The Future We Imagined
Description
MIT Technology Review — https://www.technologyreview.com/
Smithsonian Magazine — https://www.smithsonianmag.com/
LIFE Magazine Archive — https://books.google.com/books/about/LIFE.html
Atomic Ranch — https://www.atomic-ranch.com/
Paleofuture (Smithsonian) — https://paleofuture.com/
Atomic Age design resources
Official Site — http://www.thevenusproject.com/
Future by Design (documentary)
Zeitgeist Addendum (documentary)
World’s Fair Museum — https://worldsfairusa.com/
WIRED — https://www.wired.com/
National Archives — https://www.archives.gov/
r/RetroFuturism — https://www.reddit.com/r/RetroFuturism/
What did people in the 1950s and '60s think the year 2000 would look like? Flying cars? Robot maids? A kitchen that cooked dinner with the push of one shiny chrome button? A perfectly cheerful smart home that—ideally—didn’t spy on you?
In this episode of Messy Minded, Jess dives into the gloriously unhinged futures we once imagined: from retro-futuristic dream houses made of plastic, to food pills that never took off, to Cold War fallout shelters disguised as cozy family retreats. We’ll wander through world’s fairs, peek inside mid-century “homes of tomorrow,” and explore how sci-fi—from The Jetsons to The Matrix—shaped the future we’re living in now (and the future we definitely aren’t).
Along the way, we’ll visit the Venus Project, revisit the push-button optimism of the Atomic Age, and laugh at the predictions that aged like milk. Think of it as a guided tour through yesterday’s tomorrows — equal parts hopeful, weird, and wonderfully wrong.
Curl up with your metaphorical space blanket, hop into the retro time machine, and join me for a trip to the future… as imagined by the past.
Music by: SoundPlusUS Label and Mr. Lex Oleksii Bezalov for "Spark Groove", Bobby Cole for "Fifties Jukebox Moods Full" and "Milkshake Girl", Black Scorpion Music-Ali Afshar for "Matrix", "Get Ready",
William Medeirosri for "Tension" , Nikita Kondrashev for "Cosy, Quirky, Comedy", Geoff Harvey for "Mischief Maker", and Audio Coffee for "Funny"
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