LAST BEST HOPE: A Babylon 5 Podcast for Our Uncertain Age

B90 Productions

Back in the halcyon 1990s, a syndicated sci-fi TV series warned us that it, indeed, *can* happen here. In this podcast we use BABYLON 5 to talk through our current political moment in an attempt to process, understand, and, perhaps, find hope.

  1. May 11

    Talking Heads (AND NOW FOR A WORD, THE ILLUSION OF TRUTH)

    Read transcript It's our long-discussed episode on the media in Babylon 5 in which we take on two of the show's most important episodes about journalism, propaganda, and the construction of political reality: “And Now for a Word” and “The Illusion of Truth.” The conversation looks at how deeply news media was baked into JMS’s original conception of Babylon 5, from ISN as a central narrative device to the show’s use of documentary language, commercial breaks, and authoritative TV-news aesthetics. Josh and John discuss why ISN’s existence makes sense in-universe, how media infrastructure naturally concentrates power, and how easily a trusted news source can become an arm of the state. 00:00 — Introduction: the long-awaited “media episodes” discussion 00:22 — Why “And Now for a Word” and “The Illusion of Truth” work as companion episodes 00:45 — JMS’s original notes reveal Babylon 5 was conceived as a historical documentary funded through a future news network 02:28 — Why ISN being a single dominant interstellar news source actually makes sense in-universe 04:10 — Media monopolization, capitalism, and parallels to modern corporate consolidation 05:21 — Why JMS used familiar 20th-century news formats instead of fragmented social-media-style media ecosystems 08:37 — “Objectivity” versus agenda-driven journalism in “The Illusion of Truth” 10:22 — “And Now for a Word” as a fake CNN broadcast — and why the commercial structure feels so unsettling 11:46 — The PsiCorps commercials: normalization through advertising and emotional manipulation 14:12 — Why the PsiCorps propaganda is so effective 14:53 — Economic precarity, capitalism, and authoritarian recruitment tactics 16:02 — Babylon 5’s future remains recognizably capitalist unlike Star Trek’s post-scarcity Federation 18:16 — The politics of “Why are we spending money on aliens?” 19:13 — Why Dr. Franklin’s observation that most humans have never left Earth is significant 20:04 — Fear of “the other” and anti-alien sentiment as political strategy 22:50 — Humanity’s short-term memory and why societies abandon long-term projects 24:12 — Delenn’s interview and the politics of identity, conformity, and “purity” 31:09 — Londo versus G’Kar: how television framing shapes who appears “reasonable” 32:25 — ISN’s supposedly “objective” framing already contains ideological assumptions 34:20 — Dan Randall, “reasonable” fascism, and media manipulation through editing 35:45 — Confession, propaganda, and McCarthy-era parallels in “The Illusion of Truth” 37:49 — The Nuremberg trials, postwar media, and the refusal to believe “it can happen here” 39:19 — Why JMS warned viewers that “The Illusion of Truth” would be difficult to rewatch 41:26 — Silent footage, decontextualized imagery, and modern propaganda techniques 43:15 — How conspiracy theories grow from one small true detail 44:59 — McCarthyism, blacklists, algorithms, and modern forms of information control 47:08 — JMS’s optimism: truth may be incomplete, but people can still learn 50:18 — Why definitive historical truth is often impossible 53:27 — Propaganda succeeds by offering simple, emotionally satisfying conclusions 54:29 — Modern political fractures, war narratives, and media credibility 58:07 — Hypernormalization and knowingly participating in false realities 59:30 — AI, tech billionaires, and hostility toward introspection and nuance 01:00:38 — William Shatner’s Blue Origin reaction versus Jeff Bezos’s indifference 01:03:08 — Why introspection may be incompatible with certain forms of power and “greatness” 01:06:22 — If humanity loses its humanity, what exactly are we trying to build? 01:07:26 — Final thoughts on ISN, journalism, and why these episodes feel more disturbing now than in the 1990s 01:09:32 — Closing remarks and outro lastbesthopeb5@gmail.com

    1h 10m

About

Back in the halcyon 1990s, a syndicated sci-fi TV series warned us that it, indeed, *can* happen here. In this podcast we use BABYLON 5 to talk through our current political moment in an attempt to process, understand, and, perhaps, find hope.

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