I went to the Zoo recently and I couldn’t believe how many people immediately whip out their phones to film the animals in the exhibit.

Like, if looking at images of animals on your phone was anywhere near as enjoyable as seeing them in person, why even pay to come to the fucking zoo!?

The animal you are looking at is already existing within a dead facsimile of its actual environment! It’s already like looking at an image!

Do people really go back and look at these images and videos and feel the same feeling as when they’re looking a marmoset of exotic bird right in the eyes a few feet away from them?

It feels like we’ve all become trained to whip out our phones and start filming the moment anything interesting starts happening. The way everyone prefers this mediated experience to just being in reality experiencing art or living things or a concert or whatever just makes me feel kind of bleak. To me this is a great example of what is meant when we talk about Alienation.

Anyone else agree or am I being a grumpy geriatric shaking my fist at the kids on my lawn?

  • RedWizard [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    5 months ago

    The last concert I went to was Rush and everyone there was at least 50+ and I don’t recall much of anyone trying to record the set. They were to drunk/stoned anyway.

    At some point I realized I never went back to look at that stuff, and since then it doesn’t make sense to me.

    I do however feel the desire to create a physical archive of stuff though. It always slips away from me though. Thousands on thousands of photos /videos stuck in the proprietary cloud.