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Behind the Scenes:
The Downloaded
An Interview with Robert J. Sawyer
On August 28, 2023, I recorded a video interview
for Audible to help promote the launch of my
The Downloaded as an Audible Original.
That morning, I woke up to find they'd sent me
23 questions for the video interview that was scheduled to begin
in just four hours.
In those four hours, I had to shower, eat, and spend most of an
hour getting to the studio. But in the little bit of time left
over, I wrote up 3,000 words of answers to the questions, just to
prepare myself for the interview.
I spoke off-the-cuff in the interview, for a more natural effect
I did not simply read these answers on camera. And only a
fraction of the points I'd prepared made it into the final short
videos such as this one they put out.
But here, for the first time anywhere, are those full written
answers: a detailed behind-the-scenes look at the making of The
Downloaded and what my intentions were when I created it:
Tell us about how you developed The Downloaded. Where
did your inspiration come from?
Ironically, it came from mystery fiction, not science fiction.
I've always been fascinated by courtroom drama: the one setting
in which people are forced to lay their souls bare, to tell the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. The idea of a
diverse group of people convicted criminals and
interstellar astronauts being interrogated as we, the
listener, try to solve a great futuristic mystery really appealed
to me.
Why do you think this story is good for audio?
When we were brainstorming ideas, the good folks at Audible said,
look, the world is in lockdown for the COVID pandemic. We're not
sure if we'll be able to get more than one actor into a studio at
a time. And the producer, Greg Sinclair, said, hey, what about
doing it like Kurosowa's film Rashomon as a
series of first-person accounts. Greg's comment was what made it
all gel for me; I knew we'd found both the solution to the COVID
problem and the template that would make the whole thing
work as compelling audio.
Is there one character in particular whose journey resonated
most with you?
You know, you'd think it would be one of the astronauts, but it
isn't. It's convicted killer Roscoe Koudoulian the
character played by Brendan Fraser who I most identify
with. Like me, he was bullied as a child and still carries scars
from that. And, like me, he looked around and saw a job that
needed doing, and so, despite the personal cost, he simply did
it. For Roscoe, that was trying to organize the survivors
into a community; for me, twenty-five years ago, that was
stepping up when no one else had decided to run, to be president
of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America.
How did you feel when you heard Brendan Fraser was going to
voice Roscoe?
I was thrilled. First, because Brendan is a fabulous actor.
Second, because, y'know, I've dealt with lots of producers who
say things like, "Rob, baby, this is gonna be big!" and
then they do nothing to ensure that success. But Audible has
said from day one that they had big plans for The
Downloaded, and they've delivered on that every step of
the way. You can't get better than landing the most-recent
best-actor Academy Award-winner as your lead!
Back when we were developing the scripts, the producer
Greg Sinclair, who is the former head of Radio Drama at the CBC
and I were just blue-skying about our dream casting, and
Greg was the first to suggest Brendan for Roscoe, an idea I
immediately loved. But when Brendan won the Oscar, Greg and I
both thought, oh, well, no chance of getting him now but
Audible was like, "Just watch us!" A first-class operation all
the way.
What do you think Brendan brings to the table to bring Roscoe
to life?
There's an echo in The Downloaded of Brendan's
first starring role, back in 1992. Remember, he played "Encino
Man," in the film of that name, a frozen caveman thawed out in
the present day.
Second, like me, he's a dual US-Canadian citizen, and in
The Downloaded, with its two very different groups
of reanimated individuals, I'm having a sly wink at the differing
approaches to life, contrasting the United States promise of
"life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," and Canada's
counterpart, which is "peace, order, and good government." Dual
US-Canadian citizens are a bit like Mr. Spock, with two
contrasting heritages warring within them; that made Brendan
perfect.
The story explores re-establishing physical connections after
spending so much time in the digital world. How much of this
story evolved from the pandemic?
It was totally inspired by COVID-19. I started creating
The Downloaded nineteen days after the World Health
Organization declared COVID a global pandemic, and so it was at
the forefront of my consciousness. We've all spent the last few
years living largely online: working remotely from home, shopping
on the internet, having food delivered instead of dining out, and
interacting with friends only through social media and Zoom
calls. It's almost as if we'd uploaded into a virtual realm!
But, of course, I knew that pandemic would eventually end, and
we'd be forced back into the real world, dealing face-to-face
with masses of human beings again and that was the story,
with science fiction's usual tools of metaphor, that I wanted to
tell.
What would you say is The Downloaded's message about
how we treat each other?
The inciting incident for Roscoe's arc in The
Downloaded is him tracking down and confronting his
childhood bully, who has reappeared in his life as an anonymous
online troll. The Downloaded is a metaphor for
online vs. offline life, and I wanted to point out just how
poorly most people treat other human beings in the social-media
arena.
Tying into that, The Downloaded has a recurring
motif about the two most famous laws or sets of laws in
science-fiction history: Isaac Asimov's famous Three Laws of
Robotics and Arthur C. Clarke's Third Law, which is "Any
sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from
magic." But I give my robot character Penolong, played for us by
Kim's Convenience co-star Andrew Phung, the chance
to put the message of The Downloaded into words.
After dismissing Asimov's laws, he says, "After all, there really
was only a single rule anybody ever needed, and it was pure gold:
do unto others as you'd have them do unto you."
What is it about science fiction that you think draws in
fans?
Hope. In our world, the simple assertion that there will
be a future carries great power; it's something we need to hear.
Beyond all the cool science, and the exploration of philosophical
questions, and the ability to examine human beings in conditions
that would be impossible, impracticable, or unethical to do in
real life, it's that simple, basic need that draws people to
science fiction: hope.
What are your top three sci-fi stories of all time?
Gateway by Frederik Pohl. I was so thrilled
when Audible asked me to write and record a new introduction to
their audiobook edition of that novel back in 2009. I've been
lucky enough to win all three of the world's top awards for best
science fiction novel of the year: the Hugo, the Nebula, and the
John W. Campbell Memorial Award, but each one was for a different
book. But Fred Pohl won all three of them for this one single
masterpiece; I don't think anyone has ever written a finer
science-fiction novel than Gateway.
Then there's The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey
Niffenegger, which is one of the few science-fiction novels
by a mainstream author that really holds up as science
fiction; she examines her premise of a man unstuck in time in
rigorous detail, and pays real attention to the science behind
his predicament. As it happens, I didn't read this book in
print; rather, I listened to it in audio. The audiobook came out
in 2006, and, unusually for that time, they used not one but two
narrators for the two point-of-view characters, Fred
Berman reading Henry's parts, and Phoebe Strole
reading Clare's. The alternation of voices really worked well,
and that definitely set the template for the multiple
first-person narrators I decided to use for The
Downloaded, knowing Audible would cast a different actor
for each one.
And, finally, there's another, very different time-travel story:
H.G. Wells's The Time Machine. It does what I've
always tried to do in my own science fiction: tell a story, with
metaphors and disguises, about real social issues, in Wells's
case, about the British class system. If a reviewer were to
point out that both Wells's The Time Machine and my
The Downloaded deal with two very different groups
of humanity coming into conflict, one brutish, as in his Morlocks
and my unruly group of ex-convicts, and the other seemingly
privileged, as in his Eloi and my astronauts, well, I wouldn't
quibble with the comparison.
Thinking about H.G. Wells's The War of the Worlds as a
radio play, are you finding more people are returning to the
genre of audio dramas?
Absolutely! Orson Welles's Mercury Theatre version of The
War of the Worlds, so famously first broadcast October
30, 1938, really showed that science fiction makes great audio
drama. I'm thrilled to have previously won the Audio Publishers
Association's Audie Award for Best Science Fiction or Fantasy
Audiobook of the Year, for my Calculating God, but
that was just straight narration, albeit expertly done, by
Jonathan Davis. The Downloaded is just so much
richer and audio experience, thanks to our wonderful cast and
Greg Sinclair's superb direction, and there's no doubt that this
kind of immersive audio is what listeners want today.
With the advancement of AI, do you think that computers will
begin to become sentient at some point?
Probably, although I don't think it'll necessarily be a linear
progression from our current AI. Still, there's nothing magical
about consciousness even if, as I say in The
Downloaded, that it turns out to be quantum-mechanical in
nature. If it could spontaneously arise in formerly dumb apes
like us, it probably can arise on any sufficiently advanced
substrate. Indeed, that sort of emergent consciousness underpins
the three volumes of my WWW trilogy of Wake,
Watch, and Wonder, about the World
Wide Web waking up, which Audible Studios produced back in 2009
and 2010.
If you had to survive the end of humanity with one character
from science fiction, who would it be?
I've got to go with the great James T. Kirk. He doesn't believe
in the no-win scenario; he always turns death into a fighting
chance for life; and, at heart, he was a pacifist and, if you'll
forgive the pun, a bridge-builder. He said this of the leaders
of a peace mission he got to be part of as a cadet: "They were
humanitarians and statesmen, and they had a dream a dream
that became a reality and spread throughout the stars, a dream
that made Mister Spock and me brothers." You couldn't ask for a
better companion.
What do you think about the idea of cryonic suspension? Would
you want to do it?
Since the dawn of time, humans have tried to cheat death. One of
my great friends, the science-fiction writer Gregory Benford, has
indeed signed up for cryonic suspension and hopes to be revived
at some point in the future following his death. But to
come back to Brendan Fraser's first starring role, in
Encino Man I wouldn't want to be the
primitive curiosity for people to gawk at in some future. I'm
content to live a natural life, and, even if it were to come to
an end tomorrow, I'd still say, quite sincerely, that I lived in
the best time in all of history, in the best place in the entire
world, and longer than 95% of all the human beings who ever came
before me. Besides, as a Canadian, I get quite enough cold in my
life; the idea of being on ice for decades or centuries hasn't
got much appeal!
Name one person you'd want to survive all of humanity
with.
One of my best friends is the comedian Emo Philips, who is an
absolute genius, and he manages to see the humor in
everything. As Emo once said, "I used to think that the
human brain was the most fascinating part of the body. Then I
realized, `Whoa, look what's telling me that.'" If you've got to
face the end of the human race, you might as well go out laughing
and, in fact, despite the serious subject matter and
dystopian setting, there's lots of humor in The
Downloaded.
If the world had to end, which way would you prefer? An
asteroid, an alien invasion, or a zombie outbreak and why?
As with so many science-fictional questions, this is a great
example of taking something mundane the end of life
and making it fantastic, the end of the world. And I think the
best way to go in both cases is as quickly and cleanly as
possible. When I was a kid, we didn't know what had killed the
dinosaurs. Now, we know it was the impact of a 10-kilometer-wide
asteroid on the shore of the Gulf of Mexico. I think that was a
great way for Tyrannosaurus rex and company to go out, as
I have the character of Jameela Chowdhury says in The
Downloaded, inverting T.S. Eliot's famous phrase, "This
is how the world will end not with a whimper but with a
great bloody bang."
What are some headlines you think we'd see in 2059?
We are at such a key point in history right now at this very
moment: the planet is literally and figuratively on fire. But
let's be optimists as I usually am in my fiction!
and assume we're going to survive. I'd like to see headlines
that reflect some of the themes of The Downloaded:
"Permanent human city established on Mars," "All cancers cured,"
and "Humans and artificial intelligences sign new accords to
co-exist in peace and with mutual respect."
If you hear there is a meteor that will destroy Earth, what
would be the first thing you'd do?
First, and this lesson is one that's part of the subtext of
The Downloaded: I'd check the sources, check the
facts, make sure they're correct. There's a big plot twist I
won't give away in The Downloaded where something
the characters have assumed was correct turns out to be
completely wrong.
Second, look for a way to get off the planet. The only reason
the dinosaurs are extinct is they didn't have a space program.
If you were able to download your consciousness into an
inanimate object, what would it be?
An inanimate object? Well, I've never liked my body
anyway, and less so as the years go by. But I've always thought
of myself as a philosopher as much as a writer; I think a better
name for "science fiction" would be "philosophical fiction"
not sci-fi but phi-fi! and so I'd be happy to be
downloaded into a marble statue of Socrates, as long as some
robot would keep shooing the pigeons off my head.
Would you want your consciousness uploaded somewhere?
Although I write a lot about transhumanism myself, I'm not a
transhumanist. I think Letitia Garvey played by the great
Broadway actress Vanessa Sears in The
Downloaded has the right answer: upload if there's
a specific reason why it beats the alternative; in her case, that
was to make a voyage to another star possible. I disagree with
Jrgen Haass, the character in The Downloaded
played by Emmy Award-winner Luke Kirby, who thinks an
uploaded existence would be better than physical reality. As my
Russian roboticist Mikhail Sidorov says in the story, "Virtual
reality is nothing but air guitar writ large."
If you did, would you even want to download back to your
body?
I came up with, I thought, a nifty reason in The
Downloaded why you might upload your consciousness only
temporarily: to make space voyages go by quickly, or, conversely,
to make prison terms pass without years elapsing in the outside
world. But for regular people, if they upload, I expect it'll be
a one-way journey. I mean, as much as I, and others, rail
against the ills of social media and online information silos,
how many of us actually just turn off our computers and
"download" back into the real world?
Do you think we'll be able to set up colonies on other planets
someday?
Absolutely! Humanity has always expanded outward. We may have
gotten our start in Olduvai Gorge, but we went on to occupy the
entire planet. As our technology improves, for sure we're going
to build colonies on Mars, the Moon, possibly floating in the
atmosphere of Venus, and other places. But they'll only be
colonies for a while, of course. Just like Canada and the United
States, they will eventually be independent members of the
expanded United Nations of the Solar System.
Describe your perfect planet.
It's this one, Sol III, the planet Earth. It's the one we
evolved on, and so we're perfectly adapted for it; no other
planet anywhere in the galaxy will ever be as just-right for us
as Earth. That said, we've done a great job of messing things up
here one of the things The Downloaded says
is that we may be past the tipping point on global warming, so
that even if we stopped pumping carbon into the atmosphere today,
the climate might continue to grow ever hotter for many decades
to come. So, actually, the perfect planet is Earth, but
maybe 200,000 years ago before our the latest ice age, and
before we moderns messed everything up.
If you could upload your consciousness, but leave some parts
of it behind, what would you leave behind?
That's one of the great appeals about digitizing consciousness:
once it's digitized, it's also editable, and, sure there are
memories that haunt me, or upset me, of things that went down in
the past. A terrific line from the original Star
Trek was, "One is finally grateful for a failing memory."
And, again, this comes back to the social-media metaphor that
underpins The Downloaded: what each of us uploads
to Facebook or Instagram is an edited, curated version of our
life, the version of reality we want, not the painful one we so
often actually have to endure in the real world.
More Good Reading
Getting The Downloaded as an audiobook, in print,
or as an ebook
More about The Downloaded
Reviews of The Downloaded
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