corianderseed
Corianderseed
corianderseed

Any hope for an international cast? Trailer made it look like a great big bunch of Americans again.

That was awesome. Delighted that they found “havering”.

I went to see Ghost Stories a couple of years ago. Absolutely loved it.

If io9 is covering audio drama podcasts now, keep an eye on the #audiodramasundays Twitter hashtag.

Nonsense! I’m a 29 and pretty sure I’m male.

Aww no, Jason Isaacs is playing American! Who’s going to be the token Brit now?

The French call it “leaving like an English person”.

Round these parts, “purse” is what you put small change in.

The Broadway transfer, not adaptation. It started in the West End.

“actors are vain and dumb people who will leap at ANY chance to do a British or Irish accent” 

Saw Lithgow at the National Theatre a few years ago in a Victorian farce they had on for Christmas. He was very good.

It’s showing on Amazon Prime in the UK. Any good?

We don’t get Starz in Not-America but I am having a lovely time watching it on Amazon Prime.

I love the book. It’s one of my favourites. Both characters in the articles I mentioned are new characters.

This and the Vulcan headline are pretty big spoilers. Any chance of a little more shielding in future episodes? I’m enjoying this show so much.

Son of Marvel

There’s a lot happening in genre audio drama at the minute, especially in podcasting. Look out for The Bright Sessions or Uncanny County, and Radio Drama Revival is a great podcast drama introduction medium.

I would love to watch American Gods. Amazon has not made it available in my country.

An Unknown. An Unknown. An Unknown.

Give me a forty year old actress working hard on three jobs trying to work out if she can still afford to do this when all the work’s gone to Names in the last 20 years. Give me a grafter in their mid to late sixties who everyone thinks is excellent until a Name walks into the

Tip with Pratchett: If you have access to an e-reader, do a search for the word “is” to find him being philosophical. Pratchett writes stories in the past tense; present tense tends to be observational.