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Decrypted, episode 1: Our crash course to the world of Mr. Robot

Ars returns to the podcasting—this time with a limited series tied to S2 of Mr. Robot.

I've wanted <em>Mr. Robot</em> to return so badly that my work notebooks are filled with schoolboy doodles. Unfortunately, my Elliot looks too much like Doug Funnie.
I've wanted Mr. Robot to return so badly that my work notebooks are filled with schoolboy doodles. Unfortunately, my Elliot looks too much like Doug Funnie.
Nathan Mattise

If there are two things the Ars staff has been itching for over the past year, it's a return to podcasting and the return of Mr. Robot. If you feel similar, we have some good news.

Welcome to Decrypted, Ars Technica's weekly podcast for season 2 of Mr. Robot.

For our debut episode, we look back to season one exclusively through the eyes (err, words) of main character Elliot Alderson (played by Rami Malek). Despite the Internet's (justified) obsession with the show's realistic depiction of tech, Ars reviewer Jonathan Gitlin said the characters and especially how "they break down and experience their delusions" is what makes Mr. Robot compelling. So if breakdowns and delusions are what you're after, there's no better way to relive season 1 than through Elliot's words.

We also talk to one of the most familiar TV voices around: NPR's Chief Critic Eric Deggans. Deggans watches a lot of television, and in a crowded 2015 field, he felt Mr. Robot stood out from the rest:

On the surface, this series is a snaky, unpredictable drama about a disturbed hacker attempting to break the world's biggest corporation. But Rami Malek's performance as hacker Elliot Alderson is a masterpiece of detached charm. You start the series believing this is a story about an eccentric prodigy exposing how corporations control the world. But Malek's Alderson is an unreliable narrator, turning the series into a darker, more intimate mystery airing on a cable channel once known for slighter "blue sky" adventure dramas and mysteries. This is what the face of modern cable TV drama should look like: surprising, revolutionary, and revelatory.

No spoilers, but Deggans has seen the first episodes of season 2 and maintains high hopes for the series in the future. He shares the story of how Mr. Robot caught him off guard last summer and what Batman v. Superman could have learned from this little hacking drama that could.

Going forward, Decrypted will run weekly alongside the upcoming season of Mr. Robot. Look for new episodes on Thursdays or Fridays so we can touch on what happens weekly with the show (which airs Wednesdays at 10p ET on USA). We'll have episodes available through iTunes, Stitchr, RSS, and direct download on the site, so now is the time to binge-watch season 1 of Mr. Robot on Amazon Prime if you haven't already.

Listen

Decrypted is Ars Technica's weekly podcast for season 2 of Mr. Robot. Listen or subscribe however you please above, and let us know what you think—thoughts, questions, criticisms, or your favorite odd Tyrell Wellick personality trait—through the comments section, on iTunes, or via e-mail.

Channel Ars Technica