He is the only pedestrian near his home, and has never seen another person out during the many hours that he has walked. As “The Pedestrian” opens, the year is 2053 and Leonard Mead is out for another one of his lonely evening walks. In 1989, “The Pedestrian” was adapted into an episode of The Ray Bradbury Theater, starring David Ogden Stiers as Leonard. Exploring themes such as the dangers of progress, society’s treatment of outcasts, and the potential of technology to stop serving and become a danger, “The Pedestrian” is considered a predecessor to Bradbury’s most famous work about a repressive futuristic society, Fahrenheit 451. This leads to a series of events where his unusual behavior places him in danger in a society unable to understand those who differ from the norm. He has never seen another pedestrian, and neither has the police car that finds him one night on his walk. Leonard, however, enjoys going for a nightly walk in the ruined city, something that is inexplicable to those around him. Focusing on Leonard Mead, an ordinary-seeming man, the story takes place in 2053 when television has taken over the world to such an extent that most people rarely leave their homes. First published in 1951 in the news magazine The Reporter, it was later collected in Bradbury’s anthology T he Golden Apples of the Sun. “The Pedestrian” is a short story by American science fiction writer Ray Bradbury.
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