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Offworld Report: Science Fiction and Fantasy, November 2004 02/11/2004. Interviews with Stephen R. Donaldson, Clive Barker, Matt Stone and Trey Parker, Clark Kent's foster father, and John Clute, Dell Magazines' SF boat cruise, fiction by Peter Crowther, and getting laid at a science-fiction convention. 
Offworld Report: Weird Science, November 2004 02/11/2004. Iran's first satellite, the X Prize is won, a fossil dragon, robot fish, why space access costs must, and can, drop dramatically, and has the Great Galactic Ghoul lost its appetite for Martian probes? 
Offworld Report July 2004: Science Fiction and Fantasy 17/09/2004. Interviews with authors Sean McMullen, John Crowley , Bruce Sterling, Richard Morgan and Kim Stanley Robinson; a look at the Stepford Wives and the sequel to Pitch Black, fiction by Gardner Dozois, and a report from the first African-American science fiction festival. 
Offworld Report: Science Fiction and Fantasy: August 2004 01/08/2004. Interviews with Alan Moore, Geoffrey Landis, Steve Erikson and Robert Silverberg, why elitism in the genre is good, and Kim Stanley Robinson on the really dumb science of The Day After Tomorrow. 
Offworld Report: Weird Science: August 2004 01/08/2004. Inflatable space stations, why we never went to the moon, the Project Icarus study on deflecting asteroids with very large atomics, Stephen Hawking on black holes, Cassini orbits Saturn, 'and Beagle 3' looks for an American ride. 
July 2003 Offworld Report 01/08/2004. SFF imprint Earthlight is axed, John Jarrold angrily speaks out on this, Richard E Grant becomes the new Dr Who, why Clarion matters, Eric Van Lustbader is interviewed, and a fab review of POD-based SFF fiction (hint, it's really, really bad). 
Offworld Report July 2004: Weird Science
01/07/2004. Sir Arthur C. Clarke on terraforming, the Cassini probe closes in on a weird moon, scientists teleport atoms, the invisible Nordic warship, has Atlantis finally been discovered, and more SpaceShipOne and X-prize coverage than you'll know what to do with. 
Offworld Report: December '03: Science Fiction and Fantasy 01/12/2003. Robin Hobb, Iain Banks and Peter Crowther are interviewed, Robert Silverberg muses over the contents of dinosaur intestines, while John Jarrold visits the odd world of Korean science fiction. 
Offworld Report: December '03: Weird Science 01/12/2003. Scientists engineer the first artificial virus, the Pentagon begins production of battlefield laser cannons, 200,000 years old carvings of faces cause a stir, hydrogen cars revisited, and sales of robot domestics shoot up. 
Offworld Report - SF&F: November 2003 01/11/2003. Interviews with author Wil McCarthy, the cast of Alias, and the Director of Underworld. Plus criticism of this year's Worldcon in Toronto, the return of Dr Who, and a short science fiction history of the Middle East. 
Offworld Report - Weird Science: November 2003 01/11/2003. Martial arts robots hit Asia, the day a meteorite crashed through my roof, China sparks a new space race, and life across the stars: why they're now betting on the system 37 Gem. 
Offworld Report - Comics & Anime: November 2003 01/11/2003. X-Men scribe Mark Millar interviewed, the return of the Micronauts, more flipping anthropomorphic animals, plus new G-Saviour, Cowboy Bebop and Melty Lancer. Don't you just love those odd anime titles? 
Offworld Report - RPGs and Games: November 2003 01/11/2003. A look at The 1920s Investigator's Companion, Werewolf: the Dark Ages, Viking Age, and Stargate SG-1 the role-playing game, plus the question is posed: is live roleplaying on its last legs? Perish the thought. 
October 2003 Offworld Report: Science Fiction and Fantasy 01/10/2003. Spider Robinson blasts the genre and asks 'why are our imaginations retreating from science and space, and into fantasy?', Kir Bulychov dies, plus interviews with Jerry Pournelle, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Bob Eggleton, Robert J. Sawyer, Ben Bova and Vernor Vinge. 
October 2003 Offworld Report: Weird Science 01/10/2003. Why the US military want to unleash a new fleet of robot-controlled aerial vehicles, Arthur C. Clarke talks at the Los Alamos Space-elevator Conference, plans for a bacterial battery, Erich von Däniken wants a Themepark of the Gods, and why Cold Fusion scientists feel unloved. 
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