Billede af showet Chongqing Punk

Chongqing Punk

Podcast af Emily and Peter

engelsk

Under​holdning

Begrænset tilbud

2 måneder kun 19 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / månedOpsig når som helst.

  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • Gratis podcasts
Kom i gang

Læs mere Chongqing Punk

They’re stealing from her: her time, her soul, the weather. And no will listen to her. In Chongqing — the cyberpunk city, where the forecast can violently change on a dime — Linda’s looking for answers. And everyone’s pointing to a mysterious figure who makes cryptic, conspiracy-tinged videos: Western Toilet. But is he even real?Subscribe to follow Linda down the rabbit hole, and watch Western Toilet’s actual missives on youtube.com/@ChongqingPunk2026.“Chongqing Punk” is a serialized audio fiction series by Emily Hulme and Peter Sikoski. Keep up with the creators on patreon.com/chongqing_punk.

Alle episoder

14 episoder

episode Linda the Punk — Episode 14 cover

Linda the Punk — Episode 14

TRANSCRIPT Linda hadn’t always been a respectable business owner. In her misspent youth she’d been a dissatisfied hellion, railing against the squares. Nuts Club, 12 years ago, Punk Fest. Subs was playing. SUBS, from Beijing. Beijing sucked too, but Subs was awesome. They were Linda’s favorite band. She wanted to be Kang Mao when she grew up. And she didn’t want to grow up. As two broke kids, Linda and Song An couldn’t afford the tickets. And they were already known at the club. Once Song An stole a bottle of gin from behind the bar. She got kicked out, but somehow managed to hold onto the gin. She and Linda split it over barbecue and got into a spectacular fight. Linda flipped the table and Song An started throwing beer bottles until the boss threatened to call the police. And then they were a team again, running from the assholes. “We could wear disguises,” said Linda, brainstorming ways to get into the show. “No way,” said Song An. “Never hide who you are. Or why bother being anyone at all.” In the end, Linda didn’t remember how they got in — snuck in through the backdoor, or something — but it was the loudest, grimiest, most intense show she’d ever seen. She got Kong Mao to sign her arm after the show and she didn’t wash it off for weeks. Song An tried to tattoo it on with a pen and a needle, “Like they do in prison, or on TV.” Linda withstood the pain for about five pinpricks. That surviving greenish dot looked like a gross birthmark, but Linda knew what it meant. They tried to start a band themselves one summer. Practice involved screaming lyrics at each other while banging on instruments they inherited from friends who had moved on to university or whatever. It was incredible, but they kept getting chased out of their practice space for being too awful. So instead they stole a rusty dumpster from a construction site and made it into a swimming pool for some relief from the hot, hot heat of the summer in Chongqing. It was a wet mess and, frankly, a tetanus risk, but damn if it wasn’t a good party until it fell apart. Linda eventually succumbed to pressure to be respectable. Brian came along and believed in her pizza dreams and Song An faded into the background. At least from Linda’s perspective. Song An could never fade, and don’t let her hear you implying that she could.

10. maj 2026 - 2 min
episode Enter Song An — Episode 13 cover

Enter Song An — Episode 13

Transcript: “Why don’t you go out with the boys,” Brian suggested. “You’re always happier after a little Squatty time.” “Eww. Don’t call it that,” said Linda. “Take a Squat. Work the glutes. Get that ass to grass!” said Brian, demonstrating perfect deep squat form. Linda smiled. “There we go,” said Brian. “I know you’re mad, but ‘mad all the time is a distraction perpetuated by the attention sucker.’” “You’ve been watching Western Toilet!” said Linda. Brian shrugged. “He’s funny.” So Linda got it together and messaged Squatty. He immediately messaged back a location pin and said to meet them there in one hour. It was a quiet street that looked nearly deserted, but down a small alleyway, there was a door that opened into a crowded dance club. In the corner of the room, a tiny young woman wearing giant earphones and homemade jewelry was staring intently into a couple of computer screens, and the people on the dancefloor pulsed along to the beat. How come Linda didn’t know about these places? She’d lived in this city all of her life. She used to be cool. But the boys were living in a whole different world.   Linda drinks. “Your honorarium!” they would say. The DJ played weird stuff and Linda started having fun. She danced with the boys and associated friends and some straight-up strangers. Wendy showed up in an outfit she had designed and sewed herself from vintage fabrics. The music was loud and conversation was impossible. You could just yell things into the party and everyone cheered back. It was that kind of night. “I’m obsessed with a conspiracy that I made up in my own head!” Linda shouted. “Right on!” Wendy shouted back. And for a moment, Linda felt free. Maybe everyone else was right. Instead of getting all worked up about things outside of her control, she should have just gone dancing. She used to love to dance. At 2:30 am, the DJ put on a remix of the Weather Aboveground jingle, “It’s the conversation we’re all having,” chopped and screwed into sonic scrambled eggs. “Throw your vote up on the wall!” the DJ intoned. Everyone projected their watches at the club walls. Cloudy icons filled the room. “This is you!” said Adrian. “The protest vote! You made this happen!” Linda felt sick, “This isn’t me. I’m not protesting; I don’t vote. They’re … stealing your data.” “Oh, yeah. Your thing with your aunt,” Adrian said. “But I mean … who doesn’t have your data. And if I get up to 40,000 Weather Points, I get this sick customizable avatar.” “Well, I wouldn’t want to deprive you of your avatar,” said Linda, with a sarcasm that Adrian missed. A sudden commotion drew the attention of everyone in the room. “Oww, you fucking bitch. You did that on purpose,” A guy was yelling at a woman about Linda’s age. “She shocked me. She has some kind of thing and she shocked me!” “Too right, I shocked you,” said the woman. She had artfully messy hair and impish, wild eyes, and she was wearing rubber slippers.  “Your complacency is killing you.” She shuffled her feet on the floor and thrust her finger at the guy again, menacingly. He jumped back. “Song An?” called Linda. The troublemaker looked over. “Oh, hey Fuck-face! Long time, no see.”

4. maj 2026 - 3 min
episode Lawyer Time — Episode 12 cover

Lawyer Time — Episode 12

Transcript: “You went to Dan-druff?” asked Brian. “That guy! You know he interviewed with us three times.” After sitting on it for a few days, Linda told Brian about her brush with potential cybercrime. He was of the impression that setting her money on fire would have been as effective as paying Stinky Dan for retribution against the “Moldovan hackers.” “Whoever is running these accounts is probably not even in Moldova. You want me to bring it to work? I could do some digging,” offered Brian. “Though I agree with Dan-druff that making a blocklist and getting on with your life is probably the best course of action.” “But, like, they made a macabre puppet of my Aunt Rose,” said Linda. She’d had a few days to think of exactly what bothered her about this. “I know. And that’s shitty,” said Brian. “But it’s happening all over the internet. Maybe you should sue Bleater. Be some kind of landmark case.” Linda knew he was kidding, but this new direction felt like something to do. The world was changed by people taking action, after all. So armed with the list of IP addresses Stinky Dan had compiled, Linda went to see her old college pal Nessa, who had helped her with some of the paperwork for setting up the pizza place. “Linda, it’s family law,” said Nessa when Linda showed up at her office. Nessa was sat at her desk piled high in files and papers, an untouched takeaway container from a lunch that should have been eaten hours ago sitting precariously close to the edge. “I practice family law.” She was dressed in a rumpled nice-ish suit, and her long hair was hastily pulled back with … was that a pencil? Did anyone do that outside of movies about busy lawyers. “You’re the only lawyer I know,” said Linda. “I know,” said Nessa, with a sigh. “I’m the only lawyer everyone knows. Let me poke around, see what I can find that might point you in the right direction. Is there internet law? Get out of here; I’ll let you know if I find anything.” “Just one more question. Would you be able to represent me if I was associated with a cybercrime?” “Jesus Christ, Linda!” “OK. I’m going. Do you want these?” Linda asked, waving the printout of numbers she had brought. “No,” said Nessa. “Put them on … this pile.” Things moved slowly in real life. In an action movie, Linda felt they’d be in some kind of chase scene, shaking down bad guys and getting some answers. In this world, Nessa got back to Linda to say she wasn’t really sure there was anything actionable to prosecute. “I can write you a stern email,” she told her. “But there’s really not much to do here that would be worth the cost of the court filing fees. Unless you want to pioneer a class action suit.” “How would we do that?” asked Linda. “Oh, God! I was kidding!” said Nessa. “I don’t have the resources for that?” Linda was disappointed. She accepted her sternly worded email as a consolation prize, but she didn’t actually have any place to send it. Squatty offered to print it in the next issue of the zine, and that was kind of that. It was very unsatisfying. The weather, meanwhile, continued to be cloudy and cold. After having perfect conditions every day, people were starting to notice and grumble. But to Linda, it felt like a return to normalcy. People should experience some discomfort, she thought. It was good for resilliancy and moral fiber, or something. Anyway, Linda poured all of that dissatisfied energy into working with Squatty and the boys on the zines. She wasn’t sure that her writing was any good, but it was words. Squatty was very encouraging. “Self-expression is the thing!” he said. “It’s what life is made of.”

4. maj 2026 - 3 min
episode That'll show 'em — Episode 11 cover

That'll show 'em — Episode 11

Episode transcript: Stinky Dan was a “hacker” that Squatty knew. He was massive, like a figure drawn by someone who recently learned that the human shape is just a series of different circles, and he hulked behind his mutil-screened desktop. And, he did have a kind of chemical odor that Linda couldn’t quite place. “Is that why he doesn’t live at the squat?” Linda asked Squatty. Squatty smiled tightly, “Everyone is on their own path, and no judgement, but you also have to have your own boundaries, you know? But I think he can help you.” It was the first time Linda had seen Squatty slightly uncomfortable. They had come to Dan’s with Joe, another member of the Squatty crew who seemed to be the actual connection here. Joe and Dan exchanged cryptic hellos that Linda tuned out as peacocking blather. She also thought she saw something change hands during their elaborate high five, but she also, also didn’t care. Squatty and Linda sat on Dan’s fairly nice couch in his fairly dark living room while Dan and Joe hunched over the computer screen. Linda asked if there were any new Western Toilets but Squatty said he didn’t like to watch them when he couldn’t give them his full attention. Joe kept hurling questions over to Linda as they worked. It didn’t take too long for results. Once Dan got down to digging, he found that all of the bleats urging Linda to rejoin “The conversation we’re all having” — they all came from a similar cluster of IP addresses. Which suggested that one person had taken control of the various accounts. “If you look at, say, Sarah’s posting history,” he said of an old neighbor’s daughter’s account, “she stopped posting regularly about 2 years ago. This post here, ‘This place is getting stale. I’ll see you on the Green Mountain!!’” “That’s that platform for all the weenuses,” Joe interjected. “That was May 2030,” continued Dan, without acknowledging Joe. “And then she doesn’t post again until a few weeks ago. ‘Have you dabbed, yet?! Don’t miss Beany Beanz,’ with a ‘z.’” “Beany Beanz is so based,” said Joe. “Don’t click that link,” warned Dan. “Beany Beanz is malware dressed up as cryptocurrency.” “That’s what I meant,” said Joe. “I mean, that sounds bad, but what does this have to do with someone impersonating my dead aunt Rose?” asked Linda. Dan summed up his findings: “It’s bots. Someone has taken control of these dead … sorry, abandoned accounts to hawk shit to idiots, and someone else hired out these accounts that have a connection to you to target you.” Dan said that he could set up a blocklist of the IP addresses, so that Linda didn’t have to see them anymore. “Or you could join your friend Sarah on Green Mountain, where most people are now anyway.” “But, like, can you get them?” Linda asked, feeling both bored and enraged by what was happening to her. “What do you mean ‘get’ and who do you mean by ‘them’” Dan asked. “Is it Button? I know it’s Button,” said Linda. “This IP address is in Moldova,” said Dan, like that meant anything. “So do your little clicky clacks and find out who it is in Moldova!” she said. They had spoofed her aunt’s account, or whatever, and Aunt Rose had been Linda’s favorite. Desecrating her memory should come with some consequences. “What if I really did think it was her ghost?” Linda was on the verge of tears, which had made Joe retreat to the kitchen. Dan just shrugged his shoulders. “If you wanted to monetize this solution, we could talk next steps.” Squatty put his hand gently on Linda’s shoulder. “Maybe let’s get some fresh air before we put any money down on … something we might regret.” “You came to me, these are the tools I have, man,” said Dan. Linda was shaken out of her rage by the quickly escalating tension and let Squatty bundle her out of Dan’s apartment. But she filed away “next steps,” just in case. Keep up with us on YouTube [http://www.youtube.com/@ChongqingPunk2026] and Patreon [http://www.patreon.com/chongqing_punk].

14. mar. 2026 - 3 min
episode Fun and games with mustaches — Episode 10 cover

Fun and games with mustaches — Episode 10

Episode transcript: After hanging out long enough, the kids started inviting Linda along for what they liked to call their “small acts of pointless rebellion.” “Purposlessness is a great joy of life,” said a young woman with short, purple hair called Wendy, who seemed to be the ringleader for this faction of the crew. “Is that a Western Toilet?” asked Linda. Wendy rolled her eyes, “No. It’s a me.” Squatty just laughed and said, “You know she’s cool, because she’s kind of mean.” The acts were stuff like, one afternoon, they went around the neighborhood and taped little paper mustaches to the face scanning screens at all the apartment complexes. Mostly, if the security guards noticed them, they yelled them off. One even gave half-assed chase. But more than one amused themself by examining their own mustachioed face in the screen. “Is this what changing minds feels like?” Linda asked Wendy. “God. Have you never taken an art history course,” Wendy responded. She snapped her fingers at an, well, underling, who rummaged through her backpack. Wendy peered in over her shoulder. “Give her ‘Grapefruit,”’ said Wendy. The underling hefted a large hardcover into Linda’s hands. Linda examined the spine. “By Yoko Ono. … I notice this ones not from the library.” “No,” said Wendy. “I stole it. From Garden Book in Shanghai.” “What if I steal it from you?” asked Linda. “You should,” said Wendy. “And then give it to someone else who needs art in their life.” Another evening, the gang snuck up to the roof of a nearby abandoned building to add to the graffiti that was already there. Some brought chalk, some brought spray paint. Linda brought a permanent marker. She didn’t know what to draw, so she pulled up to a section of wall and just started making small squares. Wendy came over with a beer for Linda. “Nice geometry,” she said. “I can’t draw,” said Linda. “Everyone can draw,” said Wendy. “Everyone keeps saying that, but I don’t know if that’s true,” said Linda. “Suit yourself,” said Wendy. A small circle of drinkers coalesced in the middle of the roof. Adrian called Linda over to sit by him. There were no stars, but it was a peaceful night. Noise of the city drifted up from below, sounding a thousand miles away. “Do you guys do stuff life this every night?” asked Linda. “More recently,” said the underling who had given Linda the book. She was called Danny. “I think we’ve been energized by the new blood,” added Adrian. “Oh, who’s that?” asked Linda. “It’s you!” said Adrian. The small circle toasted Linda, “To new blood!” Linda felt warm and happy. Recounting this to Brian later in bed, he remarked that she seemed happier lately. “And, like, your sleep numbers are better, too. Wanna check the graphs?” He offered his watch to Linda. “Nah. I feel like you’ve got a good handle on our bio-metric optimization,” Linda teased. “Hey. When we’re sixty, but we feel thirty, you’re gonna thank me,” he said. Linda hauled her laptop on to the bed. “Babe, the blue light,” Brian said. “I’m just checking my bleats real quick. I’ve got the polarizer on,” said Linda. Brian tugged down his eye shade and slipped on his sleep-vibrations ring. “Good sleep makes good brains,” he said. Linda didn’t answer. She refreshed the tab that would bring up new messages, barely even registering the slowness of the browser-based social experience. Among the posts of vacation photos and video news — both of which were too depressing to engage with for long — there was a new bleat urging Linda to “Come back! It’s the conversation we’re all having!” She had been getting these lately, from old acquaintances. A college classmate she had fallen out of touch with. A friend of a friend she had met once at a party. An overzealous grocery store clerk who got Linda’s contact info before Brian had enlightened her on proper information hygiene. This one, though, was her aunt Rose. Her aunt Rose had died 8 months ago. Keep up with us on YouTube [http://www.youtube.com/@ChongqingPunk2026] and Patreon [http://www.patreon.com/chongqing_punk].

7. mar. 2026 - 3 min
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
Podimo er blevet uundværlig! Til lange bilture, hverdagen, rengøringen og i det hele taget, når man trænger til lidt adspredelse.

Vælg dit abonnement

Mest populære

Begrænset tilbud

Premium

20 timers lydbøger

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo

  • Ingen reklamer i podcasts fra Podimo

  • Opsig når som helst

2 måneder kun 19 kr.
Derefter 99 kr. / måned

Kom i gang

Premium Plus

100 timers lydbøger

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo

  • Ingen reklamer i podcasts fra Podimo

  • Opsig når som helst

Prøv gratis i 7 dage
Derefter 129 kr. / måned

Prøv gratis

Kun på Podimo

Populære lydbøger

Kom i gang

2 måneder kun 19 kr. Derefter 99 kr. / måned. Opsig når som helst.