Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - "7000 horses are being flown across space..." - Cautionary Questions #2
Episode Date: September 29, 2023Why are board games so popular in Germany? What’s Tim Harford’s top tip for productivity? And where do all those sound effects come from? Tim is joined by Cautionary Tales’ very own wizard of so...und Pascal Wyse, to read your emails and answer your questions.Do you have a question for Tim? Please email any queries you might have, however big or small, to tales@pushkin.fm.Please note that some emails in this episode have been edited for length.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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Tim here, if you're interested in exploring the unexpected turns of bookish fiascos for
the biggest changes in the book world today, then you should check out the chart-topping
podcast, Missing Pages, which just returned for a brand new season.
Namely, Must Listen in 2022 by the Washington Post and the Guardian, Missing Pages lives
up to the hype, including this second season.
Produced by the award-winning firm, The Podglomerate,
missing pages aims to set the record straight
on the publishing industry's hot button topics.
From the rise of Colleen Hoover
and bookbans across America,
to the idea of who owns what in fan fiction.
Host and acclaimed literary critic, Bethan Patrick investigates it all.
Not to mention, you'll hear from notable guests,
such as New York Times, Best Selling Author, Jodie Pico,
and Publishers Weekly's Jim Million.
So go ahead, follow missing pages today
on Apple podcasts or wherever you're listening.
where ever you're listening. Pushkin. Hello and welcome to our second cautionary questions episode.
I'm Tim Haferd, you are our loyal listeners, you have sent in your questions and we are
going to try to provide some answers.
This episode I am delighted to be joined by composer, sound designer, representative of
you, our listeners, representative of the people.
Pascal Wise.
Pascal.
Hello Tim.
This is very exciting, isn't it?
It's so exciting because you were with cautionary tales
from the beginning.
Do you remember when we sat down in
my producer, Ryan's apartment?
In his apartment, yeah.
And we just, we talked about airships
and what are airships going to sound like?
What's the music and sound like?
Yeah, and then I went off to record a hairdryer
or something, you know, whatever was required.
I feel like I've been, I'm like a kid and then I went off to record a hairdryer or something, you know, whatever was required.
It's, I feel like I've been, I'm like a kid
who's been allowed onto the, into the cockpit for this episode.
Although, I think it's head that,
that's a really bad sort of analogy,
because we did an episode.
Yeah, no, I didn't, and it didn't go well at all.
So that's how we, you've set the bar low there.
That's good.
So hopefully we're not going to crash on this one. On our last Q&A episode with Jacob Goldstein, we invited people to tell us what they
thought of cautionary conversations.
So what about the episodes where we're not doing a fully mixed, fully composed, narrated
story, but we're doing something else,
like having this kind of conversation
or talking to an author.
And we've got a lot of opinions, a lot of feedback.
So Pascal, you've got some of them in front of you.
Yes, now Tim, for this, I would like you...
It's been a bit of an exercise for you.
I want you to imagine that there's a bowl of chocolates
in front of us, okay?
Okay. You got that in mind of us, okay? Okay.
You got that in mind?
I'm liking that already.
I don't want to stress your imaginative skills.
Because Ruth Ware.
Alice R. Producer is telling us it is the Ruth Ware, the novelist.
Okay, that had not hit my radar.
Well, she sent a great email in with a little analogy for us.
I do enjoy the cautionary interviews.
Some more than others, depending on the person
you're speaking to, but I think perhaps the issue is they're quite a different pleasure
from the cautionary tales. I'm sure I'm not the only podcast addict who gets a pleasurable
little ping of dopamine when I see there's a new episode of my favourite podcast, but that
can turn into slight disappointment when it's not what
you are expecting. I suppose it's a bit like picking your way through a box of chocolates
and going, chocolate, chocolate, chocolate, olive. I mean, I like olives. I like them a lot.
But if I've been promised a chocolate, I may not be in the best frame of mind to enjoy
the olive. There you go. I could have offered you a bowl of olives, but I went chocolate.
You can tell she's an oveless, can't you? Thank you so much Ruth.
Yeah.
What I've been trying to do when a cautionary conversation appears is I try to make it seem a little bit like a cautionary tale.
I try and write a little bit of narrative up at the front to make it seem as close as possible to the original.
It's a really good point, isn't it, about expectation?
I mean, I really recognize that sort of dopamine hit,
which of course, all our technology at the moment
seems to be entirely based on.
Yeah.
So maybe we should be teaching people to resist.
You should enjoy the olive.
Yeah.
Don't be controlled by the steady flow of chocolate.
We invited people to keep writing in about this question
of the cautionary conversations versus the full-fledged cautionary tales
and all the thoughts.
Definitely. We've had a really good response, actually.
And obviously, that one is pointing to the idea that we should flag this up.
Again, dopamine management.
Other people, like Nadha and Sandra,
they were very keen on the traditional episodes
with full sound design, full stop.
They love those and didn't really want
the conversation episodes.
Yeah, fair enough.
And then there are lots of listeners
who are just very happy with the current setup.
Kira says, all of your episodes are thoroughly enjoyable
and incredibly enlightening.
She's so wise.
Ed Midden from Arlington, Chimes With, while I'm always interested in a good story and a lesson,
I also find it very interesting to learn about the storyteller.
Context matters.
I'm getting to know more about the world around you, helps me better understand caution retails.
Okay, so it is a, it's like a mixed box chocolate,
any others?
Yeah, Sammy Maclinon,
and I hope I'm pronouncing that somewhere in the ballpark.
Maclinon maybe?
Maclinon, yeah.
We apologize to everyone who's name we're mangling.
We do our best.
Sammy went to the trouble of making as a chart.
He will love Tim, because you love a chart, then. Yeah, I've seen the that. Sammy went to the trouble of making as a chart. He will love Tim because you love a chart.
I've seen the charts.
Tell me the other chart.
So, as far as I understand that,
I think you will probably have a deeper understanding than me.
But it shows how the conversational format has grown
over the life of the podcast.
Yeah, so I enjoyed Sammy's graph, Alice sent it on to me.
What Sammy did was to show what proportion of the show is
now cautionary conversations rather than cautionary tales, which is fair enough. That's a question
to ask. But for me, I would also have liked to have seen just the absolute number of cautionary
tales. But I think I have it, I think I have it from memory. So in 2019, we did eight. In 2020, I think we did six. In 2021, I think we did 16. And
in 2022, I think we probably did 18. So we're trying to do 20 a year now of the fully fledged fully mixed and the aim is to get something out every two weeks
So obviously 20 doesn't quite cover it so then you would need these
Conversations that we're having now you and I the Q&A episodes some reruns some cautionary conversations
Otherwise, I'm just gonna fall over yeah
Yeah, I mean yeah because you got I mean I can't write them
Andrew of course Andrew right right some of the episodes fall over. Yeah, but I mean, yeah, because you got I mean, I can't write them. Andrew,
of course, Andrew, write, write some of the episodes. There's a limit to how much he can write.
There's a limit to how much I can write. There's a limit to how much you can compose and mix.
So really the the choice is not, could we have some more cautionary tales instead of these
cautionary conversations? Sorry, we can't write any more cautionary tales about 20 years
about the limit. The question is, would you like some cautionary conversations on top of those?
Or not?
Thanks everyone for writing in.
I mean, I acknowledge that everyone who bothered to write in, they'll have their own
view, and they wrote in in response to a conversation episode, a Q&A episode, so people who despise
such episodes won't even be around to respond.
And then, you know, there's more jazz in it for you, isn't there, in terms of when you get someone else
in the studio, there's more of an improvisation,
you're being pulled in different ways.
The others are written and set,
and you know, we know what's coming,
whereas it's really interesting to hear different brains
and different brains interacting with you
and encouraging the conversation in different directions.
Yeah, it's a different thing.
Now, let's move on to D&D.
Of course, Dungeons & Dragons, why not?
The look of excitement and relief on your face.
I used to play D&D, and I can't remember too much about it.
Other than that, it did have an 18th-level monk.
Does that mean anything to you?
It doesn't mean something to me, but I mean, you say you used to play D&D.
I've played D&D twice in
June and we're recording this conversation in July so
Yeah, I'm not taking on. I am a current player. Are you a dungeon master? Sometimes I'm a dungeon master
So the dungeon master for the people who don't know is the kind of referee stroke storyteller stroke
Arbiter the director of the drama, if you like, while the others are
the actors in the drama. There's no, I mean, there's no precise analogy.
So yeah, D&D has got some of our listeners very interested here more.
Norwin, that's a good D&D name, isn't it? Yeah. I can't believe you would think of yourself as
lawful neutral. You might need to unpack that one.
I've listened to a lot of your stuff on the radio and your podcasts and even read a book
and you're clearly good.
I also suspect the UK government would consider you chaotic rather than lawful.
I'm not even sure we should unpack this.
I think people who know what Norman is talking about know,
and if you don't know, you don't know.
All I'd say is yes, as I mentioned,
I'm not really a D&D player, I play other games
and other games do not.
I'm not hedging now.
Hey, don't, I'm not hedging.
I'm completely consistent with what I told you
45 seconds ago.
I don't remember that far enough.
I'm fair enough.
Fair enough.
Yes, I'm very flattered that Norwin
regards me as chaotic good, because chaotic good
is you're the rule-breaking good guy.
This is definitely the coolest of all the alignments.
I'm not gonna let you out of the dungeon quite yet.
I'm afraid, because the D&D thing did spark
quite a few questions from the listeners.
Ryan Kennedy and his son Ian were in touch.
Hello, Mr. Halford.
My youngest son and I are huge fans of caution retails.
Ian is eight and really
looks forward to each new episode coming out. We listen to your show every time we are
driving somewhere to go camping or hiking together, and we each have a question for you.
From me, have you ever thought about doing a cautionary tales podcast episode specifically
for kids who like to listen to your show.
And from Ian, Ian loves D&D and after listening to your first question episode, would like
to know what is your favourite D&D character class and why.
So thank you for your time for such a great podcast and for your fantastic books.
Ryan and Ian Kennedy, now your best friend.
I would imagine.
Yeah, yeah. As lovely email, thank you. So I haven't considered doing a
caution tails podcast specifically for children. I know there are quite a lot of
quite young people who listen, which always makes me worry a little bit because
I mean, these really are stories for grown-ups, some of them are horrible.
Some of them aren't. But my son, who is 11, he was photographed glued
to the cautionary tale's table read.
The table read is when we,
it's basically like a rehearsal
where we kind of explore things.
I was doing a table read at home
and he was lying on the floor outside my study
with his ear, the bottom of the door,
listening to me read this story
and the story in particular
is about this guy who murders his own son. It's the most horrific episode, but he was completely hooked.
So yeah, I think about that. I have written a book for children, which is not yet available in the
US and Canada, but is available in most other places called the Truth Detective. So if there are any 8 to 13 year olds listening and they want a bit more of me, they can get
a copy of the Truth Detective and have fun with that. And Ian's question was, what's my
favourite character class in D&D? I'm going to say a fighter. The reason I say that is
because I actually find Dungeons & Dragons to be quite complicated. I prefer simpler games
that are more about the narrative of the storytelling,
the description, all of that,
unless about all the complex rules,
and fighters have the simplest rules.
So, I tend to stick with a fighter when I can.
First person shoot them up.
Exactly.
So here's another question from Mary,
who's a Brit living in France and who sends some kind words
Get ready Tim. Oh, yeah, I like kind words. Yeah. Hello. I just like to start by saying thank you for
cautionary tales. I've recommended it to a lot of people and I look forward to the new episodes when they come out.
You're my pleasure. Thank you. Right. Come on a question. Here we go. A question I ponder is
Why do board games and especially role-playing games have such a geeky and often negative reputation?
I think it's much more socially acceptable in France to be a role-player gamer,
and indeed any kind of gamer.
I know lots more people who talk openly about them in different kinds of social circles.
Can't quite get my head around why in the UK
regularly playing board games with a bit of strategy or roleplay games
seems to somehow marginalise you.
After all, they're all social activities
that you do with your friends.
Anyway, makes me ponder.
Thanks again for the podcast, Mary.
Wow, great question.
It is.
It is. I did do some thinking about this.
About 15 years ago
I wrote a magazine cover story for the financial times
That partly involved me going to Germany to the biggest board game conference in the world at Essen
Where there's just these huge huge conference centers full of board game geeks and and interviewing the board game geeks about the board games
And one of the questions was how come board games are so big in Germany and so relatively
small in the UK and the US?
And I mean, I think the best answer I've got, it's a historical accident and these things
feed upon themselves.
So if you have a board game culture, then the newspapers are kind of interested in board
games.
And so a new board game comes out, people actually review it.
So it gets reviewed in the newspapers.
It's a good board game.
That means that there's more mileage
in making a good board game.
So the board games get better.
Or board games that win a prize in Germany.
Our guarantee is like winning the book a prize
in the UK, you're instantly guaranteed
to sell half a million copies
because you won the game of the year.
And so there's this virtual circle.
And then just in terms of people's own social activity,
is it acceptable after you've had people over for dinner
to crack open a board game?
I think back in the day it would have been quite common
for a certain kind of English person to suggest a game of bridge.
But I think it's less weird now.
I've got lots of friends who are happy to try a board game.
So yeah, I don't think I have a better answer than that,
which is that it's success, breed success,
and this sort of thing.
I wonder if things like, stranger things,
the television series, which features a bunch of kids,
quite obsessed with D&D.
I mean, I wonder if that sparked any interest.
I certainly know quite a few kids around the 10 to 14 age group,
some's and daughters of friends of mine who are really into it.
And I'm always quite surprised because I feel like they've picked up
something from my childhood and they're like, wow, you know.
YouTube as well.
So they're a live play channels for D&D and reviews of board games
on YouTube, all of that.
So yeah, the hobby is bigger than it's ever been.
The next question, Tim, comes from Peter, who's in Calgary, and he asks,
Tim, what do you feel is the most pressing problem we need to solve as humans,
and how substantial is any progress we've made?
I guess the interesting thing about this is that if we have made a lot of
progress in solving it, it no longer becomes a pressing problem. So the foot comes off the
gas a bit. So I did discuss this in my book, The Data Detective Stroke, How to Make the
World Add Up. If you go back 100 years, I think the most obvious problem that the human race faced was infant mortality,
which is the polite way of saying babies and young kids dying.
And it was incredibly common occurrence.
So if you imagine a class full of 30 kids who are going to show up to kindergarten at
the age of four. And that
these 30 children have just been born. Perhaps a quarter of them, perhaps eight, will never
make it to kindergarten, because the mortality rate is so high, so many children would have
died immediately after childbirth, in childbirth, or from these diseases. That would have been
the situation in the early 19th century. And in this country or globally, that is the global average, but it would have been
in true most places.
But now the global average, I think it's less than one would die under the age of five
out of 30.
And that is globally.
That is including the very poorest, most deprived countries in the world.
So I would say if that's the most pressing
problem that human race faced, that problem has not been solved but we've made the most
incredible progress. But then you just turn it around and say, well, maybe that's no longer
the most pressing problem, maybe the most pressing problem is fascism or maybe the most pressing
problem is climate change or the risk of nuclear war, who knows? But that's the one that springs to my mind.
And it's not as pressing as it used to be, thankfully.
The writer Oliver Berkerman argues
that instead of making to-do lists,
we should make done lists.
At the end of every day,
you should make a list of all the things you've done,
it's just much more uplifting.
And so maybe infant mortality.
It's on the done list rather than the to-do list.
But we shouldn't forget that we have made that progress.
Yeah.
Oliver is an intriguing writer, and I've got a question relating to him later.
Okay.
Well, we will come to that after the break, but not immediately, because the first thing
we are going to do after the break is Pascal.
I am going to start asking you some questions, because I am very curious about where all the magic comes from.
Oh, cue sound effect off-screen. Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, Tim here, if you're interested in exploring the unexpected turns of bookish fiascos for
the biggest changes in the book world today, then you should check out the chart topping
podcast, Missing Pages, which just returned for a brand new season.
Namely, Must Listen in 2022 by the Washington Post and the Guardian, missing pages lives up to the hype,
including this second season. Produced by the award-winning firm The Podglomerate,
missing pages aims to set the record straight on the publishing industry's hot button topics.
From the rise of Colleen Hoover and bookbans across America to the idea of who owns what in
fan fiction, host and acclaimed literary
critic Bethan Patrick investigates it all. Once mentioned, you'll hear from notable guests,
such as New York Times bestselling author Jodie Peaco and publishers Weekly's Jim
Million. So go ahead, follow missing pages today on Apple podcasts or wherever you're
listening.
We're back. It's me, Tim Halford, host of Corsion Details. And if I am the heart of Corsion Details, perhaps I am,
Pascal Weiss is the soul of Corsion Details.
Pascal is our composer. He does the sound design for all the episodes.
He's been with Corsing tales right from the start.
Before even a word of any of these episodes
had been written, Pascal and I and the producer Ryan
were talking about, you know, what does an airship hang
of full of rats sound like anyway?
And so Pascal, you are such an important part
of the way cautionary tales sounds
and what people love about the show.
How do you do it? How does it happen? Just taught me through the process.
I mean, often actually in the cut and thrust of our production schedule,
often times I've not really had much of a chance to look through the script before I get, as I say, you naked.
It's you in the studio reading the whole show. Yeah.
And I just get that as what we would call you.
You get the audio, okay.
Yeah, just the audio of you having read out the entire episode, what we'd call a stem,
I suppose, in audio terms.
And it's interesting.
I've done so many episodes.
A lot of things happen very instinctively now for me, but they deserve, I suppose, a little bit
of unpacking, because what I do with that, and often I'm doing this away from the script,
I just play it, and I drop little markers in on my computer, which is playing the audio,
so I have a timeline with you speaking.
And I just start to drop in thoughts about what I'd like to hear at any given moment, you
know, and they'll, those markers, as I would call them, will kind of come into two categories.
Some will be music and some will be sound effects or sound design.
And one of the great things about podcasts, you know, you look at the sort of size of this
operation, the quite small team, and I'm handling effectively everything that happens in sound
after you.
Yeah.
So I can play around with the relationship between those two things.
But fundamentally the first thing I've got to do is think, well, what do we want to hear
here? Do we want to hear anything? Or is this something the listener will happily imagine?
And of course, you know, when you're doing music and sound design for something which is
audio only, there's very rarely a
moment that you kind of have the stage to yourself and when I suppose the theme
tune is the only spot where there's a little moment where the one is just
listening to music. Yeah, which I'm sorry to interrupt with that. I mean the theme
tune is magical and I vividly remember I was on a holiday with some family and
so I'm on some Italian hillside with a glass of glass of wine
I was sent the draft of the theme to you and I said you know this podcast thing that you know I may be doing
I've just been sent the music. Let's all have a listen and just and
you're clicking the button on my phone and and all of us gathering around the phone and just hearing through the tini speakers these
The caution tells theme and it was magic.
I thought, wow, that sounds really good.
I don't have the vocabulary to explain why it sounds really good,
but trust me, it sounds really good.
Well, thank you. I mean, yeah, sometimes you get it lucky
and your first idea kind of fits.
I mean, I think the theme had to indicate a certain sense of kind of
jeopardy or drama without being overtly kind of grim because of course there are so many different kinds
of tales so it has to be kind of quite multi-purpose. I think somewhere in the back of my mind
would be the music to tales of the unexpected you know the rolled-on stories. There's a sort of
vintage about it. Yes there's a kind of Victorian-o kind of wind up music box element to it. There's a sort of vintage about it. Yes, there's a kind of Victorian-o-guined-up
music box element to it. There's a moment where it gets a little bit wide-screen and goes almost
sort of bond-like. And I mean there are other things that you do an episode that you've mixed
and this is an epic three-parter about the creation of the V2 rocket. And I want to talk too much about it, but there's a scene where there's a high pressure
meeting with Heinrich Himmler,
who is arguably the most evil man of the 20th century,
and there's a lot of competition for that.
And you just made it sound so frightening in ways
that I cannot put my finger on just the echo, the sound
design.
We had wonderful acts as reading these lines, the lines are a matter of historical record.
There's just something chilling about the effects, the mixing.
Himmler's command centre had the nickname, the black lair.
At first, a few concrete bunkers hidden from air assaults by the Polish forests, it had
grown.
Low wooden buildings were scattered through the trees, heavily camouflaged.
There was even a command train parked up on a ramp.
SS guards were everywhere.
It was the kind of place people were summoned to, never to return.
Even the self-assured Fond Brown was unnerved
by the prospect of meeting the most sinister man in the Third Reich. Himmler received Fond
Brown behind a simple wooden table.
I must confess that I felt a bit jittery when I was shown into his office, but he greeted
me politely and conveyed rather the impression
of a country grammar school teacher than that horrible man
who was said to wait knee deep in blood.
I trust you realize that your V2 rocket has ceased
to be an engineer's toy and that the German people
are eagerly waiting for it.
Why don't you come to us?
You know that the fuel's door is open to me at any time, don't you?
I shall be in a much better position to help you lick the remaining difficulties than that clumsy army machine.
Heinrich Himmler was making his play. The SS was launching a hostile takeover of Pena Munda and the entire rocket program.
von Braun pushed back.
Yeah, it's funny isn't it?
There are sometimes when pressure,
you know, what a necessity being the mother of invention,
but when pressure and of time to do things
sometimes leads you to a quick solution
which is actually really effective.
Because when the one of the world's most evil men
gets ushered onto the script, it's very tempting to
reach for the Wagnerian orchestra or whatever. Which is just what he would want. Yeah,
yeah, I'm not playing that game. And gets 12 French horns up and running. But in this case,
it came down to just a very uneasy, very low humming background sound.
There's something just rumbling down in there to unsettle the listener.
It worked for me.
I'm curious, is there an episode that sticks in your mind as being either particularly
satisfying to work on or particularly difficult one that you got through and just thought,
what on earth am I going to do with this?
This is very hard.
Well, that's a very good question because there's a real pain and pleasure principle at play
with cautionary tales. In that, every time we move on to the next episode, we reset the clock,
you know, literally one week, I'll be doing the charge of the library gate, and the next week,
I'll be doing Clive's and Clare.
Now, that's incredibly refreshing and fun because literally I can just chuck everything off
the desk and start again.
But it's, I suppose it's in a sense, labor intensive, in the way that when you're working
on a long form in any given story, what tends to happen is you build up a library of things
that are repeatable and usable. And there is an element of that in caution
hotels actually because we do often return to subjection, like quite often we
end up on an airplane in caution hotels. But to go back to your actual question, I
often do open up an episode and you'll say something casual like, you know,
7,000 horses are being flown across space, you know, and it's like, oh know, 7,000 horses are being flown across space.
You know, and it's like, oh god, I've got to, oh,
really, I've got to do that now.
And I sort of, you know, start reaching the stuff to put in.
And sometimes I kind of, you know, I dread that moment
to think, oh god, I'm going to have to build a massive world
here.
But more often than not, it's exciting.
I mean, there are so many different episodes
that had different, really nice challenges for me. The Clive Sinclair episode I really liked
kind of trying to dig into the synthesizer world of that era and not least
because I was a ZX-181 owner that was Clive Sinclair's second computer.
The Clive Sinclair episode being the the false dawn of the electric car which I think is still one
of our most popular ever episodes so you did your job on that one. That is it, oh great. Yeah so I found it very
redulent and I really enjoyed trying to get us into that time and that's a really key thing
in cautioning tales because it moves through time it's really there's a really interesting question
every every episode is like what are the kind of signature sounds of that period? What would things have sounded like?
In what way would they be different?
What will listeners be expecting if we're in, you know, 1920s New York?
How is that different from 1980s?
London, you know, over in a restaurant or something?
Yeah. Oh Actually my favourite episode in terms of the sound design was the one about Claude Shannon
and Ed thought.
Oh yeah, that was the last thing.
And I think it's partly because it seemed to be very unpromising.
I don't think it was my best work in terms of setting scenes or telling a story.
It was a little bit more of an essay than a story in some ways.
And you just used your wonderful work on that.
Very briefly, there was a gift in that episode there,
which was that part of the clever machinery that Shannon developed
for predicting the outcome of a roulette.
We're involved a guy having a little earpiece in that played a little scale.
And of course, you know, that was...
You long for moments like that because it's...
You know, when you open an episode up, you've got infinite possibility.
And then if something in the story tells you something musical,
it's like, brilliant. It's like, that's the way I've got to go.
And suddenly, you know, your idea's flow from that. It's great to have, it's like that's the way I've got to go and suddenly you know your
ideas flow from that, it's great to have a little peg like that.
Well thank you Pascal, thank you for answering my questions, thank you for putting the
listeners questions to me. Do you have a question for me? Anything you wanted to ask me while you're here?
Yeah, I've got a meta question for you. Okay, that's kind of question maybe.
Yeah, this is going to have you kind of walking up and down an Escher staircase for the next
three days. So you've now done a podcast called Corsion Retails for what?
Nearly three years now? Is this three?
It's more than three. It's about 50 episodes, maybe 60 episodes now.
So since the Victorian era basically.
Yeah.
So what Corsionary tale would you tell
about making a podcast called cautionary tales? Yes, that's very meta. Well, and the
obvious thing to talk about is the mistakes that I've made over the time. I've been writing,
but rather than pick out specific mistakes, because we do make mistakes. We get things wrong, we accidentally get a fact wrong.
I guess what's on my mind at the moment
just to get very personal is
I absolutely love writing cautionary tales,
but it just takes so much time.
And so it's a question of,
how do I divide my time between writing something
like cautionary tales and doing something else I might want to do like writing a book.
I guess the caution entails is a man who loved his podcast so much that he couldn't let go of it.
Well, actually, quite a few listeners are really interested in this and it does, again,
I mentioned Oliver Burke when I was a year old. He wrote this wonderful book called 4,000
Weeks, which is about how to live your life wisely, I suppose. Yeah, in the very limited time that we have.
And he's, you know, a lot of the questioners are fascinated by.
I think they think they must be like four Tim Huffitz,
because they don't quite understand how you do all that you do.
I mean, there are kind of two Tim Huffitz, because Andrew Wright writes half the script for the horses.
He does, yeah, he does all the good ones.
Obviously in your writings and in cautionary tales
and elsewhere, you have come across consumed
and investigated, so many different kinds of life hacks
and self-help things and ways of operating
and dealing with the myriad problems we face.
And I wondered, you know, what has stuck?
Because I asked Oliver Beckman the same thing, you know,
having tried so many ways of organizing your life
and experimented with them.
What really remained is something that you now routinely do.
There's so many different things.
There's no one hack is there,
because life is complicated.
I mean, the one piece of advice that I think people underrate
is looking ahead more often
and more thoughtfully than seems sane.
What have I got to do tomorrow?
What have I got to do this afternoon?
What have I got to do next week?
What have I got to do the week after that?
What have I got to do over the next three months?
And just keep doing it and keep asking the question.
And it's not because these things can be controlled,
because they can't be, and unexpected stuff happens
all the time.
And if you're looking ahead and you just see,
oh, it's gonna be a bit of a crunch
towards the end of next week.
You just, you know what's happening,
and you can be calmer, and you haven't got this,
this sort of sense of something's out of your control,
and you're not quite sure what it is.
It's like going into the shed, isn't it?
You know, don't let the rats
know where we're in there and face it.
One thing I would say though, and I've been thinking about this kind of thing for a long,
long time. I've read a lot of productivity books. I've written a lot of articles for the FT
about getting things done and being productive. There is no hack. There's no piece of advice.
There's no maxim that I could give you that I couldn't then
retract or give the counter example.
Well that's why the bookshelves are so heavily stopped. No one's obviously got the right answers
because self-help shelves are groaning aren't they?
Absolutely. Carl Jung famously wrote a letter to a patient who asked him about this and he said,
what you're asking me for is to be told how to live your life.
And I can't tell you how to live your life.
So Pascal, it has been such a pleasure.
Thank you for joining us on Corsair New Tales.
Thank you. I mean, so great to be in the cockpit.
I'll now return to my seating economy now.
You know, make some sounds.
Yes, either the cockpit or economy,
probably a very bad place to be given what happens to
airplanes on cautionary tails a lot.
Thank you to everybody who sent in their questions to tailsatpushkin.fm, that's T-A-L-E-S.
Keep sending your questions in, really about anything you want, about Pascal, about me,
about cautionary tails, about anything.
We will have the wonderful Jacob Goldstein back in the studio soon enough.
He is an expert on podcasting, entrepreneurship, technology, problem solving, finance, and economics.
So if you have any particular questions about those subjects, send them in, but anything really.
And thank you so much for listening to cautioning tales.
And thank you once more Pascal Wise.
Great pleasure. Thanks everyone.
Corsairy Tales is written by me Tim Halford with Andrew Wright. It's produced by Alice Feins with support from Edith Husslo.
The sound design and original music is the work of Pascal Weiss.
Sarah Nicks edited the scripts.
It features the voice talents of Ben Crow,
Melanie Gutridge, Gemma Saunders and Rufus Wright.
The show wouldn't have been possible
without the work of Jacob Weisberg, Brian Dilly, Greta
Cohn, Lytel Moulard, John Schnarrs, Carly McGlory and Eric Sandler.
Corsan retails as a production of Pushkin Industries.
It was recorded in Wardle Studios in London by Tom Berry.
If you like the show, please remember to share, rate and review.
Go on, you know it helps us.
And if you want to hear the show add free, sign up for Pushkin Plus on the show page in Apple
podcasts or at pushkin.fm slash plus. I'm going to go to the next one. Tim here, if you're interested in exploring the unexpected turns of bookish fiascos for
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