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Dead Robots' Society

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Dead Robots' Society
Presentation
Hosted byJustin R. Macumber, Terry Mixon, Paul E Cooley, Scott Roche
GenreTalk
LanguageEnglish
Length1 hour+
Production
Audio formatMP3
Publication
Original release08/08/2007 – present
Websitewww.deadrobotssociety.com
Dead Robots' Society promotional clip

Search Dead Robots' Society on Amazon.

Dead Robots' Society is an award-nominated weekly podcast created by Justin R. Macumber, and currently hosted by Terry Mixon, Scott Roche and Paul E Cooley. Episodes typically feature the three hosts discussing a specific writing related topic and their current progress with their own projects over the course of an hour or more. Guests are often welcomed to promote upcoming works or to join the discussion when they are addressing more specialized topics.

History[edit]

Partially inspired by Mur Lafferty's "I Should Be Writing" podcast, Justin R. Macumber created The Dead Robots' Society as a podcast to "offer advice and support to other aspiring writers",[1] and to communicate with other aspiring writers and establish a network with publishing professionals.[2] In October 2013, Macumber took a sabbatical from the podcast, with episode 291 (October 29, 2013) being his final episode[3] until his return in August 2014.[4] Scott Roche was introduced in Episode 291 as a new co-host of the series. Macumber is still active in the show's social media outlets and was a guest on the show in April 2014 to promote his upcoming novel Still Water.[5]

Former co-hosts[edit]

  • Justin R. Macumber (2007-2013, 2014-Current)
  • Eliyanna "Eli" Kaiser (2010-2012)
  • Ryan Stevenson (2007-2010)
  • Gramm Binns (2007-2009?)
  • P.G. Holyfield (2009-2011)
  • Steve Leahy (2007)
  • Amanda Cales
  • Jason Mack (2007)

Explorers Anthology[edit]

The Explorers Anthology[6] was edited by Justin, Terry and Eli, respectively.

Award Nominations[edit]

The Dead Robots' Society podcast was a Parsec Awards finalist in multiple years in the Best Speculative Fiction Writing-Related category in 2007, 2009, 2010, and 2012.[7][8][1][9]

References[edit]

External links[edit]


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