Welcome to Night Vale - 38 - Orange Grove
Episode Date: January 1, 2014John Peters - you know the farmer? - had a huge, healthy orange crop this year. But Carlos grows skeptical about a sudden orange grove in the desert. Plus, the City Council tries to get out of town, a...nd an important correction to a previous story. Weather: "Black White and Red" by Emrys Cronin. soundcloud.com/emrys-cronin Music: Disparition, disparition.info. Logo: Rob Wilson, silastom.com. Produced by Night Vale Presents. Written by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor. Narrated by Cecil Baldwin. More Info: welcometonightvale.com, and follow @NightValeRadio on Twitter or Facebook. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Howdy y'all. It is Jeffrey Craneer. I'm not sure which episode of Welcome to Nightville you're listening to, but I am speaking to you from April of 2026, and I'm here to tell you we're going to be in Europe. If you want to see Nightville live and you're going to be in Europe, come check us out at the end of May. We're going to be in Edinburgh on May the 27th. We will be in Manchester on the 28th, London on the 29th, and Amsterdam on May the 30th. Just go to Welcome to Nightville.com slash live to see the show dates and to get your tickets. This is.
our newest Nightville live show Murder Night in Blood Forest. It is so much fun. Please come check it out.
Also, coming up this month here in April, it is the return of Alice Isn't Dead, brand new episodes of our other crazy hit podcast.
This is written by Joseph Fink, produced and with music by Dysperition and starring Jacique and Nicole.
So make sure you are still subscribed to Alice Isn't Dead and go get those on April the 13th as new episodes come out.
Finally, speaking of other shows, do you want to hear us talk about other things?
things. We have three other really great chat shows. First of all, there's Good Morning Nightvale
for all of your Nightvale needs. You can hear Hal, Meg, and Symphony talk about every single
episode in order of Welcome to Nightvale. Also, we have Random Horror Number Nine. That is me
and Nightville star Cecil Baldwin talking about horror movies one at a time in a random order. And then
Joseph and Meg do best, worst, which is a really fun podcast where they look at hit TV shows and they
review the best rated on IMDB, the worst rated on IMDB, and if you're a Patreon member,
they will review the middest rated on IMDB.
So check out all of those at nightfallpresents.com or just wherever you get your podcast.
And hey, thanks.
You take the good, you take the bad, you take them both, and there you have spiders
crawling out of a red velvet cupcake.
Welcome to Nightbair.
We start today's show with some exciting, agricultural news.
John Peters, you know, the farmer, said his winter orange crop is outstanding this year.
He said there are oranges everywhere.
Delicious Clementines, juicy Valencia's, rich navels, and.
and bold blood oranges.
John said there are so many oranges,
a real bumper crop, he said.
A real orange tacular, he did not say.
A real orang-a-thon, he never would have said.
A real orange-ocalypse, he may have thought, but kept to himself.
John, speaking to a pack of local reporters, and backed by a group of farmers wearing black, double-breasted suits and red silk ties, said this is the dawning of a new citrus economy in Night Vale.
John said, Citrus is our future. Citrus holds the key to prosperity. Citrus holds the key to health.
One particular orange here literally holds the key to a one-sided door in the middle of the desert.
If you find that orange, John said, I will pay you dearly for it.
Or rather, John corrected himself, you will pay dearly for it.
Then John said, either way, whatever.
Would love to have that orange, my friend.
Would love to have that orange.
Yes, sir, he punctuated.
Or ma'am.
Or neither.
I mean, whoever.
Sure would love to have that orange.
He chuckled while sweating and adjusting his wooden hat.
John then tossed some oranges to the reporters.
The reporters caught the oranges and then began to disappear.
and reappear, blinking in and out of existence.
Quickly at first, then slowly, then more out of existence than in, until they were all gone.
More on this story as it develops.
The city council announced today that they just can't be here anymore.
They said this in unison.
standing in a cramped meeting room and wearing tiny rectangular sunglasses.
They added that they wish us all the best in our final weeks.
Then they made the standard American sign language,
I love you, gesture, as smoke filled the room.
Witnesses said the smoke smelled of maple and was a little briny, but not unpleasantly so.
When the haze cleared, the city council was still standing in the room, apologizing, claiming,
this usually works, and then, no longer speaking in unison, casting blame on each other for not believing hard enough,
and that if it weren't for so-and-so, they'd all be on a beach somewhere, safe from the bears, or whatever those things are.
When asked for an explanation about the bears, or whatever those things are, the council simply whispered in unison,
Mistake.
No follow-up questions were asked, as the reporters became physically and emotionally occupied with the dozens of agitated starlings that began pouring from the air conditioning duct.
You know, listeners, I've been thinking about John Peter's Orange Grove.
I did a little digging online and found that orange trees are not native to deserts.
I also emailed my boyfriend Carlos about this.
He's a scientist, which kind of makes me a scientist too.
Here's Carlos' email back to me just now.
Cecil, I'll do my best to answer your questions.
But do know that I don't specialize in botany or dendrology.
I am a scientist. I study science, not plants or nature. I did drive out past John's farm a month ago,
and there wasn't a single tree, just acres and acres of rocky, cracked, flat ground. There's no way he could have grown anything natural on that land,
let alone a bountiful orange grove, especially in just a few weeks.
As far as your other question goes, let's stay home tonight.
We ate out last night.
Plus, there's a new documentary about scatterplot matrices on Netflix I've been wanting to see.
Also, the man who shot Liberty Valence is on TBS again.
We could re-watch that.
I'll make pasta if you can pick up some, um, et cetera.
etc., etc.
Carlos goes on about weekend bowling plans.
You know what?
You don't need all this.
Okay, I think that's all he had about the orange trees.
I do hope we watch Liberty Valance, though.
I love that film.
And now a word from our sponsors.
Tired of waiting in line at the post office,
scared of the unexplained blood,
pouring from the PO boxes?
Confused by screams that no one else hears?
Terrified of leaving your home?
Try stamps.com.
With stamps.com you can print your own postage
and avoid the long lines and predatory birds
so common at the post office.
You can even have your postal carrier pick up your packages
as long as you are careful to never look the carrier in the eyes,
as this is a sign of aggression,
and you may scare your postal carrier away.
Stamps.com has a special offer for Nightvale Community Radio listeners.
Sign up today and receive a bag of magic rocks,
$50 worth of self-loathing,
and a free scale,
so you can arbitrarily assign numbers to material objects.
To claim your new member benefits,
simply visit Stamps.com
and press your forehead against the radio mic
in the upper right of your screen
until your entire body falls forward
into the alternate Stamps.com universe.
Stamps.com will tell your family you loved them very much.
Stamps.com.
We'll tell your family that Stamps.com loves them very much.
Come here, family.
You are all our family now.
Stamps.com will say,
stretching their many boneless arms around your terrified family.
Come here.
We are all loving family.
Stamps.com
You live in a dying world.
We love you.
Ladies and gentlemen, we've just received word
that the Ralph's is stocked full of fresh orange juice
from John's farm.
It's called J.P.'s OJ,
where the O in OJ is a bright cartoonish sun
with big pink eyes and a strain toothy smile.
and the J is a sickle.
The sun is using to slice down ripe oranges from a large tree.
Adam Bear, weekday shift manager at the Ralph's,
said they have removed all other produce to stock JP oranges
and even emptied out the refrigerators to fully showcase all of JP's mouth-watering stock of fresh juice.
Even several of the dry goods aisles had to be cleared out, Adam said, pulling oranges from his apron pockets.
He continued pulling oranges from his tiny pocket, mesmerized by their seeming infinitude,
unable to continue speaking as he began to blink out of existence.
Listeners, we here at Nightvale Community Radio need to offer the following correction.
In a previous broadcast, we described the world as real.
We indicated, using our voice, that it was made up of many real objects and entities,
and we gave descriptions of these disparate parts.
We even went so far as to ascribe actual.
action, and agency to some of these entities.
But, as we all know,
nothing can be fully understood to be real.
Any description of the world we give is simply the world we experience,
which is to say a narrative we force onto whatever horror or void
lies behind the scrim of our perception.
We at the station offer our deepest, most high,
humble apologies for the previous erroneous report. We affirm once again that nothing is real,
including this correction, and least of all, your experience of hearing it. This has been
corrections. More now on the Orange Grove. Intern Morine brought it to my attention that until
today, John Peters, you know, the farmer, has been missing for about four months.
Former intern Dana was the last to see him. Unfortunately, we do not know where Dana was when
she saw him. We are also unclear as to when Dana was, as time and space seem to not apply to
Dana these days. She's been without a phone charger for about eight months now, and we're still
texting. Also, I'm not sure how she's been paying her cell phone bill. Maureen? What is that?
Maureen, that's not a glass of orange juice you're drinking, is it? Oh, I see. She got it from our
station break room, not from the Ralph's, so it's probably safe then.
Oh, well, thank you for the offer, Maureen, but I'm still working on my coffee.
Maureen? Is everything okay?
Listeners, Maureen is just staring at me, silent, a single bead of sweat running down her left temple.
She is staring now at the orange juice.
She is biting her upper lip with her lower jaw
And breathing through her nose
Her cheeks are flushing
And she is shaking her head
Very
Very slightly
That looks like a no
Is that a no, Maureen?
Listeners, I
I think that's a no from Maureen
Oh, oh dear
Maureen just flickered
Like she was there and then she wasn't
And then she was like when a plane flies in front of the sun
And the light leaves for a brief moment
As you wonder for just that split second
Is this it? Is it over?
Only to have the sun return as your brain
hears the faint hum of a distant jet
And you sigh with relief and disappointment
That everything is as it was
A similar thing just happened with Maureen
Listen, Maureen
I'm
She is
backing out of the studio.
She is backing out of the studio.
She has dropped the glass.
She is flickering.
She is flickering.
She is gone.
Listeners,
Maureen is gone.
I hear no hum of jets.
I see no intern.
Just an open door and an empty glass
and a spreading stay.
to the family of intern Maureen.
She was a good intern with a beautiful puppy and a chatty neighbor.
She will be missed.
Wait, I just got another email from Carlos, marked urgent.
He says,
Cecil just talked to my team of scientists
who have been investigating the house that doesn't exist.
The one in the Desert Creek housing development,
that looks like it exists, like it's right there when you look at it, and it's between two other
identical houses, so it would make more sense for it to be there than not. That one.
They still have not gotten up the courage to go inside the house, but they did peek in the window
and they saw John Peters, you know, the farmer. They saw John sitting in a chair in an empty
room staring at a picture on the wall. They could not see what was in the picture, but John was
sitting quietly, staring at it, not moving. They called his name. They tried dialing his phone,
but he did not respond. They even knocked on the door. Nothing. Whoever this John Peters is
selling oranges and orange juice
is not the John Peters we know.
Also, I take it back. I think we should go out to eat tonight.
I tried to go to the store, but they're completely out of pasta, tomatoes, herbs, scissors, fire, everything.
Well, now that is...
Listeners, someone is pounding on the studio door.
Despite the brightly lit on air, do not disturb sign we always put out.
Do listeners,
John Peters just came to visit to talk with him.
Maybe this is a good time for us to go to the way.
No, wait, stop. John? John? No.
Listeners.
Oh, listeners.
What a fretful few moments we just had.
John Peters, you know, the imposter?
He burst into our studio and tried forcing me to eat an orange.
I attempted to reason with him, attempted to talk about our old bowling league and the wood shop class he used to teach.
I even asked him about the hilarious times we used to have standing silent and trance-like in front of the ancient chalk spire, predecessor to the current brown stone spire.
our mouths frothing, our minds spinning, our ventricles slowing.
But John did not acknowledge any of these fond memories.
As a last resort, with the orange nearing my face and my back pressing hard against the sharp
edge of my broadcast table, I grabbed my phone to tell Carlos that if I didn't make it home
tonight. It wasn't because I didn't love him or didn't want to watch a documentary on special
scientific graphs or was too obsessed with my job to relax and enjoy a good meal and some television.
It was only because I was zapped out of existence by a lunatic non-John Peters.
And that, in fact, I do love Carlos. And I would want nothing.
more than to watch a documentary on scientific graphs over some homemade linguine, or to go out
to eat again, or whatever. But then, as I grabbed my phone, I thought, that's way too long
to write for a text. So, I just hit John Peters upside the head with it, knocking him unconscious.
And the sheriff's secret police came to carry the fake John away, telling me that I didn't see anything
here. But then the Strex Corp affiliated station management arrived and asked the sheriff and his
secret police to stand down and that they, the secret police, didn't see anything here and to move
along like nothing happened. The secret police nodded and quietly shuffled out of the building,
heads facing down at their shoes. There's still an empty OJ glass on the floor.
The carpet around it is dark, not with liquid stain, but with void.
The spilled juice has taken the rug, wherever it has taken Maureen, wherever it has taken the reporters,
wherever it probably took the real John Peters, you know, the farmer.
My producer, Daniel, just gave me a disapproving smile as he handed me this note.
StrexCorp, Sinternists, Inc., majority shareholder of J.P.'s OJ. LTD is recalling all oranges and juices due to,
and here there's just a dark red smudge across the words.
Strexorp apologizes for any inconveniences, disappearances, lethargy, and or multiplicity you may have.
experienced. Carlos texted. No pasta, but there's leftover falafel and an unopened bag of nutmeg
seeds to snack on. XOXO. And then there's an emoji of two dinosaurs chasing an early 80s Ford
Mustang up a Palmetto-line suburban street as some residents look on, shocked and scared, a few laughing,
others undisturbed as they mow their lawns or sculpt their fruit-shaped topiary bushes.
Oh, man. Oh, that's very cute.
Listeners, let me release my own special announcement.
Cecil Palmer would like to not be late for dinner.
Stay tuned next for an hour that will feel like minutes but will be late.
in actuality take weeks.
Good night. Nightvale.
Good night.
Welcome to Nightvale is a production of commonplace books.
It is written by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranner and produced by Joseph Fink.
The voice of Night Vale is Cecil Baldwin.
Original music by Dysperition.
All of it can be found at dispersion.in. info or at
dispirition.bancamp.com.
This episode's weather was Black, White, and Red by
Emeris Cronin. Find out more at Soundcloud.com
slash emiris-chronin. Comments, questions,
email us at nightvale at commonplacebooks.com, or follow
us on Twitter at Nightvale Radio. Check out Welcome to Nightveal.com
for more information on this show, as well as all sorts of cool night veil
stuff you can own. And while you're there, consider clicking the donate link.
That'd be cool of you. Today's proverb,
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single command
from a satellite-activated mind-control chip.
Hey, Jeffrey Kraner here to tell you about another show from me
and my Nightvale co-creator, Joseph Fink.
It's called Unlicensed,
and it's an L.A. noir-style mystery set in the outskirts of present-day Los Angeles.
Unlicensed follows two unlicensed private investigators
who small jobs looking into insurance claims and missing property
are only the tip of a conspiracy iceberg.
There are already two seasons of unlicensed.
for you to listen to now with season three dropping on May 15th.
Unlicensed is available exclusively through Audible,
free if you already have that subscription.
And if you don't, Audible has a trial membership.
And if I know you, and I do,
you can binge all that mystery goodness in a short window.
And if you like it, if you liked Unlicensed,
please, please rate and review each season.
Our ability to keep making this show is predicated on audience engagement.
So go check out Unlicensed, available now only at Audubon.
com.
