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Кристофер Лумумбо

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http://9gag.com/gag/arNKyqp

 

pojedini deluju zanimljivo

 

Child of Rage - zajebana priča, vredi a i kratak je i ne treba da se meša sa tv filmom istog imena i teme.

 

evo ga:

 

Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles - jako weird, nije loše

 

The Imposter - sjajan, što manje unapred znaš, to bolje, zema nije trebalo da pominje nikakve detalje jbg

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  • 1 month later...

Znam da je bilo, ovde ga i videh, ali moram jos jednom za one koji ga nisu gledali. Sjajna prica koja otkriva neverovatane fotografije.

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Hitting the Apex (2015)

 

dva i po sata o poslednjih par sezona u moto gp, koje su bile veoma zanimljive.

prosečno urađeno, može da se pogleda i da se shvati šta se tamo dešavalo, čak iako niste u životu ranije pogledali jednu trku moto gpa i ne znate nikoga osim valentina rosija

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  • 3 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...

Sta niko od jugonostalgicara se nije upecao na "Hjuston, imamo problem"

Sjajna zabava, k'o kada se zapijes u kafani pa pocnu lovacke price... odlican...

Malagurski dobio pokaznu vezbu za "proverene" price...

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  • 2 weeks later...

Watch a Short Film Adam Curtis Made for VICE About Your Life

 

By Adam Curtis

October 15, 2016

adam-curtis-living-unreal-world-short-fi

 

Screenshot from 'Living in an Unreal World: A Film By Adam Curtis For Readers of VICE'

This article originally appeared on VICE UK

Adam Curtis is one of the best filmmakers on planet earth. Every time a new film of his comes out we write about it because they're always important. Now he actually made a short one for us to help promote his new BBC project. You can read more about Adam and his work herehere, and here.

No one talks about power these days. We are encouraged to see ourselves as free, independent individuals not controlled by anybody, and we despise politicians as corrupt and empty of all ideas.

But power is all around us. It's just that it has shifted and mutated into a massive system of management and control, whose tentacles reach into all parts of our lives. But we can't see it because we still think of power in the old terms—of politicians telling us what to do.

The aim of the film I have madeHyperNormalisationis to bring that new power into focus, and show its true dimensions. It ranges from a giant computer high up in the mountains of northeast America that manages and controls over 7 percent of the worlds total wealth, to the complex algorithms that constantly monitor every move and choice you make online, to modern scientific ideas about what the normal human being should be—in their weight and in their feelings and moods.

 

What links all these systems is an overriding aim is to keep the world stable. To avoid all change. The giant computer constantly compares events happening around the world to events in the past. If it sees a dangerous pattern, it immediately adjusts its trillions of dollars to keep things stable. That is real power. The algorithms on social media constantly look at the patterns of what you like and then feed you more of that—so you enter into an echo chamber that constantly feeds you back to you. So again nothing changes—and you learn nothing new that would contradict how you feel. That too is real power.

What results is a system which cocoons us and makes us feel safe. And that means we have become terrified of all change. But that fear of change is in the interest of a system that wants to hold everything stable. And stops us from ever challenging it.

But it is impossible to keep things frozen forever. The world is dynamic. Things happen that you can never predict just by reading the past. This is why more and more we are being hit by events—the horror in Syria, Brexit, Trump, the waves of refugees—that neither we nor our leaders have the mental map to understand let alone deal with. Because we have bought into the dream that the world can be held stable and safe.

The short film I have made for VICE is about how, if you pull back and look at the everyday life all around you, you can see the cracks appearing through the shiny surface of the cocoon we are living in. So much of the modern world is beginning to feel odd, unreal, and sometimes fake. I think these are the dynamic forces outside beginning to pierce through as the system begins to fail.

 

'HyperNormalisation' is available on BBC iPlayer from October 16 at 9 PM.

 

 

kratki klip je u tekstu na vajsu.

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