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  • SUNDAY JULY 15 2007 10:20 AM

The Sunday Hangover with Warren Ellis


THE SUNDAY HANGOVER
003
WARREN ELLIS

I'm writing this outside a pub, actually. It's 2.30 in the afternoon, and I'm on the first Red Bull and first cigarette of the day. So, yes, I'm running a little late. Also, I'm testing a new word processor on my handheld (which I use in conjunction with a foldaway full keyboard), so it might all go horribly wrong anyway. It's just stopped raining (again), and I'm sitting at a bench outside a back alley bar in town. Fifties jazz is leaking out from somewhere.

This, of course, is the price of being a civilized man in Britain today: squatting in the open air, threatened by climatological nightmare and seagull shit while I savour the restorative properties of what Dennis Potter called "little tubes of delight." And while he might have died of cancer, he also wrote a shitload of brilliant television plays and got to walk around with a cool little hip flask full of morphine. Most American TV people? They go jogging. Case closed. Oh, there are good writers in American TV, to be sure. Aaron Sorkin -- cigarettes and crack. David Milch? Heroin, I think. Or was it cocaine? An ex-girlfriend once gave me a book called something like "Four American Writers Who Drank Until Their Livers Caught Fire And Slid Out Of Their Bumholes Like Meaty Napalm." "Brilliant!" I said. "That wasn't quite the reaction I was hoping for," she said.

* * * *

American Presidential politics are always more interesting than American TV. They are, in fact, one of the world's great spectator sports. John McCain, who looks like a very old Muppet left in a bin until mushrooms grew inside him, has been the source of most comedy so far. I could never understand why Americans considered him a contender -- unless it was because John Stewart, until recently, always gave him an easy time on the Daily Show -- and he's proved me wonderfully right. Whether it was singing "Bomb Iran" to the tune of "Barbara Ann" on camera, or, this week, hiring obvious retards, he's been a little laugh revue all on his own. One of his advisors approached a sex worker the other day and requested twenty dollars' worth of services. The sex worker, however, turned out to be an undercover cop, who promptly nicked the moron. But, reading this, I couldn't help but wonder -- did she arrest him for the attempted procurement, or because he only offered her a lousy twenty bucks? What does twenty bucks buy? That's ten quid. I could barely get my windows washed for that. My friend Eliza suggested that maybe the guy was just very old, and that the last time he went out whoring twenty dollars bought him an entire night's worth of silky pleasures of the East with enough change for a matinee and the night stage to Albuquerque.

* * * *

Back in the 80s and 90s, the psychedelic philosopher Terence McKenna used to preach that we were approaching The End Of History: that in fact history was a destructive process taking us ever further away from an idyllic existence where everything was lovely and everyone got to have mud-spattered hippie group sex with each other. Which was the kind of thing that made me want to shit on vegetables, frankly. (There's a recording of a McKenna lecture featuring a hideous introduction by Timothy Leary, clearly in a near-terminal state of plant-induced refreshment, exhorting the audience to give a round of applause "for the vegetables!" Of which there was obviously many in that room.)

But the SF novelist Charles Stross, on the BBC Technology website this week, managed to nail down a new idea for me. Charlie calls this not the end of history, but the dawn of history. The idea being that history to this point is an incomplete, imperfect process full of guesswork and implication. We're now at a point where we can record everything. Future historians will have an incredibly rich pool to draw from, because we store everything down to our Twitter tweets. And the early-stage cyborgs, who have been operating blog-style systems called glogs for years, point the way ahead. Charlie -- who has the maddest grin you every saw, and I could picture him grinning away as he wrote this -- points out that someone rigged for 24/7 video and audio recording is probably not putting away more than 10,000 gigs of data a year. Which, these days, is not a whole hell of a lot. And there are people who do that -- in small ways, like setting their phone to send a photo every five minutes, to people wearing computers on their belts and cameras on their glasses. For those of you who worry about privacy: pay less attention to the security cameras and more to the guy with the weird goggles who falls over every time his GPS connection drops out.

###

 

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Comments
Metaverse

Metaverse

USA
March 2005

JUL 15, 2007 03:23 PM

Another good one. My personal favorite:

John McCain, who looks like a very old Muppet left in a bin until mushrooms grew inside him



lol

whiterabbit819

whiterabbit819

Sacramento, CA
September 2006

JUL 15, 2007 03:35 PM

Brilliant essay.

Has the same feeling as "I hate it here" just a little more toned down.

TheCoolerKing

TheCoolerKing

NEWSWIRE

Los Angeles, CA

JUL 15, 2007 08:04 PM

warrenellis said:

scylis said:

warrenellis said:
"Four American Writers Who Drank Until Their Livers Caught Fire And Slid Out Of Their Bumholes Like Meaty Napalm."



isn't that the whole plot behind a new show coming soon? only set in the 50s, or something? because that would be one hell of a series finale.



See, who wouldn't want to watch that? Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Eugene O'Neill sharing an apartment in Hollywood. Wacky anal-leakage blood-coughing hijinks ensue!



Hilarious. Especially considering how messy the obligatory "trapped in an elevator" episode would get...

abracadabra

abracadabra

Seattle, WA
April 2004

JUL 15, 2007 11:05 PM

Terrence McKenna was a truly evolved human..Sad to hear you dissing him..Even greater was his library which mysteriously caught fire..

kamagurka

kamagurka

Germany
July 2007

JUL 16, 2007 12:16 AM

For anyone keeping score: The fact that this man is now writing for this place is the main reason why I joined this place. Yes, even before the hot naked girls.

malkav11

malkav11

Saint Paul, MN
July 2003

JUL 16, 2007 12:42 AM

The problem is, even though we're recording more data than ever before, we're doing it on far more transient media. Most varieties of digital data storage won't last more than a few decades, much less centuries or millenia like the stone tablets and parchment scrolls of yore. Even the stuff that lasts won't necessarily be intelligible for long. Formats change so often. I'd be hard pressed to read anything that was written to be read by a DOS program these days, much less for more primitive computers. And just try finding something that knows what to do with a 5.25" floppy...

Not to mention the thorough long-term unreliability of anything whatsoever staying available on the internet. Sites vanish and relocate and mutate into wholly dissimilar forms all the damn time.

And of course, all of that relies on having a communications and power infrastructure.

Gerry_D

Gerry_D

Los Angeles, CA
May 2003

JUL 16, 2007 12:43 AM

kamagurka said:
For anyone keeping score: The fact that this man is now writing for this place is the main reason why I joined this place. Yes, even before the hot naked girls.



I keep track of this sort of thing. glad you're here.

I'm as a big a fan of Warren as you are.

Gerry_D

Gerry_D

Los Angeles, CA
May 2003

JUL 16, 2007 12:46 AM

malkav11 said:
The problem is, even though we're recording more data than ever before, we're doing it on far more transient media. Most varieties of digital data storage won't last more than a few decades, much less centuries or millenia like the stone tablets and parchment scrolls of yore. Even the stuff that lasts won't necessarily be intelligible for long. Formats change so often. I'd be hard pressed to read anything that was written to be read by a DOS program these days, much less for more primitive computers. And just try finding something that knows what to do with a 5.25" floppy...

Not to mention the thorough long-term unreliability of anything whatsoever staying available on the internet. Sites vanish and relocate and mutate into wholly dissimilar forms all the damn time.

And of course, all of that relies on having a communications and power infrastructure.



also sorting, analyzing and cataloging that a lifetime's data will require some some serious innovation.

warrenellis

warrenellis

United Kingdom
September 2005

JUL 16, 2007 04:32 AM

abracadabra said:
Terrence McKenna was a truly evolved human..Sad to hear you dissing him..Even greater was his library which mysteriously caught fire..



Yeah, I bet that was my fault, too...

Even McKenna knew he wasn't "a truly evolved human." These constant post-mortem events to elevate him to Stoned Jesus are pretty distasteful.

Harleen

Harleen

United Kingdom
June 2005

JUL 16, 2007 05:06 AM

mentalrage said:


What does twenty bucks buy? That's ten quid. I could barely get my windows washed for that.



I'm sure you could have some fun with that if you went to one of the less reputable estates and found a nice lady of the night,( I use the term lady in it's loosest sense). In fact she'll probably be grateful for the company the money will just be a bonus. biggrin



I was thinking something pretty similar to this. £10 can get you half hours fun in some areas of Leeds smile

warrenellis

warrenellis

United Kingdom
September 2005

JUL 16, 2007 06:04 AM

Harleen said:

mentalrage said:


What does twenty bucks buy? That's ten quid. I could barely get my windows washed for that.



I'm sure you could have some fun with that if you went to one of the less reputable estates and found a nice lady of the night,( I use the term lady in it's loosest sense). In fact she'll probably be grateful for the company the money will just be a bonus. biggrin



I was thinking something pretty similar to this. £10 can get you half hours fun in some areas of Leeds smile




Define "fun" in Leeds. Beyond, you know, throwing yourself under a bus.

thunderbunny

thunderbunny

USA
OLD SKOOL

JUL 16, 2007 11:08 AM

malkav11 said:
The problem is, even though we're recording more data than ever before, we're doing it on far more transient media. Most varieties of digital data storage won't last more than a few decades, much less centuries or millenia like the stone tablets and parchment scrolls of yore. Even the stuff that lasts won't necessarily be intelligible for long. Formats change so often. I'd be hard pressed to read anything that was written to be read by a DOS program these days, much less for more primitive computers. And just try finding something that knows what to do with a 5.25" floppy...

Not to mention the thorough long-term unreliability of anything whatsoever staying available on the internet. Sites vanish and relocate and mutate into wholly dissimilar forms all the damn time.

And of course, all of that relies on having a communications and power infrastructure.



True that. Ask any archivist. The best material for media storage in the history of the world, to date? Paper.

mentalrage

mentalrage

United Kingdom
March 2006

JUL 16, 2007 02:13 PM

warrenellis said:

Harleen said:

mentalrage said:


What does twenty bucks buy? That's ten quid. I could barely get my windows washed for that.



I'm sure you could have some fun with that if you went to one of the less reputable estates and found a nice lady of the night,( I use the term lady in it's loosest sense). In fact she'll probably be grateful for the company the money will just be a bonus. biggrin



I was thinking something pretty similar to this. £10 can get you half hours fun in some areas of Leeds smile




Define "fun" in Leeds. Beyond, you know, throwing yourself under a bus.


How did you find out about that it's still an underground sport.
Depending on who you talk to "fun" in Leeds is random drunken violence usually involving shouting "what's you're fucking problem" at some unsuspecting person at the Bus stop /Taxi stand or anywhere else for that matter.

d20

d20

San Francisco, CA
September 2003

JUL 16, 2007 03:50 PM

autodidactic said:
This is the sort of spark that made me originally want to become a librarian...



you became a librarian, i became a programmer. same reason, and i think if we survive long enough, same job.

obd

obd

Venice, CA
June 2003

JUL 16, 2007 04:24 PM

d20 said:

autodidactic said:
This is the sort of spark that made me originally want to become a librarian...



you became a librarian, i became a programmer. same reason, and i think if we survive long enough, same job.



Are you guys familiar with the Long Now Foundation? They're interested in similar issues. The SALT podacasts are the only ones I still make time for on a semiregular basis.

We're doing a great job of creating and storing infromation, but I'm not sure that we're getting any better with analysis or practical application.

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