Dreams Of Future Past

The Thunderbirds, Saving the Future One Disaster at a Time

44 min · 22. apr. 2026
episode The Thunderbirds, Saving the Future One Disaster at a Time cover

Beskrivelse

Before superheroes ruled the screen, there were the Thunderbirds. Debuting in the mid-1960s, Thunderbirds imagined a future where technology wasn’t built for war or profit, but for rescue. With impossibly advanced machines, calm professionalism, and a belief that humanity’s biggest problems could be solved through preparation and cooperation, the show offered a surprisingly optimistic vision of the future at the height of Cold War anxiety. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/thunderbirds/s01 [https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/thunderbirds/s01] Please join Greg, Ian, and McKay as we as we explore a future where saving the day is just another scheduled launch. 5-4-3-2-1, Thunderbirds are Go!

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Dreams Of Future Past-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

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

Alle episoder

16 episoder

episode H.R. Giger, Designing a Future That Feels Alive and Wants You Dead cover

H.R. Giger, Designing a Future That Feels Alive and Wants You Dead

Giger’s vision of the future isn’t something to aspire to, it’s something to survive. H. R. Giger didn’t imagine sleek machines or heroic frontiers, he gave science fiction its nightmares. Emerging from postwar Europe and shaped by Cold War anxiety, Giger’s work channeled subconscious fear rather than optimism. Where Ralph McQuarrie made the future believable, Giger made it predatory. His biomechanical worlds fused flesh and machine, turning bones into architecture and technology into something invasive. In Alien, his Xenomorph terrified a generation with a vision that impacts us today. His work anticipated fears of dehumanizing systems and corporate indifference, where people become components. Join McKay, Ian, and Greg as we explore the artist who turned the future into something visceral, unsettling, and impossible to ignore.

I går37 min
episode Leonardo da Vinci — The Original Futurist cover

Leonardo da Vinci — The Original Futurist

Was Leonardo da Vinci a Renaissance artistor the first true futurist? Living in a world without engines, electricity, or modern materials, Leonardo imagined flying machines, armored vehicles, and robotics centuries before they were possible. As the ultimate polymath, he blurred the line between art and engineering, using observation of nature to design human-centered machines and systems. While he correctly anticipated principles of flight, anatomy, and complex infrastructure, his ideas were limited by the lack of power sources, materials, and manufacturing and his ideas remained only in his notebooks. Yet his legacy endures as the blueprint for curiosity-driven innovation, proving that imagination often arrives long before technology catches up. Please join Greg, Ian, and McKay as we as we explore one of the most inventive and brilliant minds in history, a man who ignored the boundaries between art, science, architecture, and engineering and was sketching the future long before it arrived.

20. maj 202645 min
episode Ralph McQuarrie: Painting the Long, Long Time Ago Future We All Remember cover

Ralph McQuarrie: Painting the Long, Long Time Ago Future We All Remember

Ralph McQuarrie didn’t just imagine the future, he grounded it in dirt, wear, and function, making it believable in a totally new way. In the 1970s, as audiences moved past campy or sterile sci-fi, McQuarrie partnered with George Lucas to create a visual language for Star Wars that felt worn, lived-in, and emotionally real. His designs, X-wings patched together, Darth Vader’s industrial menace, and the Death Star’s authoritarian scale, grounded fantasy in function and history. McQuarrie’s art convinced studios to fund an entire universe, proving that artists don’t just illustrate the future, they can truly bring it to life. Join McKay, Ian, and Greg as we explore the life and work of the visual futurist who created a universe that is still expanding today.

6. maj 202644 min