

Exploring Humanity Through Sci-Fi
Tony Tellado
Where Imagination Meets What It Means To Be Human
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 25, 2025 ⢠17min
Vintage Episode: âMonsters in the Margins: Gareth Edwards on DIY Filmmaking and Creature Creationâ
Before Godzilla, before Rogue One, Gareth Edwards was a one-man army with a camera, a laptop, and a dream. In this throwback episode of Byte, we revisit our early conversation with Edwards just after the release of his breakout indie sci-fi film, Monsters (2010)âa haunting, low-budget marvel that redefined what guerrilla filmmaking could achieve.
đĽ The Micro-Crew Miracle With just two lead actors, a sound recordist, and a handful of gear, Edwards shot Monsters across five countries in three weeks. He recounts the thrill and chaos of filming without permits, improvising scenes with locals, and shaping a story from raw, real-world textures.
đž Designing the Monsters Hear how Edwards built the filmâs towering, bioluminescent creatures using off-the-shelf software and sheer imagination. He discusses the emotional logic behind their designâwhy theyâre more gentle giants than alien invadersâand how he wanted audiences to feel awe, not just fear.
đ Sci-Fi with Soul Edwards talks about his desire to make a monster movie that felt intimate and human. He breaks down how Monsters is really a love story wrapped in a sci-fi road trip, and why the infected zone is less about aliens and more about borders, trauma, and connection.
đ§ This episode is a time capsule of indie ingenuityâa portrait of a filmmaker on the cusp of global recognition, still chasing the magic of storytelling with nothing but grit and a laptop.
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Aug 24, 2025 ⢠6min
Byte Donald Mowat Teases Tron Ares
The Make-Up Designer for Tron Ares teased me about the movie during a break from filming last year.
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Aug 22, 2025 ⢠20min
Time Capsule 413: A journey through memory, meaning, and the future
Episode 413 brings together creators and performers who challenge what it means to be human, to belong, and to imagine beyond the stars.
đŚ Featured Interviews:
Ross Marquand on Descendent The actor opens up about the emotional toll and transformative process behind his role in Descendent, a film that blurs the line between trauma and transcendence.
Director Peter Ciella on Descendent Ciella shares why he chose alien abduction as the lens for exploring identity and loss, and how the film reclaims the genre for a new generation.
đ§ Rewind Segment: David Dastmalchian & Noma Dumezweni A powerful revisit to their reflections on humanity, empathy, and storytelling as resistance. Their insights remain as urgent and resonant as ever.
Valerie Weiss on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds The director of âThe Sehlat Who Ate Its Tailâ reveals how she drew inspiration from the original series to craft an episode thatâs both whimsical and deeply philosophical.
Mynor Luken on We Are Starfleet In this documentary-style episode, Luken explores the ethos of Starfleet through intimate scenes with the cast. He reflects on legacy, leadership, and unity.
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Aug 21, 2025 ⢠10min
Explore Weekly; Wizards, Wastelands & Emmy-Worthy Aliens
This week on Explore Weekly, we dive deep into the genre multiverse with the biggest headlines from sci-fi, fantasy, horror, and comics. From Middle-earth to the Mojave Wasteland, Emmy buzz to alien invasionsâhereâs whatâs lighting up the internet:
đ 2025 Hugo Awards: We break down some the winners
đ§ââď¸ Gandalf & Frodo Return: First look at Hunt for Gollum, the surprise Tolkien adaptation bringing back iconic characters.
â˘ď¸ Fallout Season Two: New factions, deeper lore, and a wasteland even more brutalâwhat showrunner Geneva Robertson-Dworet revealed this week.
đ§ The Penguinâs Emmy Sweep: Lauren LeFranc talks building Gothamâs criminal underworldâand reaction how the series snagged 24 Emmy nominations.
đ Dune: Prophecy: Behind the scenes with the VFX team crafting a key scene in the season finale.
đ§Ź Vought Rising: The Boysâ latest spinoff promises biotech horror, corporate satire, and a new generation of supes.
đŞ New Harry Potter Star Speaks: The actor stepping into the iconic robes opens up about legacy, pressure, and magical reinvention.
đĽ Fantastic Fest 2025 Line-Up: A look at some of the must-see films shaking up Austin.
đ§ Sci-Fi & the Emmys: Why genre storytelling is finally resonating with voters
đ˝ The Eternauts Explained: We decode the alien mythology behind Netflixâs Argentine sci-fi hit.
đ Alien Earthâs True Villains: A closer look at the human cost of survival in this haunting post-contact thriller.
đ§ Listener Takeaway
Genre isnât just escapismâitâs a lens on power, identity, and transformation. This episode celebrates the creators pushing boundaries and the fans keeping the conversation alive.
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Aug 20, 2025 ⢠5min
Rewind: Murderbot's Noma Dumezweni & David Dastmalchian: Compassion, Code, and Colonies
In this episode, we dive into the layered performances behind Murderbot, the sci-fi adaptation thatâs redefining what it means to be human, augmented, and emotionally resilient. Joining us are Noma Dumezweni, who brings a quiet ferocity to Dr. Mensah, and David Dastmalchian, whose portrayal of Gurathin pulses with tension between cybernetic precision and raw humanity.
We explore how Noma crafts Mensahâs leadershipâequal parts empathy and steelâand how David finds the soul within Gurathinâs augmented shell. The conversation also touches on the almost utopian, hippie-like existence of the colonists. Plus, David reflects on his chilling role in Late Night With The Devil, and how playing Gurathin offered a very different kind of psychological terrain.
Mensahâs Moral Compass: Noma shares how she approached the characterâs deep compassion without compromising her authority, revealing the emotional intelligence behind Mensahâs decisions.
Gurathinâs Duality: David discusses the tension between Gurathinâs cybernetic enhancements and his very human skepticismâespecially toward Murderbotâand how that conflict shaped his performance.
From Devil to Data: David reflects on Late Night With The Devil, the psychological toll of playing a character unraveling on live TV, and how Gurathinâs internal battles offered a quieter, more introspective challenge.
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Aug 19, 2025 ⢠14min
Trek Tuesday: Valerie Weiss on Directing Star Trek and Storytelling
This week on Trek Tuesday, weâre joined by one of the most intellectually and artistically gifted directors in the Star Trek universeâValerie Weiss. With a PhD from Harvard Medical School in biological chemistry and a passion for cinematic storytelling, Valerie brings a rare fusion of scientific insight and emotional depth to her work behind the camera.
đ Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
Precision in âAd Astra Per Asperaâ She breaks down her meticulous approach to camera angles and blocking in the courtroom scenes, using visual language to heighten tension and underscore themes of justice and identity.
âThe Sehlat Who Ate Its Tailâ â A metaphysical, emotionally resonant tale that explores grief, memory, and the boundaries of Vulcan logic.
Her Directing Philosophy Valerie discusses how she blends intuition with preparationâbalancing emotional truth with technical execution to serve the story and characters.
Staging Action with Purpose From phaser fights to starship maneuvers, she reveals how she choreographs action sequences to reflect character stakes and narrative rhythm, never just spectacle for spectacleâs sake.
Character-Driven Direction At the heart of her process is character. Valerie explains how understanding a characterâs emotional arc shapes every directorial choiceâfrom lens selection to pacing to performance notes.
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Aug 18, 2025 ⢠16min
UFOs, Trauma, and Truth: Peter Cilella on His Debut Feature Descendent
In this episode, I chat with writer and director Peter Cilella to explore his haunting and intimate debut feature, Descendentâa fresh and emotionally charged take on the UFO abduction narrative.
The film follows Sean Bruner (played by Ross Marquand) and his wife Andrea (Sarah Bulger) as they prepare for the arrival of their first child. But when Sean blacks out after witnessing a mysterious light during a late-night security shift, he awakens aboard an alien craftâand reality begins to fracture.
Peter shares how Descendent uses science fiction not just to thrill, but to probe the psychological toll of trauma and the resilience of love. We discuss:
đ¸ The blurred line between memory and imagination
đ How couples navigate the aftermath of extraordinary events
đ The grounded performances of Marquand and Tomko
đ§ Clues and visual motifs that challenge the viewerâs perception of reality
đŹ Peterâs journey from shorts to his first featureâand why this story had to be told now
Whether you're a fan of cerebral sci-fi or intimate character studies, Descendent offers a layered experience that lingers long after the credits roll.
đ Watch closely. Whatâs real? Whatâs imagined? And what does it mean to truly survive?
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Aug 17, 2025 ⢠9min
Byte Scott Brick On Performing Dune Audio
Scott doesn't read the books for audio, he performs then. We chat about pronouncing a key Dune house plus we hear a clip from McMillan audio that Scott performs.
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Aug 16, 2025 ⢠5min
Byte Matt Betts
Writer of the Steampunk themed, Odd Man Out talks about his love of the genre.
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Aug 15, 2025 ⢠18min
Is Time Travel Possible? Insights with Dr. Amira Val Baker
Dr. Val Baker is a Scientific Research Associate at the Resonance Science Foundation. She earned an MSci in Astrophysics from University College London and a PhD in Astrophysics from Open University under Dr. Andrew Norton. Her research spans binaries, neutron stars, black holes, gamma-ray bursts, AGN and exoplanets.
Forward Time Travel via Relativity
Einsteinâs special theory of relativity tells us that the faster you move, the more slowly you experience time relative to someone at rest. Precision experimentsâlike synchronizing atomic clocks on jets versus on the groundâconfirm that high-speed travel causes measurable time dilation.
Did The Avengers Get Time Travel Right in Endgame?
The MCUâs Quantum Approach
In Endgame, the Avengers use Pym Particles to shrink into the Quantum Realm and slip through time. This nods to real ideas about spacetime shortcutsâakin to wormholesâbut the film glosses over the astronomical energy and stability challenges such a method would entail in actual physics.
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