Tollorin wrote:
At least with some ideas in marketing... How marketing expert have such positive view of dystopia I have no idea.
By the detection of boredom (
http://pielot.org/2015/08/when-attention-is-not-scarce/) and multimedia
deciding what we gonna watch (
http://trends.cmf-fmc.ca/blog/programmatic-content-a-not-so-distant-future/ it could mean a future in which peoples are constantly consuming (culture is all about consumption nowadays.) all day shallow multimedia content decided by machines without any quiet solitary thinking moment. Prepare for hell.
![Sad :(](./images/smilies/icon_sad.gif)
Having been one of those marketing experts, I can admit that you are spot on. I despised telling the public what to watch, listen, wear, eat, worship and enjoy. But, there is a sure-fire way to avoid marketing's effects: Get off its grid.
Read books (not web sites), talk to family and friends (don't text), cook your meals (don't microwave), use your postal service to communicate (not e-mail messages), develop your own opinions (don't repeat what others have said on your behalf), live actually (not virtually) and avoid those individuals who would drag you back into dystopic isolation. Be your own best advocate and defender.
It doesn't matter if most people disagree with your opinion. "Even if you are a minority of one, the truth is the truth" --Mahatma Gandhi.