35 episodes

A podcast about the real science behind your favorite science fiction themes and tropes. Each episode, I choose a recurring topic or two in science fiction, and then dive into how it works in reality. If you ever wanted to learn more about genetics, virtual reality, or space travel - this podcast is for you.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Fact and Science Fiction Fact & Science Fiction

    • TV & Film

A podcast about the real science behind your favorite science fiction themes and tropes. Each episode, I choose a recurring topic or two in science fiction, and then dive into how it works in reality. If you ever wanted to learn more about genetics, virtual reality, or space travel - this podcast is for you.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Lady Astronaut Series with author Mary Robinette Kowal

    Lady Astronaut Series with author Mary Robinette Kowal

    In this special episode, I got to ask a really smart person lots of questions. Specifically, the author, voice actor, puppeteer, and science communicator Mary Robinette Kowal, author of the Lady Astronaut series— starting with The Calculating Stars, The Fated Sky, and the new novel coming out July 14th - The Relentless Moon. We talk about why her books are set in the past, how she researches her novels and more.
    Karly’s Recommendations
    The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal (novel)
    Monstress by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda (graphic novel)
    The Vast of Night dir. Andrew Patterson (film)
    Mary Robinette’s Recommendations
    Avenue 5 (TV) available on HBO and Amazon Prime
    The War I Finally Won by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley (audiobook)
    The Light from Other Stars by Erika Swyler (book)
    Shop this list of recommendations through my affiliate link at Bookshop.org https://bookshop.org/shop/fasf and support the show!
    The Relentless Moon hits shelves on July 14, celebrate the book launch at this Zoom event and get a paperback copy with your ticket.
    See the process for recording The Relentless Moon audiobook here for a limited time! [This message will self-destruct on July 14]
    Subscribe, rate and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, and PodcastAddict. Follow the podcast on Twitter @FactandScifi and find other content on the blog factandsciencefiction.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 33 min
    Special announcement: Afrofuturism and diverse science fiction

    Special announcement: Afrofuturism and diverse science fiction

    I was going to create a podcast episode on afrofuturism but I found that this genre/aesthetic/artform can speak for itself so instead I'm going to link all my research sources and then make a pledge to ensure all @FactandScifi eps from now on include black and non-black POC media rep. Afrofuturism, broadly defined, imagines a future, past or present of the African diaspora freed from colonialism (and from white people.) It's not just black characters in science fiction, it centers the black experience. It challenges western, white-centric ideas of sci-fi

    Films and educational podcasts about afrofuturismSpace is the Place by Sun Ra (available on Youtube) - part funk and experimental jazz music performance part scifi imagines a home for black people away from whites (note Sun Ra liberates black people in Oakland very much like Wakandans want to do in the Black Panther movie)Learn the history of Afrofuturism in music and its connections to modern day hip-hop including Missy Elliot, Kendrick Lamar and OutKast in the pod Bottom of the Map: Culture in the Cosmos: AfroFuturism, Hip-Hop, and Black JoyHow did Black Panther (2019) open up Afrofuturism to the world? Listen to this interview with Shawn Taylor from Nerds of Color as he explains Afrofuturism in academia, music, film and seminal books of the genreWatch this short film called Robots of Brixton about a riot of underclass robots against their oppressors. This is the first time I can remember seeing robots that don't look like white peopleHow is Afrofuturism different from African science fiction? I can't speak to the quality of this podcast overall but this interview with Dr. Moradewun Adejunmobi about Afrofuturism and what it signals about future expectations was fantastic.Watch this short film called Afronauts, an alternate history about the first African astronauts during the space raceAfrofuturism novels and anthologiesKindred by Octavia ButlerMothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond ed. by Bill Campbell and Edward Austin HallShuri: The Search for Black PantherWar Girls by Tochi Onyebuch

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    • 2 min
    Cyborgs and Cybernetics

    Cyborgs and Cybernetics

    In this episode I discuss real examples of cyborgs, cybernetic organisms living today, human or otherwise, and these examples may surprise you. I’ll define what exactly cybernetic means, and why exactly cybernetics is an exciting industry to watch. 
    New Segment! Recommendations:
    -Sleeping Giants by Sylvain Neuvel (book, 2016)
    -Color out of Space dir. Richard Stanley (movie, 2019)
    -She-Ra and the Princesses of Power cr. Noelle Stevenson (TV, 2018-2020)
    -Prophet cr. Rob Liefeld (comic)
    -ArchAndroid by Janelle Monae (music, 2010)
    Research from MIT News, Forbes, CyborgAnthropology, and Where are the Cyborgs in Cybernetics?
    Follow the podcast on Twitter @FactandScifi, the transcript for this episode is live on factandsciencefiction.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 25 min
    Earthquakes & Landslides: Science of Disaster Movies

    Earthquakes & Landslides: Science of Disaster Movies

    Disaster movies can be fun. They can be scary or thought-provoking. And they can be really, really bad. But how close are they to the science of real disasters? I talk about recent landslides and earthquakes, my own experience with natural disasters, and a model for risk communication.
    Follow the podcast on Twitter @factandscifi and find the transcript to this episode on factandsciencefiction.com

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    • 22 min
    The Many Worlds Interpretation and Parallel Universes in Sci-Fi

    The Many Worlds Interpretation and Parallel Universes in Sci-Fi

    In this episode of Fact and Science Fiction, I'm discussing the science and science fiction of parallel universes. I review the famous Many Worlds Interpretation, the theory of bubble universes and more. I use examples from The Dark Tower, Golden Compass and Spider-man: Into the Spider-verse to understand why parallel universes are just so fascinating to science fiction fans.
    I used research from the Khan Academy course video on Quantum Wavefunction, The Case for Parallel Universes in Scientific American and PhilosophyNow.org
    Subscribe to the podcast in your podcast app or leave a review! Transcript for this episode is live on factandsciencefiction.com


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    • 22 min
    Animal Mimicry in Nature and Carpenter's The Thing

    Animal Mimicry in Nature and Carpenter's The Thing

    In this episode I'm sharing types of animal mimicry. From owl butterflies to cuckoo birds, to the "thing" from space. I discuss defensive mimicry, aggressive mimicry and even mimicry humans have contributed to. It turns out there's no greater inspiration for horror than the natural world.
    Research from this episode is from my ol' pal Wikipedia and
    C. Blut, J. Wilibrandt, D. Fels, E.I. Girgel & K. Linau's 'The 'sparkle' in fake eyes - the protective effect of mimic eyespots in lepidoptera' in the journal Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata
    Dream/Flashback effect from Zany Madcap
    Follow the podcast on Twitter @FactandSciFi
    Read the blog factandsciencefiction.com

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    • 25 min

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