317 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
317 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
[1]
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old world
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[11]Technology
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Feb 5, 2026
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The feeling of the old world fading away
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“Undone by a string of clues”
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Heather McCalden on the struggle to articulate the present.
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• [12]
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• [13]
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• [14]
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•
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For a long time, I’ve been experiencing something I can only describe as the
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feeling of the old world fading away. It’s as if some deeply embedded internal
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architecture is slowly dissolving and leaving in its particle wake a sorrow,
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for which there is no name. The causes are spoken of: the global conflicts, the
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ecological catastrophes, the social injustices—but the actual, visceral,
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experience of losing a coherence that held reality together, remains under
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examined. To be clear, this sorrow is not about nostalgia or “getting older”,
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this is about living in a moment when the question, “Has the world changed or
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have I?” is irrelevant because the separation of the self and the world no
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longer makes any sense.
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∞
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I can tell you exactly when it happened, the moment the world cracked away from
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me, or rather I from it. I was standing inside a narrow café on Redchurch
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Street in London, distractedly scrolling Apple News on my phone when my eyes
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caught a headline my mind could not understand “Reality Winner, N.S.A.
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Contractor Accused of Leak, Was Undone by Trail of Clues.” Maybe it was the
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overcrowding of the room, and the resultant heat which created a sensation of
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being squeezed into a corridor, but as I read the words I experienced a
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syntactical meltdown. My synapses spasmed. “Reality Winner” as a name, could
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not be processed. Instead, I understood that a contestant from America’s Next
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Top Model was moonlighting as an N.S.A Contractor. After a nanosecond of
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bewilderment, this not only seemed plausible, but felt correct. It was 2017.
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The composition of the headline, coming at me on a tiny screen, viewed
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sideways, pointed toward a new way of existing: of information from other times
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and places splintering the present moment into a mist of shards, fracturing it
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open until all possible moments were all time. This time. The time of the
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device I held in my hand.
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∞
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In 1923, Cecil B. DeMille built what amounted to a city in the wide, empty sand
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dunes of Guadalupe, California. The so-called “City of the Pharaoh” was
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designed to simulate ancient Egypt for his epic The Ten Commandments. Used in
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the film’s Exodus scene, it was considered, at the time, to be the most
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extravagant film set in the history of cinema.
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Paul Iribe, a decorative artist and illustrator who precipitated the Art Deco
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movement, was tapped for the production design, resulting in an Egypt of sharp
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geometrical forms and the occasional sunburst. However, the stylish aesthetics
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were secondary to the set’s sheer scale which included gates measuring 110 feet
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high, four 35-foot-tall statues of Ramses II, an 800-foot-wide temple, and an
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avenue of 21 sphinxes. Each sphinx weighed five tons and was assembled piece by
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piece, as heads, paws, and legs arrived on trucks from Los Angeles 165 miles
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away.
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Aside from these creature components, everything else was fabricated over the
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course of six weeks on location by over 1,000 craftspeople. The location, owned
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by the Union Sugar Company, was rented to the production for $10 and one
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stipulation: no trace of the set could remain. The sand dunes had to be
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restored to a pristine condition, as if nothing had ever happened. For the
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responsible parties, the cost of dismantling the set was unappealing, so the
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idea of abandoning it, intact, and fucking over Union Sugar was floated. To
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this, DeMille objected. He assumed other filmmakers would flock to his creation
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and use it for their own, potentially successful, projects. Rather than leave
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the set exposed, he preferred to detonate it; according to legend, dynamite was
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taken to the City of the Pharaoh, leaving it in ruins, eventually washed over
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by sand.
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Time passed, and other than the locals who lived near the site, knowledge of
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this place evaporated from cultural consciousness.
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∞
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We know the old world was definitely not better, more functional, or even more
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beautiful than the current one, but it held together. By the “old world” I mean
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the 20^th century and slightly beyond but, this is less to do with time and
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more to do with what was inside those years that carried us forward.
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We know the old world was definitely not better, more functional, or even
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more beautiful than the current one, but it held together.
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∞
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The phrase “undone by a string of clues” implies a betrayal, implies the
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technology Reality used ratted her out. The famous printer signature, or the
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tracking dots, are all anyone seems to remember, though this was old tech,
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invented in the mid-80s by Xerox and then deployed worldwide as a failsafe
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against counterfeiting. The real mistake, if it even can be called that, was
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pretending the surveillance of certain types of documents didn’t exist, or
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didn’t matter. That it could be overwritten, or outrun, which is to say she was
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undone by the ethos of the previous decade: move fast and break things.
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∞
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The City of Pharaohs was briefly resurrected in a single line from Cecil B.
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DeMille’s 1959 autobiography:
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“If 1,000 years from now, archeologists happen to dig beneath the sands of
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Guadalupe, I hope they will not rush into print with the amazing news that
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Egyptian civilization, far from being confined to the valley of Nile, extended
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all the way to the Pacific coast of North America.”
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∞
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Cultural theorist and writer Mark Fisher remarked in a 2014 lecture that,
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“Smartphones shouldn’t be thought of as objects which we have, but as portals
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into cyberspace, which means that when we carry them around, we're always
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inside cyberspace.” By cyberspace, he meant a specifically capitalist
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cyberspace, in which the nervous system is radially seduced/assaulted by an
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uninterrupted flow of content. The consequence of this condition, of living
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online and offline, simultaneously, is not just dysregulation, but a
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recalculation of physical space. From Einstein, we know that if space changes,
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so does time, the two components interwoven in a single geometric structure
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called spacetime. So, as our spatial reality shifts, we find ourselves immersed
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in a new temporality, which Fisher touched upon in his essay “The Slow
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Cancellation of the Future.”
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Fisher writes, “In the last 10 to 15 years, meanwhile, the internet and mobile
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telecommunications technology have altered the texture of everyday experience
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beyond all recognition. Yet, perhaps because of all this, there’s an increasing
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sense that culture has lost the ability to grasp and articulate the present. Or
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it could be that, in one very important sense, there is no present to grasp and
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articulate any more.”
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∞
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Nighttime, late June, the strange lights of Hollywood melting through the
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windows of my friend’s white Saturn Ion sedan. It’s 2009 and we are parked on
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Ivar Avenue off of Hollywood, talking a mile a minute about music. Nowhere to
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be. No one missing us. No money in our pockets. This is how we spend many an
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evening, stationary in a vehicle, near the glamour, but always outside of it. I
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am just back from London where a single song seemed to play across the entire
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city, La Roux’s “In for the Kill.” I keep trying to describe sound, and I keep
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failing, “Imagine the voice of a wood sprite climbing over a jagged electronic
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throb—” She cuts me off by shaking her head, and then pulls out her brand-new
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iPhone, which is so jet black and sleek, I actually gasp. “Let’s download it,”
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she says.
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“You can do that? From here?”
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She taps a thing, and very slowly, the album begins to materialize on her
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phone. It feels like if we can do this, well, what can’t we do?
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∞
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The feeling of the old world fading away comes from witnessing culture lose
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“the ability to grasp and articulate the present,” but it is not, as Fisher
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says, because the present no longer exists, it’s just that the present, now, is
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so beyond what a human mind can hold.
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∞
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Over drinks one night in the autumn of 1982, Bruce Cardoza tells his friend
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Peter Brosnan about The City of the Pharaoh lingering, theoretically, somewhere
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in the sands of the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes. Brosnan’s life has recently burned
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to the ground, a fire having claimed his house, and wiping out all traces of
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his professional, creative output. This is why he finds himself crashing at
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Cardoza’s, and now, having a strange conversation about a lost replica of a
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lost civilization. Eventually, DeMille’s autobiography is pulled off a shelf,
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and the sentence about the city is read aloud. This incites a eureka flash for
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Brosnan: he decides, then and there, to make a documentary about excavating the
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film set.
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The idea, though laser sharp in its hook, appeal, and simplicity, takes an
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unexpected thirty years to execute, the production thwarted by almost every
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imaginable circumstance including environmental concerns for the western snowy
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plover and city politics. A reprieve comes in 2012, when a cash infusion paves
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the way for exactly one archeological dig, during which, the plaster head of a
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sphinx is gingerly unearthed. Brosnan has described himself as an “obsessive
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lunatic,” but aren’t we all at this point?
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∞
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Sometimes I think there is nothing more difficult than articulating feeling
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because nothing is more true and more stupid and more brilliant than a simple
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one scraped off the surface of the heart.
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∞
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It is a cold night in December 2016, and instead of watching shadows spread
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across my thoughts I’m streaming four ten-year-olds on bikes, frantically
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peddling down a suburban street. On the back of one bike is an elfin-girl with
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a shaved head wearing a Crayola blue jacket. She stares down a white van on a
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collision course with her party, and with a narrowing glare, sends the van
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airborne, flipping it in a somersault above their heads, and for reasons that
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are quite difficult to explain, I’m crying like a motherfucker. Something
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deeply buried in my brain is sending out a sonar ping; I know this autumnal
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color palette, the synthetic textures of the kid’s clothes, the freedom of
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getting lost on a bike. All of this looks like my childhood, or actually, it
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looks like my fake childhood, the one I used to watch on TV. The show is about
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the 80s, but it is also made to feel like it is from the 80s, without quotation
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marks, and this very sincerity makes it appear benign. This is pure
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entertainment, right? Not cultural commentary, except the pinging in my mind is
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growing louder, and my heart is sinking lower, because somehow I understand
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that the only way to address what is happening now is through the past. It
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contains the thing we are currently missing: the wonder of the future.
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It contains the thing we are currently missing: the wonder of the future.
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∞
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In order to relive the anticipation that the future once held for us, we
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venture backwards in time, creating cultural artifacts cloaked in the
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aesthetics of previous decades. A constant, obsessive regression in the face of
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everything Now. The feeling of the world fading away is the same as the
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sensation of losing a memory. We can’t quite remember how people once thought
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about the future, so we search for it endlessly, and perhaps this is why
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history repeats itself.
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∞
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DeMille’s last motion picture was a VistaVision version of The Ten Commandments
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shot partially on location in Egypt three years before he died. At the time of
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its release, in 1956, it was the most expensive film ever made. Despite the
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fact that it was not a remake of the 1923 film, the set possessed an enhanced
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replica of The City of the Pharaoh built just outside Cairo, complete with a
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series of alabaster pyramids positioned on stilts to create a more visually
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striking horizon. However, the most impressive element of this déjà vu was the
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Gates of the City Per-Ramses, standing 107 feet high and 325 feet long, or the
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equivalent of a ten-story building and a standard American football field.
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At the conclusion of production, the Egyptian government offered to turn the
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Gates into a museum. DeMille refused, preferring, again, to obliterate the
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set.
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Next Read
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[16]britney cover
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Dec 19, 2025
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Tabloids predicted the future
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Jeff Weiss on Britney Spears and her scribes.
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Read More
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