1.9: Momentous! ... 1.10: Everything!

Sunday, June 18, 2023

A Good Time to Talk about Cellphones

Cellphone2_(1)

It's been 50 years since Martin Cooper famously put in a call in his handheld cellphone in April 1973.  And I've now been interviewed three times about how this now ubiquitous device has revolutionized our lives:

And my book, Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobile Medium, and How It Has Changed Everything, which I wrote on the fly in 2003, in between two science fiction novels, and in my first year as Chair (ugh!) of the Communication and Media Studies Department at Fordham University, is suddenly getting a lot of attention and sales.

So, it's a good time to talk about cellphones -- in contrast to talking on or via cellphones, when you're not using them to text, take pictures, listen to music, or roam the many fields of social media (for my thoughts on which, see my New New Media).

And speaking of pictures on the phone and music, you might enjoy this demo from 2020.





Friday, June 16, 2023

Silo 1.8: What Really Happened?


A stunning ending to the excellent episode 1.8 of Silo up today on Apple TV+.  And I won't say anything more until I alert you about the Big Spoilers ahead ...

***

Ok, the question is what happens to Juliet when she jumps off the railing, in her attempt to escape Holland and Sims and their fascist goons?

Let me again say that I haven't read any of Hugh Howey's books upon which this series is based, so I honestly don't know what will happen next.

And I'll also say that, in general, I tend to believe that unless you see a character's head severed or blown off, there's alway a chance that the character survived.  But ... that's what I said when Marnes was shot, and he indeed died.  And I also thought that Holston and even his wife perhaps survived when they got outside, and, so far, at least, they didn't.  The point here is that so far in this superb 1984-like series, people who seem close to death always have died.

But I do think Juliet is different.  Also, she knows the depths of the silo like the back of her hand.  And, also, she broke free of Billings precisely because she didn't want to go outside to die.  So I'm betting she knows a ledge on the way down that she can get a grip on, stop her fall, and move on to safety.  We'll see what happens next week.

Meanwhile, another thing I really liked about this episode is that it cleared her father.  He didn't go to the authorities with info about what his wife, Juliet's mother, was doing.  They found out what she was doing via their spying cameras.   And, while we're at it,  Billings seems to be a fairly good guy, too.

Which is a very good thing, because with the Mayor revealed as bad, there are some powerful forces now out to kill Juliet.

I'll see you back here next week with my next review.  I'm glad about the news that Silo was renewed for a second season.  This is powerful science fiction indeed.

See also Silo 1.1-1.2: A Unique Story, Inside and Out ... Silo 1.3: Like Chernobyl, Repaired ... 1.4: Truth, Not Quite ... 1.5: Revelations ... 1.6-1.7: The Book and the Water



Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 2.1: Nurse Chapel



Great to see Star Trek: Strange New Worlds back today with the first episode of its second season, even if it has little of Pike, who may be becoming my favorite Star Trek captain.  I should add, Strange New Worlds is already my favorite new Star Trek series.

And episode 2.1 does have Spock (Ethan Peck) and M'Benga (Babs Olusanmokun) in the spotlight.  So why did I put just Nurse Chapel (Jess Bush) in the title?  Because she's in the best scenes with Spock and the ship's doctor, and in fact is the glue that holds the whole episode together.

[Ok, more spoilers ahead ... ]

Spock is acting in command, and takes the Enterprise to a place in space where the Klingons and humans alternate being in control, and it's now the Klingons' turn.  Spock disobeys an admiral's order to go there, and that's a good sign about what kind of leader he is becoming.

Of course, the Admiral isn't wrong that the Enterprise going there could provoke a war with the Klingons, and M'Benga and Chapel have to fight off a whole bunch of them to make good their escape.  How do they do this?  By taking some drug -- a guess akin to a super steroid -- that gives them almost super powers.  But the drug doesn't last too long, and their fight with the Klingons starts off this second season with some fine action scenes.

They escape, barely with their lives, and the scenes with Spock and Chapel are another kind of excellent. Spock has tears in eyes as he sees Chapel survived, and what she says to Spock shows she clearly loves him.  In terms of continuity with TOS, did Chapel and Spock love each other back in our 1960s?   I'm not sure, but I don't care.  They two are an emerging great couple now in SNW, and I look forward to seeing more of that.

Which I expect will happen, and I'll be watching and reviewing every episode.

See also Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 1.1-1.2: Great Characters, Actors, Stories ... 1.3: "Instead of terraforming planets, we modify ourselves ..." ... 1.4: The Gorn and the Wub ... 1.5 Going to the Chapel ... 1.6: Two Stories ... 1.7: The Kiss ... 1.8: Ends of the Continuum ... 1.9: Momentous! ... 1.10: Everything!



Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Why the Final Beatles Record via AI Will Be Great, But Not So Revolutionary


Edison and his first phonograph

Everybody's talking about Paul McCartney's comment in a BBC interview that AI was used in the creation of the "last" Beatles record, based on a demo John Lennon made in the 1970s, and already worked on by the surviving Beatles -- Paul, George, and Ringo -- in the 1990s, when The Beatles released two other Lennon demos they recrafted, "Real Love" and "Free As A Bird".   I'm really looking forward to this new record, to be released last this year, but I expect it won't be very much different in production and outcome than any other Beatles recordings released in the past few years, including the beautiful things Peter Jackson did to the Beatles recordings from their 1969 rooftop concert and a little before in Jackson's 2021 documentary, "The Beatles: Get Back."

Let's go back to the history of recording to understand why AI use in these recordings is not such a big deal.  If Frank Sinatra hit a bad note, or wanted to change anything in his studio recording of "That Old Black Magic," which would appear on his second studio album, released on Columbia Records in 1947, he would have needed to go back into the studio and record the whole song again.  By the 1960s, when The Beatles began recording, that already was not necessary.  Splices could easily be made in the recording tape, so the correct note could replace the off-key note, and by the end of the decade and the beginning of the 1970s even that was not necessary.  All splicing could be done electronically, and as the number of "tracks" that were used in a recording quickly expanded from 4 to 8 to 16 and more, doing harmony to your own voice became easy and commonplace.  None of that was called or even considered to be recordings made by AI.  The were recordings made by human beings, using ever more sophisticated technology,

By the 21st century and increasing in the past two decades, digital correction of flat notes via Autotune and production of harmonies without the singer needing to put down another track became ubiquitous in recording.  Even in the 1990s, producer Jeff Lynne did all kinds of electronic magic on Lennon's vocals to make them compatible with the new voices Paul and George were putting on "Real Love" and "Free As A Bird".  None of that was thought or said to be the least bit worrisome.  These developments were just more of the same tech advances which had been foreseen almost since the day Thomas Edison rolled out his first phonograph -- which recorded on tin foil -- back in 1877.  He'd intended that to be used as a recording device for the telephone (invented by Alexander Graham Bell a year earlier in 1876) and didn't foresee its mass adoption as a music recording player.  But the world soon did, and gave Edison the name of "The Wizard of Menlo Park" (New Jersey, where Edison invented the record player).

History is always worth consulting, and especially useful in putting new developments into perspective.  It may be exciting to be concerned about our increasing use of AI in so much that we do, but the Greek chorus of criticism that we hear about every new use of AI these days is misplaced. In reality, it's actually about things that AI does in science fiction, and is itself a kind of science fiction.

I'll sit back and listen to this new Beatles recording with no concern at all, and nothing but pleasure, grateful that Yoko sent cassette recording by John to Paul in the 1980s, and we now have the technology to make it sound fully alive.

It's Real Life

"It's Real Life" -- an alternate history about
The Beatles -- read it for FREE here


Saturday, June 10, 2023

Silo 1.6-1.7: The Book and the Water

I'm reviewing episodes 1.6 and 1.7 of Silo together because they're very closely related, and revolve around two themes: the book and the water.

[Spoilers ahead ... ]

Episode 1.6 has Juliette discovering and devouring a relic that provides a key piece of the hidden truth: a book, with pictures of the outside world, including, especially, the ocean.  Being on Cape Cod, this immediately resonated with me.  There's truth indeed in any big body of water, and especially when the reader is living in a silo.  And there's a whole tradition in our off-screen world of books being conveyors of repressed truths, ranging from Station Eleven to, of course, 1984.  Silo has echos of 1984 already, and you can add that great dystopian novel to Westworld (listen to the music in Silo), a dystopian television triumph, until its final season.

And in episode 1.7 Juliet briefly rescues Gloria, who gave that book to George's mother, who in turn gave it to her son.  The episode is entitled "The Flamekeepers," and that's who Gloria and George's mother were.  And now -- as Gloria tells Juliette -- Juliet is their standard bearer.

The heroes and villains are this story are slowly coming into focus.  In addition to everyone who went outside to clean, and now Juliet, there are few others willing to buck what we would today call this fascist regime.  Bernard seems to be a good guy, and by and large, even Juliet's father, at least in things concerning his daughter's wellbeing.  Billings could wind up being a good guy, but that's pretty much it.  Sims, wherever his ultimate loyalties may reside, is so far a reliable agent of deceptive government.

But we still know precious little about that -- who they are, and what they ultimately want.  I'm looking forward to more of that become clear in the concluding three episodes of this season, and in seasons ahead of this provocative series.

See also Silo 1.1-1.2: A Unique Story, Inside and Out ... Silo 1.3: Like Chernobyl, Repaired ... 1.4: Truth, Not Quite ... 1.5: Revelations


Podcast: Roundtable Discussion of Star Trek: Picard 3




Welcome to Light On Light Through, Episode 354, in which I join Captain Phil on WUSB-FM Radio (Stony Brook, New York), Marybeth Ritkouski, and Michael Rizzo, in a 2-hour in-depth, fun discussion of Star Trek: Picard Season 3.

Links to what is discussed in the podcast:

 


Check out this episode!

Friday, June 2, 2023

Podcast: Robots Through the Ages, AI, and Chat GPT




Welcome to Light On Light Through, Episode 353, in which Captain Phil and I discuss the new anthology Robots Through the Ages -- with stories by Ambrose Bierce, Philip K. Dick, and other titans, as well as relative newbies like me -- and AI and Chat GPT.

Links to what is discussed in the podcast:

 


Check out this episode!

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