Editing that episode of MiS reminded me how much joy we derive from doing the show. We always said we'd stop doing it when it stopped being fun - and for a while life was so hectic that neither of us could really find time for it.
We no longer have a website, and won't be uploading our episodes to any platform but soundcloud. We used to have some support in maintaining all these platforms, but we don't anymore, and we decided to just be okay with that!
Heya Pemsqueaks, we have another episode in the can - but it's going to take a bit for us to get it out. Meanwhile, maybe watch the film we reviewed: Nightwing [1979].
Friendly reminder that we don’t run ads and we won’t run your ad! The only ad we’ve ever agreed to air is from the Church of George and that’s only because they supplied the technology required for us to receive dispatches from ourselves 300 years into the future.
Today in "#LandBack, Indigenous Futurisms, and the Climate Crisis," Edward Dunsworth speaks with Molly Swain of @Metis_In_Space.
This interview is part of our "Historians Confront the Climate Emergency" series w/ @ActiveHist & @ClimateHist
https://t.co/uTOpjEJL0Z
#envhist
We aren't trying to present a polished anything, we're trying to capture the moment, and we do. In all its flaws. We're in it for the fun, and we take a very anti-professionalization approach.
So no, we aren't looking for a sound editor, or monetization, or perfection.
Métis in Space is not a professional production, and I love the fact that it has a real soundscape - throughout the seasons you can hear children running around, the bumps and crackles and ums and ahs because that's how we actually talk and live.
I guess we got excited, and recorded a longer episode than usual, but it's been well over a year, what do you expect?
WE'RE BACK, BABY!
https://t.co/lZZJi0sAiD