How to analyze the wiring video
Michael Calor: Go to the movies.
Lauren Good: Just go to the movies.
Kitty Drummund: I love it.
Michael Calor: This is the worst time of the year to go to movies.
Lauren Good: No, the best time of the year is because air conditioning and comfortable seats.
Michael Calor: Yes, but
Kitty Drummund: I’m with Loren, this is a great advice.
Lauren Good: No, I have been three times this year and every time, very last. One of my friends invited the last moment to see the 40th anniversary of the Goonies who was playing in the city center. We went, it was fantastic. I was closed with his friends one night and said, “Let’s see sins.” He was playing right on the street, wonderful. The theater was practically empty, magnificent. The film, in fact, examines our friends in the great, the New Yorker sheath. They had some ideas about the materialists, so I would like to throw it to them, but it was great. I loved, I have to go to the movies more.
Michael Calor: Oh, sure
Lauren Good: What is your advice, Mike?
Michael Calor: I’m going to recommend a book, and this is a book I have read July 4. This is called, I happily refuse to do so. I believe this is the fourth novel Life Enger. He is the bestseller, you may have heard from his name before. This is his new book, a dystopian story. It has been depicted for decades that society has collapsed in a very recognizable and familiar way, a bit like a more dangerous and unknown version of today. The whole economy is controlled by a handful of extremely rich elites. The education system has collapsed, most Americans are proudly illiterate. In this book we have a proudly illiterate president. Satellite communications are dumb, completely unreliable, GPS no longer works. This is exactly like a eroded version of the world in which we live and it is really clear. We go to this world and pursue the main character. The whole book is held in the Sopor Lake in the north of Minsota and western Ontario. The main character falls in a boat and he goes and he puts the sail in the Superior Lake and we follow him around. I don’t want to ruin it by saying something more, but this is unpredictable, as well as beautiful and beautiful, beautifully written on the sentence surface. This is like poetry for pages. It’s amazing, emotional, deep. This makes you angry because it’s a book for this moment. It’s just gorgeous
Lauren Good: I don’t know what to say to it, except that it looks really deep.
Kitty Drummund: You are much more complicated than both of us. Sorry, Loren.
Michael Calor: Well, I mean it’s not really.
Lauren Good: I accept that
Michael Calor: No, I mean, I know I have recommended a Nerdy book, but you really have to read it just because you give you a completely sharp future of what he loves, if you only allow the richest people in the world to run the economy and run all the basic services we rely on, so they just need them. And it is as if this is a very unpleasant kind, like the world is moving, and that is why the book resonated with me a lot when reading it. Yes
Lauren Good: I’m going to add it to good readings. Thank you very much
Michael Calor: Of course
Lauren Good: Yes, I recommended almost a book by a philosopher, but now I want to hold it and keep it down. When Kitty disappears we can only turn on the Nerd, Mike.
Michael Calor: I don’t know I’m going to watch the Goonies. I don’t know
Lauren Good: Welcome to the Nerd Lit Wired podcast.
Michael Calor: Well, well thank you to listen to this part of this part Illegal valleyIf you love what you have heard today, be sure to follow us in our show and evaluate it in your podcast selection program. If you want to contact us with any questions, comments or suggestions, write for us at [email protected]. Today’s show was produced by Adriana Tapia. Amar Lal of Macrosound mixed this section, Pran Basi was our New York Studio Engineer. Mark Lida was our San Francisco studio engineer. Kate Osborne is our executive producer. Kitty Drumvand is the Wired World Editorial Director and Chris Bannon is the head of Global Audio.