(Sound Effect – Drum Roll 6 Seconds) 2060, 45 years from now, Oil will begin to drizzle to nothing but a drop, but hey that’s just a statistic… a statistic that can still be changed. Welcome ladies, gentleman and everyone else in between to your weekly dose of Wednesdays with Wato, filled with ground-breaking topics and completely unnecessary sounds (Sound Effect – “Boing” 2 Seconds) that reinstate the J in Journalism. Tonight we’re looking at Dystopic Elements of Speculative Fiction (Sound Effect – “Dinosaur Roar” 3 seconds) Woah, calm down Rexy, 4 Jurassic Park movies is enough. This is Alex Watson, proud host of Triple J’s Hack podcast, hit it Kasey. (Introducition – “Where All Gonna Die Some Day” Kasey Chambers – 15 Seconds) Dystopia in …show more content…
Questioning his existence, Camus said, “The meaning of life is the most urgent of questions, but I continue to believe that this world has no ultimate meaning.” Camus’s enlightened understanding of humanity and wisdom could perhaps be influenced by his recurring bouts with tuberculosis, which forced him to confront the reality of his own mortality. I guess his road had a dead end. (Sound Effect – Burning Tire 2 …show more content…
The Road is a 2006 novel by American writer Cormac McCarthy. It is a post-apocalyptic tale of a journey of a father and his young son over a period of several months, across a landscape blasted by an unspecified cataclysm that has destroyed most of civilization and, in the intervening years, almost all life on Earth. The context of the story is a reflection on humanity’s understanding of time, place and culture. Depicting a barren world that provides us as a species an insight into the road were currently on, every action has a consequence, good things never last. The Author, Cormac McCarthy is an American novelist, playwright, and screenwriter. A writer of 10 novel spanning the Southern Gothic, western, and post-apocalyptic genres, arguably his most successful novel, “The Road” spawned a feature length film and was inspired by real life conversations between him and his son. This provided readers with raw emotion, showing that despite unholy circumstances, a father and a son can still survive… if they look after each