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TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN

Podcast de TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN

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TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN is a companion to those looking to live with purpose, power, and presence... We discuss culture, products, and living a rich life. A show centred around building a life that blends ambition, sophistication, and fulfilment. time2liveagain.substack.com

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15 episodios

episode Dr No by Percival Everett | Frivolity at it's best artwork

Dr No by Percival Everett | Frivolity at it's best

Rating - M for Masterclass “Frivolity at its best” The smartest Bond villain, might be a parody of the very idea of Bond itself, and that’s where Percival Everett has the most fun. 2023’s Dr No isn’t trying to be a great Bond story. It’s something stranger and lighter, and it succeeds so completely that the only sensible critique is: nothing. This is a review that isn’t really a review. I can’t pretend to be objective about a Bond‑adjacent book; I’m too far down the rabbit hole. We also don’t cover bad or mediocre things here. What I can do is talk about a story that lives near 007 and stubbornly refuses to be a Bond book. Spoiler alert: Bond doesn’t show up. At all. He’s only ever glancingly referenced, and the plot touches his world in a way that’s loose enough not to trouble any IP people. The book is stronger for it. Instead, Everett takes what we think we know, tweaks the characters and offers a masterful remix from the perspective of the afterthought: the self‑actualised Black man. Our main character, Wala, lives in that space. He’s not Bond, he’s a reluctant villain after all. He’s also a hero of sorts. Wala doesn’t try to be Bond, and isn’t interested in much. If he shares anything with 007, it’s a kind of mathematical “butt‑kicking ability” that runs under the surface of the story. As readers of my work already know, I’m the Bond fan who actually tries to pay the cost of the lifestyle, not just watch it. So a book that exists in the 007 “world” and gives us interesting Black characters moving through that universe is rare enough to feel almost impossible. Wala may not be Bond, but the villains around him? They are perfectly 007. The plot, in it’s loosest terms: a mathematician, more philosopher than lab‑rat, and a physicist are paid a kingpin’s ransom to help a deliberately blaxploitative villain get into Fort Knox. John Sill. They are in search of “nothing,” which also happens to be Wala’s speciality. Nothing as concept. Nothing as object. Nothing as power. Nothing is powerful here precisely because it is nothing, and that’s the joke the whole book dances around. The story unfolds in a world of limerick, riddle, absurdity, and deliberate literary frivolity. That mode is going to be majorly off‑putting to some readers. The sing-song villain sections remind me of Tolkien. There are spies and government functionaries, including a version of Bill Clinton wandering through the pages. There are explosions. Talking dogs. Dreamy swings into mania. And, most importantly for me, Black angst and self‑questioning set against a backdrop of luxury. The only way this book could resonate more with me is with nothing—more of that empty centre it keeps circling. At the risk of rambling, I’m landing this non‑review right as rumours of Callum Turner stepping into the role of James Bond swirl across the internet. I like Callum for Bond. People have sent me his name in DM’s and ask what I think, and based on what I’ve seen, he’d be a strong choice. He’s engaged to Dua Lipa, who I’d happily keep far away from 007 on screen. Argylle told us most of what we needed to know there. As a potential Bond theme artist, though, that’s a different story. A quick look at the Kanye leaks from Donda tells you she has the range. She has more cultural weight than just “Levitating” on repeat. Interested to read other thoughts on this book and the state of 007. She also did a sharp conversation with Percival Everett that I’d recommend tracking down. It’s part of the same through‑line: the Bond world, and the orbit around it, are expanding. Things are getting weirder, cooler, and less comfortable at the edges. And we’re better for it. It’s not happening in the ways we’d usually expect, or always in ways fans are ready for. But that’s exactly why books like this matter: they show us what happens when you take the trappings of 007 and hand the centre of the story to someone like Wala instead. From the outset, the book signals that this is a fun read, not a light one. The subject matter, the focus that it requires to read certain tricky portions of this book, the subtle jab at Fleming’s depictions of Bond girls. Sedated. Robotic. Solely there as incapable damsels in distress who serve the male gaze and please. Percival Everett knows exactly what he’s doing, he’s tied this entire story into an earlier novel from his bibliography. I haven’t read Glyph yet but that’s next on my list. I’d also recommend the exceptional, White Teeth by Zadie Smith for a less frivolous, lower stakes satirical book tackling adjacent themes. TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN is a reader-supported publication. Subscribe Here Get full access to TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN at time2liveagain.substack.com/subscribe [https://time2liveagain.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

8 de feb de 2026 - 3 min
episode All About Bond artwork

All About Bond

On this instalment of the podcast, we had a little bit of fun with some Bond-adjacent topics… We shared some of our favourite moments from Bond films with style and car shout outs. Covered a cool article from GQ and discussed our dream theme music for Bond 26. Winter Essentials Guide [https://time2liveagain.com/2025/11/17/essential-gear-guide-winter-25/] The Berlin Brief Playlist [https://music.apple.com/gb/playlist/the-berlin-brief/pl.u-EdAVzWWCDbYVBAK] (Apple) + Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5KUAqbAkO9X1Lxf6yHBeov?si=ZbUJDOuqQfO6x1lw4OfqCA] GQ - Rules for Modern Gentlemen [https://www.gq.com/story/gq-125-rules-for-modern-gentlemen-manners-etiquette-guide] Get full access to TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN at time2liveagain.substack.com/subscribe [https://time2liveagain.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

11 de dic de 2025 - 30 min
episode Tragedy as Reset artwork

Tragedy as Reset

Simon’s philosophical work Tragedy, The Greeks, and Us is a book form of years of educating students about Greek thought and how it informs western thinking from when the plays were first invented to now. Simon Critchley writes philosophy like it’s a casual act. He somehow finds the way to make the high tower ideas of texts seem relatable to the everyman. I read this book during the summer of 2025 while going through a divorce, running a business, raising sons, and traveling around in Germany with family. It came at a time when I myself felt like I was not only experiencing personal tragedies to my own ideas of where my life was going but it seemed like a daily occurrence if you looked anywhere online as well. I was a philosophy minor in college and often return to thinkers and texts like a lost lover looking for warm arms to hold me. The recommendation that drew me to this book after reading his book on Mysticism was “Pay attention and you can reinvent your life” by The New Yorker. It’s written on the books cover under the title. Seemed too obvious. A far too simple explanation of this book’s premise is that tragedy is “disorientation” that reorients one to life as what it is. Tragedy itself is disorienting and can spin one out of context. You can be forced into finding your way again which is the work after tragedy. Life has a way of going about on its own. No matter how much habit, practice, creation, will, or even discipline, life has a way of reorienting or disorienting you to the realities of what a day presents. Here are some examples of what I wrote in the margins of the book: “Tragedy can be transitory - a new beginning” “Share what you know of the past.” “How can one stay in the traditional ways of thinking when the tragedies that befall them point to a lack of reasoning?” “Hero = Villain - same coin.” “We are all of us a part of this machine and must acknowledge our place for there to be any foundation that could lead to peace.” “Tragedy is a lie revealing the Truth.” Those were only from the first four chapters. The premise of this book is taking the idea of tragedy in literary form and how the Greeks hold a mirror up to us, “in which we see all the dissolution and illusion of our lives but also the terrifying beauty and intensity of existence.” Tragedy can expose the reality of being alive because it shows us that we can be snuffed out, exposed, or even made weak by the realities of living in a world that regularly seems indifferent to our desires. This book came at a time when most of our world seems thrown into division, despondency, and even outright pathological insanity. I regularly hold an optimistic and even defiant hope that we bend towards justice, but even my somewhat stoic, mystical worldview has fallen victim to the nonsensical happenings of the age we exist in.I’ve had to deal with the shortcomings of a worldview that can’t seem to make sense of so much that makes so little sense. Simon takes a course he has taught in universities for years and makes it somewhat approachable to those who are willing to face the tragedies they witness on a day-to-day basis. We all have seen them. From our social media feeds to our personal lives. From the sprawl of nihilism to how democracy seems to mean nothing at all anymore. It’s very easy to think, feel, and even experience that a lot of this seems pointless. However, the book never lets up in its undying turn of possibilities. Even in plays that are as ancient as Plato, Greek thought, and the birth of tragedy as a written or played out medium. Western thought has absolutely let the world down yet, when have humans not come short? This isn’t some review of a book that signals that there is some larger entity that is yet still guiding it all - it’s more of an acknowledgement that somehow life has the ability to find a way. Even when we are in our darkest moments, we can actually look at whatever experience that is befalling us and decide what to do with it. Even if you or I are heartbroken beyond measure, we can still choose to act with grace or understanding or even goodness because the tragedy of the event itself does not have to define us. I don’t know how to recommend this book outside of sharing a journal entry while I was on a beach in Germany because Tragedy, The Greeks, and Us was at the top of my mind while I was there: 6/20/25 - “The Beach” I just did a 1 ½ front flip for the first time in over 2 years into a river in Germany. Dillon and his friends vaulted me in the air at a nude-friendly beach in Berlin, Germany. I interviewed Brendon this morning while my siblings went to a memorial for the Holocaust. I’ve seen enough of that devastation. I see it daily in Gaza. The world has been a witness to it for over a year. How does one keep living and making things in the face of so much heartache? How can we all see blown-up kids in between ads on social media? I never imagined I would be here - finishing a book about tragedy at the beach and fully alive while also going through a divorce. Life has a way of surprising us even in the times of great joy and great heartache. Life’s experiences of joy and sorrow are like a pretzel. Never just one thing. I’m smoking a cig while writing - I haven’t done this exactly since my late 20s. We got to go backstage at the Palask, which is a world-renowned theatre where my brother Dillon has been performing for the last two years. This is all a gift. I am happy and melancholy and joyous while carrying the weight of sorrow. Maybe this is the point ultimately. To be alive and aware. To be alive while also fully sad with the realities of what it means to be human in a complex, unjust and inhuman world that puts money above all. Tragedy exposes our humanness, and we all are that at the end of the day. The whole idea of Time2LiveAgain is to put into practice that which needs to happen to be fully alive. We are striving to shine a little brighter, to offer alternatives to the gloom, the nihilism, and the despondency that creeps in. This book helped me do just that and if you have the patience, it will reward you too. -Caton Vance Purchase via Amazon : https://amzn.to/4q5kE1j [purchasing via the link above supports our work directly][which is good] - Brendon Get full access to TIME 2 LIVE AGAIN at time2liveagain.substack.com/subscribe [https://time2liveagain.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

10 de dic de 2025 - 6 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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