Example: You can now buy a replica of Fisher-Price’s record player music box that was a favorite of children from multiple generations. Except, it’s cheap trash from China, a sad, flimsy knockoff of the original that breaks as soon as you use it (according to many online reviews.) You can have vintage retro antiques, but you’ll never recapture the quality.
Thanks to the internet we can now listen to a fresh new version of a song we’ve known for centuries. Oh, wait, no, that’s because of pop producers who are too scared to try anything even remotely new (and good), because it might not make money.
I have a nostalgic yearning for furniture that has just a bit of grace, style, and comfort. But then I’m old and Danish and Italian Modern and ’50’s comfort have been replaced by the cold, hard angles of airport waiting areas or hospital waiting rooms. Some of this stuff makes even the insane bean bag chairs of the ’70’s look like good choices.
Things you can find on line that were nearly impossible to find before. How to diagnose and fix and appliance problem, how to reassemble a Shimano derailleur you pulled apart a little too quickly, wood working advice, at the family Christmas party, info that instantly proves your loud mouth uncle is full of sh@#, and my favourite, an old song that my mother loved.
At least once each time I visit an antique store/mall, I see a booth that makes me proclaim: “That’s the stuff that was in my dad’s tacklebox!!” Nothing wrong with that.
I wish I had my Grandma’s floor model radio. Paris, Rome, Moscow, Berlin, London – a dial full of names a world away and a cabinet with not a single water-ring on it. Hope it didn’t end up in someones garage.
In Ted Chiang’s short story “The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling” (46 pages, anthologized in Exhalation) we are treated to two interlaced stories bracketing the era of human literacy, one of the future, in which the journalist narrator describes how Remem personal video memory (lifelogging) is making writing obsolete, and one of the past, in which Jijingi’s village in Tivland learns of reading and writing from the European missionary Moseby. The story’s narrator discovers that he has completely misremembered an argument with his dottir Nicole. Jijingi describes the difference between literal truth (what’s precise: vough) and emotional truth (what’s right: mimi).
The entire anthology is brilliant, and highly recommended!
Concretionist over 2 years ago
And don’t forget 3-D printers which allows you to make your OWN pseudo-retro items!
eromlig over 2 years ago
Jef, you’re done it again. Brilliant!
Bilan over 2 years ago
Sounds like a Berraism. Or is that a Caulfieldism?
crisidelm over 2 years ago
If you truly believe the Internet contains the whole bulk of human knowledge and experiences, you are direly deceiving yourself.
The Old Wolf over 2 years ago
Example: You can now buy a replica of Fisher-Price’s record player music box that was a favorite of children from multiple generations. Except, it’s cheap trash from China, a sad, flimsy knockoff of the original that breaks as soon as you use it (according to many online reviews.) You can have vintage retro antiques, but you’ll never recapture the quality.
alien011 over 2 years ago
Thanks to the internet we can now listen to a fresh new version of a song we’ve known for centuries. Oh, wait, no, that’s because of pop producers who are too scared to try anything even remotely new (and good), because it might not make money.
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 2 years ago
I miss Usenet groups, and webrings.
sandpiper over 2 years ago
I have a nostalgic yearning for furniture that has just a bit of grace, style, and comfort. But then I’m old and Danish and Italian Modern and ’50’s comfort have been replaced by the cold, hard angles of airport waiting areas or hospital waiting rooms. Some of this stuff makes even the insane bean bag chairs of the ’70’s look like good choices.
mourdac Premium Member over 2 years ago
Now memories of you can live “forever” or as long as the Internet lasts.
cervelo over 2 years ago
Things you can find on line that were nearly impossible to find before. How to diagnose and fix and appliance problem, how to reassemble a Shimano derailleur you pulled apart a little too quickly, wood working advice, at the family Christmas party, info that instantly proves your loud mouth uncle is full of sh@#, and my favourite, an old song that my mother loved.
goboboyd over 2 years ago
It has never been otherwise.
Ed The Red Premium Member over 2 years ago
The internet has weaponized nostalgia.
Ignatz Premium Member over 2 years ago
Bring back BBS’s.
oakie817 over 2 years ago
if Yogi Berra were alive to read this, he’d be rolling over in his grave
The Wolf In Your Midst over 2 years ago
Nostalgia: Cleverly re-selling you your past so that you can temporarily forget that you’re old and you’re going to die soon.
Lambutts over 2 years ago
At least once each time I visit an antique store/mall, I see a booth that makes me proclaim: “That’s the stuff that was in my dad’s tacklebox!!” Nothing wrong with that.
fencie over 2 years ago
Good thing I invested in all these Beanie Babies, Hummel figurines, and collector plates to fund my retirement.
Uncle Bob over 2 years ago
“Forward into the past!” — Catherwood
well-i-never over 2 years ago
I wish I had my Grandma’s floor model radio. Paris, Rome, Moscow, Berlin, London – a dial full of names a world away and a cabinet with not a single water-ring on it. Hope it didn’t end up in someones garage.
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 2 years ago
In Ted Chiang’s short story “The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling” (46 pages, anthologized in Exhalation) we are treated to two interlaced stories bracketing the era of human literacy, one of the future, in which the journalist narrator describes how Remem personal video memory (lifelogging) is making writing obsolete, and one of the past, in which Jijingi’s village in Tivland learns of reading and writing from the European missionary Moseby. The story’s narrator discovers that he has completely misremembered an argument with his dottir Nicole. Jijingi describes the difference between literal truth (what’s precise: vough) and emotional truth (what’s right: mimi).
The entire anthology is brilliant, and highly recommended!
tghllama over 2 years ago
Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be.
Stephen Gilberg over 2 years ago
Except it’s not the future anymore.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 2 years ago
What is old once were new.
DaBump Premium Member over 2 years ago
Ow, ow, my head!