WEBVTT 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 00:11 you're famously quoted often as saying 00:15 the future is already here it's just not 00:17 very evenly distributed this perpetual 00:20 toggling between nothing new you say 00:22 Under the Sun and everything having very 00:25 recently changed absolutely is perhaps 00:27 the central driving tension of my work I 00:30 don't know if you remember saying that 00:32 can you expand on that well I have that 00:45 you know as a sort of ordinary sense of 00:49 my waking waking day that you know I 00:54 mean I'm in the eternal world that 01:00 humans have been living in almost 01:04 forever and we're not we don't seem to 01:10 be that terribly advanced in terms of 01:14 how we deal with one another we were 01:17 still doing appalling things variously 01:21 around the world every every day and 01:26 simultaneously I'm waking up in the 01:29 morning 01:30 and poking at my iPad Mini and seeing 01:35 that someone in London has just remarked 01:38 on the weather and posted a photograph 01:41 of the sky so I suddenly have this this 01:44 and they that they did it the minute I 01:47 woke up so I'm suddenly looking at the 01:50 sky in London that some stranger 01:52 stranger took and described in a in 01:56 another poetic way and it's all 01:59 instantaneous and people never did that 02:02 before and that's all happening at top 02:07 that's all happening very near the apex 02:10 of a pyramid of once emergent 02:13 technologies that might have say at the 02:17 bottom you'd have have growing cereal 02:20 and above that you would have cities 02:25 which you can't do unless you could grow 02:27 and store cereal and above that you have 02:30 sewers without which your city died of 02:33 above a certain population of of cholera 02:37 and dysentery so we're up at the apex if 02:41 any of those other layers below win out 02:43 on us we don't die we forget that that 02:48 we're at the peak of peak of something 02:51 but we're supported by older 02:53 technologies that we no longer even 02:55 think of us as technologies so and I 03:01 think maybe professionally I have some 03:04 awareness of that every day or I try to 03:10 have are you frightened by that one I'm 03:17 anxious by Nature 03:21 you know I'm one of those there's sort 03:26 of hyper-vigilant people except when I'm 03:31 on those on those occasions when I'm 03:35 when I'm relaxed 03:37 but it's a bit scary but so is life and 03:42 it's it's it is what it is what it is 03:48 I think of what I do as a species of 03:52 naturalism not that it's not that it's 03:59 predictive or or trying to be prescient 04:04 but that I'm simply trying to describe a 04:06 sometimes the incomprehensible present 04:10 with the tool kits of science fiction 04:14 and futurology which seem totally 04:17 appropriate to this particular present 04:20 yeah I think we're on a Speedway of 04:26 Technology now and I don't know if 04:29 that's going to continue but it has been 04:31 for the past maybe ten years for me that 04:33 you you don't have anything you can play 04:36 anything on anymore you know and it 04:40 makes small bits of trouble for 04:42 novelists because in Victorian novels 04:46 the calling card falls behind the bureau 04:50 somebody's life is ruined and you could 04:53 write that for all your life and now if 04:55 you I had a student who had everybody 04:59 had flip phones in her novel by the time 05:01 it came out those were like antiques 05:04 might as well have them playing records 05:06 on gramophones yeah can I have a lot of 05:11 sympathy with that I think if I if a 12 05:15 year old reading Neuromancer today she'd 05:18 get to page 20 and go okay the whole 05:22 plot hinges around what happened to all 05:24 the cell phones 05:28 not press it yeah I remember you saying 05:35 that in some interview that you it was a 05:37 real oversight but who could have 05:40 predicted that that we walk around and 05:42 be available to everybody anytime there 05:45 was no no one but more more 05:47 interestingly I think is for a thought 05:51 account of difficult thought experiment 05:55 spend some time trying to imagine what 06:00 it would have been like if somehow 06:02 someone back in 1963 some science 06:06 fiction writer had received in her sleep 06:09 a completely accurate vision of our 06:14 state of cellular telephony today and 06:18 she wrote a novel that incorporated that 06:22 vision and took it to a publisher the 06:25 publisher said are you insane the 06:28 characters in this book spend all their 06:30 time looking at these tiny and tiny 06:33 television radios things in their 06:35 pockets and writing letters on them and 06:38 playing Angry Birds and they're never 06:41 alone no one is ever loved what will 06:44 people make I wonder we have been 06:48 wondering quite a lot recently what will 06:51 people make in 20 years of all the 06:53 fiction ever written in which people are 06:55 mostly alone most of their lives yeah 07:00 that the the the solitude will be 07:04 incomprehensible 07:06 I remember the year I don't know which 07:09 year it was in in London when the 07:11 solitude went away I I went to London in 07:17 the fall and I remember standing on 07:20 standing on a platform somewhere in 07:24 Kensington waiting for the Train and 07:26 looking at the English people not 07:29 speaking to one another and not making 07:32 eye contact 07:33 that's was there what from time 07:35 immemorial and I went away and I came 07:38 back a month later and they were all on 07:40 cell phones it just changed overnight 07:43 that solitude above London flew away and 07:47 I thought that was the moment the 07:50 extraordinary thing for me was that I 07:53 had actually seen it seeing it happen 07:56 no no one now remembers the night that 07:59 they turned on the broadcast television 08:01 in New York City but you know it changed 08:04 everything and it's never changed but do 08:10 you think cell phones will I mean you 08:11 didn't predict them can you produce 08:13 their demise I think that they will you 08:19 know assuming that if this goes on you 08:22 know I think we'll probably internalize 08:25 them as the the characters in the 08:30 further future have done in the in in 08:33 the peripheral they have them implanted 08:38 they don't know exactly where that sort 08:40 of the technology is distributed and 08:42 they experience them as a sort of 08:46 internalized head-up display where you 08:50 see you see who's calling in you you see 08:54 their sigil but I actually had to 08:57 develop that technology because when I 09:01 started the book I developed a much more 09:04 fully realized idea of fully 09:08 internalized cellular telephony that 09:13 makes that look really primitive but 09:15 what I found was it was so distracting 09:18 and took the took the readers so far 09:22 away from the narrative that it was just 09:24 impossible to use it so I deliberately 09:27 cranked their technology back I figured 09:31 it was about thirty years in order to 09:35 have something recognizable to 09:39 to a reader today I remember and and I 09:45 never could figure out how it worked 09:47 from Twitter first came out I think it 09:49 was in zero history were they have they 09:57 set up a private Twitter account that's 09:59 that was the first time I thought that 10:01 it has a kind of a lock nobody else can 10:03 join do you remember this 10:05 yes it's actually easy you could you 10:07 could you could do that any any Twitter 10:11 account can be set set to private so 10:17 that that no one can no one can follow 10:19 you unless you okay them if two people 10:23 do that mutually to the exclusion of 10:26 everything else and sir private life 10:28 yeah it's a it's a private line I 10:31 thought that was cool I still have both 10:35 of those accounts the accounts they is 10:38 because I knew that people would open 10:40 them if I - yeah yeah well your new 10:44 novel which you know you're here on your 10:47 tour the peripheral doesn't end run 10:51 around the blur between the president 10:53 future by taking place in your future 10:55 and a farther one a connection is 10:59 established between the two basically 11:02 through a wormhole in a video game 11:05 anyway is that would you had a describe 11:12 that is as correct and video games are 11:15 such that wealthy people have players 11:18 play them for them yes well I've to to 11:25 as you say there there are two two 11:30 futures that it's like a double scoop of 11:34 that whole science fiction and one is 11:39 one is a near future which is basically 11:42 winters 11:44 with better smartphones or justified 11:48 with more drones and then there's the 11:53 further one which is my take on on how 12:03 badly human beings could manage to mess 12:07 up the the so called singularity so I 12:12 guess it's a very screwed up singularity 12:15 and it's on the far side of an 12:22 apocalyptic event of sorts although 12:27 while I was working on that is something 12:30 that the strut that I struck me that I'd 12:33 never noticed before 12:34 is that our cultural model of of the 12:38 apocalypse is unique causal and a very 12:41 brief duration so Triffids come world 12:45 ends post apocalypse the United States 12:52 and USSR nuke each other to mutual 12:55 destruction post apocalypse they'd like 12:59 it it's one thing it happens and I saw 13:03 what if the what if the apocalypse were 13:09 multi causal complexly systemic it took 13:14 40 or 50 years but actually I initially 13:19 thought what if it took 400 years or 500 13:22 years but that was too much time for my 13:27 story so I got it down to four I got it 13:30 down to 40 there's another reason why 13:33 that wouldn't happen then I can see it 13:37 actually is a lot more likely than a 13:40 brief uni causal event but we I don't 13:45 think we have the cultural equipment to 13:49 hold that idea readily in 13:52 heads it's not part of our mythology in 13:56 spite of the possibility that we might 13:59 now already be living in it and that 14:04 that fact might account for those creepy 14:08 feelings that some of you have been 14:12 having myself included and you call that 14:19 the jackpot in the book heads 14:21 it's the jackpot yes the jerk the 14:24 jackpot and when the survivors of the 14:31 jackpot have tended to be able to afford 14:35 it when they come out after I won't go 14:41 into it what saves their bacon but when 14:45 they come out and see the dog that many 14:48 people left there they sort of say wow 14:51 man we dodged the bullet that was really 14:54 close and the bullet they dodged was was 14:59 Malthusian in nature them simply that 15:02 there were too many people on the planet 15:05 to continue operating that way and I 15:11 think that's the way the survivors of 15:14 that sort of apocalypse would likely 15:17 likely view it like shoo that was tragic 15:21 but here we are given given human nature 15:30 yeah I I think what you're I think what 15:33 you're saying is is more likely to 15:35 happen and that it's already begun you 15:38 know we're just the frog in the water 15:40 and the water is getting heated up but I 15:44 wanted this I head for the rum but I 15:46 want to ask you now you and I are about 15:50 the same age or my brother's age and we 15:53 grew up on the same tropes about the 15:55 future gleaming kitchens and mama rails 15:58 for public transportation help as we're 16:00 all going to have a helicopter on the 16:01 roof but it'd all be deaf 16:03 and then somewhere in the late seventies 16:07 around 16:08 I remember that bar scene in Star Wars 16:10 and Mad Max the vision the the kind of 16:14 pop entertainment vision went from 16:18 utopian to dystopian and particularly 16:22 techno dystopian machines gone bad girls 16:28 gone wild machines gone bad hell what do 16:32 you think a counter for that shift 16:34 oh well it's come you know culturally 16:40 its complex like the excuse me the the 16:46 first Star Wars film came out in 1977 16:51 so it was confirming us with the Sex 16:55 Pistols and it was like a big to me this 17:01 this guy quit appallingly retrograde 17:07 nostalgia retro retro future it was 17:12 everything I didn't want science fiction 17:16 to be in spite of the cantina scene and 17:21 it was riffing it was riffing on the 17:25 1930s Buck Rogers serials that ran every 17:28 day after school on television when I 17:30 was when I was like four years old I'm 17:35 hope we're in time Tom Corbett it's so 17:42 and I wasn't you know I went to I went 17:46 to it but I came out I wasn't an 17:48 ecstatic the way my friends were it's 17:50 like I wanted to listen to The Clash 17:52 this is like this is that I want to 17:55 write so I want there to be science 17:57 fiction that's like listening to the 17:59 listening to the clash so that was 18:02 happening and at this same time Blade 18:07 Runner 18:08 in the wings and was and was going to be 18:14 made so I think they were there were two 18:16 at least two different modalities of pop 18:24 futurism abroad then and probably 18:28 probably considerably more it it hasn't 18:32 been it hasn't ever really been a 18:37 monolithic thing the gleaming kitchens 18:40 and the monorail and the flying cars and 18:44 all of that in the 1950s coexisted with 18:50 a strain of left-leaning 18:56 American socio-politically aware prose 19:02 science fiction which was being 19:05 published in contrast to its political 19:08 opposite the political opposite was 19:11 called astounding stories and the 19:14 liberal sci-fi magazine was called 19:16 galaxies and the writers there was a 19:20 little bit of crossover and they would 19:23 drink together when they went to science 19:26 fiction conventions but otherwise they 19:28 didn't they didn't have much to do with 19:31 one another and if you look at the 19:33 stories that were being published in 19:36 galaxies the quiet dystopian and and 19:41 grid grittier and more more naturalistic 19:45 and to my mind altogether more 19:47 intelligent but that's sort of a matter 19:50 of taste 19:51 so it's never all one one scenario we 19:58 though we tend to we tend to remember it 20:01 that way I do think there was a time 20:04 when we thought things are getting 20:06 better and and that evolved into a 20:10 belief that things are kind of getting 20:12 worse and I don't know that 20:16 if that attached itself to to science 20:19 fiction or not but I sort of think it 20:22 has now you know you're viewed as a guru 20:29 you know that that sure if readers view 20:33 you as a guide to the future but a 20:36 signpost that keeps changing as the 20:38 world morphs into its future because you 20:40 know we've had you know about 30 years 20:43 of present that turned him future that 20:45 turned it in present since you've been 20:47 writing as one reviewer put at writing 20:51 about the trajectory of Neuromancer of 20:53 course the future was going to be filled 20:55 with mirror shades and black leather 20:57 jackets and the film of blood on a wet 20:59 razor why because William Gibson said it 21:03 would be but in the years since you 21:06 created that future even though it 21:07 hasn't happened yet you've already 21:09 revised and refined the vision and as 21:11 one reader puts it it is no longer the 21:14 sprawl no longer Neo Tokyo no longer 21:17 jacked in drugged-up surviving in stitch 21:20 Punk colonies on a broken bridge or 21:24 lounging in the edgiest of designer 21:26 clubs but Gibson had found it hiding 21:28 becoming here and there in our midst and 21:30 written one of those who walked away 21:33 those unseen paths just out of sight of 21:36 our daily commute you know the broken 21:40 bridge in this quote makes me think of 21:43 of New Orleans after Katrina where all 21:47 those people were left on an on an 21:49 overpass which is pretty apocalyptic for 21:52 them hmm well I'm not ready to take the 21:58 rap for for all of that when I began to 22:04 write write science fiction 22:07 I knew that imaginary when I began to 22:10 write I began to write 22:12 as it happened I began to write science 22:14 fiction but I had a bachelor's degree in 22:17 comparative literary critical 22:20 methodology and I read a lot of a lot of 22:23 modern novels and as a kid I'd read a 22:26 great deal of science science fiction so 22:29 I took the the contents of my otherwise 22:32 fairly useless 22:34 undergraduate degree and applied it to 22:37 what I knew of the history of science 22:41 fiction and one thing one thing that 22:46 allowed me to see is that when people 22:49 write imaginary futures they never about 22:52 the future they are in they can only be 22:58 about the moment in which they were 22:59 written and the history known history 23:02 before that we don't have anything else 23:05 we have no access to the future we can 23:09 we can try to extrapolate and we can 23:13 spend scenarios and try to make future 23:19 histories that that seem intriguingly 23:23 logical but they aren't going to be 23:25 anything like what really happens now 23:29 when someone someone predicts something 23:35 that really happens more or less and I 23:39 would say that that arthur c clarke 23:41 predicted community orbiting 23:45 communication satellites much more 23:48 accurately than i ever predicted the 23:53 world wide web but in both cases we tend 23:58 to our culture tends to overestimate the 24:03 hit but yes he's prescient yes he's a 24:07 prophet no they're all the misses this 24:11 one hinting and they're all that all the 24:13 misses that the same the same right are 24:17 made now I've never had that heart to go 24:19 through arthur c clarke and find 24:21 all the stuff that he got wrong but he 24:24 was human and he could only he could 24:26 only get a lot of it get a lot of it 24:29 wrong and unfortunately or maybe 24:35 fortunately I don't know for my having 24:38 been able to make a living 24:42 people who write about imaginary futures 24:45 if they get a few hits are marketed as 24:49 though they were Sears or shaman and 24:59 when we're not as my colleague Bruce 25:02 Sterling used to like to say rather 25:04 smugly were charlatans we've joined the 25:08 circus and you're throwing money at us 25:13 because our shells the public and their 25:18 publicists present us as people who 25:22 could predict the future and yet we're 25:27 we're not and should you ever meet a 25:32 science fiction writer or a futurist 25:36 to tell you that he or she can predict 25:41 the future run because you've got a live 25:45 one and you don't want to go there do 25:50 you remember anything you predicted that 25:53 didn't happen well every time I don't 26:00 often reread my own own work I could not 26:05 for instance to save my life write a 26:09 precis of the plot of count zero I 26:13 remember a few scenes I'm pretty good 26:16 with Neuromancer because I've had to 26:18 revisit it very frequently when when 26:22 whenever anyone attempts to make one of 26:26 the 26:26 abortive attempts at realizing it as a 26:30 feature film and so from going back to 26:33 you from going back to the Durham answer 26:36 I I did you know there's a scene in 26:39 Neuromancer where case is really you 26:43 know he really you've it's very far in 26:48 the book and and you know the crunch has 26:50 really come and he needs to communicate 26:53 really quick so he says somebody get me 26:57 a modem I can tell you I can tell you 27:04 now is this is humiliating you know this 27:08 is really embarrassing but when I wrote 27:10 that I didn't know what a modem was it 27:14 was just this word that I had heard 27:16 computer people use and it had something 27:20 to do with with communicating 27:24 communication between computers so it 27:27 makes absolutely no sense in in the 27:32 context of the imaginary world world of 27:37 that book but I was working from the 27:41 poetics of an emergent language of 27:48 around around the digital and honestly 27:54 the the first time I heard anyone use 27:57 interface as a verb i fairly swooned at 28:03 how that's so hot just incredible and I 28:10 went right home when I put it historian 28:12 another time I was standing beside two 28:16 former WAC Women's Army Corps keypunch 28:21 operators who had worked at the Pentagon 28:24 they had to wear sweaters remember that 28:26 because it was cold in the rows yeah I 28:29 imagine these these women had worn or 28:32 sweaters and they were reminiscing with 28:35 one another and I was eavesdropping and 28:40 one of them said yeah they had the guys 28:42 with that cart that came around in the 28:44 morning and they took off those games 28:47 that people would put on put on our 28:50 UNIVAC or whatever it was and the other 28:53 one said yeah but what they were really 28:56 after was those viruses and I got broke 29:00 my neck oh wow sorry I said excuse me 29:04 but what viruses and she said all 29:08 computers can be infected by viruses 29:10 they're not really they just call them 29:12 that they're their little tired things 29:15 that sort of behave like viruses within 29:18 the information and the computer and 29:21 that was the first time I ever heard of 29:24 that and you know something probably 29:27 nobody else in that whole science 29:29 fiction convention had ever ever ever 29:32 heard of that so I was like I think I'm 29:34 leaving the Condor Lee I've got some 29:36 Ryan writing to do because I wanted to 29:40 get that down before anybody anybody 29:44 else heard about it and it was about 29:49 well when Neuromancer came out the idea 29:52 of of computer viruses was still pretty 29:57 pretty esoteric and for that matter when 30:02 Neuromancer came out the idea that that 30:05 Japan was about to own the whole world 30:09 was really a really esoteric but it was 30:14 there that's another way that I didn't 30:19 get it right but I don't really care I 30:23 kind of I treasure our tech science 30:28 fiction for those very flaws it makes it 30:35 charming and deeply it makes it charming 30:39 and deeply strange it demonstrates that 30:43 it is 30:44 an artifact of the very moment in which 30:48 it was made which is really all it can 30:51 be you can't get really off the hook of 30:53 having and vented the trim cyberspace 30:56 you're just gonna have to live with that 30:58 right well I did you know I I how I came 31:04 to to coin that the word word cyberspace 31:09 which is I think I think of cyberspace 31:14 as a piece of heritage terminology and 31:21 it wasn't when I wrote Neuromancer but I 31:26 think that cyberspace is heritage 31:29 terminology in the same way that the 31:32 real world quote is heritage terminology 31:37 the difference between the world into 31:41 which neuroma Neuromancer was published 31:45 and the world in which we live tonight 31:48 is that in Neuromancer z-- day in the 31:55 day of the actual publication of the 31:57 book there was cyberspace this other 32:02 realm and the real and the real world 32:05 and what's happened what's happened 32:12 actually it's presented that way in the 32:15 book even though it's like something 32:17 like i assumed 2035 in the book people 32:21 still go okay is the real world here in 32:24 the sprawl but they're in cyberspace 32:26 leaving beyond the duh so that's gone 32:31 and what's happened is that cyberspace 32:33 has colonized the real world and the 32:36 distinction the distinction is what's 32:40 going to make us look like Hicks to our 32:43 great-grandchildren that we even think 32:46 there could be a distinction it's 32:50 they're not I don't you know we keep 32:52 going the way we're going out on 32:54 there'll be a distinction there's less 32:56 of a distinction now than there was last 32:58 year and are you disappointed at all in 33:03 the web no no I um it isn't it's it's 33:13 sort of part of the marketing which you 33:19 know it this isn't it isn't that I've 33:21 only now come to say oh no the marketing 33:24 is raw you shouldn't you know you should 33:28 regard me as a prophet I've said that 33:32 more over the course of 30 years than 33:35 I've said anything else I've did 33:40 remorselessly on topic with that since 33:45 since the very beginning is that weird 33:49 anthology of every interview I ever did 33:52 that has been recently published 33:55 apparently indicates someone who 33:58 actually went through it all says so you 34:02 certainly repeat yourself and quite a 34:06 lot of it is me saying nope I'm not 34:09 prescient and I and I didn't 34:11 particularly I didn't particularly 34:14 expect to be but I keep watching this 34:19 stuff as it changes and the distinction 34:26 between between the digital and the 34:30 so-called real or the so-called digital 34:33 and so-called real is is going it's just 34:39 going away and assuming that we keep 34:45 being able to make these gadgets and 34:48 systems I think it will continue it will 34:51 it will continue to to go away 34:55 and those who grow up with that will 35:01 regard us with some puzzlement 35:04 as transitional creatures between 35:08 themselves and whole world before 35:13 television that they were they were all 35:16 struggle to comprehend much as we 35:21 struggle if we seriously try to 35:23 comprehend the lives of our ancestors in 35:28 the savannas yeah you know I have two 35:31 more pages of questions but I'm not 35:33 going to get to ask them because we want 35:36 to turn this over to the audience after 35:39 I ask you a question I've been holding 35:41 bed but I'm sure you have an opinion 35:44 that is what do you think happened to 35:48 Malaysia air 370 I'm still on it I think 35:57 I think of that as a demonstration of 36:04 the extent to which we are not yet truly 36:09 post geographical I think that that's a 36:14 demonstration of the brute beingness of 36:24 geography and if I if I had to guess I 36:30 would say that it's very very deep 36:34 somewhere in India probably in the 36:39 Indian Ocean but that the Indian Ocean 36:42 is so damn big and so damn deep that it 36:46 will be a long time before we find it 36:50 and even when we find it we may not know 36:52 exactly what unfortunate story that it 36:56 than it to be there but I think it would 36:59 it was I think of it as a rupture in our 37:05 fantastic membrane of hubris about 37:09 inside we imagine our technology as 37:13 being like like actually cooler 37:16 that it is when we run into running when 37:21 we run into a situation in which our our 37:24 best techies say to us there's nothing 37:28 we can do we could just keep looking it 37:30 may take forever it's down in the bottom 37:34 of the ocean it's too deep to find and 37:38 it's hard for us too it's become hard 37:42 for us to get our heads around that you 37:47 don't think it's in Kazakhstan come on I 37:51 would be Syd I would be super 37:54 I would actually would be surprised but 37:57 it's the thing about this thing about 38:04 conspiracy theories is that in order to 38:10 propagate you have to be able to 38:11 describe them over a maximum of two 38:15 pints of beer now and that means that 38:21 they won't by nature be be very complex 38:26 and they may but neither 38:30 interestingly will they be very 38:33 frightening even even if they involve 38:36 the Reptoid Illuminati I haven't got 38:40 that their actual their actual function 38:43 in in that simplicity is to protect us 38:46 from the really terrifying realities 38:51 which are inherently vastly complex so 38:57 it's it's actually that scary to think 39:00 that that that plane is in Kazakhstan 39:03 than it is to think that it's at the 39:06 bottom of the ocean as a result of some 39:10 human that we may never 39:13 understand that's scarier based on your 39:18 books and on your Twitter feed you have 39:20 a big interest in fashion I actually 39:22 bought a pair of outlier chinos based on 39:24 your recommendation 39:27 but what specifically interests you 39:29 about fashion well it isn't I don't 39:34 actually like to think about it as 39:36 fashion because I think of fashion as a 39:39 kind of artificial marketing structure 39:43 where at the turn of every season they 39:46 jump up and say oh you need new pants 39:49 but I am interested I'm interested in 39:56 clothing and haircuts and things like 39:59 things that we think of as fashion I'm 40:02 interested in it as a language and 40:08 sometimes the localized language and 40:10 some sometimes now a global a global 40:16 language and we all communicate to some 40:21 extent with what we with what we wear 40:26 some of us pride ourselves on not doing 40:29 that but that's not really true if you 40:32 see someone who's making an actually 40:34 utterly incoherent closing statement 40:38 you cross the street it's even those of 40:43 us who think of ourselves as resolutely 40:45 anti fashion and not interested in any 40:48 of that are not getting it that wrong so 40:53 I'm interested in that I'm interested in 40:56 how people identify with with 41:02 counterculture I'm interested in counter 41:05 cultural identification through garments 41:08 I'm interested in the fact that there is 41:10 apparently always one breeding pair of 41:14 rockers in the United Kingdom and and at 41:18 least one of classic mods and and Goths 41:24 seem utterly established and never go 41:27 away and those are all modalities 41:33 identification 41:35 I've been sitting with him for a couple 41:38 hours now and everything he's wearing is 41:41 cool you're you're not up close enough 41:43 to see it but his pants are cool jacket 41:46 totally cool with this snaps shoes I 41:49 didn't notice somebody came out here and 41:50 I got a gander at those socks ordinary 41:53 but everything else I was actually I 41:58 shouldn't this will haunt me but I have 42:01 to I have to admit it because I think 42:03 it's funny I was a branding consultant 42:06 on the line of clothing that these pants 42:12 in this jacket are a harlow but I can't 42:16 say what it was because had to sign a 42:19 nondisclosure agreement so I can't tell 42:24 you what Brad did is I actually was and 42:28 that was where that was where I learned 42:30 that all the stuff in in Xero history 42:34 that people think I've made up about 42:37 about the the the hybridization of the 42:43 military industrial complex and the 42:46 skateboard clothing complex so that that 42:51 was really good that was really going on 42:53 and if I if I hadn't have been 42:56 researching that I would never have 42:58 gotten but God's a gig very strange do 43:04 spend in fiction writers are poor when 43:08 it comes to research and cutting-edge 43:10 knowledge in history I think that our 43:15 mail has gotten shorter and shorter and 43:19 shorter and I think our now when I was 43:23 about five years old was maybe a 43:27 presidential term or half of one and how 43:33 now today is is like a fraction of a 43:37 news cycle if that it's been it's been 43:42 shrinking so back 43:44 back in the 50s Robert Heinlein's say 43:48 writing writing some pretty carefully 43:53 extrapolated speculative fiction had 43:57 this big flat now to work on and he 44:01 could sort of arrange the bits but 44:04 that's been getting smaller so that the 44:06 thing that was the size of two Olympic 44:09 tennis courts is now like like a quarter 44:12 of what used to be called the postage 44:15 stamp 44:15 but now itself is kind of on the verge 44:18 of verge of extinction and writers today 44:22 don't have the real estate of now in 44:29 which to plant their stuff because 44:31 everything is changing changing very 44:34 quickly and and that creates different 44:37 problems in in speculative fiction and 44:43 people have to come up with with 44:46 different solutions and one of my 44:48 solutions is just to accept that what I 44:53 write is is obsoleting it's it's if it 44:58 were an ice cream cone it would be 45:01 melting as I tried to take it home 45:03 it's obsoleting as I write it somebody's 45:06 inventing something right now that will 45:09 make make my novel ridiculous except 45:13 well if I if I'm really serious about 45:18 writing a novel that stuff won't matter 45:20 and my novel won't become ridiculous 45:23 because its intent will have been in the 45:26 end quite serious um my question is sort 45:32 of sort of carries on a little bit with 45:34 we were just saying about the not the 45:35 present and you mentioned earlier that 45:37 you think that science fiction tells you 45:42 about the moment in which it occurred in 45:44 the moment that in which it was 45:45 published and I'm curious what you think 45:47 that science fiction being written and 45:49 published today tells us about the 45:52 current moment well I should be careful 45:57 about science fiction being published 45:59 today because I don't actually read that 46:02 much of it myself so I'm actually very 46:08 out of touch with the genre as a 46:15 marketing thing and as a marketing 46:19 mechanism and when I if I go into a 46:23 science fiction specialty shop I'm just 46:26 overwhelmed by the the number of titles 46:29 and the variety of that I rely on the 46:34 sort of personal network / filtering 46:39 operation that one develops over the 46:43 course of a literary life or if 46:45 something happens that a sufficient 46:48 number of my friends find interesting 46:51 enough to bring to one another's 46:52 attention it sort of bumps along until 46:55 it gets to me and I'll go home I might I 46:59 might I might read that but I did 47:03 something I went to a science fiction 47:05 convention in Vancouver and I had been 47:08 to a convention that's enough convention 47:11 in about 20 years a little over 20 years 47:14 and so I went and I was I was doing a 47:20 conversation something like this they're 47:23 less wide-ranging in front of us a 47:26 smaller audience and and so I said here 47:31 these are three writers somebody asked 47:33 me that I was interested in and I saw 47:34 other these three writers and I said how 47:37 many people have heard of her and two 47:40 people raised their hands and of him and 47:43 one raised the head and of him nobody 47:46 raised their hands so I realized I was 47:48 sort of walking around in some kind of 47:50 Internet consensus bubble and I had no 47:54 idea what these people were reading and 47:56 then almost none of them were reading 47:58 there the writers I I thought were 48:02 are really interesting right now we're 48:04 just getting into it I think it's fair 48:07 to say that there's a lot a strong vein 48:10 of warning in this new navi novel and 48:12 when other people write these books with 48:14 these strong warnings in them they're 48:16 very bad things happen in them but my 48:19 question is why are you so nice to your 48:21 characters compared to your peers 48:23 it's a d2 final the two final chapters 48:28 are a sort of litmus test for 48:30 socio-political sophistication if you 48:35 think a woman's okay because she's 48:36 married pregnant and has a lot of money 48:42 look there's a lot of is a lot of you 48:46 know a happy ending is about when you 48:48 roll the credit there's a lot of bad 48:50 hovering around both those both 48:54 those chapters and particularly well one 49:02 of it one of the characters in the 10th 49:05 ultimate next to last chapter 49:09 essentially has the last word of the 49:12 book and she looks out she looks out 49:18 over the City of London and says human 49:21 all too human because she and that's her 49:25 answer to being asked why the people in 49:29 that the good guys in that chapter why 49:32 they might not inadvertently be creating 49:35 exactly what they think they're escaping 49:38 from which if you think about it when I 49:43 get it's too spoilery for me to get into 49:47 but if you read it again which I 49:51 actually recommend with this book 49:53 because it works completely differently 49:56 the second time is you I guarantee 49:59 you'll see a lot of things you missed 50:01 the first time particularly in the first 50:03 hundred pages it does I think those two 50:10 final chapters of the 50:11 Jarius thing I have ever written the 50:14 creepiest thing I've ever written and 50:17 I've already seen reviews that accused 50:20 me of going beyond my known penchant for 50:24 absurdly happy endings so in your 50:32 collection distrusts that particular 50:34 flavor 50:35 you mentioned the term prosthetic memory 50:38 and from my understanding you're the 50:42 recall in that memory it could be 50:44 distant or nearby and these are kind of 50:48 determined by algorithms like search 50:50 algorithms or things on the phone and 50:52 whatever what may have you do you have 50:55 any thoughts on that or personal opinion 50:58 I have a pocket full of prosthetic 51:02 memory right right here I've got you 51:07 know I don't know how far back the email 51:10 record I can access on this this phone 51:14 goes but that's prosthetic memory this 51:18 phone when I'm in a building other than 51:21 this one can can access Google and 51:24 that's prosthetic memory 51:27 it probably prosthetic memory is not 51:31 like like a chip from whatever 51:34 RadioShack is now called if it even 51:36 still exists it's it's this entire 51:40 system where we're connected to and as 51:43 someone said on on Twitter last last 51:47 month --is said someone said I'm getting 51:51 tired of not being able to lose track of 51:54 anyone I thought that was somehow like 52:00 the core statement of the entire year 52:06 for BRE yeah and that's prosthetic 52:10 memory that prosthetic memory is like 52:14 every everything you ever did in social 52:19 media just stay 52:21 being there for the rest of your life 52:23 but it's we we live in this vast 52:29 mechanism of prosthetic memory that 52:32 relatively speaking scarcely existed 50 52:36 50 years ago we have been creating forms 52:41 of prosthetic memory forever you know 52:46 painting on cave walls working at you 52:50 know notching bones working all of those 52:53 things that animals don't do that we've 52:58 always done culminate now and then 53:01 whatever the hell this is that we're 53:04 doing which I tend to assume the 53:09 endpoint would just be a single digital 53:14 now it would be like a spherical retina 53:20 looking in in itself and some kind of 53:24 some weird kind of digital board DC and 53:28 Alpha Omega thing and you know we may we 53:35 may not get to find out but one day is 53:37 someone might there was a there was a 53:40 piece you wrote the Bible interview my 53:42 MP she wrote in Wired in the 90s when 53:45 someone said like you've been accused of 53:47 creating dystopias and you said well it 53:49 depends who you are because if you're 53:51 like a slum blower in Bangladesh on a 53:53 site of a high-tech Bangladesh or 53:54 whatever yeah that's that's peeling and 53:56 so you still think that this apocalyptic 53:59 sense things are getting worse is kind 54:01 of a luxury of us at the top and that 54:04 actually no actually mostly the vans are 54:05 helping most of humanity so we just 54:07 better chill out just accept that other 54:09 people are well I mean it is in a way 54:13 the anxiety about having too much 54:18 anxiety about the apocalypse is perhaps 54:20 the the ultimate first world problem 54:24 yeah I think people people are trying to 54:28 you know get get food on the table to 54:32 keep their children from 54:33 they're not like they're not stressing 54:36 the apocalypse there they're very much 54:39 in the but they're very much in the 54:41 moment and I do think that they're 54:48 plenty I think they're probably a lot of 54:50 people in say Mogadishu who offered that 54:53 offered the chance to immigrate to 54:56 Neuromancer would be there in a flash if 55:00 they if they could and they'd be doing 55:02 they'd be doing they'd be doing better 55:05 one of the the kind of secrets I guess 55:09 that the sort of very simple moves I 55:14 discovered early on in my career which 55:17 I'm only sort of becoming willing to 55:20 talk about thee these days is that what 55:23 I would do what I would do for these 55:26 futures what I would just take take the 55:29 conditions of the third world transfer 55:35 them to say Chicago and just run them 55:39 you know just run it straight through 55:41 and people would go oh how could and yet 55:45 they're probably you know there are 55:47 parts of Chicago where that you could 55:51 zero in on and go well that's pretty 55:53 close indeed it's true so the people who 55:57 have the the the holy that scary 56:02 react reaction to to Neuromancer tend to 56:08 be very privileged people one one way or 56:12 another and and that was part of my 56:16 program and I was hoping that in some 56:22 way I could maybe change that a little 56:25 bit by showing it people this stuff in a 56:28 different way thank you 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