
Free Daily Podcast Summary
by Robb Corrigan
The Multiverse Employee Handbook is a science comedy podcast where workplace humor meets cosmic exploration. From quantum mechanics explained through staff meetings to space history through annual reviews, we decode scientific mysteries through corporate metaphors. Each episode combines rigorous science with absurdist office scenarios, whether exploring the strange physics of black holes or the equally baffling logic of expense reports. Perfect for curious minds who suspect their workplace might exist across multiple dimensions, we deliver astronomical insights wrapped in corporate satire. Whether you’re fascinated by the mysteries of dark matter or the inexplicable disappearance of break room snacks, our show provides genuine scientific knowledge with existential humor.
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The Multiverse Employee Handbook is taking a brief holiday. Our narrator is currently horizontal in a field outside Innsbruck, the Alps are doing their thing, and Season Four is being assembled somewhere in the quantum foam of late summer. We'll be back soon — with more actual science, delivered with the calm urgency of someone who has just realised the atoms in their deckchair were forged inside a dying star. Season Four arrives at the end of summer. Try not to collapse your wave function while we're gone. AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and sound effects come from Pixabay which are generated by human artists. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, music, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by humans.
Season 4 is Coming: The Universe Remains Uncooperative The Multiverse Employee Handbook returns for a fourth season of science, satire, and the quiet suspicion that reality was written by a committee with no editorial oversight. Season 4 dives deeper into the genuine absurdities of existence—the kind that come with equations, experimental evidence, and the occasional Nobel Prize. We'll be exploring everything from the arrow of time to the nuclear physics happening inside your own body, from dark energy's relentless campaign to stretch the cosmos into nothingness, to the uncomfortable probability that none of this is real and the simulation is running low on memory. All of it accurate. All of it researched. All of it delivered with the calm, measured tone of someone explaining that the floor beneath you is mostly empty space and always has been. Meanwhile, at Quantum Improbability Solutions, the Square-Haired Boss remains employed—a fact that challenges our understanding of natural selection, corporate governance, and the second law of thermodynamics in equal measure. New episodes arriving soon. Subscribe now, while the concept of "soon" still means something in your local spacetime. The Multiverse Employee Handbook. Revealing that science has been funny all along, and someone really should have mentioned it earlier. AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and sound effects come from Pixabay which are generated by human artists. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, music, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by humans.
Space radiation is constant, omnidirectional, and entirely unbothered by your feelings about it. 🎧 Love the show? Help us improve in 2 minutes: https://tally.so/r/nr1evM This week: what's actually out there, why Earth has been quietly protecting us for four billion years without asking for credit, and what happens when you leave that protection behind. Exploding stars, Van Allen's doughnuts, the surprisingly violent history of how we first noticed, and why the most sophisticated radiation shielding strategy currently available is, in certain respects, a cave. Plus: NASA's Artemis programme is heading back into deep space for the first time in fifty years, and this time we're bringing considerably better instruments. AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and sound effects come from Pixabay which are generated by human artists. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, music, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by humans. https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com
Humanity has spent thousands of years naming constellations, building calendars, and writing mythology onto the night sky — largely ignoring the actual stars next door. 🎧 Love the show? Help us improve in 2 minutes: https://tally.so/r/nr1evM This week, we meet the ten nearest star systems to Earth: a collection of failed stars, violent flare stars, one object colder than a freezer, and a sales territory that Brad from Quantum Improbability Solutions would like formally struck from the Q4 quota. Space is stranger than advertised. The neighbourhood association has concerns. AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and sound effects come from Pixabay. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, music, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by a human. https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com
Eleven point nine light-years away, in the constellation of a mythological sea monster, sits a star that astronomers, SETI researchers, and science fiction writers have been collectively obsessed with since 1960. 🎧 Love the show? Help us improve in 2 minutes: https://tally.so/r/nr1evM In this episode of The Multiverse Employee Handbook, we visit Tau Ceti — the Sun-like neighbour that has everything you'd want in a nearby stellar system: stability, age, a habitable zone, and almost certainly planets. Almost certainly. We explore the full and rather remarkable story of this ancient star, from Johann Bayer's 1603 star atlas and Frank Drake's original SETI search, through decades of planet hunting, a debris disk of genuinely alarming proportions, and the latest findings from the ESPRESSO spectrograph, which has made everything considerably more complicated. We also ask whether Tau Ceti represents a genuine opportunity for life beyond our Solar System — and why, despite everything, it refuses to stop being interesting. Plus: Ryan Gosling, the Kobayashi Maru, and the nine-billion-year question the universe is still sitting on. Peer-reviewed papers Refining the Stellar Parameters of τ Ceti (2023) — https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.10394 Integrated Analysis of the Tau Ceti Planetary System (2020) — https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.14675 Debris Disk of τ Ceti — Herschel Observations — https://arxiv.org/abs/1408.2791 AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and music and sound effects come from Pixabay. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by a human. https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com
Join us for a towel-mandatory celebration of Douglas Adams as we explore the most suspiciously significant number in the multiverse! 🎧 Love the show? Help us improve in 2 minutes: https://tally.so/r/nr1evM In this special birthday episode, we put aside our regular corporate chaos to honor the man who taught us the importance of always knowing where your towel is. Join our quantum-superposed guide as we investigate why the number 42 keeps appearing in the fabric of reality like an interdimensional typo that nobody can quite correct. Explore the remarkable life and legacy of Douglas Adams, from chicken shed cleaner to galactic navigator, and discover the mathematical coincidences that make 42 more significant than Deep Thought ever calculated. We'll examine Earth's alarming tendency to narrowly avoid destruction in ways eerily similar to Adams' fiction, and contemplate the philosophical implications of discovering the Answer without knowing the Question. Along the way, marvel at how Adams predicted modern technology with uncanny accuracy decades before it existed. Sign up to our mailing list (bottom of this page): https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com/about/listen/ AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and music and sound effects come from Pixabay. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by a human. https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com
Uranus has been rolling through the solar system on its side for four and a half billion years, confidently labelled an ice giant since a single spacecraft spent six hours there in 1986 — and until very recently, nobody had particularly strong grounds to argue otherwise. Then 2025 happened. 🎧 Love the show? Help us improve in 2 minutes: https://tally.so/r/nr1evM The James Webb Space Telescope found a moon that the original mission missed entirely, sitting quietly in the inner system at roughly ten kilometres across, invisible to everything previously aimed at it. And two astrophysicists in Zürich published a paper suggesting that beneath that hydrogen-helium atmosphere, Uranus may be predominantly rock rather than ice — making the classification we've built forty years of textbook confidence around a historical artefact rather than a robust physical fact. In this episode, we explore what we actually know about the seventh planet, how planetary interiors are modelled when you cannot visit them, why the magnetic field has always been quietly awkward, and what it means for thousands of exoplanets across the galaxy if our local reference point turns out to have been the wrong kind of world all along. Sources & Further Reading: Uranus Facts — NASA New Moon Discovered Orbiting Uranus — NASA/Webb Morf & Helled, 2025: Icy or Rocky? New Interior Models of Uranus and Neptune AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and music and sound effects come from Pixabay. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by a human. https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com
Gravity has been operating continuously, without maintenance, since approximately 13.8 billion years ago — and it still hasn't confirmed its own carrier particle. 🎧 Love the show? Help us improve in 2 minutes: https://tally.so/r/nr1evM Every other fundamental force has one, but the graviton, the particle that ought to be riding gravity's Nobel Prize-winning waves, remains the most wanted and most elusive entry in the whole of fundamental physics. In this episode, we trace the chain of discovery from a seventeenth-century pendulum clock to a Louisiana laser detector to laboratories cooling beryllium to the edge of absolute zero, and ask the question nobody has yet been able to answer: how do you catch a graviton — and what happens to physics if you do? Sign up to our mailing list (bottom of this page): https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com/about/listen/ AI Transparency: In a universe increasingly filled with AI-generated content, we believe in being clear about what’s human and what’s not. Your time is valuable, and you deserve to know what you’re experiencing. The narrator, David, is a professional voice actor who has digitized his voice using ElevenLabs’ voice-cloning technology and is fairly compensated for his vocal performance. Thumbnails are created using OpenArt, and music and sound effects come from Pixabay. Everything else—the research, the writing, jokes, sound editing, and interdimensional coffee consumption—is 100% human-made by a human. https://multiverseemployeehandbook.com
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The Multiverse Employee Handbook is a science comedy podcast where workplace humor meets cosmic exploration. From quantum mechanics explained through staff meetings to space history through annual reviews, we decode scientific mysteries through corporate metaphors. Each episode combines rigorous science with absurdist office scenarios, whether exploring the strange physics of black holes or the equally baffling logic of expense reports. Perfect for curious minds who suspect their workplace might exist across multiple dimensions, we deliver astronomical insights wrapped in corporate satire. Whether you’re fascinated by the mysteries of dark matter or the inexplicable disappearance of break room snacks, our show provides genuine scientific knowledge with existential humor.
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