I was reading clips on the Imagining the Internet website from Elon University and came across this quote, ““Someday we will build up a world telephone system, making necessary to all peoples the use of a common language or common understanding of languages, which will join all the people of the earth into one brotherhood. There will be heard throughout the earth a great voice coming out of the ether which will proclaim, ‘Peace on earth, good will towards men.’”
I read that and had that EUREKA! moment, after which I wrote this potential first line for Virtually Real (either the book, or the documentary), “Welcome to the future where everything is different and nothing’s changed.”
I had been ruminating over the reality that Web 3.0, or the Metaverse, or whatever the hell anyone wants to call it would create a clash of cultures out of the need to find a common language. Here an old-time futurist (mull on that for a while) foresaw the need for a common language because of the use of the telephone, and that that common language would create harmony, and peace. I wonder how he would have felt if the plausible common language outcome was Mandarin, and not English. But I digress.
But not really. In reading this passage I found my historical touchstone, the previous illustration of how we, humans, adjust to influential technological changes. Fear. Promise. Dispair. Hope. People envision the entire range of plausible outcomes, and yet, technology invariably ends up augmenting our world, not taking it over.
As Jamais Cascio reminded me over coffee, “technology does not change culture; they develop together.” There is no tail wagging the dog. There is a symbiosis, despite the Luddites’ fear of technology, and the technophones’ belief that we’ll all live richer, better lives solely because of technology.
So how does one create a narratively compelling story out of the tag line “nothing changes?” Well, I’ve done it before, winning a staged reading in a playwriting competition with a play called “Cold Coffee,” about a diner where at the end of the day, the characters are different, but nothing else about how each day progresses changes. I sense the development of a theme here.