The Science Fiction & Fantasy Factory – Details, episodes & analysis

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The Science Fiction & Fantasy Factory

The Science Fiction & Fantasy Factory

Mookie Spitz

Fiction
Science
Religion & Spirituality

Frequency: 1 episode/2d. Total Eps: 25

Buzzsprout

Hosted by writer and ranter Mookie Spitz, the SFFF is where science fiction & fantasy creators, fans, and technologists transform imagination into reality. Each episode explores how writers, filmmakers, and world-builders bring their universes to life, with personal stories about turning wild ideas into finished projects that connect, inspire, and thrill. From indie authors to visionary engineers, Mookie uncovers the creative engines powering the future of sci-fi & fantasy storytelling!

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Apple Podcasts

  • šŸ‡¬šŸ‡§ Great Britain - scienceFiction

    03/03/2026
    #68
  • šŸ‡©šŸ‡Ŗ Germany - scienceFiction

    30/10/2025
    #98
  • šŸ‡©šŸ‡Ŗ Germany - scienceFiction

    29/10/2025
    #80
  • šŸ‡©šŸ‡Ŗ Germany - scienceFiction

    28/10/2025
    #53
  • šŸ‡©šŸ‡Ŗ Germany - scienceFiction

    27/10/2025
    #37

Spotify

    No recent rankings available



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RSS feed quality
Good

Score global : 78%


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Mechhaven Dreams: Talking Indie Shop with Greg Sorber

Season 1 Ā· Episode 3

jeudi 23 octobre 2025 • Duration 01:40:46

Step back inside The Science Fiction Factory, where host Mookie Spitz joins fellow indie author Greg Sorber as they transform vivid imagination into great storytelling. Recorded fresh off LA Comic Con 2025, this episode dives into what it means to build worlds, fight algorithms, and write science fiction without a corporate mothership.

Greg opens up about the making of his Mechhaven saga—a gritty space opera he describes as ā€œTransformers meets Braveheartā€ā€”where 200 sentient robots struggle for peace, freedom, and identity on a faraway planet after galactic war. Mookie and Greg dissect the high-stakes life of indie authors: grinding out manuscripts nightly between day gigs, pitching from booths in underground artist alleys, and competing with algorithms and apathy for reader attention.

Together they explore:

  • Why ā€œa rising tide floats all indie boatsā€ in the sci-fi underground.
  • The trade-off between artistic control and traditional gatekeeping.
  • How AI, fandom, and world-building are reshaping the future of storytelling.
  • The real cost—financial and emotional—of chasing your own mythos.

From nostalgic Star Wars awakenings to deep talk on trauma, AI, and literary obsession, The Science Fiction Factory celebrates every dreamer soldering their imagination into the infinite verse. ā€œIt’s not just about robots or rockets,ā€ says Greg. ā€œIt’s about creators who refuse to wait for permission to build their own worlds.ā€

Greg Sorber

"I’m a lifelong fan of science fiction, fantasy, and comic books. Some of my earliest memories are of Land of the Lost, Speed Racer, and The Six Million Dollar Man. Seeing Star Wars in the theater for the first time in 1977 was a life-changing experience. An avid reader from an early age, I’ve always loved books that engaged my imagination. Reading The Hobbit in 7th grade English class and writing a short story that same year set me down the path of becoming a writer. I live in Riverside, California with my family and two dogs."

greg@gregerationx.comĀ 

www.gregerationx.comĀ 

https://amzn.to/4gWS2DL

Want to be on the show? Have feedback? Send Mookie a text!

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Top 10 Reasons We Love Science Fiction

Season 1 Ā· Episode 2

mercredi 22 octobre 2025 • Duration 01:38:46

We can't get enough science fiction! But why...?Ā 

Science fiction isn’t just a genre, but the way we see the world and ourselves. Great science fiction is where philosophy meets spectacle, where we project our fears, fantasies, and future selves into strange new worlds to see reflections of our possibilities.Ā 

After talking to die-hard fans, veteran writers, and creators across the sci-fi spectrum, I started noticing patterns — emotional, intellectual, even spiritual. Beneath the laser battles and alien languages, the same obsessions kept resurfacing. So I made a list — ten deep reasons we love science fiction, can't get enough, why great sci-fi keeps shaping everything from our politics to our childhood dreams.

Here's my attempt to decode why sci-fi matters more than ever, and why we love it so much:Ā 

  1. Contacting AliensĀ  — Sci-fi satisfies our primal curiosity: what’s out there, and how will we meet our first extraterrestrials? From Childhood’s End to Contact, the alien is both mirror and mystery.
  2. Playing God — The power to create and destroy worlds. From Frankenstein to Ex Machina, sci-fi lets us tinker with life and watch the fallout.
  3. Playing Politics — The safest place to hide dangerous ideas. Star Trek, Handmaid’s Tale, and District 9 use fantasy to talk politics, morality, and ideology.
  4. Fetishizing Technology — We don’t just use tech; we worship it. From Metropolis to Iron Man to Tron: Ares, technology becomes both muse and mirror — sleek, sexy, and slightly sinister.
  5. Joining The Tribe — Sci-fi fandom is a culture, not a hobby. Comic-Con, Worldcon, and Disney’s Star Wars lands show how outsiders find belonging in shared weirdness.
  6. Becoming Creators — The dream fulfilled: Lucas, Favreau, and Filoni grew up geeking out — then built universes of their own. Sci-fi is recursive creation.
  7. Feeling Nostalgic — Every fan remembers their first time — E.T., Star Wars, that dog-eared Asimov paperback. Sci-fi reconnects us to the childhood awe we lost.
  8. Letting It Loose — No genre explodes bigger. Whether it’s The Expanse or Avengers: Endgame, sci-fi lets us annihilate galaxies to vent our fears.
  9. Predicting the Future — The speculative engine. From Black Mirror to Minority Report, sci-fi imagines what happens if we keep doing what we’re doing — or stop.
  10. Building Worlds — The ultimate sandbox. From Alien to Dune to The Matrix, sci-fi creates believable worlds that make us believe this one could be rewritten.
  11. Laughing Our Asses Off (Bonus) -- From Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy to The Fifth Element, great sci-fi doesn’t just imagine — it mocks. Because sometimes the only sane response to infinity is to laugh.

What do you think? Mookie can't wait to hear from you -- and welcome you onto the podcast to share your own opinions as a sci-fi writer, artist, producer, or raving fan!

Want to be on the show? Have feedback? Send Mookie a text!

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Welcome to the Science Fiction Factory

Season 1 Ā· Episode 1

mardi 21 octobre 2025 • Duration 02:11

What makes science fiction great?Ā 

Step onto the shop floor where imagination meets machinery. The Science Fiction Factory is where writers, artists, filmmakers, and dreamers reveal how the genre gets made—story by story, world by world, effect by effect.

Join your host Mookie Spitz to talk about the craft and chaos behind your favorite futures: from character arcs to cosmic engines, from special effects to planetary-scale ideas. Think of the show as a behind-the-scenes pass to the creative assembly line that keeps science fiction alive and thriving.

Whether you're a creator, a fan, a marketer, or just someone who gets a rush from the smell of rocket fuel and ink, you’ll find your tribe here.

Get ready for The Science Fiction Factory—where we build enthralling realities, one episode at a time.

Want to be on the show? Have feedback? Send Mookie a text!

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Ingrid's Moonstruck Musings on Indie Sci-Fi

Season 1 Ā· Episode 4

mardi 28 octobre 2025 • Duration 01:25:06

Your sci-fi obsessed host Mookie Spitz sits down with science educator, technologist, and multi-genre author Ingrid Moon to dissect writing and self-publishing — and why it’s so damn hard to do it well.

They start with Ingrid’s journey from tech marketing to science classrooms to building reference books for sci-fi authors who don’t know enough science. Astrofiction, Biofiction, Robofiction — yes, those are real, and they’ll save your story from embarrassing ā€œspace magic"...

Then it’s all in on the struggles:

  • The agony of finishing a book when your brain craves endless worldbuilding.
  • The harsh truth that most ā€œnew ideasā€ are stale genre tropes — and why that might actually be a good thing.
  • How finding a close-knit writers’ group is the secret weapon to stay sane and keep your plot from face-planting.

Mookie rants about trying to hack attention in a world drowning in content. He describes how his first 500-page illustrated Santa Claus epic baffled readers who couldn’t tell if it was for kids or deranged adults. Then he reveals why his latest sci-fi novel, Jonnie Fazoolie & the Transfinite Reality Engine finally nailed it:

  • A raw, savage take on the mess that is 2025, crammed into tight three-line blocks that read like Twitter poetry on meth.
  • A bad guy that’s literally a Boltzmann brain floating at the edge of a dying universe — obsessed with a loser she can’t have.
  • A narrative style chopped into tweet-sized punches that force every line to matter — and rewrite your brain on how to read).

They tear into why many indie authors fail at story — chasing intricate lore instead of broken people trying to survive. Why character arcs matter more than your perfectly mapped kingdoms. Why even if your idea is another alien invasion or Mars colonization, it’s your twist, your voice, your messed-up characters that breathe life into tired tropes.

Also on deck:

  • How to edit your work so it stops sucking, and why line editing is more brutal (and necessary) than you think.
  • The tension between satisfying genre fans who crave familiar beats vs pushing the story into new places.
  • Why finished is always better than perfect, and why marketing your book is a separate beast that no one warns you about.

If you’ve ever wanted to write (or just watch two writers spiral into their own creative hangups), you’ll feel right at home.

The Guest

Ingrid Moon is an author, editor, and science teacher. She currently has four science fiction novels, three audiobooks, and three science reference books for worldbuilding, with more on the way. Ingrid is a Southern California native who can't surf because she spent most of her youth navigating mountains and watching sci-fi television, all of which inspired her writing career.Ā 

Her Resources

author website: https://ingridmoon.com

editor website: https://ingridmoon.com/authors

goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5035674.Ingrid_Moon

amazon author page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Ingrid-Moon/author/B0CKKMRL88

instagram: @ingridmoonauthor

facebook (author business): https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61553084507674

Want to be on the show? Have feedback? Send Mookie a text!

Support the show

Sounds of the Biohunter: Making of a Sci-Fi Audiobook

Season 1 Ā· Episode 5

mercredi 29 octobre 2025 • Duration 01:04:07

Sci-fi author Ingrid Moon and voiceover wizard Scott Allen join yourĀ  host, Mookie Spitz, for an unfiltered ride through the making of audiobook for Biohunter—a post-apocalyptic sci-fi love story between a deadly alien tracker and a teenage human target. They talk shop about audiobooks, content repurposing, and self-publishing in the age of AI.Ā 

Ingrid reveals how the novel began as a pseudonymous writing challenge—complete with a mystery book cover and fake name—and ended as a full-fledged sci-fi saga complete with morally conflicted characters and actual emotional stakes (imagine Dances with Wolves meets The Most Dangerous Game, with fewer buffalo and more cloning). Mookie compares notes on the struggle of doing bad German dominatrix accents while reading his own fiction out loud. Scott shares war stories from behind the mic—including the horror of accepting a voice gig before reading the manuscript, only to find out midway that it goes full weird.

They deep-dive into audiobook production (hint: color-coded dialogue and wrestling with audio files), the psychological toll of switching voices like a caffeinated sociopath, and what it’s like to hear your own writing read back to you in someone else's voice—better than you imagined but also slightly unsettling, like hearing your dog say your name.

Then it gets existential. AI narration, KDP’s soulless ā€œRead Now With a Robotā€ button, and the philosophical death spiral of bots making content for other bots. Can real emotion survive a whispering LLM? Do the robots stutter convincingly yet? Does anyone really read anymore, or are we all just huffing 10-minute audio chunks while reheating lasagna?

It’s a heartfelt, hilarious, and occasionally unhinged conversation about storytelling, collaboration, and fighting for human creativity in the face of algorithmic mediocrity. Perfect for writers, listeners, aspiring voice actors, and anyone terrified that their next favorite novel might be written—and narrated—by Skynet. Spoiler: Ingrid and Scott are still human. For now. And Mookie remains bald. Surprise!Ā 

The Author

Ingrid Moon is an author, editor, and science teacher. She currently has four science fiction novels, three audiobooks, and three science reference books for worldbuilding, with more on the way. Ingrid is a Southern California native who can't surf because she spent most of her youth navigating mountains and watching sci-fi television, all of which inspired her writing career.Ā 

Her Resources

book website: https://bit.ly/biohunterĀ 

author website: https://ingridmoon.com

Sign Up for Newsletter: https://bit.ly/moon-newsĀ 

The Voice Talent

https://scottallenvoice.com/

Ingrid On the Pod

https://www.buzzsprout.com/2549048/episodes/18084835

Want to be on the show? Have feedback? Send Mookie a text!

Support the show


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