
Show overview
My Internet Has Stopped Working has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 10 episodes. That works out to roughly 10 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a roughly quarterly cadence.
Episodes typically run an hour to ninety minutes — most land between 1h 5m and 1h 29m — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. Roughly 50% of episodes carry an explicit flag from the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Arts show.
There hasn’t been a new episode in the last ninety days; the most recent episode landed 3 months ago. Published by Justin William Marquis.
From the publisher
We are the Podcasters of the Apocalypse, a band of literary wayfarers and in My Internet Has Stopped Working we delve into the dusty corners of forgotten libraries unearthing lost treasures and arcane lore. Science fiction epics whispered of in forgotten tongues. Fantastical journeys hidden in the shadows of bestsellers. Forget the well-trodden paths of Arrakis, Pandora and The Matrix. We seek the undiscovered country in mysterious tales that will leave you muttering, "Why haven't I heard of this?"
Latest Episodes

S1 Ep 10MIHSW: Season 1 Holiday Special
The Podcasters of the Apocalypse, on the My Internet Has Stopped Working podcast, take on A Season of Wonder, a holiday collection that swaps cozy nostalgia for time travel as confrontation—using the past not as escape, but as a proving ground for faith, grief, and identity. These stories ask why holidays pull us backward in time and what it costs when technology makes that pull literal. In Harlan Ellison’s “Go Toward the Light,” a future scientist intervenes during the desecration of the Temple in Jerusalem, reframing the Hanukkah miracle as an act of choice rather than myth. Kristine Kathryn Rusch’s “Loop” turns the lens inward, using a holiday marked by loss to show that even infinite do-overs can’t erase grief—only clarify it. It’s science fiction that challenges tradition, unsettles comfort, and gives the season of wonder real teeth.

S1 Ep 8MIHSW: The Breathing Method by Stephen King
EIn Stephen King's “The Breathing Method” — A woman takes her Lamaze lessons very seriously, a doctor joins a secret storytelling club where reality occasionally forgets its boundaries, and somewhere between birth and death, the universe takes a deep, unsettling breath. In this chilly corner of Stephen King’s multiverse, manners matter, stories have rules, and persistence—especially maternal persistence—might just bend the laws of physics. It’s not It or The Shining; it’s quieter, stranger, and somehow colder. A tale for the long, gray November evenings when even your technology seems to stop breathing. Join the Podcasters of the Apocalypse as they dive into this under-appreciated 4th novella from King's Different Seasons. The same book that gave us The Shawshank Redemption and Stand by Me.

S1 Ep 9MIHSW: Theological Implications of LeGuin's The Lathe of Heaven
Using Google Notebook I created a short supplemental episode exploring my thoughts on George Orr as God and contrasting his theology with that of Frank Herbert's Leto II and Robert Browning's Setabos. Three starkly different ideas of what an embodied God might look like.

S1 Ep 7MIHSW: The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. LeGuin
In this episode, we dive into Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Lathe of Heaven — a haunting exploration of dreams that shape reality itself. What happens when one man’s subconscious can rewrite the world? Join us as we unravel the novel’s mind-bending layers of power, ethics, and existence. From surreal dreamscapes to philosophical paradoxes, this episode takes you through the blurred boundaries between imagination and control, waking life and illusion. Reality is shifting — are you awake enough to notice?

S1 Ep 6MIHSW: All Systems Red by Martha Wells
In All Systems Red, the first novella in Martha Wells’ award-winning Murderbot Diaries, we meet a Security Unit who’s hacked its own governor module—and would very much prefer to be left alone to watch its favorite soap operas. It’s a brilliant twist: a rogue AI with a deadly skillset, a sarcastic personality, and absolutely no desire to make eye contact with humans, much less protect them. Unfortunately for Murderbot, that’s exactly what it has to do when a routine planetary survey mission goes sideways. As sabotage, danger, and corporate malfeasance rear their heads, Murderbot must juggle combat, cover-ups, and the sheer agony of human small talk—all while trying to keep its awkward affection for its human clients under wraps.In this episode, the podcasters gleefully crown Murderbot as the ultimate reluctant hero—equal parts Terminator, tech support, and introvert icon. They discuss how Martha Wells flips the script on AI narratives by giving us an android that doesn’t want to destroy humanity—it just wants boundaries and quiet time. And maybe some downloaded rom-coms.

S1 Ep 5MIHSW: The Iron Heel by Jack London
EIn The Iron Heel, Jack London ditches the howling wilderness for the howling engines of capitalist doom. Set in a chillingly plausible near-future America, this revolutionary dystopia follows Avis Everhard as she recounts her husband Ernest’s resistance against a ruthless oligarchy—the Iron Heel. Through Avis’s eyes, we witness the rise of a totalitarian regime that crushes socialist uprisings, installs a brutal labor caste system, and silences dissent with steel-toed efficiency. From the explosive Chicago Commune to the smoldering embers of the Peasant Revolt, London’s prophetic tale doesn’t just warn us about the future—it grabs us by the collar and screams, “This is how it starts.”Enter the Podcasters of the Apocalypse on the wildly unpredictable My Internet Has Stopped Working podcast. Armed with sarcasm, social theory, and questionable coffee, the podcasters plunge into The Iron Heel like time travelers with Marxist decoder rings. They unpack London’s eerie foresight, tracing connections between the fictional Oligarchy and real-world power structures that still stomp through history. They ask the big questions: Is Avis a reliable narrator or just love-drunk on revolution? Is Ernest Everhard a hero or just Jack London’s heavily mustached self-insert? And how did London predict both fascism and late-stage capitalism decades before they became household hashtags?From meme-worthy moments (“I’m sorry, did he just overthrow a city during lunch?”) to serious analysis of class warfare, propaganda, and resistance, the Podcasters of the Apocalypse turn The Iron Heel into a modern-day warning label—one that might as well say, “Break glass in case of oligarchy.”By the end, you'll want to rise up… or at least start a book club.

S1 Ep 4MIHSW: Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Herland is about three clueless guys—Van, Jeff, and Terry—who discover a hidden society of women living without men for 2,000 years. These women reproduce through parthenogenesis, meaning no men required. The guys think they're about to be heroes, but the women have built a peaceful, efficient society and don't need saving.Terry, the macho man, tries to assert his dominance and fails miserably. Jeff, the romantic, treats the women like delicate flowers, which they find amusing. Van, the narrator, starts to appreciate Herland's way of life. The women capture the men, teach them their language, and show them how a society can thrive without patriarchy.The men fall for their captors, but the women want equal partners, not traditional romance. Terry can't handle it and gets kicked out. Van and his love interest, Ellador, leave Herland to explore the outside world, while Jeff stays behind, smitten with the utopian life.Herland is a snarky critique of early 20th-century gender roles, wrapped in a fun, adventurous package.

S1 Ep 3MIHSW: The Peripheral by William Gibson
EToday, we’re diving into the mind-bending world of William Gibson’s The Peripheral. Imagine a future where gaming isn’t just a pastime but a portal to another timeline. Our heroine, Flynne Fisher, thinks she’s just filling in for her brother in a virtual reality game. But plot twist! She witnesses a murder that turns out to be very real and very future.Meanwhile, in a distant, post-apocalyptic London, we meet Wilf Netherton, a publicist navigating a world where technology has both advanced and regressed in the weirdest ways. These two timelines collide through the use of “peripherals”—avatars that allow people to interact across time. It’s a wild ride of conspiracy, futuristic tech, and the ever-looming question: how much can we really control our destiny?So, grab your VR headsets and join us as we unravel the tangled threads of The Peripheral. It’s a tale of two futures, one murder, and a whole lot of sci-fi goodness!What do you think? Ready to dive into the world of The Peripheral?

S1 Ep 2MIHSW: The Terraformers by Analee Newitz
EThe Terraformers by Analee Newitz is a captivating science fiction novel set in a future where humanity has embarked on a ambitious project to terraform Venus. The story follows a diverse cast of characters, including scientists, engineers, and even a genetically engineered "bio-engineered" alien, as they navigate the challenges and ethical dilemmas of transforming a hostile planet into a habitable world.With vivid descriptions of alien ecosystems and thought-provoking explorations of humanity's relationship with technology and nature, The Terraformers offers a thrilling and imaginative vision of the future.

S1 Ep 1MIHSW: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Philip K. Dick
EIn a world ravaged by nuclear war, where the line between human and machine blurs, Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? is a haunting exploration of identity, empathy, and the very essence of what it means to be alive. We, the Podcasters of the Apocalypse, are diving headfirst into this dystopian masterpiece, unearthing the forgotten gems of science fiction. Forget the familiar paths of space operas and cyberpunks; here, in the dusty corners of literary history, we discover tales that challenge our understanding of humanity and leave us questioning our own reality.