numb3r_5ev3n: Dragon pendant I got at a renfaire. (Default)
numb3r_5ev3n ([personal profile] numb3r_5ev3n) wrote2025-06-03 08:58 pm
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Three videos for this week.

First: The Rise And Fall of Kitschy 90s Restaurants. This is apropos of nothing, except that I feel like the "fall" of these kinds of establishments and their replacement by the "grey/beige/greige late 2010s Millennial Air B&B Aesthetic" is part and parcel of the 2020s Enshittification Of Everything.

2: This echoes my thoughts exactly right now. And it gives me anxiety that all of the Worst People have truly won, if it means that I am pulling back from Web 2.0 social media altogether. Because, as The Functional Melancholic says, it's becoming impossible to tell what's real, in a way that feels dangerously destructive to civilization as a whole right now. This is literally one of the goals of Active Measures, and it appears to have succeeded.

III. Vera of The Council Of Geeks also echoes my thoughts perfectly right now. As well as those of many others, I suspect. This is also my Current Mood for this post. I also just let this loop for like 10 minutes yesterday. That's how spot-on it is.

Also, Sinners is out on streaming, for those who have not seen it yet. Just please, I'm begging you, watch it on a screen bigger than a phone screen if you have any other recourse. I'm serious.
sabotabby: raccoon anarchy symbol (Default)

[personal profile] sabotabby 2025-06-04 11:13 am (UTC)(link)
SINNERS IS SO GOOD I did not expect a movie in this day and age to be good like that.
nyyki: (Default)

It's Matrix Reality Time Again

[personal profile] nyyki 2025-06-04 07:09 pm (UTC)(link)
The start of video #1 seems to make a strong case that the reality we lie in is a constructed one, like those of The Matrix (yes, I contend all worlds in it are constructed realities, in part illustrated by how Neo never did anything in the utopia world that broke the rules of that program), and then he goes to Plato's cave metaphor, sort of, because he doesn't address several important things in how the metaphor works. It gets used for all kinds of things, but many of those aren't what Plato was getting at; I guess it's use in multiple contexts shows its utility.

The world he's describing is one experienced by a subsection of human society -- there's a healthy measure of FWP in it, and it's also, at least to appearance and my personal experience, subjective. What he described is a huge risk to introverted people who use Web 2.0 sources for their interactions -- that is not my experience at all. The reality is that introversion is a majority condition among the nerds and geeks from the time of the creation of the World Wide Web, and also in those who propagate it, and for those not of that social orientation the web requires people to function from that angle. I've been described as someone who can code switch with not much effort as long as I know the code, and three decades of web interaction along with the five years before that of BBS time taught me the way of the introverted. So much of what he describes is not a part of my reality at all. But then again, I refuse to use most short cycle news sources, the one holdout a newspaper, and my other news sources are weekly or monthly publications. And I'm not feeling that existential angst that he's describing -- this may be a generational factor, because I remember a lot of years where we wondered if the next IRL day was going to show up or if we were going to get nuked from orbit, because it was the only way to be sure.

The condition you describe is one I feel, regarding restaurants -- I try hard not to think of the Snuffer's next to The Granada, the original location, because the new one they built in the same spot lacks the cool and funky spaces the original one had, especially the back room that was full of wood paneling and plants.

Also, I get a consistent anchor -- petting the Holy Terrier is a multiple times a day thing, and the physical world is a screaming reality in my life because I have to check where it is so often when not at home; I've given up on using a public restroom, because they're like totally too much, ya know? Still, I notice people disengaging from the physical world, and back in college (my successful time in one, since I managed to perform a degree) my state and local government teacher admonished the guys in the class because they were walking around campus on their phones and overlooking all of the attractive women -- for his Boomer mind that didn't make sense at all, and for all the current doom-saying and counter-Candide sentiments this was back in 2005, so it's been with us for a while. The guy on YouTube mentions doom scrolling cat videos, and that screams distraction to me -- the web very may well be a drug.

I need digital communication as a survival medium -- there's so much I can't do without it, thanks to my physical disability. Other people seem to think they need it as much as I do, but I wonder about that -- is it for real survival, or is it a fix?

One more observation -- it wouldn't surprise me if the guy on YouTube spouted some Emo poetry, because his tone, vocal energy, and cadence evoked that kind of vibe. I don't know if that was him tailoring his delivery to the audience he wanted to reach or if it's his normal engagement style, but it had copious amounts of doom and darkness underlying it. I hope he finds his connection to some sort of Real World (TM) he can feel comfortable with.