Space The Imagination Station interviews Gregg Taylor

Online Audio

Space The Imagination Station - Hypaspace PodcastSpace: The Imagination Station which is Canada’s equivalent of the Sci-Fi Channel. Their podcast is called Hypaspace and it has an interview with Decoder Ring Theatre‘s Gregg Taylor! Hypaspace talked to Gregg about both The Red Panda Adventures and his other awesome (though not Spec-Fi) show Black Jack Justice. You can download that |MP3| here, or subscribe to the Hypaspace podcast via THIS xml feed.

Also, as a service to those not already in the know are excited about The Red Panda Adventures returning to Decoder Ring’s podcast on Saturday March 24th 2007 with the remaining six thrilling adventures of its second season. I’m looking forward to a Podiobooks release soon after…. hint hint.

The Sci Phi Show revists The 7th Son universe with J.C. Hutchins

SFFaudio Online Audio

The Sci Phi Show podcast is doing a show on 7th Son and the philosophy of mind. The host, Jason Rennie, talks about the two completed 7th Son novels in the context of personal identity, immortality and the nature of consciousness. You can hear Jason’s thoughts on the subject as wells as a brand new interview with J.C Hutchins, author of the podcast novels |MP3|.

Also, two previous Sci Phi Shows that interview Hutchins are also available (Outcast #1 |MP3|) and (Outcast #7 |MP3|).

Subscribe to the podcast via the feed:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheSciPhiShow

More Damn Dirty Apes! Planet Of The Apes audiobook

Online Audio

Hunter's Planet Of the Apes ArchiveHunter Goatley‘s site also has an abridged reading of the original novel of Planet Of The Apes by Pierre Boulle. It was originally published in 1963 in French as La Planète Des Singes. “Singe” translates to both “ape” and “monkey.” Translator Xan Fielding called it Monkey Planet. In the English-language POTA films, the apes are insulted when called “monkeys,” but in this reading no distinction is made, the term “singes” is used interchangeably with both “apes” and “monkeys.” This abridged reading regrettably dispenses with the framing story, which offers one of the twists that people who’ve only seen the films could still have enjoyed. Despite this, the audiobook is worth hearing, it falls into the tradition of A Strange Manuscript Found In A Copper Cylinder, in which dystopian society acts as social commentary.

 Planet Of The ApesPlanet Of The Apes
By Pierre Boulle; Read by Michael Maloney
5 MP3s – [ABRIDGED]
Broadcaster: BBC Radio 4 / Book at Bedtime
Broadcast: 2005
|Part 1 MP3 | Part 2
MP3 |Part 3 MP3 |Part 4 MP3 |Part 5 MP3 |