Welcome to Night Vale - 208 - Cecil in The Big City

Episode Date: May 15, 2022

A vacation to The Big City. Plus, listener questions, breaking financial news, and an emergency press conference. Weather: “Black Car” by Penfriend https://penfriend.rocks/blackcar Transcript ...available at http://welcometonightvale.com/transcripts 2022 US / CANADA / EUROPE TOUR DATES for “The Haunting of Night Vale” http://welcometonightvale.com/live Hot Night Vale merch! https://topatoco.com/wtnv FACELESS OLD WOMAN novel now available in paperback! https://www.welcometonightvale.com/books Patreon is how we exist! If you can, please help us keep making this show: http://patreon.com/welcometonightvale/ Music: Disparition http://disparition.bandcamp.com Logo: Rob Wilson http://robwilsonwork.com Written by Joseph Fink & Jeffrey Cranor. Narrated by Cecil Baldwin. http://welcometonightvale.com Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram. Check out our books, live shows, store, membership program, and official recap show. Produced by Night Vale Presents. http://nightvalepresents.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:04 Hey, Nightville, it is Jeffrey Craneer speaking to you from April of 2026 with a couple of cool things coming up. First off, we're going to be in Europe touring our newest Nightville live show, Murder Night in Blood Forest. We're going to be in Edinburgh, UK, on May 27th. We'll be in Manchester on the 28th. We will be in London on May 29th, and we will be in Amsterdam on May the 30th. You can get tickets for these shows at Welcome to Nightville.com slash live, and hopefully we'll have more. shows coming up later this year. Who knows? Just get on our newsletter. Go to Welcome to Nightville.com. Sign up for our newsletter. We will send you emails twice a month to let you know all of the news that you need to know about Welcome to Nightville. One of the big news things to tell you
Starting point is 00:00:48 right now is that our other hit podcast, Alice Isn't Dead, is coming back on April the 13th, written by Joseph Fink, produced by Disparition and starring Jacica Nicole. More episodes of Alice Isn't Dead return on April the 13th. So make sure you are still subscribe to that podcast. Finally, do you want some cool nightbail merch? Go to welcome to nightville.com, click on store, and we have all kinds of cool t-shirts, things
Starting point is 00:01:15 for the summer, tank tops, beach towels, and if you like coffee mugs, if you want calendars, if you want backpacks, all kinds of cool stuff there. So check out Welcome to Nightville.com and click on store, click on live. If you want to see our live shows, we will see you in Europe. And hey, thanks.
Starting point is 00:01:34 You scream. We all scream. Then a long moment of dawning horror as our mouths remain open, but no sound is left to save us. Welcome to Nightvale. Listeners, it's been a while, but I'm happy to say that Carlos and I took a little vacation together, just the two of us. We've had some lovely and peaceful trips to the remote desert and the forest, but never to the The Big City. Lately, we've been talking about how fun it would be to see a musical, shop at fancy stores, and take in the myriad cultures of urban life. Living in what feels like the middle of nowhere, we often forget that the big city is only a couple hours in the car away.
Starting point is 00:02:44 A place that close shouldn't seem exotic, but it really is. We had a fun time, and I can't recommend it enough. It was a little tough to leave home, though. Our son was in good hands with my family, so we didn't worry, but we certainly missed him. Plus, I've been hoping my cat, Koshek, will come back to his home here at the radio station. I mean, what if he returns when I'm gone? But Carlos said, Cecil, Koshchek's been missing for six months. You have to come to terms with him being gone for good.
Starting point is 00:03:20 And of course, Carlos is right. He's so scientific. So we packed our things and drove out of town. The first thing we did in the big city was visit Middle Park, a huge expanse of nature right in the center of this thriving metropolis. There were loads of trees and birds, plus people everywhere enjoying a gorgeous spring day. Some were skateboarding, others were reading on blankets in the shade, and others were camping and tents made out of hot dogs. We even saw a political demonstration. A group of protesters was throwing rocks at the sun.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Wow. There's always excitement in the big city. Middle Park also has a beautiful lake where some of the last remaining ichthyosaurs live. People come from all around to feed them breadcrumbs, bits of ham, whole ducks, and mountain dew flaming hot. Next to the lake is a dog park. I was blown away by the lack of tall electrified fences around this area. There were people in the dog park and dogs. I should suggest this for our own dog park at the next Nightvale Town Hall.
Starting point is 00:04:39 The big city is packed with surprises. I even saw one man who had his cat with him on a leash. And the cat was so chill and accepting and it reminded me of caution. I got sad thinking about him, but it, you know, it passed. It passed. We came to the big city to get away, to have fun, and boy did we. But first, financial news. Once there were many gods, far more than we have today. These gods had specific jobs. There was Pocra, the god of acorn caps. There was Namastanos, the god of washing trousers, but only in river water. There was Buzet, the god of cinnamon-flavored dental floss.
Starting point is 00:05:29 But over the millennia of human civilization, these gods remained redundant. Their duties passed on to fewer and fewer gods who made no more money, but had far more responsibilities. The remaining gods grew angry. They were unable to unionize because of the oppressive corpocracies, of the stars, and soon the system began to show the flaws of despecialization. More prophets. The void demanded of these celestial rulers. These gods are merely middle managers of the skies, and they've lost the thread. Now we have fewer than 30 gods remaining, and they're struggling to keep track of everything they have to keep track of. As a result,
Starting point is 00:06:14 The Dow is down 10, the NASDAQ is down 8, and NFTs are silly. This has been financial news. So, after the park, we had reservations at Le Fond de 2, the only three-star Michelin restaurant in the big city. It's post-modern French cuisine, so not only is it delicious, they are quite creative with their presentation. One of my favorites was the beef berguignon. The entree was reduced to its chemical nutritional components, dissolved in a saline solution,
Starting point is 00:06:51 and then the waiter came by with an eyedropper and placed three drops in each eye. Did you know your eyeballs can taste beef? Well, they can't. And that's kind of the point. This restaurant really makes you think. For dessert, we got to the cherry coflutie. It's a classical French tart that's traditionally served by a blindfolded man on a 300-horsepower Kawazaki motorbike. But at La Fond de 2, our Clyfudi were served by a
Starting point is 00:07:22 woman in a luchador mask driving a 1995 Chrysler-Labarin convertible with the top down. It didn't have the homie charm of the moonlight all night, of course, but it was a once-in-a-lifetime dining experience. There was one odd moment, though. As Carlos and I were paying the bill, I noticed an interesting couple one table over, a woman wearing a long cloak, her back to me, and a man dressed in a sharp black suit and tie. He was so handsome, like, in a dangerous way. I wondered if he were mafia or a spy, or some foreign oligarch. He was frightening, but I couldn't turn my gaze.
Starting point is 00:08:11 Something about his eyes. They were kind. No, innocent and gentle. At one point the woman put her hand to his cheek. I swear it sounded like purring. It was adorable and strange. But it also reminded me of Koshak, and that cast a small shadow on our otherwise delightful dinner. Of course, just then the waiters brought the cart over to serve a single, raw carrot table side, before loudly shouting, a murder has been committed, and wheeling the carrot back into the kitchen uneaten. And I was once again in the classy fun of Michelin-starred dining. More soon, but now it's time for one of my favorite segments, Hey There, Cecil, where I offer advice to some of my listeners. First question comes from Joseph F. in Nightvale. Hey there, Cecil. So I wrote this show. It's fiction, all of it. Nightvale, you, everything. But then about a year ago, I suddenly found myself living in this town, this town that I made up. And this is a hard ask, because as the creator of Nightvale, I feel like I should know the answer. But how do you leave here and get back to the real world? Well, Joseph F. I'll concede that Night Vale is fiction. that everything is fiction. Nothing is real. So you can't get back to the real world because none exists. But I don't know. If writing got you here, maybe try writing your way back home. Worth a
Starting point is 00:09:54 shot. Next question. This one is from Sunita R. Sunita writes, Hey there, Cecil. What's going on? Doing my show. Well, that's all the time we have for. Hey, there Cecil. Thank you everyone for writing in. Okay, back to my trip. Carlos and I went to see a show in The Big City. Listen, we have some great theater in Night Vale, but nothing beats the glitz and glamour of a stage production in the Big City. Carlos got us center orchestra tickets to see Samuel Beckett's musical extravaganza, Craps, Last, Tape. Featuring some really Matchy numbers like, alone with a tape deck, and just one man talking very slowly, if at all. And hello starkness, my old friend.
Starting point is 00:10:57 You would not believe the huge chorus line dance routines that this single 70-year-old man performed over no music, just the dull hum of a real-to-reel machine. I have never been so blown away by sparse, poetic, ennui. You get your money's worth in production values at these big city shows. But during the climactic scene where Krap pensively retreats into his memories of youth, I caught a glimpse of one of the loge boxes. There sat the same couple I had seen at dinner. Her face was obscured by the hood of her cloak,
Starting point is 00:11:38 but I recognized the dangerously handsome man by his kind eyes. They looked completely enraptured by the show, and I was enraptured by them. Why could I not turn my eyes away? I see lots of attractive people in this world without needing to gawk at them, so it wasn't that. Was I suspicious of these two? Did I know them somehow? Suddenly, they both turned swiftly and together, and they looked right at me. I gulped and twisted back toward the play, afraid to look at them.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Are they still staring at me? Do they think me suspicious? Do they know who I am? After a few minutes passed, I slowly turned and saw they were gone. They were gone, at least from their seats. I wouldn't see them again. Not that night anyway. And now, local news.
Starting point is 00:12:40 Night Vale's Director of Emergency Press Conferences, Pamela Winchell called an emergency press conference today to address wind. Wind is just the dumbest possible thing. She announced from her podium, which was just a makeshift stack of milk crates. Wind makes it so hard to walk, or to keep your hair nice, or to set your napkin down on a picnic table. Sure, we can fly kites, but kites are dumb, too. Who are these people that absolutely, above all else? Have to fly a kite, she ranted.
Starting point is 00:13:16 At this point, a gust of wind came along and rustled her notes, which flew up into the air. Winchell then pointed and pleaded, see? It's so stupid. Why should this be happening? A reporter on the scene asked Winchell why she didn't hold her press conferences indoors. Winchell stared for an uncomfortably long time at the reporter. She then pressed a button on her lapel which ignited her jet. and she flew away, never breaking eye contact with the impertinent journalist.
Starting point is 00:13:50 On our last day in the city, Carlos and I went shopping at a luxury boutique. Carlos got himself a Salvatore Ferragamo lab coat, some Tom Ford safety goggles, and a pair of Louis Vuitton hazmat gloves. I bought a maroon bow-fur tunic by Dior and matching Dulce and on a hunting cap. I also went to a touristy shop to get some chotchkes to give as gifts. I got my sister a snow globe that features the big city's famous statue of eternal fear. And for my brother-in-law, I got a t-shirt that has the classic big city slogan, If I can make it here, I'm lying to myself. And I got my niece an official basketball jersey for the big city trouser pants, which is her favorite NBA team.
Starting point is 00:14:41 I love shopping, but I may have overbought. I had to carry these huge shopping bags around the Big City Museum of Art afterwards. We wanted to see the new exhibit featuring some of the most prominent names in modern art. Van Gogh, Césin, Monet, Kincaid, all the greats. Our friend Larry had told us that this was one of the best exhibits going, and he wasn't lying. We got to see Mene's autumn leaves on a soccer ball, Gogan's broken bichhorn,
Starting point is 00:15:17 and even O'Keeffe's definitely just a flower. Those were all masterpieces, but I was especially taken by one work in particular. It was a small, maybe 14 by 10-inch painting by George Surrah called Magic Eye Dinosaurs. It was the first ever work of Pointalism, which is a style of 19th century impressionism that requires the viewer to cross their eyes in just the right order to see a three-dimensional image. It was stunning.
Starting point is 00:15:54 I got so caught up and staring at this painting. I didn't notice the fire alarm had gone off. Carlos had to pull me away. The crowd filed out of the museum, mostly without incident, but one person actually knocked me over. I didn't see who it was. I just grumbled, got back up, and walked outside. My bags felt heavier, but I was in a foul mood and nothing felt right. I was bummed that our museum trip got cut short. But then outside, I saw that woman in the cloak. The one I'd seen at the musical and the restaurant, I finally saw her face clearly. And I knew her. It was
Starting point is 00:16:36 Mino. Carlos and I had gone to see an art exhibit of hers in Nightville last year. We both waved and said, Mino, hi. How have you been? She smiled and waved uncomfortably. I said, were you at the musical last night? I thought I saw you. And who was that handsome fellow? I was chatting her ear off, but before she could reply, the shifting crowd filled the space between us and her. When the crowd thinned again, she was gone. It turned out to be a false alarm at the museum, but Carlos and I were ready to go. We had a tired, quiet drive home. Carlos listened to his new favorite podcast, my brother, your brother, and a cursed emulet. We were too exhausted to unpack fully, but I did want to get my gifts wrapped and my new clothes ready for work the next day.
Starting point is 00:17:31 But when I reached into my shopping bag, I felt something unfamiliar. It was wooden, rectangular, maybe about 14 by 10 inches. And I froze. I didn't want to look. I didn't want to know what I had inadvertently taken home with me. Then a knock at our door. Again, finally, my gut. That's quivering in fear, I answered it.
Starting point is 00:18:07 More on that soon, but now the weather. Remember the summer when everyone stayed at home. Ships in a bottle stacked up with our lives on. The dangerously handsome man with kind eyes. The one from the restaurant and the musical. He introduces himself as, Silas. Silas, I repeat.
Starting point is 00:23:07 I've heard that name recently. Silas is holding one of the lost cat posters I had hung around town. He tells me, I know where your cat is. Where, I ask. He's close by, the man says, and then adds the caveat. But first, I bumped into you quite
Starting point is 00:23:29 by accident in the museum today, and I think one of my belongings ended up in your shopping bag. Um, I struggled to respond. I know I have been played. I was an easy mark, a wide-eyed, naive tourist in the big city. First, he interrupts my feelings of shame and anger. First, I'm afraid I ran into you quite hard, and for that, I am sorry. but I would like my item returned to me.
Starting point is 00:24:04 His kind eyes do not blink. I cannot ignore his charm, nor his vaguely threatening aura. I bring him the item still in the shopping bag. I taken everything out of the bag except his stolen... Nope. I do not assume it is stolen anything, painting, or otherwise. I have not seen the item in question. I merely handed over, unseen, in a bag.
Starting point is 00:24:29 to this dangerously handsome man with kind eyes and I say, Here you go. He nods his thank you rather than saying it and walks away. I call out, but what about Koshek? What about my cat? The man pauses and without turning around says, He'll be back soon, Cecil. Maybe not often, but soon. How do you know my name? I ask. I do not see him smile.
Starting point is 00:24:59 But I sense it. He leaves without answering. That was last night. This morning, I came back to work, and listeners, you'll never believe what I found. Whom I found. My cat, Koshak, returned to the radio station bathroom. He's not floating four feet off the ground anymore. He was standing on the floor.
Starting point is 00:25:24 Above him were his grown kittens, Larry, mixtape, and potato. Koshik purred and rubbed against my leg, which was so sweet, but also painful because of his sharp caudal spine. He ruined my brand new designer tunic, but I didn't care. He'd returned to me. It was as if the man named Silas told the cat named Koshak he should visit Cecil again. Cecil who misses him. Cecil who had always cared for him. Cecil, who had been searching for him for months.
Starting point is 00:25:59 And so, Koshak came back to check on me and his children. Sadly, he didn't stay long, but it filled my heart to see him. And there he was, walking around, freed from his fixed point in space. Cats can't smile, so I couldn't see his happiness, but I could sense it. He's gone again, but I feel so much better knowing he's okay. Such is the life of a cat owner. You can't train them or confine them. I'm learning this now.
Starting point is 00:26:38 But with his newfound freedom, I hope Koshchak is staying out of trouble wherever he goes. Stay tuned next for your own birth. The simulation had to be reset. We apologize for the inconvenience. Good night, night fail. Good night. Welcome to Nightvale as a production of Nightvale Presents.
Starting point is 00:27:09 It is written by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Criner and produced by Dysperition. The voice of Nightvale is Cecil Baldwin, original music by Dysperition. All of it can be found at disparition.bancamp.com. This episode's weather was Black Car by Penfriend. Find out more at penfriend. Comments, questions, email us at info at welcome to nightvale. or follow us on Twitter at Nightville Radio or tell a tree that it's doing quote a pretty good job all told check out welcome to nightvale.com for info about our live tour of the northeast and the Midwest that is
Starting point is 00:27:50 happening very soon get those tickets today's proverb put your money where your mouth is right there near the bottom of your face put your money in there eat it eat your money Hi, I'm here to tell you about Good Morning Night Vale. Welcome to Night Vale's official recap show and unofficial best friend food podcast. Join me, Meg Bashwinner and fellow tri-hosts, Hal Lublin and Symphony Sanders, as we dissect all of the cool, squishy, and slimy bits of every episode of Welcome to Nightvale. Come for the insightful and hilarious commentary and stay for all of the weird and wild behind-the-scenes stories. Good morning Night Vale, with new episodes, every other Thursday. Get it wherever you get your podcasts. Yes, even there.

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