![]() |
The Comedian Next DoorAuthor: John Branyan
The Comedian Next Door Language: en Genres: Comedy, Comedy Interviews Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
Listen Now...
Riff 80 - Solitaire and Harmful Side Effects
Thursday, 19 March, 2026
We start with childhood TV, back when watching a show meant knowing exactly what time it came on and being in front of the television when it did. If you missed it, your only option was to hear about it later from someone who might get the details wrong. Families built evenings around what was airing, using the TV schedule as a kind of household clock. From there, we get into medication commercials, where everything begins with a cheerful scene and ends with a list that takes a hard turn. You’ll hear about dry mouth and dizziness in the same breath as something that sounds like it requires immediate attention. The delivery never changes, which makes the contrast between the smiling people and the list even harder to ignore. That leads into sleep machines, which are supposed to help by playing sounds like rain or waves. The idea is simple until you realize you’re lying there paying close attention to whether this particular version of rain sounds right. Instead of falling asleep, you’re evaluating the loop and wondering why the ocean seems to repeat every few seconds. We then move to solitaire, where every move feels important right up until you run out of options and realize the deck had other plans. That small-scale decision-making sits next to Dwarf Fortress, where every action connects to several others and the system keeps track of all of it. One has you flipping cards and hoping for a red six; the other has you managing layers of outcomes that build on each other. We also get into actors’ heights and how they’re adjusted on screen, especially in portrayals of dwarves, where camera angles and positioning do most of the work. Across TV schedules, side effect lists, looping rain sounds, card stacks, and dense game systems, we keep running into the same situation: you follow the setup, and then something in the details refuses to behave the way it’s supposed to.












