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141: How to Interview the Dead

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Colin Rowsell
Paperboy
Posts: 11
Joined: 14 Jan 2008

How to Interview the Dead

"Richard Feynman hangs in the air before me, just above the dirty dishes in the sink. He shimmers, shifts, the famous eyebrows drifting like smog. Behind him floats the Trinity nuclear test site, a swarm of nanobots, a sensory deprivation tank, the rubber seals of the Space Shuttle Challenger.

"Bongo drums. Topless bars. The hallucinatory curves of delectable young graduate students. Nobel Prize-winning scientists sure know how to pick 'em."

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klimas
Anonymous Source
Posts: 1
Joined: 18 Mar 2008

... what was the point of this article? I'm serious. I honestly don't get why this made it into the Escapist.

Surggical_Scar
Beat Writer
Posts: 184
Joined: 13 Feb 2008

I was about to agree and have a rant...but there's something quite beautifully poetic about this.

You say a lot without saying much at all, which, I think is what was the point. What my comrade above was expecting was something complex and focused, much like the astrophysicists and chemists you make reference to, only to be given something much more freeform and simple, something malliable and fluid to be thought of in its unique way.

Call it piddle and tosh if you wish, but frankly, you're just can't see the wood for the trees.

Beery
Muckraker
Posts: 252
Joined: 26 May 2004

What the f*** was that? I've seen some nonsensical stuff in my time - I've even read Rudy Rucker's 'White Light', but this is ridiculous. Did some wacko shoot the editor and start greenlighting whatever garbage comes across his desk. I must have wasted at least 5 minutes on that article.

Tinq
Copy Clerk
Posts: 51
Joined: 25 Feb 2008

It was a very good experiment, but I agree that it didn't have the same tone as other articles on this site, what with the fiction.

Brian Name
Paperboy
Posts: 22
Joined: 1 Feb 2008

I have no idea what just happened. But it kept me reading the entire time. I liked it.

cool13011
BANNED
Posts: 133
Joined: 9 Oct 2007

I read half of the first page, but when I saw that you were actually making a made up bullshit article with some dead guy, I clicked the comments button. WTF WAS THAT? I can understand Holodecks, floating frogs, glowing cats, and air fresheners, but making up a bullshit interview with a dead guy? Come on.

USER WAS BANNED FOR THIS POST.

sammyfreak
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 1504
Joined: 5 Dec 2007

Points for originality, but i dont realy understand what you are getting at.

Joe
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 1124
Joined: 7 Jul 2006
image

cool13011:
Words.

Future reference for everyone else: If you're going to shit all over someone else's work, at the very least pretend you read the entire fucking thing before you waste more of our bandwidth.

Thaddeus
Reviewer
Posts: 19
Joined: 20 Mar 2007

This article manages to take base, seemingly everyday words from the English language and stack or smash them together in such a way as to create a potent and palatable deliciousness.

I demand more Colin Roswell.

Ice-Nine
Section Editor
Posts: 102
Joined: 11 Jan 2008

Jeez guys, you're talking like you've never been to a run-of-the mill seance before.

Anton P. Nym
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 1095
Joined: 18 Sep 2007

I'm not big on gonzo journalism, but somehow this piece still worked for me. Still scratching my head about it, but it kept me reading.

-- Steve

Lara Crigger
Contributor
Posts: 68
Joined: 11 Jul 2006

I loved it. Love, love, love. Want to pick out invitations and flower arrangements love. It perfectly captured a specific feeling that I had about four years ago, when I was debating whether or not to leave the sciences to become a professional writer - down to the heated arguments with dead physicists. Sure, it's not exactly the same situation as Colin's - but the feelings and angst I had are right there, mirrored in Feynman's grinning face.

Seriously, awesome job Colin. I can see how this wouldn't speak to everyone, but it definitely spoke to me.

Elwro
Anonymous Source
Posts: 4
Joined: 27 Nov 2007

Frankly, I don't like gaming-related articles here at the Escapist. But I read your newsletter and got tempted by the snippet of this article, which I've subsequently read and liked very much. Nostalgic, funny, smart. Congratulations!

j-e-f-f-e-r-s
Gone Gonzo
Posts: 1750
Joined: 14 Nov 2007

Erm...that was...different.

Seriously though, it's all well and good writing stream-of-consciousness, out there articles, but it would be nice if they had at least some semblance of a point or a message. I come to the Escapist to read high quality stuff, not the mad ramblings of someone who's had one red bull too many.

Finnish(ed)
Copy Clerk
Posts: 70
Joined: 16 Mar 2008

Sublime!

Although the subject matter did not exactly resonate with my current state of mind, I found the article funny as well as refreshing. Challenging the audience is a rare thing these days, when everything is designed for a specific target group or demographic. Challenge means discomfort and people, well they dislike it.

I enjoy anything that has been done with a little bit of originality, intellect and conviction, and this article fits that description.

sharp_as_a_cork
Copy Clerk
Posts: 105
Joined: 12 Oct 2006

While an interesting experiment, this article did not really do it for me. Some of the links are interesting, though (spy bugs are coming!).

incoherent
Paperboy
Posts: 31
Joined: 7 May 2007

Brian Name:
I have no idea what just happened. But it kept me reading the entire time. I liked it.

I... think... it's telling us that our science isn't weird enough. But I'm not positive of that, and I think if I think about it any more it'll ruin the effect.

Fraser.J.A
Beat Writer
Posts: 156
Joined: 17 May 2007

It's not an experiment, it's a distinct style. And it came out interesting, if a little eyebrow-raising. To me, the famous scientist's sassy ghost is old hat, everyday stuff. But the constant mentioning of New Zealand? That was weird.

BTW, I love how the moderators around here are totally lacking in judicial restraint. Fair enough: internet forums are to rudeness what the world of Judge Dredd is to criminal mayhem.

Elwro:
Frankly, I don't like gaming-related articles here at the Escapist.

Huh?

 
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