
Banned Camp: Banned Books, Comedy, and Free Speech vs. Censorship
Love banned books? Hate censorship?
Same. You’re our kind of people.
Banned Camp is a comedy podcast where we read banned books and try to figure out why they were banned in the first place.
Each season, we tackle a new banned book, reading it chapter by chapter and asking: What made someone clutch their pearls and scream, "BAN IT!"? (Spoiler: It’s rarely what you’d expect.) One thing is clear—the people banning these books often haven’t read them. While we uncover some eyebrow-raising moments, nothing truly justifies censorship.
Join us—and our listeners, "The Scary Book People"—as we explore the strange, hilarious, and sometimes baffling world of banned books.
Past seasons have featured classics like To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle, Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz, Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut, and 1984 by George Orwell.
This season, we’re diving into Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. It's a dystopia built on pleasure, not fear. People are engineered, drugged, and distracted into obedience, and they’re taught to love the system that controls them. It’s funny, creepy, and disturbingly familiar. And like all great banned books, it makes you question the world you're living in.
By reading these books, we ask big questions: Why are banned books important? What does “banned” mean? What does “challenged” mean? How do book bans affect students? Are book bans constitutional?
Come hang out with us and have some laughs while we dig into the drama behind banned books—you might even learn something cool along the way!
Banned Camp: Banned Books, Comedy, and Free Speech vs. Censorship
Brave New World | Ch. 2.1: Why the Babies Hate Books Now
In this episode of Banned Camp, Jennifer and Dan read Chapter 2 of Brave New World, where things get... uncomfortably real. Babies are conditioned to hate flowers and books. Khaki-clad infants get electrocuted. Nature is labeled “gratuitous.” And hypnopædia, sleep learning, is born after a child accidentally memorizes something. Jennifer tries to make sense of caste systems and clone hierarchies while Dan compares everything to sourdough starters and American Eagle jeans. It’s dystopia at its most absurd—and somehow, still a little too familiar.
Things To Listen For:
- Jennifer’s working theory: the more clones you have, the lower your caste
- Dan’s sourdough starter metaphor for human replication
- How flower-hating babies are engineered through terror
Banworthy to Bingeworthy:
Check out Good News for Lefties, a podcast that highlights real progressive wins every day—even when the news feels grim. A great counterbalance to dystopia. Find it wherever you listen to podcasts. Also check out Here’s The Scoop from NBC — it’s a sharp daily news show clocking in under 15 minutes.
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Disclaimer:
Banned Camp features readings and discussions of Brave New World by Aldous Huxley for the purpose of criticism, commentary, education, and entertainment, in accordance with fair use guidelines. Some sections may be lightly abridged for clarity and pacing. We encourage listeners to purchase a copy here to experience the full work.
This podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Aldous Huxley, his estate, or the book’s publisher. All rights remain with their respective holders.
Topics Covered:
Brave New World, Pavlovian conditioning, hypnopædia, book banning, dystopia, authoritarianism, flower torture, caste systems, electric shocks, banned books