The Higher We Climb, the Lower We Stoop

A couple of headlines in the photography and videography press caught my eye this week:

Blackmagic Teases Groundbreaking 17K Large-Format Cinema Camera

Old Movies Are Being Enhanced With AI Tools and Not Everyone is Happy

Okay, the first one. “17K” refers to a newer, higher-resolution imaging sensor, in which a mind-boggling amount of videographic data is recorded and stored every second.

Sadly, these cameras are mostly used for two types of photography: the “oh, look at how good my footage is,” and the “this movie has a lot of special effects.”

Even the 2023 Picture of the Year, Oppenheimer, a flashy, visually-rich biopic about the creator of the atomic bomb, was disappointing to me. I haven’t finished my review of it, but when I do, one of the things I plan to call out about it is that the bomb that the plot spends so much time discussing and designing, wasn’t the bomb, or even the same design, as the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan.

Don’t believe me? Look it up.

This may be the least popular thingI say all year, but I think entertainment is at it’s all-time lowest value.

What do I mean by “value?”

To drive home my thoughts on this matter, as I wrote this, I cancelled my only remaining streaming service, Netflix. As the years have gone by, more and more products from this, or any other streaming service, have gotten less and less interesting, and, especially, less enlightening than ever before. I am not only bored, I am annoyed at an entertainment culture that continues to give us petaflops of shallow eye candy.

On the second point, about AI, I know I’ve weighed in on this before, but it merits saying again and again: AI is leading us down a dangerous, ingenuine, and ultimately destructive path. Think about the goal of AI: create something fake out of something real. No matter how you feel about “fake news,” fake reality is worse on every level.

I look at the world around us and think of how many people are unhappy, and wonder why we are pushing harder and harder for this unhappiness. We spout off about how disappointing the world around us is, while at the same time devoting our lives to watching, and buying, the worst of it. Who among my readers is naive enough to imagine, for example, any of our leaders on either side of the spectrum won’t use AI to manipulate us?

What, Richard, will you do without streaming, cable, or television? If you know me, you know how much I love reading, writing, photography, flying, travel, working outside, taking care of my dogs, and on and on. No, canceling my last streaming subscription won’t be difficult. In fact, it already feels like one of the best moves I’ve made lately.

The diffraction grating filter was a popular screw-on special effect filter in the 1970s and 1980s, but they have mostly fallen out of favor. I made this image not with a screw-in filter, but through a pair of paper glasses I got at an attraction in Las Vegas last year, and hung on to them in hopes of using them to illustrate something. Does this image look fake? In most ways, it definitely is.
The diffraction grating filter was a popular screw-on special effect filter in the 1970s and 1980s, but they have mostly fallen out of favor. I made this image not with a screw-in filter, but through a pair of paper glasses I got at an attraction in Las Vegas last year, and hung on to them in hopes of using them to illustrate something. Does this image look fake? In most ways, it definitely is.

1 Comment

  1. What’s most encouraging about your decision to cancel Netflix is that it was a conscious choice, made for a particular reason, not least because you were tired of spending your dollars on something that increasingly less value to you. All the things you mentioned that you could or would rather do instead of streaming endless hours of content, are vastly worthwhile and are life-enhancers. You chose to cancel your last streaming (screaming?) service because there are other, better things you could be doing. Exercising that right is something a lot of people don’t seem to realize they can still do.

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