Re: Apple publicly apologizes for celebrating its destruction of the human experience

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Sujet : Re: Apple publicly apologizes for celebrating its destruction of the human experience
De : jollyroger (at) *nospam* pobox.com (Jolly Roger)
Groupes : misc.phone.mobile.iphone comp.mobile.ipad
Date : 11. May 2024, 00:29:17
Autres entêtes
Organisation : People for the Ethical Treatment of Pirates
Message-ID : <la7ldtF2ibsU4@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : slrn/1.0.3 (Darwin)
On 2024-05-10, Chris Schram <chrispam1@me.com> wrote:
On Fri, 10 May 2024 14:33:50 -0700, Alan wrote:
>
On 2024-05-10 14:30, Andrew wrote:
Jolly Roger wrote on 10 May 2024 18:33:42 GMT :
 
I found the ad visually stunning on one level, but pretty creepy on
another. Overall, not the best way to tout the iPad's artistic
versatility.
>
I usually tune out Apple advertisements during their announcements
(and I generally avoid watching advertisements in general anyway). I
was indifferent to it when I watched it again, and I don't take anyone
claiming to be offended by it very seriously. It's just an ad.
 
Given all your statements about Apple come from Apple advertisements,
 
LOL!
>
Well, now that Arlen has entered the room, I suppose this conversation is
over. So I guess It's now OK to broaden the discussion, and eventually
drag it far off-topic.
>
In an online article commenting on the recent Apple ad, it was hinted that
videos of various objects being crushed by a hydraulic press has become
some sort of social media meme, perhaps a logical successor to "Will It
Blend." Perhaps I lead a sheltered life, but I have not viewed other such
videos. That would make Apple's ad a humorous (?!) parody of an existing
meme. I'll bet the committee that dreamed it up had a great laugh.

I mean other companies have made similar commercials for many years.
Strangely, the internet didn't melt down over them. But this is Apple,
so...

I'm really overthinking this, but the more I overthink it, the concept of
crushing traditional creativity tools to splinters and goo, before
compressing them into an iPad, seems not the very best way to advertise
the iPad's creativity tools.

It's a light-hearted advertisement, and nothing more. People reading too
much into it is exactly how we got here in the first place.

So Stephen Colbert's parody is a parody of a parody of a social media
meme. My brain hurts!

I think Social media is nothing without parodies.

--
E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter.
I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead.

JR

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