Today's show consists of What's In The News, TV Talk, and an Old Fashioned Radio Reading of "Animal Farm."
Showing posts with label George Orwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Orwell. Show all posts
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Verbal Vomit: Animal Farm Gets Psyched
Verbal Vomit Episode 2! Landon and Rebecca are back for their weekly podcast.
Today's show consists of What's In The News, TV Talk, and an Old Fashioned Radio Reading of "Animal Farm."
Today's show consists of What's In The News, TV Talk, and an Old Fashioned Radio Reading of "Animal Farm."
Labels:
Animal Farm,
George Orwell,
News,
Psych,
Radio,
Spitwads,
TV Talk,
Verbal Vomit
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
1984
"1984" by George Orwell
War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. Doublethink. Big Brother. George Orwell does what he does best and creates a startling world where the reader is submerged in interesting political and social statements. A disturbing dystopian future where The Party controls everything. The Party is never wrong. If they said something that did not come to pass, then the statement would be changed to match what happened. The Party is never wrong. Big Brother controls the past. What is truth? Is it what you remember happening, or is it what Big Brother tells you. If Big Brother says 2+2=5, then 2+2=5. Telescreens and microphones are everywhere; two-way devices that allow Big Brother to watch and listen to you every minute of every day. The world is in constant war. The Thought Police strictly enforce thoughtcrime.
The book is very well written, and has had a big impact on today's literature (dystopian novels are very popular now with the recent Hunger Games). For some reason, I didn't seem to enjoy this novel nearly as much as Orwell's Animal Farm. I would recommend Animal Farm over 1984 if you were to choose only one Orwell novel to read. 1984 is definitely worth a visit, even though it is full of war, torture, and deceit.
And that is How Lou Sees It.
War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. Doublethink. Big Brother. George Orwell does what he does best and creates a startling world where the reader is submerged in interesting political and social statements. A disturbing dystopian future where The Party controls everything. The Party is never wrong. If they said something that did not come to pass, then the statement would be changed to match what happened. The Party is never wrong. Big Brother controls the past. What is truth? Is it what you remember happening, or is it what Big Brother tells you. If Big Brother says 2+2=5, then 2+2=5. Telescreens and microphones are everywhere; two-way devices that allow Big Brother to watch and listen to you every minute of every day. The world is in constant war. The Thought Police strictly enforce thoughtcrime.
The book is very well written, and has had a big impact on today's literature (dystopian novels are very popular now with the recent Hunger Games). For some reason, I didn't seem to enjoy this novel nearly as much as Orwell's Animal Farm. I would recommend Animal Farm over 1984 if you were to choose only one Orwell novel to read. 1984 is definitely worth a visit, even though it is full of war, torture, and deceit.
And that is How Lou Sees It.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

