The War of the Worlds on Podcast: How H.G. Wells and Orson Welles Riveted A Nation

Today, by pop­u­lar demand, we’re run­ning an updat­ed ver­sion of one of our more pop­u­lar posts to date. Enjoy…

At has­tened speeds dur­ing the past year, we have seen book lovers record­ing home­grown audio­books and post­ing them on sites like Lib­rivox (see our col­lec­tion of free audio­books here). For obvi­ous copy­right rea­sons, these audio texts large­ly come from the pub­lic domain, and, yes, they’re some­times of uneven qual­i­ty. Some good, some okay. Among the recent releas­es, you’d expect to find great clas­si­cal works — the major plays by Shake­speare, the essen­tial trea­tis­es by Pla­to and oth­er philoso­phers, etc. — and you do get some of those. How­ev­er, far more often you get texts by more mod­ern writ­ers who wrote with­in the thriller, sci fi and adven­ture gen­res. Here, I’m talk­ing about Wash­ing­ton Irv­ing, Robert Louis Steven­son, Edgar Allen Poe, Arthur Conan Doyle, and H.G. Wells. (Find these pod­casts here.)

It seems rather fit­ting that Wells, the father of sci­ence fic­tion, would be among the first to have his writ­ings dig­i­tal­ly record­ed and dis­trib­uted. Nowa­days, you can down­load, sync and lis­ten to his major works – The New Accel­er­a­tor (mp3), The Invis­i­ble Man (iTunes — feed), The Time Machine (iTunes — feed), and The War of the Worlds (iTunes). But what’s bet­ter than all of this, at least in our minds, is this vin­tage gem …

Here you can down­load the ver­sion of The War of the Worlds that Orson Welles famous­ly adapt­ed and aired on nation­al radio in Octo­ber 1938. Pre­sent­ed so that it sound­ed like an actu­al news broad­cast, the Orson Welles ver­sion was mis­tak­en for truth by many lis­ten­ers who caught the pro­gram mid­stream (more info here), and, soon enough, they found them­selves flee­ing an unfold­ing Mar­t­ian inva­sion, run­ning down into their base­ments with guns cocked and ready to fire. You can catch the mp3 ver­sion of the famous Welles record­ing here (and also alter­na­tive­ly here). Have fun with this broad­cast. It’s a clas­sic.

Relat­ed con­tent: For more old time, sci-fi radio broad­casts, check out this nice col­lec­tion on iTunes.

Also see: Vin­tage Radio Archive: The Lone Ranger, Abbott & Costel­lo, and Bob Hope

Sub­scribe to Our Feed and peruse our col­lec­tion of Free Audio­book Pod­casts

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Pirating The Long Tail: The Audio Book Dilemma

Longtail See Open Cul­ture’s col­lec­tion of Audio Book Pod­casts.

Let us quick­ly excerpt from the lat­est blog entry by Chris Ander­son, the author of the best-sell­ing
busi­ness book (and now over-used expres­sion), The Long Tail. This is Chris speak­ing:

“I know I should­n’t say this, but I’m frankly delight­ed to see that my book has been pirat­ed and is avail­able on Bit­tor­rent. (Pre­sum­ably this is the audio book ver­sion, even though it claims to be an “ebook”, which I was­n’t aware exist­ed).

My pub­lish­ers want to make mon­ey, and I like them so I usu­al­ly do what it
takes to keep them hap­py, but in truth I just want to be read/listened
to by the largest num­ber of peo­ple. Leave it to me to fig­ure out how to
con­vert that rep­u­ta­tion­al cur­ren­cy into cash –just get me in front of the biggest audi­ence and I’ll do the rest…

As Tim O’Reil­ly puts it, “Obscu­ri­ty is a far greater threat to authors and cre­ative artists than pira­cy”.

Of the near­ly 200,000 books pub­lished last year, only about 2,000 (1%)
made any mon­ey for any­one. The rest of them were pub­lished for oth­er
rea­sons, which range from mar­ket­ing con­sult­ing ser­vices to sim­ple
expres­sion. Out­side of a rel­a­tive hand­ful of celebri­ty authors and
self-help ped­dlers, almost nobody writes books for a liv­ing.

As for my own book, I imag­ine that approx­i­mate­ly zero (give or take a few dozen) peo­ple who would have oth­er­wise bought the prop­er audio book ver­sion will put up with the incred­i­bly slow down­load required to pirate it (cur­rent­ly five days, accord­ing to my Bit­tor­rent client)…

But all that said, I have mixed feel­ing about pur­pose­ly dis­trib­ut­ing a free
audio­book in its cur­rent incar­na­tion (the pirat­ed ver­sion on Bit­torent
isn’t going to mat­ter one way or anoth­er). On one hand, I think that
zero-mar­gin­al costs ought to result in zero price. On the oth­er, this
is not an infe­ri­or ver­sion serv­ing as mar­ket­ing for a supe­ri­or
experience–for peo­ple who like audio­books, it is the expe­ri­ence. As such it real­ly does appear to be a replace­ment for the CD/Audible.com ver­sion. Hype­r­i­on put a lot of mon­ey into pro­duc­ing that audio­book and they deserve a return. I’m con­fi­dent that a free ebook would sell more of the print ver­sions, but I’m less sure that peo­ple would buy a dig­i­tal audio­book if there was a free ver­sion cir­cu­lat­ing wide­ly online.

Any for­ward-think­ing book indus­try folks out there who want to explore the eco­nom­ics of this a bit fur­ther with me?”

In read­ing his post, sev­er­al ques­tions came to mind. Who knew that writ­ing books had become such a depress­ing propo­si­tion, an exer­cise in cre­at­ing loss lead­ers? And how hard did some VP at Hype­r­i­on (the pub­lish­er of Ander­son­’s audio book) swal­low when see­ing Chris pub­li­cize, even take some delight in dis­cov­er­ing, a pirat­ed ver­sion of their audio book prod­uct?

Ander­son­’s com­men­tary under­scores an impor­tant prob­lem in the audio book mar­ket. Where­as Lawrence Lessig and Cory Doc­torow have demon­strat­ed that tra­di­tion­al book sales can be stim­u­lat­ed by mak­ing avail­able free dig­i­tal copies of the work (read: e‑books), there’s no par­al­lel in the audio book mar­ket. Dig­i­tal copies of audio books, pirat­ed ver­sions or oth­er­wise, pret­ty much only lead to can­ni­bal­iza­tion of the orig­i­nal audio books. Pira­cy presents a prob­lem for the indus­try. And it’s all exac­er­bat­ed by the fact that audio book prices are almost illog­i­cal­ly high. Con­sid­er this: Although the main virtue of the inter­net is that it low­ers the cost of deliv­er­ing infor­ma­tion-based goods, and allows for prices to come down in kind, the audio book ver­sion of the Long Tail runs $31.95 on iTunes and $27.99 on Audi­ble, which com­pares very poor­ly to the $16.47 that you pay for the paper copy on Ama­zon. This skewed pric­ing struc­ture not only sti­fles demand, but also cre­ates an incen­tive for knock-offs, leav­ing the audio book world in a bind. At this point, the audio book indus­try should have every incen­tive to do some­thing cre­ative with the dig­i­tal tools avail­able to it, much as the music indus­try has done over the past sev­er­al years. We’ll keep an eye on whether any for­ward-think­ing pub­lish­ers take up Ander­son­’s invi­ta­tion to sort this one out.

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New Italian and German Audio Lessons (Plus English as a Second Language)

Here’s a good catch by one of our read­ers: The folks at Radio Lin­gua

Inter­na­tion­al, who pro­duce the very pop­u­lar pod­cast, “Cof­fee Break Span­ish,” haven’t wast­ed their momen­tum. They have recent­ly released two new pod­casts that will help you learn Ital­ian (iTunes Feed Web Site) and Ger­man (iTunes Feed Web Site). Each pod­cast teach­es you smalls bits of the lan­guage over the course of 20 weeks, giv­ing you the vocab­u­lary you’ll need to trav­el around Italy and Ger­many and get the most out of it.

Mean­while, it’s worth men­tion­ing that our col­lec­tion of ESL pod­casts is get­ting a bit rich­er. Here are the titles that you’ll now find:

To learn more lan­guages, please vis­it Learn Lan­guages for Free: Span­ish, Eng­lish, Chi­nese & Beyond.

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New Cory Doctorow Book Available for Free Download (Under Creative Commons)

Overclocked_2A cou­ple weeks ago, we told you about
45 recent­ly pub­lished books, most of them of very high
qual­i­ty, that you can down­load for free under a Cre­ative Com­mons license. Giv­en the exu­ber­ant response to that post, it seemed worth men­tion­ing that Cory Doc­torow — the sci-fi author, Boing­Bo­ing blog­ger, and advo­cate of open­ing up copy­right restric­tions — is now releas­ing a new col­lec­tion of short sto­ries called Over­clocked. As usu­al, you can buy the book, down­load the short sto­ries for free, or do both. It’s your call. He fig­ures he’ll win either way. And, by the way, you can freely down­load the rest of Doc­torow’s books here.

Now, final­ly, it’s worth point­ing out that the Boing­Bo­ing (iTunes — feed) crowd has a pod­cast worth check­ing out. The lat­est episode — the first 10 min­utes, in fact — gives you some of Doc­torow’s thoughts on what the future of e‑books looks like, the pros and cons, etc.  Cer­tain­ly worth a lis­ten. Enjoy.


Apple Warns iPod Users Against Using Vista … For Now

Itunesimage_1Here’s a quick warn­ing for our read­ers who enjoy lis­ten­ing to pod­casts on iPods.

From CNET:

“Apple has warned Win­dows users run­ning its iTunes soft­ware that they should wait for its next update before upgrad­ing their PCs to Microsoft­’s new Win­dows Vista oper­at­ing sys­tem.

The Cuper­ti­no, Calif.-based com­pa­ny cit­ed a vari­ety of com­pat­i­bil­i­ty issues that may cause fric­tion between the media play­er soft­ware, its accom­pa­ny­ing iPod play­er, and Vista. Among these prob­lems is an inabil­i­ty to play music or video pur­chased from the iTunes Store, prob­lems syn­chro­niz­ing address book con­tact and cal­en­dar func­tions, and slowed run­time. Addi­tion­al­ly, there is a chance that plug­ging an iPod into a com­put­er run­ning Vista may cor­rupt the device.”

Click here to read the full arti­cle.


A Brief Audio History of Iraq


FlagiraqDespite being 4 years into the Iraq war, most Amer­i­cans still could­n’t tell you very much about the
his­tor­i­cal back­ground of the coun­try in which we’ve invest­ed so much. Iraq will be with us for a good long time, so it would­n’t hurt to spend 30 min­utes get­ting famil­iar with the broad brush strokes his­to­ry of the frac­tured nation, espe­cial­ly since the past holds clues as to why this cam­paign nev­er went as smooth­ly as some first antic­i­pat­ed.

In this audio seg­ment from The Leonard Lopate Show (iTunes — Feed — Web Site), Bar­ry Lan­do, a for­mer inves­tiga­tive reporter for 60 Min­utes and the author of a new book on Iraq, gives a half-hour overview of Iraq’s his­to­ry — of how the British fash­ioned an inde­pen­dent nation in 1932 out of the frag­ments of the Ottoman Empire, and how, from there, the des­tiny of this arti­fi­cial meld­ing of three eth­nic groups has been con­stant­ly inter­twined with the for­eign pol­i­cy ambi­tions of Eng­land, Rus­sia, and even­tu­al­ly the Unit­ed States, which, of course, leads us to today.

P.S. You may want to check out Lan­do’s blog, and, on the lighter side, and espe­cial­ly if you’re bummed by the whole Iraq affair, you may want to take a look at Lan­do’s recent appear­ance on The Col­bert Report:

 

NPR’s Fresh Air Now Available as a Podcast

A quick fyi: As of this week, Fresh Air, the pop­u­lar pro­gram host­ed by Ter­ry Gross, is now avail­able as a free pod­cast on iTunes or via feed. Along with Fresh Air, NPR has just issued many oth­er new pod­cast offer­ings, includ­ing Xeni Tech, a dai­ly pro­gram fea­tur­ing Boing­Bo­ing blog­ger Xeni Jardin, who explores the inter­sec­tion between tech­nol­o­gy and con­tem­po­rary cul­ture (iTunes — Feed). For the com­plete list­ing of NPR pod­casts, see this web page or vis­it NPR’s main page on iTunes.


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Book Talks on Demand

Okay, this prob­a­bly won’t be our high­est rat­ed post ever. We’ll con­cede that. There’s noth­ing chic
and hip about C‑SPAN. But there’s some good sub­stance here, and sub­stance is what we’re about first and fore­most. So give us the ben­e­fit of the doubt for a moment.

C‑SPAN’s Book-TV lets you stream videos of talks, long and sub­stan­tive ones, giv­en by most­ly seri­ous authors. You can catch Pres­i­dent Jim­my Carter talk­ing about his new con­tro­ver­sial book, Pales­tine Peace Not Apartheid (plus Alan Der­show­itz’s response); Niall Fer­gu­son, the Har­vard his­to­ri­an, speak­ing on his recent work, The War of the World: Twen­ti­eth-Cen­tu­ry Con­flict and the Descent of the West; Howard Zinn, anoth­er his­to­ri­an, dis­cussing his col­lec­tion of essays, A Pow­er Gov­ern­ments Can­not Sup­press; and Adri­an Goldswor­thy giv­ing a talk on his new biog­ra­phy, Cae­sar: Life of a Colos­sus. For a com­plete list of book talks, click here.

In many ways, C‑SPAN’s offer­ing is no dif­fer­ent in qual­i­ty or sub­stance from the video ser­vices offered by FORA.TV and Prince­ton’s Uni­ver­si­ty Chan­nel — two oth­er high-qual­i­ty ser­vices that we like and have pre­viewed here before. If you can set aside your gen­er­al impres­sion of C‑SPAN — your mem­o­ries of the unedit­ed, end­less talks from the Sen­ate floor that lead to nowhere — you’ll find enlight­ened video here that’s well worth your lim­it­ed time.


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Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.