Bubble (podcast)
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Bubble (podcast)
''Bubble'' is a scripted science fiction podcast produced by Maximum Fun and created by Jordan Morris and Jesse Thorn. The podcast was later adapted into a graphic novel published by First Second Books. Background The podcast was created by Jordan Morris and Jesse Thorn and produced by Maximum Fun. The podcast focuses on a town called Fairhaven, which is situated inside a protective bubble surrounded by wilderness. The protagonist of the story is a woman who grew up outside the bubble named Morgan. Morgan teams up with two guys and starts killing monsters that have gotten inside the bubble for a contracting company. The show is an eight episode satirical science fiction podcast with a sitcom style delivery. Reception Becca James wrote in ''BuzzFeed News'' that the podcast is as "addictive as it is absurd." Laura Jane Standley and Eric McQuade wrote in ''The Atlantic'' that the "sound engineering is appropriately cartoonish." Megh Wright wrote in ''Vulture (website), Vulture ...
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Science Fiction Podcast
A Science fiction podcast (sometimes shortened to sci-fi podcast or SF podcast) is a podcast belonging to the science fiction genre, which focuses on futuristic and imaginative advances in science and technology while exploring the impact of these imagined innovations. Characters in these stories often encounter scenarios that involve space exploration, extraterrestrials, time travel, parallel universes, artificial intelligence, robots, and human cloning. Despite the focus on fictional settings and time periods, science fiction podcasts regularly contain or reference locations, events, or people from the real world. The intended audience of a science fiction podcast can vary from young children to adults. Science fiction podcasts developed out of radio dramas. Science fiction podcasts are a subgenre of fiction podcasts and are distinguished from fantasy podcasts and horror podcasts by the absence of magical or macabre themes, respectively, though these subgenres regularly overlap ...
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