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    Our Opinions Are Correct

    Explore the meaning of science fiction, and how it's relevant to real-life science and society. Your hosts are Annalee Newitz, a science journalist who writes science fiction, and Charlie Jane Anders, a science fiction writer who is obsessed with science. Every two weeks, we take deep dives into science fiction books, movies, television, and comics that will expand your mind -- and maybe change your life
    enAnnalee Newitz165 Episodes

    Episodes (165)

    Videogame movies are officially better than comic book movies

    Videogame movies are officially better than comic book movies

    At last, videogame movies have defeated comic book movies. We learn about why from Evan Narcisse, who writes for comic books and videogames, as well as being a journalist and critic. Then we rant about why so many people are obsessed with psychoanalyzing villains, and are flocking to stories that reveal the innermost traumas of bad guys. Why do we keep humanizing awful people? It's a problem.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    We Don't Give a F*ck About Canon

    We Don't Give a F*ck About Canon

    Science fiction and fantasy fans love to argue about canon — both meanings of the word. Which stories in a fictional universe really "happened"? Which stories deserve to be enshrined as the best of the genre? We don't think either of those things is worth yelling about! Also, did you know that tsunamis can happen in lakes, rivers and even creeks? We talk to Aggeliki Barberopoulou with the USC Tsunami Research Center to learn more...

    The world's humblest heroes, from plumbers to tardigrades

    The world's humblest heroes, from plumbers to tardigrades

    Inspired by The Super Mario Bros Movie, we're talking about a humble class of heroes whose lives are devoted to infrastructure maintenance and repair. There are heating engineer rogues and space janitors and, of course, plumbers. Later in the episode we’ll head down to Antarctica, where our guest Ariel Waldman spent her summer vacation studying the environment and the tiny creatures who live there – including tardigrades, the world’s greatest microscopic animals! 

     

    Encore Episode: The Incredibly Strange Career of Anne Rice

    Encore Episode: The Incredibly Strange Career of Anne Rice

    Anne Rice is best-known for her Vampire Chronicles, which began in the 1970s with her novel Interview with the Vampire. But did you know she also wrote bestselling BDSM erotica and two novels about Jesus? In this episode, we do a deep dive into Rice's strange career, including that time she unleashed her fans against Tom Cruise. We also discuss the fantastic new Interview with the Vampire series. 

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enJanuary 25, 2024

    Encore Episode: Science Fiction Keeps Trying To "Fix" Disabled People with Elsa Sjunneson

    Encore Episode: Science Fiction Keeps Trying To "Fix" Disabled People with Elsa Sjunneson

    Science fiction and fantasy are full of portrayals of disabled bodies, some of which are nuanced and positive, and many of which... aren't. Join us as we talk about disability tropes and the realities of disabled life with Elsa Sjunneson, author of the brand new book Being Seen. Plus we answer reader questions from our Patreon!

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enJanuary 11, 2024

    Alien ecosystems and the algae menace

    Alien ecosystems and the algae menace

    All of us live embedded in webs of life known as ecosystems, and that can get pretty creepy -- or astonishingly beautiful. Inspired by the mind-blowing new animated series Scavengers Reign, we're talking about some of the best examples of alien ecosystems in science fiction. Then we dive into some real-life ecosystems on Earth, and reveal two important ways that scientists study environmental changes. Along the way, you'll find out why algae is literally sucking the life out of coastal ecosystems. Plus, shouldn't salt marsh grass have rights?

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enDecember 28, 2023

    How Doctor Who Stood the Test of Time

    How Doctor Who Stood the Test of Time

    How does Doctor Who remain cool after sixty years? By constantly updating and reinventing itself. We've been loving David Tennant's triumphant return, and we're so pumped for Ncuti Gatwa. But we're wondering... are there lessons from Doctor Who's longevity that could apply to other venerable series and universes? Heck yeah, there are. Allons-y!

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Episode 142: Books That'll Get You Through The Winter Months

    Episode 142: Books That'll Get You Through The Winter Months

    There's no company as soothing as a good read when the days get shorter and the air gets colder. So here's our annual list of recent books that'll help get you through those nasty winter months. (Or if you're listening to this in the Southern hemisphere, here are some summer beach reads!) The good news? We're lucky to have a wealth of amazing reads right now.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enNovember 30, 2023

    Episode 141: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Zines

    Episode 141: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Zines

    Zines are DiY publications that grew to prominence in the early twentieth century scifi fan community, then morphed into a punk subculture in the 70s and 80s ... and now they're back! We talk with two guests who take us deep into the history and future of zines: Lynn Peril, who created the iconic zine Mystery Date in the 1990s, and Lawrence Lindell, author of the new graphic novel Blackward, about queer Oakland teens who organize a Black zine fest.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enNovember 16, 2023

    Episode 140: Silicon Valley is doomed to misunderstand the future, with Dr. Joy Buolamwini

    Episode 140: Silicon Valley is doomed to misunderstand the future, with Dr. Joy Buolamwini

    Silicon Valley markets itself as the place where futures are born, and yet tech corporations have no real understanding of where our civilizations are headed. We are wrapping up our Silicon Valley vs. Science Fiction series with some final thoughts on why this might be. Then we talk to AI developer, ethicist, and poet Dr. Joy Buolamwini, founder of the Algorithmic Justice League and author of a new book called Unmasking AI: My Mission to Protect What Is Human in a World of Machines.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enNovember 02, 2023

    Episode 139: How To Write About Violence (with Fonda Lee and Lauren Beukes)

    Episode 139: How To Write About Violence (with Fonda Lee and Lauren Beukes)

    Battles and smackdowns are a key part of many science fiction and fantasy stories — but how do you do them right? Do you have an obligation to show the cost of violence? And what does a good fight scene look like? To find out, we talked to authors Fonda Lee and Lauren Beukes. (Note: This episode was recorded Sept. 23 at Rose City Comic Con in Portland, OR.)

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Episode 137: The Creativity Fallacy

    Episode 137: The Creativity Fallacy

    What does it mean to be a creator at a time when creativity is completely commodified? We’ll talk about the status of the author, and how audiences have idealized artists while also celebrating the so-called death of the author and rise of the reader. We’ll talk about how AI converts our minds into apps, and also why the intentional fallacy blew up the literary world in the 1940s! Later in the episode we’re joined by Mary Anne Mohanraj, an author and professor of literature at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who tells us about using AI in the college classroom.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enSeptember 21, 2023

    Episode 136: Who Wants to Live on an Eyeball Earth? With Aomawa Shields

    Episode 136: Who Wants to Live on an Eyeball Earth? With Aomawa Shields

    We've learned so much about the planets outside our solar system in the past ten years, and we're poised to learn even more. What kind of life could live on eyeball Earths, and other types of tidally locked worlds? To find out, we asked Aomawa Shields, astrophysicist and author of the science memoir Life on Other Planets. Plus Aomawa talked to us about why burnout is such a huge problem for Black women in STEM.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Episode 135: The Myth of Free Speech

    Episode 135: The Myth of Free Speech

    Tech companies love to trumpet about how their products are free speech machines. But how can we have free speech when we don't have freedom? That's what we're asking in today's episode, the latest in our Silicon Valley vs. Science Fiction series. We take a deep dive into 1984, the science fiction novel that started a lot of today's discourse about speech and authoritarianism. And of course, we talk about the company formerly known as Twitter, and much more!

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enAugust 24, 2023

    Encore Episode: Work Is Not Your Friend, with Alan Henry

    Encore Episode: Work Is Not Your Friend, with Alan Henry

    People have been paid for labor for at least 5,000 years, but the modern 'workplace' is a pretty recent invention. We look at how science fiction  has dealt with the transformation of labor — plus we talk to Alan Henry, author of the new book Seen, Heard and Paid.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Our Opinions Are Correct
    enAugust 10, 2023

    Encore Episode: We're in the wrong timeline, with Connie Willis and R.F. Kuang

    Encore Episode: We're in the wrong timeline, with Connie Willis and R.F. Kuang

    We've all been feeling like something is wrong with the timeline. In this episode, we ask what alternate history, fake history, and secondary world history can teach us about the present. Does exploring the past in fiction help us learn from history or are we doomed to repeat it? History-obsessed authors Connie Willis (Blackout, Doomsday Book) and R.F. Kuang (The Poppy War) offer their thoughts too.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes

    Episode 134: The State of the Galaxy

    Episode 134: The State of the Galaxy

    It's time for our state of the galaxy address. We’ll be talking about how humans figured out that we are living in a galaxy, and how science fiction represents other galaxies. We're also joined by Molly Peeples, an astronomer with the Space Telescope Science Institute and Johns Hopkins University, who studies where galaxies come from, and what they’re actually made of.

    Show notes: www.ouropinionsarecorrect.com/shownotes