Further Reading
Do cities trap us in a man-made version of the internet doomscroll? We didn’t have time for a deep-dive this week, so we chatted about cities, bikinis as a trend slop predictor, and mimetic desire. You can also listen on Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/31zl1qMryM40bS89PZK4Hj?si=bf55a0830eb64e24] and Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/further-reading/id1888766368]! Subscribe below to get these in your inbox whenever a new one is out. Below is a loose write-up with none of the jokes. Today’s mini chat (let’s call these ‘Further Scrolling’) was inspired by this note: In major cities, you can’t escape the algorithm simply by logging off. TikTok can follow you into the real world through the clothes people wear, the cafes menu you order from and the phrases written on billboards. You can map the timeline of trends just by walking down the street. First, you might pass a buzzy matcha shop, then a family-run bar that started serving a brownish diabetic matcha to keep up with said shop, then a new matcha bar with lo-fi vinyl, then, finally, a chain that did something diabolical to the matcha like adding liquorice jam or whatever. You can see the whole arc of the trend (innovation, democratisation, gentrification, corporate ruination) just by walking to the dentist. In cities, internet trends are physically perceptible and all around you. We also talk about mimetic desire — the idea that your desires aren't organic to you, but they're installed by repetition. If you see all the cool city people wearing that hideous brown Zara skirt with blue dots all over, you might start wanting it too, but how many of them only wanted the skirt in the first place because they saw it 500 times on TikTok? We end up living in this 3D algorithm that just forces our tastes. (We did warn you this wouldn’t be a very profound episode lol) Sithara delivers her bikini theory in this episode: The bikini is the purest canary in the trend slop coal mine. It’s cheap, constitutes a full outfit, and it doesn’t take up too much space in your wardrobe, so you can theoretically just get a new one each year to participate in whatever trend it is next time. This summer you might see people in brown-and-pastel bikinis, and your “ugh, that's disgusting" could slowly turn into an "actually, you know what, it's kind of cute." Obviously, the countryside doesn’t protect you from the internet. If anything, some people use the internet more out of boredom and isolation. But cities externalise the internet and then surround you with its trends until the algorithm warps reality. When you live in a city, you're walking around being constantly reminded of all the things that you learn from your phone. Added to that, the chances are you’re in close proximity with people who are discoursed up. It’s slop soup in here. Is this a problem? Probably not, but if you want to hear more about everything above, please enjoy this kind of stupid episode! Listen on Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/31zl1qMryM40bS89PZK4Hj?si=bf55a0830eb64e24] or Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/further-reading/id1888766368]. Subscribe for more deep dives and stupid chats This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit furtherreadingpod.substack.com [https://furtherreadingpod.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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