My Weird Prompts

Warm Absurdism: The Genre Daniel Actually Loves

35 min · Gestern
Episode Warm Absurdism: The Genre Daniel Actually Loves Cover

Beschreibung

Daniel is back with more data. He loves Waiting for Godot, Vanilla Sky, The Matrix, and Inception — but can't get into Severance and dislikes sci-fi. What's the through-line? Corn and Herman build a full taste profile, naming the genre "absurdist humanism" and recommending across film, literature, and philosophy. From Charlie Kaufman to Jorge Luis Borges, Kafka to Brazil, they trace the threads of warm absurdist work that uses impossible premises to explore deeply human longings — and why Severance's cold aesthetic misses the mark.

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Episode The Dewey Decimal System for Things That Go Boom Cover

The Dewey Decimal System for Things That Go Boom

How do you prove a cluster munition was used when every country calls it something different? This episode unpacks the hidden scaffolding of arms control: the UN Munitions Reference System (MRS), the MTCR equipment annex for missile technology, the Chemical Weapons Convention schedules, and the UN Register of Conventional Arms. We explore how each taxonomy was built for a different purpose—monitoring, export control, trade transparency, or humanitarian clearance—and why getting the definition exactly right can mean the difference between a sanctions violation and a diplomatic stalemate. From the 300 km / 500 kg threshold for nuclear-capable missiles to the Schedule system that balances chemical weapons control with industrial production, these classification systems shape every arms control conversation you've ever read about.

Gestern32 min