(1) SARA FELIX UPDATE. Sara Felix, whose husband was badly injured when their new house blew up yesterday, has given Facebook friends a news update.
The girls have such a nurturing bunch of moms that have watched them while I am at the hospital.
The community was damaged by this not just us. It is scary how big of an accident it was.
We hadn’t moved in so the girls are at the current house. Cheeto and everyone is fine.
Keith is stable and is through surgery. He has burns on a large percentage of his body, but he is recovering.
(2) AUREALIS AWARDS. The 2024 Aurealis Awards shortlists were announced today. Complete information at the link.
(3) FAAN AWARDS. The winners of the FAAn Awards for fanzine achievement were revealed yesterday in the UK. The full list is here: “2025 FAAn Awards”.
(4) STURGEON SYMPOSIUM DATES AND CALL FOR PAPERS. The J. Wayne and Elsie M. Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction at the University of Kansas has set the dates for the 2025 Sturgeon Symposium.
The J. Wayne and Elsie M. Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction is pleased to announce our 4th Annual Sturgeon Symposium, to be held October 9-10, 2025. In addition to presenting the annual Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for best science fiction short story, which will include a reading from the winner, we are delighted to announce that Darcie Little Badger has accepted our invitation to speak at the symposium.
We have opened our call for papers where we invite papers, panel proposals, and roundtable discussions that engage with this year’s theme: “Expanding Speculative Horizons.” Inspired by Darcie Little Badger’s diverse contributions to SF (novels, short stories, comics, etc.), we encourage a wide range of submissions, especially those that reflect upon expansive understandings of speculative expression.
We encourage you to submit and share our CFP widely. Below you will find the link to our CFP with more details on the event and guidelines for proposals. Deadlines for submissions is May 19.
(5) DOCTOR WHO HISTORY. [Item by Nickpheas.] Front Row on BBC Radio 4 has quite a long feature on the new series of Doctor Who which spread to cover the history of the show, and even a brief interview with Waris Hussein, the original director (who I didn’t realize was still alive). “…Doctor Who new series & impact on culture…”. Doctor Who feature starts 11:20 in.
(6) RUSSELL T DAVIES Q&A. Parade tries to find out what’s coming in this season and the next: “’Doctor Who’ Boss Russell T Davies Breaks Down That ‘Earth-Shattering’ Premiere Twist”.
This year marks the twentieth anniversary of the modern incarnation of Doctor Who, which you helped bring on screen. What have you learned most over the course of working on so many episodes and with so many Doctors?
I mean, it’s astonishing. I just look exactly the same. So clearly, I’m made of Adamantium. It’s funny because actually, a couple of years ago, the BBC said, “You want to celebrate the 20th anniversary.” And I said, “We’ve just had a 60th anniversary!” And on Disney+, it’s only two years old, so no, so we chose not to. Now we get to the 20th, and everyone’s talking about the 20th. And I feel a bit stupid. We didn’t really do anything to celebrate it. Someone at the BBC is making a documentary, so that’ll be out in a couple of months.
I think about Doctor Who, you learn something new with every single episode. It was different. Now this year, coming out in Episode 2, this year, we go to Miami in 1952, where there’s a living cartoon. The cartoon has stepped out of the cinema screen, voiced by Alan Cumming. So, for that, we all had to learn hand-drawn animation. I’ve worked in television for a million years. And I’ve done graphics, I’ve done CGI. I’ve never actually done hand-drawn animation before, which was amazing.
What I did learn is it’s 15 times more meetings than anything else I’ve ever done. [Laughs.] But it’s wonderful. I feel like I’ve learned a lot, and I appreciate the skill of the animator more than ever. And Doctor Who has always done that. Always every week, it’s different. I mean, last year, we sort of said to ourselves, “Can we do an episode where the enemy is just an old woman who stands 73 yards away?” And we did, and it worked. So you have to take these very deep breaths and sort of say, “Is this going to work?” And have faith in it. So it teaches you something different every single time. And 20 years whizzes past in a flash….… As we’re just starting out Season 2 on Disney+, are you already in the planning stages for Season 3?
We’ll always look ahead to the future if we get the chance to keep running. I’ve got ideas. “I think I’ll do that near [Season] 4 or 5.” And that’s always the way I’ve worked on things. So yes, I could promise you amazing stuff at the end of Season 4. There are things we’ve already mentioned that are going to bear fruit a long time into the future. So that’s just the fun of it. That’s the fun of Doctor Who. But, to say again, it’s the pit stops along the way….
(7) NAME THAT ORBIT. Mental Floss challenges readers: “Can You Match the Moon to the Planet It Belongs To?” Take the quiz at the link. Uh, after Earth and the Moon, my hit rate rapidly declined. I got 41%. You can do better!
(8) SF WAS SUPPOSED TO BE A WARNING, NOT A BLUEPRINT FOR THE FUTURE. Sam Freedman’s latest column in The Guardian is: “The big idea: will sci-fi end up destroying the world?”
One can only imagine the horror the late Iain Banks would have felt on learning his legendary Culture series is a favourite of Elon Musk. The Scottish author was an outspoken socialist who could never understand why rightwing fans liked novels that were so obviously an attack on their worldview….
… Musk isn’t alone in his enthusiasms. Mark Zuckerberg has renamed his company and sunk $100bn in pursuit of the “metaverse”, a word that first appeared in Neal Stephenson’s 1992 novel Snow Crash. So obsessed is Zuckerberg with the book – in which people plug into a simulated world to avoid a real one fallen into dystopian chaos – that at one point all product managers at Facebook were asked to read it as part of their training. Snow Crash also inspired the development of Google Earth, and was mandatory reading for the Xbox development team at Microsoft. Jeff Bezos loves Stephenson so much that he hired him to work for his Blue Origin rocket company.
If sci-fi’s influence was simply on product design, it wouldn’t be a problem. If Zuckerberg wants to burn his own cash in pursuit of a personal fantasy, or Musk wants to build hideous cars, that’s their call. It may even inspire something genuinely useful from time to time….
…The real issue is that sci-fi hasn’t just infused the tech moguls’ commercial ideas but also their warped understanding of society and politics. The dominant genre of sci-fi in the 80s and 90s, when today’s Silicon Valley overlords were growing up, was Cyberpunk – as exemplified in the novels of William Gibson (who invented the term “cyberspace”) and Stephenson, as well as any number of films and video games. The grandfather of the genre was Philip K Dick, whose novels and short stories spawned films including Blade Runner, Total Recall and Minority Report.
https://dff5fe6618baf1dc9a69a0f44e8ea6da.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-41/html/container.html Dick’s stories were fuelled by amphetamine-driven paranoia. Nothing can be trusted and nobody is who they appear to be. It’s a style that’s arguably had more impact on modern culture and aesthetics than any other. The Matrix (1999) is just one example of Dick’s wider influence: he had often spoken of other worlds and suggested our own reality was a simulation.
As historian Richard Hofstadter noted in his famous 1964 essay, the “paranoid style” has been a feature of rightwing American politics for a long time – but The Matrix has given it a new vocabulary and imagery….
(9) PKD AT MEDIA DEATH CULT. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Moid over at Media Death Cult is really into Philip K. Dick. He has just posted a quick guide to the author. You can see the 24 minute video below…
(10) MEMORY LANE.
[Written by Cat Eldridge.]
Probe series (1988)
Thirty-seven years ago on this date, the Probe series ended its seven-episode run, not by any means the shortest run of a series we’ve looked at – several, such as Nightmare Cafe and Space Rangers, lasted only six episodes. Can anyone recall a genre series that lasted less episodes? I’m sure there is one.
It was co- created by Michael I. Wagner and Isaac Asimov. Asimov had quite some background in television SF series and Wagner was previously known for creating Hill Street Blues. (You can purchase all one hundred forty episodes at Apple TV+ for just $39.95!)
Here Asimov co-created, produced and according to ImDB was involved in writing all of the eight scripts. That’s not particularly surprising to me that he did that given how prolific he was.
The pilot and series starred Parker Stevenson as Austin James, an asocial genius who solved high tech crimes, and Ashley Crow as James’ new secretary Mickey Castle. Stevenson’s only major casting was on Baywatch. Row has a serious genre credit as she played Sandra Bennett on Heroes. That series is streaming on Peacock. And no, I really don’t care if Baywatch is streaming anywhere.
It aired on ABC just once and was re-aired on Syfy, though they edited the episodes to stuff in extra commercials as they did every series they aired which they hadn’t produced.
What happened to it? Did poor ratings doom it? No, they didn’t. As one reviewer notes, “Together, these two encounter out-of-control experiments, supernatural events, and mysterious deaths. As you might expect, Probe features heavy doses of scientific knowledge and logical reasoning, but was cut short due to the 1988 writers strike.”
Remember the Australian-filmed Mission: Impossible shot during the writers strike was only a go because they dug into the file drawers of the first series and used not filmed scripts. Or possibly Grave’s brain.
It is not streaming anywhere. Except Space Rangers, I find really short run series that were not done as miniseries tend not to be streamed.
Do I have to say that all those YouTube copies are illegal, so links will be, oh, need I say it?

(11) COMICS SECTION.
- Carpe Diem tries Newton-style bowling.
(12) YMMV DURING HOLY WEEK. There is a surprising sf film mentioned in this NPR story. “Revisiting our favorite (and not so favorite) religious films” at NPR.
DETROW: And even for those of us who live more secular lives, movies continue to offer a bit of a cinematic catechism with stories from the Bible and other religious traditions. And with Passover and Holy Week underway, we figured it would be a good time to talk about faith and film. I’m joined by NPR’s religion correspondent, Jason DeRose. Hey, Jason….
… DEROSE: Well, I have a very specific group of religion movies that I actually like quite a lot, and they are comedies. They’re the Monty Python films – “The Life Of Brian,” “The Holy Grail,” “The Meaning Of Life.” “The Meaning Of Life” has one of the funniest songs I ever heard in my life – “Every Sperm Is Sacred.”…
…MARTIN: The other film that I – is, like, “Arrival,” for example…
DETROW: Yes.
MARTIN: …Which is, again, like, science – it’s supposedly science fiction, right? But, like, I think a lot of films in sci-fi also – or that are technically sci-fi actually live in a – to me, in a spiritual space because they ask hard questions. What is the meaning of existence, and how do we know?…
(13) WHIP IT GOOD! Inverse tells how “’Indiana Jones And The Great Circle’ Just Got A Lot More Fun”. (See the Launch Trailer on YouTube.)
Indiana Jones And The Great Circle was one of the best games of 2024. Machine Games’ remarkable fusion of stealth gameplay, detailed open-ended levels, and a dogged faithfulness to the film series was a match made in heaven. Now, just a week ahead of its PlayStation 5 debut, The Great Circle is getting a few new additions that will make re-experiencing this modern classic worthwhile.
The Great Circle Title Update 4 will add entirely new perks for players to take advantage of in combat, over a dozen quality of life improvements, and a new hilarious use for an often underutilized item in the game.
The biggest item on the list is two new Adventure Books. One is called “Open Season,” which makes enemies more vulnerable to follow-up damage after getting hit with Indy’s whip. The second is called “Sleight of Hand,” which lets Indy use his whip to pull an enemy’s weapon towards him after doing a disarm whip attack. For players partial to the game’s optional gunplay, Sleight of Hand will add new strategy and variety to how ranged combat encounters play out.
For the more melee-focused player, Indy now has a secondary use for repair kits. These consumables are typically used to give more longevity to Indy’s makeshift weapon of choice. But The Great Circle is so chock-full of random pick-ups that they can often go ignored through most (if not all) of a single playthrough. Machine Games has made note of this player trend and adjusted things accordingly.
“Some of you have told us that you don’t have much use for Repair Kits,” the update’s patch notes read. “Well, now you can throw them at your enemies!”…
(14) WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE. Learn “How climate change could disrupt the construction and operations of US nuclear submarines” at Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
…In recent years, the Defense Department has started to acknowledge climate change as a “threat multiplier”—albeit slowly. Acknowledging the billions of dollars climate change could cost the Navy in the future, the Pentagon now incorporates inclement weather disasters and other climate effects into military planning and base structures. However, during the first Trump administration, the Navy quietly ended the climate change task force put in place by the Obama administration, which taught naval leaders how to adapt to rising sea levels. As the new Trump administration wipes all mention of climate change and other environmental measures from federal agency websites, climate-related measures may also be halted despite being critical for the viability of naval missions.
Most of the naval construction and operations infrastructure for the United States’ ballistic missile submarines are located on the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. Due to sea level rise and increased inclement weather attributed to climate change, these facilities are becoming more vulnerable to flooding. The intensity and number of hurricanes in the North Atlantic region have increased since the 1980s and will continue to do so as ocean temperatures keep rising, further threatening coastal areas. These incidents are highly costly and disruptive to operations. According to a Congressional Research Service report, the Defense Department has 1,700 coastal military installations that could be impacted by sea level rise. In 2018, Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida suffered $4.7 billion in damages from Hurricane Michael.
Infrastructure at risk. General Dynamics Electric Boat—the lead contractor for the new Columbia-class submarines—performs over three-quarters of the construction operations for the 12 new ships at its two shipbuilding facilities located in Rhode Island and Connecticut. Both facilities are in at-risk flood areas….
(15) IN DEFENSE OF SCIENCE. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Science by definition is arguable genre-adjacent to SF. So no better a time for an appeal for reason.
The world’s two leading multi-disciplinary journals, Nature and Science have in the past month had a series of articles and news items reporting on how science in the US is being dismantled, and how it is being mis-represented by politicians on a range of issues from climate change to vaccines.
Ironically, Brit Prof Dave Kipping moved to US for his career and now many scientists are moving back and some US scientists are leaving. See his 12-minute video from the Cool Worlds Lab…
(16) VIDEO OF THE DAY. [Item by Andrew (not Werdna).] DeForest Kelley was apparently well-prepared for Trek: “DeForest Kelley on The Millionaire”. Watch until the end.
[Thanks to Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Olav Rokne, Nickpheas, Andrew (not Werdna), Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, and John King Tarpinian for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel “Prokofiev” Dern.]
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(14) ISTR that a USAF base in Nebraska was damaged by floods some years back. And every port is vulnerable to sea level rise, with or without rivers flooding them..
(10) I remember Probe fondly – one episode featured a prolific science fiction author (played by Michael Constantine) as the person our heroes needed to help.
10). I remember Parker Stevenson’s first big TV effort: as Frank Hardy, in the Hardy Boys. It was a series produced by Glen Larson that rotated with Nancy Drew (played originally by Pamela Sue Martin, later by Janet Louise Johnson who later had a small roll in the original Battlestar Galactica). Joe Hardy was Shaun Cassidy, who later produced the excellent American Gothic.
(14) Lovely. How long will the Pentagon be allowed to continue taking woke stuff like weather into account?
(1) The whole thing is dreadful. Glad to hear he’s through surgery, but recovery’s going to be a while. Best to them.
(8) I disliked that it seemed to be a warning against sf… (And never mentioned 1984, used by the GOP as a literal playbook.)
(14) But.. but Dear Leader has told us it’s all a hoax, so we don’t need to worry at… (glub,glub,glub…)
(15) A brain drain has been reported, and France is encouraging immigration.
(16) Damnt, Jane!
(14) I wonder about the long term effects of warming water on hull conditions, sonar propagation, and nuclear cooling water.
Was it Pohl’s “The Gold At the Starbow’s End” that featured a scene with a future White House, in a diminished and rundown America, that has standing water on the ground floor?
(12) How about ‘Sister Act?’ But seriously, I watch ‘King of Kings’ each year because the narration was written by Ray Bradbury.
(10) IIRC in an issue of Asimovs, Asimov said his involvement with Probe was minimal. He gave them some ideas about the main character and maybe some ideas to llok into.
7) I managed 100%. I suppose it helps if you know pointless things – all Uranus’s moons are named after characters in Shakespeare or Alexander Pope, for instance.
10) Yes, indeed, there are genre series shorter than six episodes – the 1980 Beyond Westworld lasted only five. My vague memories suggest it was OK, but not particularly good.
14-15) The thing is, there actually is such a thing as objective reality, and people like the Department of Defense have to deal with it. Climate change is actually happening, and no amount of shouting “hoax!” will change that. Trying to argue with facts… doesn’t usually end well for the person arguing.
6) This reminds that I need to pick Dr. Who back up. I lost track after Jodie Whittaker left because of real life but I’ve got Disney+ (because I have kids and because Verizon offered it to me for free, well, not for ‘free’, but you know what I mean) so there should be no real impediment but finding the time.
8) “The Scottish author was an outspoken socialist who could never understand why rightwing fans liked novels that were so obviously an attack on their worldview….” Maybe because not everybody sees everything solely through the lens of politics? In fact I would wager that more people don’t than do, which might clear up some of Bank’s mystification. Personally, I read, listen to, or watch all sorts of media that are created by people who don’t share my political, sociocultural, or religious views and in some cases are directly opposed to them. Because it’s the quality of the media that matters, not the creator’s politics.
12) Pretty much the take I’d expect from NPR. By the by, the ‘unidentified actors’ from the Ten Commandments clip are Charlton Heston as Moses and Yul Brynner as Rameses, which fifteen seconds on Google would have cleared up.
8) There’s an essay waiting to be written about the role(s) of “civilization” and “governance” and related sociopolitical notions in the broadly-conceived SF area that includes space opera. A particularly interesting pair of writers to consider would be Banks and Neal Asher–with, perhaps, a look back at Jack Vance (particularly the Oikumene/Beyond dyad in the Demon Princes books). If Asher’s Polity isn’t a response to the Culture, I’ll eat my latest (printed paper) ARC.
Meredith moment: Niven’s “Rainbow Mars” for $1.99
(14) I can remember when it was the Soviets who had to say things they knew were false, do things they knew were stupid, in deference to ideology and/or aging leaders. One of the reasons it’s now the former Soviet Union.
Meredith Moment: the revised edition of Martha Wells’ Wheel of the Infinite is $2.99 at some of the usual suspects. Incidentally, I notice that All Systems Red has a new cover tying in to the TV series.
10) Short-lived genre series: ONCE A HERO, 1987, ABC. Dead after 3: it aired its 2-hour pilot and two 1-hour episodes. Fourth ep guest starred Adam West as an actor who once played a superhero and is now reduced to making personal appearances as the character–and getting sued by the studio. IIRC, Mr. West was semi-retired and living in Arizona at the time, and was SO HAPPY to get this role! Alas, even though the episode was listed in TV Guide for the week it was supposed to be aired, the show got cancelled and the episode was replaced at the last minute by a repeat of an old Ice Capades Holiday Special or some such (which got better ratings than any Once a Hero eps did).
Hans Beimler & I wrote two eps, #5 & 6, that were filmed but never finished past the rough cut stage. (One featured a very young Mayim Bialik playing a character named Blossom. Three years later, Mayim got her own sitcom where she also played a character named Blossom!) Ep 7 was in the middle of filming when the cancellation hit; execs came down to the set and sent everybody home; they didn’t even finish the day’s shoot.
About the only other notable thing about the series is that it co-starred Robert Forster playing a trenchcoated 40s detective named “Gumshoe” and he was an absolute delight to work with.
Quatermain: well, there are some widely-read books that are terribly written, and political. Anything by Ayn Rand, for example (I read Anthem when I was 19, and was aggravated that this was a published book when I could see the strings on the straw puppets.) Her stuff is read because of the politics.
JimJ: yeah, and with Hegseth, we’re going to see that here, until he’s removed, or we’re the former US.
(10) Struck by Lightning was a 1979 sitcom that latest 3 episodes. I must be among the very very few people who saw all three anyone else? The premise was that a modern-day Joe turns out to be a descendent of Dr Frankenstein inherits an old inn, with monster attached. The opening credits are hilarious as the monster appears to the tune of “You Are So Beautiful to Me”. Otherwise not a good show.
(14) “the Navy quietly ended the climate change task force put in place by the Obama administration, which taught naval leaders how to adapt to rising sea levels.”
Presumably this included adding a couple of feet to the length of the anchor chains.
Pretty sure the length of the anchor chain won’t be very useful when the entire facility is flooded out.
1) This even made my local news. 🙁 Hope Keith heals up well.