Posted on 03/16/2022 8:03:36 AM PDT by BenLurkin
Call the History Channel, amigo.
These high-energy particles constantly rain down on Earth (yes, they’re harmless)
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Democrats will find a way make this another form of global warming and label it a “crisis” that calls for a national effort to save us from it. Just watch.
Paging Al Gore...
Anyone care to comment just why there is such a fascination with digging up ancient graves and why vampire or living dead shows are so prevalent in popular culture.
Call the History Channel, amigo.
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Or maybe Geraldo.
It’s always in the last place you look.
“The largest of the two voids is located just above the grand gallery...”
Structurally, this would be the place to put “relieving chambers” to reduce the weight pushing down on the gallery, just like there are relieving chambers above the King’s chamber.
Fear of the unknown. Fear of people with different cultures or looks. Fear of competition due to lack of self-confidence in personal abilities. These are all common fears.
Didn’t they do a scan of Tut’s tomb, and find a void behind a wall in his burial chamber? I would love to be involved in either one of those searches!
As entropy said, fear of the unknown. At one people thought there were dragons waiting to eat ships that sailed to the edge of the world. Now it’s aliens.
“why vampire or living dead shows are so prevalent in popular culture”
Well, ladies like vampires because they are the ultimate “sexy bad boys”, and men like zombies because you can blast away at them with automatic weapons or cut their heads off with samurai swords without any pesky moral quandaries.
I’m guessing it’s the ballroom and the tiki lounge.
Because they’re not graves. Anyone that tells you they’re graves are trying to lead your astray.
Because they’re not graves. Anyone that tells you they’re graves are trying to lead your astray.
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Oh great one, please bestow your knowledge upon us as to what they are then?
Great stuff, hope they learn more soon.
They started out as tombs, but, as grave robbers kept breaking in, it became cheaper to use the Valley of the Kings, which was easier to secure.
It came down to how much cash would be spent on protecting the Pharaoh’s treasures.
I think popular entertainment is a reflection of the times. The '70s film was pretty fatalistic, with lots of exaggerated violence and a projection, cities being dysfunctional and in decline, and traditional values being lost. Romantic comedy? Not so much. Tearjerkers instead. America was in the doldrums in the '70s economically and culturally so it fit the mood.
The '80s flipped it, very upbeat with lots of openly patriotic themes, the violence was made more cartoonish bright colors, bouncy music. Light romantic comedy was back on the menu. The national mood was positive (leftists were miserable, of course. They always are. But they were in retreat then).
The '90s was eclectic but there were several films that featured a 'nothing is what it seems' sort of vibe. For example The Matrix, Seven, Usual Suspects, Sixth Sense, Groundhog Day, The Truman Show. I'm not sure what that says about the zeitgeist of the era though. The effect of widespread internet access?
The last 20 years has been post-apocalyptic / zombies and superheroes everywhere. Zombies = a force of nature, the uncontrollable threat. You can't defeat the zombies anymore than you can stop a hurricane. That's never the point, its just to survive and so they are really movies about characters under extreme pressure and how some rise and some descend to the depths of human nature. Different takes on that, sometimes humanity bonds together to fight back and the threat unifies people (World War Z). Others like the Walking Dead seem to basically say that man's default is aggression, selfishness, and oppression with just a few willing to fight for the values they held before the zombies came. I tend to think zombies are used as an avatar for climate change by hollywood writers (maybe on a subconscious level, reflecting their general anxiety that the world is sitting on a knife edge).
But you know, you could name 100 exceptions to every point I made, it's just some random thoughts on the intersection of pop culture and national mood that I've had over time.
I forgot to mention that zombies are not just reflective of climate anxiety but also maybe the threat of faceless random terrorism (post 9/11).
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