Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration This week Joseph and Nathan are joined by Breanna, a Silent Generation listener who works as a software engineer for a major online dating company, to discuss online dating. They detail the early history of online dating (such as how the first person to develop a computer based dating service was a working class British woman named Joan Ball) before sharing their experiences with online dating websites and apps such as Match.com, Hinge, Tinder, Okcupid, and The League. Amongst other things they discuss how dating apps replaced ELO algorithms with Gale-Shapley algorithms, how a recent study found that NYC was the worst major US city for dating, and how Chicago attracts “coastal dating app refugees” who seek an easier dating market. Links: How heterosexual couples met graph The Mother of All Swipes by Mar Hicks Whitney Wolfe, founder of dating app Bumble, has had quite the year. She just can’t discuss parts of it by Todd C. Frankel Hinge’s newest feature claims to use machine learning to find your best match by Ashley Carman Towards a statistical physics of dating apps by Fabrizio Olmeda The Uncanny Swipe Drive: The Return of a Racist Mode of Algorithmic Thought on Dating Apps by Greggory Narr Not My Type: Automating Sexual Racism in Online Dating by Apryl Williams and Kendra Albert Race and Attraction, 2009 – 2014 from Oktrends NYC is the ‘worst’ US city for dating by Asia Grace River Page Grindr Tweet Hot Gays, Body Image, & Comparison by Hellvetika What is the dating culture in Chicago like? Reddit post Asian gay immigrant looking to relocate to Chicago from LA? Reddit post Artwork: 80s-90s Japanese electronics advert shared by Kaihatsu Recorded on 11/10/2024
Pokémon is the highest grossest media franchise of all time, but has it declined in quality? On this week’s episode Joseph and Nathan use Pokemon as a case study to talk about gamer culture, nostalgia, and fandoms more broadly. After breaking down the history of Pokémon into three booms and one bust, the boys detail what they like about the franchise (Ken Sugimori’s artwork, HM moves, and their favorite Pokémon) and the things they dislike about it (competitive Pokémon play, shiny hunting, and legendary Pokémon). Amongst other things they discuss how Poliwhirl almost became the main mascot for the Pokémon franchise, how Pokémon became uncool in the mid-2000s, how the designs of Pokémon became rounder and cuter over time, and how a terabyte of information stolen from Game Freak’s servers (dubbed “the teraleak”) recently leaked to the public. Links: Pokémon – from bugs to blockbuster by Simon Parkin Poliwhirl: The Mascot You Never Knew Pokémon Trainer Norm MacDonald “Pokémon” on Google Trends Pokémon Go - Vaporeon stampede Central Park, NYC Target Pokémon card scalper stampede video Ken Sugimori’s artwork for the original 151 Pokémon Oh Wow, The Best Pokémon Card Art All Comes From The Same Person by John Walker How Pokémon's Art Style & Design Has 'Evolved' Generic Pokémon Design by Generation What Would Gen 8 Pokémon Look Like in Gen 1? (Part 2) The Evolution of Pokémon Design Pokemon Gold & Silver beta Pokémon Gorochu’s back sprite Project Bauer/ Pokemon Movie 24 Palworld vs. Pokémon Comparison: Just How Similar Are the Designs? by Joshua Yehl Pokemon Sword and Shield Controversy and 'Dexit', Explained by Casey DeFreitas & Matt Kim Taechichu’s Youtube Regi Noises Victreebel Scream Artwork: Charizard Pokémon Carddass artwork by Ken Sugimori Recorded on 11/3/2024
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration Why did Joseph go to Copenhagen last week? Did he bike around a lot? How many hot dogs did he eat? How was Malmo, Sweden? These are some of the important questions Nathan asked Joseph on this week’s episode. Artwork: Street photo Copenhagen ... Summer and sun by Ivan Naurholm Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) Recorded on 10/27/2024
Hyperpop is a music genre that is noted for its hyperfeminine, artificial, and childlike sound. The term “hyperpop” came into popular use after Spotify staff created a hyperpop playlist in 2019. The music the term described emerged much earlier however, with the earliest examples coming out of the renowned UK record label PC Music starting in 2013. This week Nathan is joined by his friend E to delineate the three main subgenres of hyperpop: future pop, internet pop and digicore. They discuss music by Danny L Harle, A. G. Cook, Hannah Diamond, QT, SOPHIE, Charli XCX, 100 Gecs, Alice Gas, Food House, and others. Amongst other things they discuss how how they first came to find PC Music, how digicore is NEET music, and how both Hannah Diamond and Dis Magazine used “superreal” aesthetics. Links: Nathan and E’s Hyperpop Spotify Playlist GFOTY vs. LITTLE MIX - The Interview PC Music’s GFOTY criticised after calling Toumani & Sidiki Diabaté “Bombay Bicycle Club blacked up” Why did GFOTY leave PC Music? Reddit post THE 3 PILLARS OF HYPERPOP Reddit post Two Bloods Called by I’m so Popular https://studio.hannahdiamond.com/ MEAT’s AW12 I LUV U campaign MEAT’s AW13 Believe campaign Ur Not a Baller by Serious Thugs Alis Pelleschi’s Instagram Hey QT - The Story of a Popstar Who Never Existed Baby Bubbles by QT Hood By Air AW 2014 runway show Vroom vroom vine Hyperpop: How Charli XCX Created a New Genre 100 Gecs opening for Deftones video 404 Error, Genre Not Found: The Life Cycle of Internet Scenes by Sophie Walker Alice Gas, Alice Glass, 100 gecs Drama Explained Reddit post Dis Magazine/ PC Music collaborations Artwork: Artwork for Pink and Blue by Hannah Diamond Recorded on 10/27/2024
Kevin Heckart is a Kansas City based artist who created the artwork behind seapunk’s original aesthetic. This special episode coincides with both the one year anniversary of Silent Generation and the relaunch of the seapunk clothing line Mainframe, which features many of Heckart’s designs. The first half of episode is an interview with Heckart that serves as a spiritual threequel to Silent Generation’s prior two seapunk episodes while the later half is a broader conversation about net art and net artists such as Brad Troemel, Hito Steyerl, Laturbo Avendon, and Lorna Mills. Amongst other things they discuss how Heckart has gone viral on Tiktok for hacking animatronic fish and furby toys, how Nathan and Brad Troemel did the same undergrad program, how Hito Steyerl incorporated real life biographies into Factory of the Sun, and how Skibbidy Toilet shows how thoroughly post-internet aesthetics have permeated popular culture. Links: mainframehq.net Mainframe’s Instagram Kevin Heckart’s Instagram Kevin Heckart’s Tiktok I hacked a singing fish. - Kevin Heckart “and yet a trace of the true self exists in the false self” meme HIS BRAIN? NO. HIS HEART Brad Troemel meme The Post-internet Culture Report by Brad Troemel Untitled, 2016 by Laura Owens Trojan Horses: Activist Art and Power by Lucy R. Lippard Color(ed) Theory Series by Amanda Williams Rhizome’s Net Art Anthology My Boyfriend Came Back from the War by Olia Lialina Madison Beer #NoFilter by Dis Magazine I was Raised on the Internet exhibition at the MCA Transdimensional Serpent by Jon Rafman The Jogging Tumblr blog Army of Ants by Brad Troemel Giant Arthropods Eating Doritos early meme Liquidity Inc. by Hito Steyerl screenshot Factory of the Sun by Hito Steyerl takeSomeCrime Youtube channel In Defense of the Poor Image by Hito Steyerl In Defense of the Poor Image-esque Instagram post GIFS by Lorna Mills Repetition Mindset: Artists as Snowflakes by Brad Troemel Artwork: Provided by Kevin Heckart Recorded on 10/16/2024
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration For this week’s episode Joseph and Nathan watched Francis Coppola’s latest (and likely final) film, Megalopolis. The film draws parallels between Ancient Rome and modern day New York City and has been met with widespread confusion. The boys discuss the film in the first half of the episode, detailing the performance of several actors (notably Aubrey Plaza’s role as the brilliantly named Wow Platinum) and the film's various references to Ancient Rome. In the second half of the episode the boys discuss megalopolises more broadly, including ones in real life (the Northeast Megalopolis, the European Megalopolis, Japan's Taiheiyo Belt, and China’s various megalopolises) and fictional examples (the megalopolis depicted in the 1927 film Metropolis, Mega-City One in Judge Dredd, and Coruscant in Star Wars). Links: Martin Scorsese Had a Cinema Epiphany ‘Too Late’ Megalopolis Plot meme Megalopolis Movie Clip - Cesar is Mine (Wow Platinum elevator scene) Nymphet Alumni’s Ep. 90: The Baby Name Game with Sophie Kim Francis Ford Coppola Didn’t Want ‘Megalopolis’ To Be “Some Woke Hollywood Production,” Casting “Canceled” Actors from Deadline Tell Your Children by Alex Berensen Megalopolis: The Urbanized Northeastern Seaboard of the United States by Jean Gottman What if the cities of Jersey City, Elizabeth, Union, Newark, Hoboken, and others became one larger city like NYC? Reddit post Why is there no major city here? (Boroughitis) by Urban Jersey Guy The location of Gotham city Cars.destroyed.our.cities Hartford, Connecticut post Blue Java Banana Review by Weird Explorer Artwork: From Megalopolis' Interactive Scene Explained: What Happens In It Recorded on 10/6/2024
What is Chautauqua? Chautauqua began in 1874 in Chautauqua, New York as a Summer camp that trained laymen to be Sunday school teachers. President Ulyses S Grant visited the assembly shortly after its founding in 1875, which gave Chautauqua widespread attention and engendered a national movement; the original Chautauqua (now known in the modern day as the Chautauqua Institution) gave rise to hundreds of “daughter” Chautauquas. They offered week long or month long retreats to religiously minded vacationers who wanted to enjoy nature but also wanted to stay productive by watching edifying sermons, lectures, historical impersonations, and concerts. On this week’s episode the boys discuss how the popular Chautauqua speech Acres of Diamonds resembles the 21st century self help book The Secret, how Chautauqua acts differed from vaudeville acts, and how a specific type of historical impersonation popular in circuit Chautauquas became synonymous with Chautauqua in the modern day. This is the third and final installment of a three part series that explores interconnected topics that deal with American culture and the outdoors. Links: The Chautauqua Institution Chautauqua: An American Narrative (2011) The History of the Chautauqua Movement Acres of Diamonds by Russell Conwell Bohumir Kryl The height of assassins versus that of their targets Reddit post Artwork: Participants of a Circuit Chautauqua at Gurdon (Clark County); circa 1919. Recorded on 9/22/2024
In a more anecdotal direction, this week’s episode is on American Summer camps. The boys detail how camping was first developed in 1861 by Frederick Gunn before discussing their own experiences as campers and counselors at American Summer camps. Amongst other things they discuss how modern Summer camps have felt the need to hyperspecialize and give parents an ROI, how Summer camp aesthetics are 1970’s by default, how Summer camps were depicted as WASPy in Addams Family Values, and how Summer camps were depicted as somewhat utopian in the 1964 Soviet film Welcome, or No Trespassing. This is the second installment of a three part series that explores interconnected topics that deal with American culture and the outdoors. Links: The Not So Happy Campers by Mimi Swartz About our Founder - The Frederick Gunn School Summer Camp Capitalism The History of American Jewish Summer Camps I can tell from her tweets that she had to go live with grandma for a lil bit meme Wednesday’s revolt from The Addams Family Values Long accused of Indigenous misappropriation, Boy Scouts ask if it’s time to change Welcome, or No Trespassing (1964) Artwork: Photograph by Andy Sweet Recorded on 9/15/2023
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration Scouting is a grassroots, child-led movement that began in the early 1900’s after children discovered Robert Baden-Powell’s written accounts of his time working as a scout for the British Army. After learning of children’s interest in his work, Baden-Powell conducted an experimental scout camp at Brownsea Island in 1907 and subsequently published his seminal work Scouting for Boys in 1908. Dozens and hundreds of official scouting organizations followed, most of which still exist today. On this week’s episode the boys detail the history of various figures and organizations in the scouting movement. Amongst other things they discuss how arbitrary it was that the scouting movement was inspired by scouting, how scout badges and scouting uniforms create an archive of people’s childhoods, how Cub Scouts truthfully don’t create their own pinewood derby cars, and how the TTI industry and wilderness therapy are “dark scouting.” This is the first installment of a three part series that explores interconnected topics that deal with American culture and the outdoors. Links: Scouting for Boys by Robert Baden-Powell The Zoomer Question by Isaac Wilkes Remembering the Wandervogel by John Savage & Johnny Ryan David Hahn, The ‘Radioactive Boy Scout’ Who Tried To Build A Nuclear Reactor In His Backyard Joseph as a Cub Scout Nanook of the North (1922) Scouts Honor: The Secret Files of The Boy Scouts of America (2023) Artwork: Scouts with canoe - National Parks Gallery Creative Commons CC0 License Recorded on 9/9/2024
Why was Nathan in Rio de Janeiro last week? Why was he there in 2018? What did he do there? What new fruits did he try? These are some of the important questions Joseph asked Nathan on this week’s episode. Links: Brazil with a Z vs Brasil with an S - example 1 Brazil with a Z vs Brasil with an S - example 2 Artwork: Picture of Rio de Janeiro taken by Nathan from Pão de Açúcar Recorded on 9/2/2024
How did the spy-fi literary and cinematic genre come to be? This week Joseph and Nathan chronicle how detective fiction authors took inspiration from sensational espionage cases such as The Dreyfus Affair and The Rosenberg Trial to imagine what the front lines of The Cold War might look like. The boys cover “realistic” spy movies such as James Bond’s Dr. No, Three Days of the Condor, and The Bourne Trilogy before going into fantastical depictions of spies in Children’s media like The Spy Kids, Kim Possible, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Amongst other things they discuss the difference between state and industrial espionage, Austria’s constitutionally mandated status of neutrality, and Edward Snowden’s modeling portfolio. Links: Nathan’s Instagram Was the Rosenberg trial America’s Dreyfus Affair The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy The Thirty-Nine Steps by Charles Buchan Ep. 53: Bond Girl Summer by Nymphet Alumni Photos from young Edward Snowden’s brief modeling career Trying to Make Sense of Hannah Diamond and Post-Ringtone Music by VICE The Real Life Spy Behind Charlie And The Chocolate Factory Children of undercover Russian spy couple only learned their nationality on flight to Moscow Exclusive: Suspected Chinese spy targeted California politicians Artwork: Sean Connery playing James Bond in From Russia With Love Recorded on 8/16/2024
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration This week the boys are joined by local filmmaker Charles Livingston to discuss male desire. They begin by first discussing straight male desire (the derision of the male gaze, male jealousy and possessiveness, and gender performance) before going into a deep exploration of Nathan’s thesis that yearning is the most universal and inexorable difficulty experienced by gay men. Amongst other things they discuss how the Ancient Romans conflated sexual conquest with imperial conquest, how Cleopatra in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra weaponized mens’ desire, and how straight men and gay men seem to equally match each other in terms of desire. Links: Charles Livingston’s Instagram Wings by Charles Livingston Oscars 2018: Facts and figures about the members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences - Orange County Register The VICE Guide to Being Gay Armond and Mark scene from the White Lotus Artwork: Germanic Warrior with Helmet, Osmar Schindler, 1902 Recorded on 8/11/2024
On this week’s (sans Joseph) episode of Silent Generation, Nathan is joined by his friend Kamara to discuss antiques. They talk about how they first got into antiques, the best antiques that they own, and the defining characteristics of several antique furniture styles (Victorian, Arts & Crafts Movement, Art Nouveau, Art Deco, and Mid-century Modern). Amongst other things they discuss how Victorian antiques and houses are construed as being haunted, how antiques seem to be most popular in rural areas, and how the antiques industry acts as a point of intergenerational exchange between different generations of gay men. Links: Antiques Pinterest Board (Nathan’s antiques are at the bottom) A Lamp & Fixture Corp Tighlman Chicago Justanswer Antiques The Blue Fairy Book edited by Andrew Lang Campbell House Museum The Slav Epic by Alphonse Mucha THREATENED: Hector Guimard’s Art Nouveau Metra Entrance Restor-A-Finish Youtube demo The Roger Brown Study Collection Artwork: Art Deco Cubist Armchair in Vermilion Mohair Velvet and Maple, Belgium, 1920s Recorded on 8/4/2024
This week the boys cover a listener suggested topic that is closely associated with their lines of work: unions. Nathan is currently a librarian represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), and Joseph works in the heavily unionized construction industry. Amongst other things they discuss how violent strikes were prior to the formation of the NLRB in 1935, how the Haymarket Affair lead to creation of the 8 hour work day, how YIMBYs feel ambivalent toward unions, and how unions mitigate but don’t eliminate the deleterious effects of monopolization. Links: How Chicago’s Past Resulted in Disproportionate Lead Poisoning of Minority Children of the Present: A Narrative Review The Redneck Army Refuses to Stay Buried by Cassady Rosenblum Ep. 164: Labor Union Depictions in Hollywood by Citations Needed Ten cities facing the worst of the pension crisis CTA has only netted 4 rail operators this year Reddit post Noisy and Unsafe: Stop Fetishizing Old Homes by M. Nolan Gray A ton of variation in construction labor cost M. Nolan Gray tweet Artwork: Der Streik by Robert Koehler Recorded on 7/28/2024
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration Christopher Lasch identified narcissism as the dominant pathology of the Baby Boomer generation in his seminal work The Culture of Narcissism and suggested that prior and future generations of Americans would also exhibit collective pathologies. What is the dominant pathology or ideology of the Millennial generation? On this week’s episode Joseph and Nathan are joined by their friend Bobby to present evidence that said ideology is nihilism. They examine the causes of Millennial nihilism (The Great Recession, 9/11, New Atheism) and the effects that nihilism has had on Millennials (“cutting off your family” discourse, distrust of authority, the proliferation of sexwork, and the increasing number of deaths of despair). Amongst other things they discuss what generation they personally identify with, how nihilism has been slowly accumulating from generation to generation, and how both Rick and Morty and Everything Everywhere All at Once use the idea of multiverses to create worlds in which nihilism is justified. Links: The Culture of Narcissism by Christopher Lasch The Revolt of the Elites by Christopher Lasch “Optimistic Nihilism” Tiktok Video The Nihilism of Generation X is an Artifact of Privilege by Shane Burley The End of History and the Last Man by Francis Fukuyama “I’m tired of living through historic events” meme The Case Against the Sexual Revolution by Louise Perry ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ in the Age of #StopAsianHate and Millennial Nihilism Recorded on 7/21/2024
Ivy Style, otherwise known as Ivy League, is a style of men’s dress that became mainstream at Ivy League schools during the 1950’s. Students started wearing casual versions of the traditional menswear staples worn by their fathers and started wearing clothing originally designed for recreational activities outside of sports fields. On this week’s episode Joseph and Nathan delineate various Ivy Style staples and talk about several groups that adopted the look: Jews who dressed Ivy in order to blend in in professional environments, female students at the Seven Sisters schools who dressed Ivy in a strikingly masculine way, and Black civil rights activists who dressed Ivy in order to persuade White Americans that they were equals. The boys then round off the episode by critiquing the Ivy League as an institution. Links: Ivy League Pinterest Board The Ivy Style Primer American Ivy: Chapter 1 - Articles of Interest Take Ivy by Hayashida, Teruyoshi The Weird and Glorious Culture Shock of “Take Ivy” Kiel James Patrick’s Instagram Man fired for being ‘too American,’ old, wearing khakis: EEOC complaint Visual snow syndrome grid pattern post What is Black Ivy, and why you've never heard of it The Zoomer Question by Isaac Wilks Air rage triggered by walking past first-class seating, study says Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall Street by Karen Ho Pete Buttigieg McKinsey tweet Artwork: Sunday in the Ivy League from Take Ivy Recorded on 7/15/2024
This week Joseph and Nathan are joined by Marissa Macias, a local artist and fashion designer who owns the insect-inspired clothing brand Petrichor, to discuss insect aesthetics. They begin by examining 7 of the ~30 extant insect orders: hymenoptera (ants, bees, wasps), odonata (dragonflies), coleoptera (beetles), orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets), mantodea (mantids), lepidoptera (butterflies, moths), and heteroptera (true bugs). Amongst other things they discuss Chicago’s recent dual cicada brood emergence, how insects appeared in pre-modern still lives because of their association with death, and how decline in insect biomass could result in systems collapse and a sixth extinction. Links: https://www.petrich0r.com/ (online shop) Petrichor (Instagram) Marissa’s Neurobasis Kaupi Are.na Channel Maria Sibylla Merian The Insect Asylum Cicada Parade-a Carravagio’s Basket of Fruit Durer’s Stag Beetle Eating Bugs to Save the Planet by Dana Goodyear The Collapse of Insects By Julia Janicki, Gloria Dickie, Simon Scarr and Jitesh Chowdhury Earth Is Not in the Midst of a Sixth Mass Extinction by Peter Brannen Ocean Trash Is a Lifesaver for Insects by Daniel Strain Artwork: Neurobasis Kaupi by Marissa Macias Recorded on 7/10/2024
Full episode available on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SilentGeneration Originally started as a Facebook page by three Portland natives, health goth was an online internet aesthetic that proliferated from 2013 to 2015. Health goth imagery and fashion incorporated monochrome color schemes, performance wear brands (particularly Nike, Adidas, and Y-3), chav culture, light weaponry, face masks, and fitness culture. Where did it go, and why has it been erased from public memory to a greater degree than other early Tumblr aesthetics? On this week's episode the boys explore how the aesthetic was later commandeered and mishandled by the controversial former Chicago club kid Johnny Love. Amongst other things they discuss how the aesthetic side of Tumblr often made them feel “Tumblr fatigue,” how local DIY scenes are a recipe for drama and GoFundMe disasters, how goth clean girl looks eerily reminiscent to health goth, and how phonk seems to be health goth music incarnate. Links: Health Goth Pinterest Board Health Goth Facebook Page healthgoth.com Cottweiler: 2014 S/S Collection What Health Goth Actually Means by Adam Harper Health Goth Fitness Manifesto #HealthGoth - Hashtags Season II by Red Bull Music Academy execussion.tumblr.com 2012 by Celestial Youth Is the Health Goth Movement Selling Out to the Mainstream? meme about scene rants famous 2012 basement group photo w/ Johnny Love Johny Love’s recent health goth facebook post The DigiFairy’s goth clean girl Instagram reel Phonk Aesthetics Artwork: Jazzelle Zaughnatti wearing a Dead Worldwide shirt Recorded on 6/30/2024
While many recent episodes of Silent Generation have focused on decline, this episode explores how movie theaters have had multiple golden eras. Vaudeville theaters, nickelodeons, movie theaters, drive-ins, and multiplexes have each offered unique ways for moviegoers to enjoy films. Joseph and Nathan begin by discussing the history of movie theaters before examining four iconic movie palaces in Chicago: The Garrick Theater, The Chicago Theater, The Music Box, and the Ramova Theater. Amongst other things they discuss how movie studios used to bundle blockbusters and B-movies together in a now illegal practice called “block booking,” how the stars in the ceiling of The Music Box theater remind them of Grand Central Station, how modern movie theaters have an Art Deco-esque aesthetic that is called Decoplex, and how Alamo Drafthouse Cinema workers are unionizing. Links: Downtown Chicago’s Historic Movie Theaters by Schiecke, Konrad Avondale Time Machine posts about movie theaters in Avondale All Extant Louis Sullivan Buildings in Chicago The Last American Possession screening at the Music Box on July 24th CTA Bus Hit, Damaged Ramova Theatre Days After Building Earned Initial Landmark Status Alamo Drafthouse Made Millions. Exhausted Workers Said Enough Artwork: The Music Box Recorded on 6/23/2023
In response to the Berlin Crisis of 1961, President John F. Kennedy chose to encourage everyday Americans to construct homemade bunkers. Civilians could suddenly mitigate their fears of a nuclear holocaust through consumption, and thus prepper culture was born. This week the boys are joined by the writer and community builder Anna Savina to discuss preppers, survivalists, and other groups that have doomsday inspired “exit strategies.” They begin by examining the zine she created on bunkers, Bunker Mentality, to explain how bunkers fit into the story of how Americans shifted from being citizens to being consumers. Amongst other things they discuss how the towers that existed in medieval Italian cities were an early form of bunkers, how prepper culture seems to thrive in the interior of the United States rather than the coasts, and how the prepper aesthetics depicted in Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding were beautiful but ultimately not representative of prepper culture. Links: Prepper Aesthetics Pinterest Board Anya is Typing… Anna Savina's Zine on bunkers: Bunker Mentality Anna Savina’s Twitter Prepper Lingo: Terms, Slang, and Acronyms from A-Z Towers of Bologna, Italy in the 12th Century San Gimignano Preppers in Death Stranding New Survivalism by Parsons & Charlesworth, The Object Guardian Conservative guy afraid of cities meme Why We Love the Apocalypse - EP183 by The Casual Preppers Podcast Wikipedia Database download Graph of the Population of Rome Through History Artwork: How to build a fallout shelter, 1957 Creative Commons CC0 License Recorded on 6/19/2024