Vintage

Caveman RacketThere was an article in Slate a while back discussing the uber-hipness of the Gieco auto insurance spokescavemen: ‘They have poetry magnets on their fridge(sic)…in Esperanto.’ The article specifically called out the commercial with the caveman in the airport on a moving sidewalk with his velvet tracksuit and tennis racket that looked like they came–I was gonna say ‘from 1968,’ but the article said, ‘from a Wes Anderson set.’ And I thought, ‘Yeah! Cool,’ because I freakin’ love Wes Anderson.

Flash forward to tonight when The Last Boy Scout comes on and for no reason I notice the absence of cell phones. Then I imagine if they did have a cell phone how hilarious it would look: Bruce Willis holding up a beige brick with an antenna.

Being a hotshot writer/director/producer, I made a note: never include current technology in a movie because it’ll be dated and it won’t be charming; it’ll be corny. Obviously Wes Anderson knew this, if only instinctually, and thus littered his films with anachronistic accoutrements.

If I may restate the obvious, we live in an age where technology moves so fast that the past looks ridiculous. Sure, we laugh when we think about bell bottoms or powdered wigs, and we cringe when we see that pic of our ducktail from 1986 or that video of us doing the Macarena. But the difference is that today we record everyday life so much in photos or videos that we are surrounded by representations of ourselves from only months, days, or hours ago.

So now a paranoia has set in and we avoid trends like the plague, except we fall into a new, safe trend: vintage. We take an old Bon Jovi shirt from Goodwill (more likely Target) and wear it proudly, not because we like Bon Jovi, but because we can make fun of everyone who used to sincerely like his music. It’s sad really. It’s like making fun of love because you’re too scared of getting hurt. (Did you read that sincerely, or with an ironic affectation?)

Of course there’s another, more innocent side to this all: nostalgia. And what are we nostalgic for? I’d venture to guess that in our lonely moments we clutch that original pressing of The Dave Clark Five across our vintage-T-shirt-clad chests and we cry for an imagined past when you could sincerely feel or be something without being bombarded by media, whether commercial or personal, like a funhouse mirror floating three feet in front of us at all times to make us feel like morons.

Comments (5) left to “Vintage”

  1. danielle wrote:

    two things:

    1. wes anderson when to my high school.
    2. i like you’re writing. you’re good at it, and you have a fantastic vocabulary.

  2. beau wrote:

    Danielle is the coolest!

  3. DrRetarded wrote:

    In response to Danielle, Dr.Retarded the robot space gypsy is not amused by Beau’s prosaic human vocabulary.

    However: Beau should read the essay by David Foster Wallace called “E Unibus Pluram.” It addresses irony and it’s import in television and US fiction today. This essay can be found in the book “A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again.”

    He says, “All US irony is based on an implicit ‘I don’t really mean what I’m saying.’ So what does irony as a cultural norm meant to say? That’s it’s impossible to mean what you say? That maybe it’s too bad it’s impossible, but wake up and smell the coffee already? Most likely, I think, today’s irony ends up saying: ‘How totally banal of you to ask what I really mean.’ Anyone with the heretical gall to ask an ironist what he actually stands for ends up looking like an hysteric or a prig. And herein lies the oppressiveness of the institutionalized irony, the too-successful rebel: the ability to interdict the question without attending to its subject is, when exercised, tyranny. It is the new junta, using the very tool that exposed its enemy to insulate itself.”

    Suck on that, mortals.

  4. Beau wrote:

    Thanks, Dr. Retarded, will do. BTW, loved your work on Monster Parties. Scary stuff!

  5. danielle wrote:

    danielle hereby retracts the later half of statement #2 above. david foster wallace has a better vocabulary.

    however, danielle would like to appoint beau the title of “official dream reader.”

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