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throughout history.
COMICS ARCHIVE
Comics Archive - Pessimists Archive. Comics Archive. I n the 1950s, America declared war on the comic book. People feared that they’d turn children into hardened criminals, and so opponents burned them in large piles, states banned them, and the U.S. Senate investigated their dangers. Comic Book Murder.THE NOVEL ARCHIVE
The Novel Archive - Build For Tomorrow. The Novel Archive. L ong before television and video games, or before comic books and D&D, novels were the new and scary form of entertainment. They were accused of corrupting the youth, of planting dangerous ideas into the heads of housewives, and distracting everyone from more serious, importantbooks.
ELEVATORS ARCHIVE
Elevators Archive - Pessimists Archive. Elevators Archive. A s the elevator gained popularity in the late 1800s, it had a profound effect on the way we organize our cities and ourselves. It was also blamed for a rise in crime, for causing something called brain fever, forAIRPLANES ARCHIVE
Airplanes Archive. W hile the airplane was revolutionizing how we live our lives, it was also evoking all kinds of grief from the same pessimists who resisted the bicycle and the horseless carriage. Now, The “Aeroplane Face”. American Examiner | 1905. “Squinting Eyes, Overgrown Nose and Head Bulging Between the Ears”.THE BICYCLE ARCHIVE
The Bicycle Archive - Build For Tomorrow. The Bicycle Archive. W hen the bicycle debuted in the 1800s, it was blamed for all sorts of problems—from turning people insane to devastating local economies to destroying women’s morals. Here are some of the most striking examples of this extreme reaction to the bicycle. THE WALTZ - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - PESSIMISTS Grinding, freak dancing, swing dancing, rock-n-roll – each had their opponents. But at the beginning of it all was the waltz. We may think of the waltz as classy and performative today, but as it gained popularity in the early 1800s, the dance was called disgusting, dangerous, an “obscene display confined to prostitutes andadulteresses
TELEPHONE ARCHIVE
Telephone Archive - Build For Tomorrow. Telephone Archive. P hones have been accused of ruining romantic interaction and addicting us to mindless chatter, but neither of these accusations are new. Long before they made their way into our pockets, telephonesTELEGRAPH ARCHIVE
The New York Times | July 9th, 1886. A cable of the Commercial Telegram Company maliciously severed. S ome miscreant, armed with a strong and sharp pair of shears, climbed a telegraph pole on lower Broadway early on Wednesday morning, and cut a cable strung there belonging to the Commercial Telegram Company. Source. ELEVATORS - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - BUILD FOR TOMORROW As the innovation gained popularity in the late 1800s, it had a profound effect on the way we organize our cities and ourselves. It was also blamed for a rise in crime, for causing something called brain fever, for destroying civil society, and more. On this episode of Pessimists Archive, we look at how the elevator shaped our world,why not
AN ARCHIVE OF PESSIMISM THROUGHOUT HISTORY Explore our collection of pessimism, alarmism and technophobiathroughout history.
COMICS ARCHIVE
Comics Archive - Pessimists Archive. Comics Archive. I n the 1950s, America declared war on the comic book. People feared that they’d turn children into hardened criminals, and so opponents burned them in large piles, states banned them, and the U.S. Senate investigated their dangers. Comic Book Murder.THE NOVEL ARCHIVE
The Novel Archive - Build For Tomorrow. The Novel Archive. L ong before television and video games, or before comic books and D&D, novels were the new and scary form of entertainment. They were accused of corrupting the youth, of planting dangerous ideas into the heads of housewives, and distracting everyone from more serious, importantbooks.
ELEVATORS ARCHIVE
Elevators Archive - Pessimists Archive. Elevators Archive. A s the elevator gained popularity in the late 1800s, it had a profound effect on the way we organize our cities and ourselves. It was also blamed for a rise in crime, for causing something called brain fever, forAIRPLANES ARCHIVE
Airplanes Archive. W hile the airplane was revolutionizing how we live our lives, it was also evoking all kinds of grief from the same pessimists who resisted the bicycle and the horseless carriage. Now, The “Aeroplane Face”. American Examiner | 1905. “Squinting Eyes, Overgrown Nose and Head Bulging Between the Ears”.THE BICYCLE ARCHIVE
The Bicycle Archive - Build For Tomorrow. The Bicycle Archive. W hen the bicycle debuted in the 1800s, it was blamed for all sorts of problems—from turning people insane to devastating local economies to destroying women’s morals. Here are some of the most striking examples of this extreme reaction to the bicycle. THE WALTZ - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - PESSIMISTS Grinding, freak dancing, swing dancing, rock-n-roll – each had their opponents. But at the beginning of it all was the waltz. We may think of the waltz as classy and performative today, but as it gained popularity in the early 1800s, the dance was called disgusting, dangerous, an “obscene display confined to prostitutes andadulteresses
TELEPHONE ARCHIVE
Telephone Archive - Build For Tomorrow. Telephone Archive. P hones have been accused of ruining romantic interaction and addicting us to mindless chatter, but neither of these accusations are new. Long before they made their way into our pockets, telephonesTELEGRAPH ARCHIVE
The New York Times | July 9th, 1886. A cable of the Commercial Telegram Company maliciously severed. S ome miscreant, armed with a strong and sharp pair of shears, climbed a telegraph pole on lower Broadway early on Wednesday morning, and cut a cable strung there belonging to the Commercial Telegram Company. Source. ELEVATORS - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - BUILD FOR TOMORROW As the innovation gained popularity in the late 1800s, it had a profound effect on the way we organize our cities and ourselves. It was also blamed for a rise in crime, for causing something called brain fever, for destroying civil society, and more. On this episode of Pessimists Archive, we look at how the elevator shaped our world,why not
WHAT WILL WE FEAR NEXT? What Will We Fear Next? Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. C OVID changed many people’s relationship with technology so what comes next? We explore why technophobia always happens in cycles, how we misuse science in a way that amplifies fear, and what everyone will be concerned about in five to 10 years.COMIC BOOKS
00:00. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. I n the 1950s, America declared war on the comic book. People feared that they’d turn children into hardened criminals, and so opponents burned them in large piles, states banned them, and the U.S. Senate investigated their dangers. The man leading the charge was apsychologist
ELEVATORS - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - BUILD FOR TOMORROW As the innovation gained popularity in the late 1800s, it had a profound effect on the way we organize our cities and ourselves. It was also blamed for a rise in crime, for causing something called brain fever, for destroying civil society, and more. On this episode of Pessimists Archive, we look at how the elevator shaped our world,why not
THE WALTZ - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - PESSIMISTS W hy are new dances always so scandalous? Grinding, freak dancing, swing dancing, rock-n-roll – each had their opponents. But at the beginning of it all was the waltz. We may think of the waltz as classy and performative today, but as it gained popularity in the early 1800s, the dance was called disgusting, dangerous, an “obscene display confined to prostitutes and adulteresses”, and THE COMPUTER ARCHIVE The Computer Archive. B efore they revolutionized how we live and communicate, computers were thought to be everything from an existential threat to a dying fad. Even Wozniak publicly doubted their usefulness. Here are some early headlines that reflect both old and enduring fears about where the computer will lead us.THE WALKMAN ARCHIVE
The Walkman Archive - Build For Tomorrow. The Walkman Archive. T ravel back to the 80s with us, where the portable cassette player was accused of turning people into “wind-up non-humans,” laws were passed to keep them off the streets, and one New Jersey man risked jail time for his right toRADIO ARCHIVE
Radio Archive - Pessimists Archive. Radio Archive. T he power of radio was clear from the beginning, but the scope of that power was up for debate. With this new technology came a familiar list of fears: kids being robbed of a traditional childhood, spikes in juvenile crime and the balance of elections being tipped.MIRRORS ARCHIVE
T he portable mirror has come to woman’s aid. The blundering man who thinks that all this distracting loveliness is kept in place by the mere fact of some sort of unknown law of gravitation is mistaken, for, as usual where a woman’s wiles are concerned, it is the tiny, confidential mirror that does the deed.PRIVACY POLICY
This Privacy Policy describes the policies and procedures of Pessimists Archive LLC on the collection, use, and disclosure of your information on our site.THE UMBRELLA
In the 1750s, a London man took to the streets holding an umbrella—and braved jeers, rock-throwing haters, and even a cab that tried to run him over. We explore why rainy England was once so anti-umbrella, and whether that fight was really ever settled. AN ARCHIVE OF PESSIMISM THROUGHOUT HISTORY Explore our collection of pessimism, alarmism and technophobiathroughout history.
THE NOVEL ARCHIVE
P arents complain about blood-and-thunder radio programs and gangster-story comic strips as chief problems in bringing their young hopefuls unspoiled through childhood’s impressionable years. Yesterday’s parents found a new menace in the movies. Before that, it was the dime novel, concealed under the pillow or read in the woodshed’s obscurity, which occasioned parental worries andCOMICS ARCHIVE
An archive of news and article clippings showing the pessimism, alarmism, and technophobia surrounding comics throughout history. THE WALTZ - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - PESSIMISTS W hy are new dances always so scandalous? Grinding, freak dancing, swing dancing, rock-n-roll – each had their opponents. But at the beginning of it all was the waltz. We may think of the waltz as classy and performative today, but as it gained popularity in the early 1800s, the dance was called disgusting, dangerous, an “obscene display confined to prostitutes and adulteresses”, andTHE BICYCLE ARCHIVE
S till, there is not the slightest doubt that bicycle riding, if persisted in, leads to weakness of mind, general lunacy, and homocidal mania. In the opinion of one of the ablest and most experienced of British lunatics, the habit of watching the revolution of the forward wheel develops in the mind of the bicycle rider a tendency to reasonin a circle.
AIRPLANES ARCHIVE
E verybody remembers the “bicycle face” which appeared and disappeared with the two-wheeled craze. After this came another, the “automobile face.” The aeroplane physiognomy differs from both the older ones in all particulars but one. The tremendous nervous strain which distorted the bicyclist’s features and that of the motor maniac is even more prominent in the human birds.ELEVATORS ARCHIVE
“T hat is a kind of sickness which is more common than most people supposed. In fact, hardly a week goes by but what I am called upon to treat people who are suffering from it. I call it ‘elevator sickness,’ although it is not always due to riding in elevators, but arises from a disease which is made apparent by motion of that kind.TELEGRAPH ARCHIVE
A telegram from Hartford was published yesterday saying that a few days ago a bale of paper stock, on its way from the railroad station to a mill in East Hartford, burst open, and a large number of private telegrams, originally sent through the Western Union Telegraph company, fell out and were carried off by children, and are now affording amusement to the gossips of the town.TELEPHONE ARCHIVE
I t is time that the atrocious nature of the telephone should be fully exposed, and its inventors, of whom there are any quantity, held up to public execration.. When this nefarious instrument was first introduced, it was pretended that its purpose was an innocent one. We were told that the telephone would enable a man in New York to hear what a man in Philadelphia might say; and though it was ELEVATORS - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - BUILD FOR TOMORROW • Etiquette in Elevators | The New York Times, 1866 • Avoiding Elevator Sickness | Pittsburg Dispatch, 1890 • The Elevator Sickness | The Daily Republican, 1895 • “So This Is Africa” | Wheeler and Woolsey, 1933 • Maverick Calls for End to Elevator Hat Tipping | El Paso Herald-Post, 1936 • Countering the Power of Suggestion | American Psychological Association AN ARCHIVE OF PESSIMISM THROUGHOUT HISTORY Explore our collection of pessimism, alarmism and technophobiathroughout history.
THE NOVEL ARCHIVE
P arents complain about blood-and-thunder radio programs and gangster-story comic strips as chief problems in bringing their young hopefuls unspoiled through childhood’s impressionable years. Yesterday’s parents found a new menace in the movies. Before that, it was the dime novel, concealed under the pillow or read in the woodshed’s obscurity, which occasioned parental worries andCOMICS ARCHIVE
An archive of news and article clippings showing the pessimism, alarmism, and technophobia surrounding comics throughout history. THE WALTZ - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - PESSIMISTS W hy are new dances always so scandalous? Grinding, freak dancing, swing dancing, rock-n-roll – each had their opponents. But at the beginning of it all was the waltz. We may think of the waltz as classy and performative today, but as it gained popularity in the early 1800s, the dance was called disgusting, dangerous, an “obscene display confined to prostitutes and adulteresses”, andTHE BICYCLE ARCHIVE
S till, there is not the slightest doubt that bicycle riding, if persisted in, leads to weakness of mind, general lunacy, and homocidal mania. In the opinion of one of the ablest and most experienced of British lunatics, the habit of watching the revolution of the forward wheel develops in the mind of the bicycle rider a tendency to reasonin a circle.
AIRPLANES ARCHIVE
E verybody remembers the “bicycle face” which appeared and disappeared with the two-wheeled craze. After this came another, the “automobile face.” The aeroplane physiognomy differs from both the older ones in all particulars but one. The tremendous nervous strain which distorted the bicyclist’s features and that of the motor maniac is even more prominent in the human birds.ELEVATORS ARCHIVE
“T hat is a kind of sickness which is more common than most people supposed. In fact, hardly a week goes by but what I am called upon to treat people who are suffering from it. I call it ‘elevator sickness,’ although it is not always due to riding in elevators, but arises from a disease which is made apparent by motion of that kind.TELEGRAPH ARCHIVE
A telegram from Hartford was published yesterday saying that a few days ago a bale of paper stock, on its way from the railroad station to a mill in East Hartford, burst open, and a large number of private telegrams, originally sent through the Western Union Telegraph company, fell out and were carried off by children, and are now affording amusement to the gossips of the town.TELEPHONE ARCHIVE
I t is time that the atrocious nature of the telephone should be fully exposed, and its inventors, of whom there are any quantity, held up to public execration.. When this nefarious instrument was first introduced, it was pretended that its purpose was an innocent one. We were told that the telephone would enable a man in New York to hear what a man in Philadelphia might say; and though it was ELEVATORS - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - BUILD FOR TOMORROW • Etiquette in Elevators | The New York Times, 1866 • Avoiding Elevator Sickness | Pittsburg Dispatch, 1890 • The Elevator Sickness | The Daily Republican, 1895 • “So This Is Africa” | Wheeler and Woolsey, 1933 • Maverick Calls for End to Elevator Hat Tipping | El Paso Herald-Post, 1936 • Countering the Power of Suggestion | American Psychological AssociationCOMIC BOOKS
Making Sense of Moral Panics, by Sarah Monod de Froideville • Seducing the Innocent: Fredric Wertham and the Falsifications That Helped Condemn Comics by Carol Tilley • A regressive formula of perversity: Wertham and the women of comics by Carol Tilley • The Adventures of Mr. Obadiah Oldbuck, the OG comic book • “Comic Books Injurious to Children, Mothers Decide” (1942) THE WALTZ - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - PESSIMISTS W hy are new dances always so scandalous? Grinding, freak dancing, swing dancing, rock-n-roll – each had their opponents. But at the beginning of it all was the waltz. We may think of the waltz as classy and performative today, but as it gained popularity in the early 1800s, the dance was called disgusting, dangerous, an “obscene display confined to prostitutes and adulteresses”, andRADIO ARCHIVE
D eath struck swiftly into a flock of blackbirds as they were passing over the J.R. Lippincott farm today, and hundreds of little bodies, rendered lifeless in some puzzling manner, rained down among the fruit trees. Only part of the flock was affected, death was instantaneous and the bodies showed no sign of poison. The best guess seems to be that some form of static electricity was responsible.THE WALKMAN ARCHIVE
T ravel back to the 80s with us, where the portable cassette player was accused of turning people into “wind-up non-humans,” laws were passed to keep them off the streets, and one New Jersey man risked jail time for his right to walk with headphones. Be sure to check out the podcast episode as well, where we untangle all of the fears people had about this new technology.RECORDED MUSIC
• The Menace of Mechanical Music”, John Philip Sousa’s famous essay • “Sousa Marches In Radio Parade”, Sousa’s piece about embracing radio • Phonograph Instant Success, Pittsburgh Post-Gazzette 1931 • Murder of Music Laid to Machines, The New York Times 1933 • “Sing, Smile, Slumber”, the cylinder audio heard at the beginning of the show ELEVATORS - BUILD FOR TOMORROW - BUILD FOR TOMORROW • Etiquette in Elevators | The New York Times, 1866 • Avoiding Elevator Sickness | Pittsburg Dispatch, 1890 • The Elevator Sickness | The Daily Republican, 1895 • “So This Is Africa” | Wheeler and Woolsey, 1933 • Maverick Calls for End to Elevator Hat Tipping | El Paso Herald-Post, 1936 • Countering the Power of Suggestion | American Psychological Association THE COMPUTER ARCHIVE F aceless machines that can out think any man steadily move into new areas formerly reserved for the mind. They are electronic computers, capable of advising a sausage maker on the best mixture of meats or a doctor on the genetic code of life. Here’s a graphic report on wondrous new benefits produced by these thinking machines, and a look at what some feel are its possible evil effects.PRIVACY POLICY
This Privacy Policy describes the policies and procedures of Pessimists Archive LLC on the collection, use, and disclosure of your information on our site.MIRRORS ARCHIVE
T he portable mirror has come to woman’s aid. The blundering man who thinks that all this distracting loveliness is kept in place by the mere fact of some sort of unknown law of gravitation is mistaken, for, as usual where a woman’s wiles are concerned, it is the tiny, confidential mirror that does the deed.THE UMBRELLA
In the 1750s, a London man took to the streets holding an umbrella—and braved jeers, rock-throwing haters, and even a cab that tried to run him over. We explore why rainy England was once so anti-umbrella, and whether that fight was really ever settled.* Start Here
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This is a show about the crazy, curious things from history that shaped us, and how we can shape the future. Each episode is deeply researched, fast-paced, funny, and aims to answer big questions about ourselves. Like: Why are we so obsessed with the good ol’ days? Why do we hate being told what to do? And why were teddy bears once so scandalous? If change makes you uncomfortable, or if you’re worried about the future, this show will change the way you think. (Note: This podcast was originally called Pessimists Archive.)Subscribe on:
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Episode #19
HOW THE ELEVATOR SHAPED OUR WORLDListen Now
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224 YEARS OF ELECTION HACKINGListen Now
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Most people are smart, but then cognitive biases kick in and they start acting like fools. This is why I love Jason’s show. If you understand people’s bias towards pessimism, that's the first step in choosing yourself for success.“ James Altucher (the James Altucher Show)__________
I love to hear about all the wacky stories from the past that seem bonkers now, but were totally normal then! It’s one of the best and most unique show angles I’ve ever come across.“ Hala Taha (Young and Profiting podcast)RECENT _EPISODES_
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THE SURPRISING IMPORTANCE OF TO-GO COCKTAILSListen Now
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WHEN EXACTLY WERE “THE GOOD OLD DAYS”?Listen Now
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DID PESSIMISTS ARCHIVE CHANGE ITS NAME? YES!Listen Now
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DO WE LOSE SKILLS BECAUSE OF TECHNOLOGY?Listen Now
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HOW TO COMMUNICATE WITH THE FUTUREListen Now
Episode #33
THE MOST IMPORTANT PODCAST OF OUR LIFETIME!Listen Now
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224 YEARS OF ELECTION HACKINGListen Now
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