Film Features

Before Its Time: "Videodrome" and Mainstream Media Brainwashing

David Cronenberg's cult classic horror was a box office bomb in 1983, but its warning signs ring truer in 2021.

'VIDEODROME' DAVID CRONENBERG, w/ JAMES WOODS IN 1983

Snap/Shutterstock

One of the most impressive feats a film can accomplish is becoming more relevant as the years pass.

The events that swept 2020 were way more terrifying than films like Contagion or Get Out could even begin to depict. But a cult classic horror film, Videodrome, comes startlingly close to today's real-life terror as it challenges our loyalties to mainstream media.

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If there was ever a year to buy a practical gadget for your home, 2020's the one.

Yep, it's been a crazy year. For a lot of reasons. Offices closed and travel was canceled, but the tech innovation never stopped. Our editors have done the research on some of the best recent inventions in the tech world, and have narrowed it down to our 5 favorites that will enhance your at-home experiences.

If you'd like to find out what piece of technology is the best investment at the moment, and how to upgrade where you sleep, how you make coffee, and how you drink water, keep reading...

1. CleanPod UVC Sterilizer ($90)

CleanPod UVC Sterilizer

This handheld device sterilizes and kills germs on nearly anything with its UV light. From groceries to luggage, you can sanitize anything with it quickly. Not everything is soap or GermX-friendly, so this is a valuable tool to have at your disposal this year. Plus, it's better for the environment than chemical cleaning products.

2. The Pod Pro by Eight Sleep (From $2545)

The Pod Pro by Eight Sleep

Update: Get $500 Off the Pod Pro During Eight's Black Friday Sale

This mattress is on another level. With its dual heating capabilities, you can control the temperature on each side of the bed separately using their app. You can set temperatures between 55-110°F, so you and your partner can both be at your perfect sleep temperatures and it costs less than running your AC or heat all night. Plus their GentleRise Technology wakes you naturally up by cooling your body down gradually, instead of using a loud sudden alarm.

The mattress itself is comfy and great for your back. The five layers of premium foam create amazing contouring support and relief on the right pressure points. Plus you can monitor your sleep fitness on the app, which can be integrated with your GoogleHome or Alexa.

3. Mr. Coffee 10-Cup Smart Optimal Brew Coffeemaker Wemo Enabled ($69.99)

Mr. Coffee 10-Cup Smart Optimal Brew Coffeemaker Wemo Enabled

Another one for the tech geeks, this is a machine for the smart-home era. The Optimal Brew makes premium coffee, and supports a fully customizable 7-day programmable schedule. The coolest part is it can be integrated with apps like the Eight Sleep app, or the Belkin WeMo-connected intelligent device platform, so you can have your coffee brewing before you even get out of bed. This device is also easy to handle and clean.

4. Hypervolt Plus Cordless Vibration Massager ($349.93)

Hypervolt Plus Cordless Vibration Massager

Has anyone been seeing these cordless massagers all over social media lately? Us too. The Hypervolt Plus comes with five interchangeable heads so it's comfortable to use on any muscle. 2020 is the year where we bring outside luxury inside our home, and these massage guns are like having a private masseur on hand, which could be great after a home workout, or a long WFH day.

5. Larq Movement Water Bottle ($98)

Larq water bottle

As much as 2020 is the year to bring luxury home, it's definitely the year of cleanliness, and this self-cleaning water bottle is an impressive representation of that. Like the CleanPod UVC Sterilizer, the Larq bottle uses internal UVC lights to sanitize itself. These bottles are great to bring on long hikes, but mostly, they're great for peace of mind.

These inventions remind us that even in 2020, humans can't help but grow, adapt, and invent. It's been a tough year, and no one knows what lies ahead, but no matter what that is, these gadgets will make it better.

Our favorite pick of the bunch is definitely the Pod Pro by Eight Sleep. We're spending more time on a mattress than ever before, so why not get one that has amazing features like the Pod Pro? Out of any new tech invention we've researched, it's by far the best investment.

Black Friday Sale: Get $500 Off The Pods + $200 Off Pod Pro Cover + 20% Off Accessories with Purchase of The Pod or Pod Pro Cover.

SPONSORED

New Eco-friendly Phone, Who Dis?

I found the easiest way to be more sustainable.

Every January 1st, I pick a new word to define my year; 2020 is "sustainability." I want to reduce my plastic consumption and carbon footprint, but I was already in trouble when my phone broke. Just straight up died at the beginning of the year.

I didn't want to buy anything unnecessary, but a phone is a need these days. I was available for an upgrade, so I got a different size, which also meant a new plastic case, which would be a double whammy.

I was browsing cases online, and they were all cute, but it bugged me so much that I was contributing to the piles of plastic filling up our oceans. Even eco-friendly cork cases have plastic, and wood cases sometimes have a chemical finish.

I know a girl who works on sustainability for a major brand, so I asked if she had any recommendations, and she told me she's a Pela convert.

I looked them up, and this company is downright amazing; they created a new material called Flaxstic® - it's a plant-based blend of bioplastic elastomer and flax straw materials that's 100% compostable and plastic-free!

They're also a member of One Percent for the Planet, so they donate at least 1% of sales to non-profit environmental organizations.

This seemed like a company I'd actually feel great supporting.

On their website, you can browse by phone size, so I looked at the choices for my recent buy.

There are all different colors and designs, and many of them actually show the animals and causes that Pela's trying to save - sea turtles, bees, sharks, whales, penguins, and more.

There were classic colors and other designs, but I was drawn to the yellow honeycomb case with bees. It was so sunny and pretty, it made me feel hopeful about the environment instead of cynical.

The cases are pretty slim, but they claim the cases absorb shock, so they bounce when they drop. They're not impact cases, but they have a 100% Happiness Guarantee for your first 90 days. If I felt the material was chintzy, I could just send it back.

I ordered my case and barely used my phone while waiting, panicking that I'd break it before the case arrived. Thankfully, my Pela came quickly with a note thanking me for my contribution! There was also zero plastic in the packaging! I hadn't even thought to look that up, but I will now for anything I purchase.

I do compost, but I also found out from Pelathat if I got a new phone in a different size before I was done with the case, I could send it back to Pela and get a new case for 20% off!

The sunshine color of my case was so pretty, and you could see the flecks of the flax straw! I liked having a one-of-a-kind case. For the price, it was so durable, such high quality, and when I popped my phone in, super secure!

Now that I've had it for a while, I'm bringing the mirror selfie back. I also dropped my phone while biking to work (yay sustainability!), and it didn't smash, so it's staying with me.

So listen, I didn't stop climate change from buying a phone case. In fact, I still bought a new thing instead of thrifting. But one less piece of plastic in a landfill (or the ocean) is still a really big deal. If everyone made the switch to Pela, we'd combat plastic production and consumption at an amazing rate.

I'm so inspired by Pela, and I'm in love with my phone case, too! Check them out!

Update: The folks at Pela Case are extending a special offer to our readers! Get 10% OFF Your Pela Case Today!

Offer Expires In

SPONSORED

New Eco-friendly Phone, Who Dis?

I found the easiest way to be more sustainable.

Every January 1st, I pick a new word to define my year; 2020 is "sustainability." I want to reduce my plastic consumption and carbon footprint, but I was already in trouble when my phone broke. Just straight up died at the beginning of the year.

I didn't want to buy anything unnecessary, but a phone is a need these days. I was available for an upgrade, so I got a different size, which also meant a new plastic case, which would be a double whammy.

I was browsing cases online, and they were all cute, but it bugged me so much that I was contributing to the piles of plastic filling up our oceans. Even eco-friendly cork cases have plastic, and wood cases sometimes have a chemical finish.

I know a girl who works on sustainability for a major brand, so I asked if she had any recommendations, and she told me she's a Pela convert.

I looked them up, and this company is downright amazing; they created a new material called Flaxstic® - it's a plant-based blend of bioplastic elastomer and flax straw materials that's 100% compostable and plastic-free!

They're also a member of One Percent for the Planet, so they donate at least 1% of sales to non-profit environmental organizations.

This seemed like a company I'd actually feel great supporting.

On their website, you can browse by phone size, so I looked at the choices for my recent buy.

Pela
Eco-Friendly
100% Compostable

Get 10% OFF Your Pela Case Today!

There are all different colors and designs, and many of them actually show the animals and causes that Pela's trying to save - sea turtles, bees, sharks, whales, penguins, and more.

There were classic colors and other designs, but I was drawn to the yellow honeycomb case with bees. It was so sunny and pretty, it made me feel hopeful about the environment instead of cynical.

The cases are pretty slim, but they claim the cases absorb shock, so they bounce when they drop. They're not impact cases, but they have a 100% Happiness Guarantee for your first 90 days. If I felt the material was chintzy, I could just send it back.

I ordered my case and barely used my phone while waiting, panicking that I'd break it before the case arrived. Thankfully, my Pela came quickly with a note thanking me for my contribution! There was also zero plastic in the packaging! I hadn't even thought to look that up, but I will now for anything I purchase.

I do compost, but I also found out from Pelathat if I got a new phone in a different size before I was done with the case, I could send it back to Pela and get a new case for 20% off!

The sunshine color of my case was so pretty, and you could see the flecks of the flax straw! I liked having a one-of-a-kind case. For the price, it was so durable, such high quality, and when I popped my phone in, super secure!

Now that I've had it for a while, I'm bringing the mirror selfie back. I also dropped my phone while biking to work (yay sustainability!), and it didn't smash, so it's staying with me.

So listen, I didn't stop climate change from buying a phone case. In fact, I still bought a new thing instead of thrifting. But one less piece of plastic in a landfill (or the ocean) is still a really big deal. If everyone made the switch to Pela, we'd combat plastic production and consumption at an amazing rate.

I'm so inspired by Pela, and I'm in love with my phone case, too! Check them out!

Update: The folks at Pela Case are extending a special offer to our readers! Get 10% OFF Your Pela Case Today!

Offer Expires In

MUSIC

The Uncanny Inevitability of Whitney Houston's Musical Hologram Tour

Whitney Houston's hologram will tour this January through April.

A hologram of Whitney Houston is seen during the dress rehearsal of 'An Evening with Whitney Houston'

Photo by Oscar Gonzalez/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

This fall, Whitney Houston will go on tour.

Or at least, a holographic version of her will. The late singer's image—recreated via laser beam shot through a prism—will be transmitted out on stages across the world, allowing millions of fans to experience the star's legendary presence in not-quite real life. The tour will kick off in Mexico on January 23 and will end in Belarus on April 3rd.

Entitled "An Evening With Whitney," the tour will be "a celebration of her best work," according to Brian Becker, the chairman and CEO of BASE Hologram, the company responsible for this. Previously, BASE sent simulations of Roy Orbison and opera singer Maria Callas around the world.

Unless there's an afterlife and Whitney Houston is looking down from above, the real Whitney will have no say in where and how her image will be projected. Many fans aren't happy about that. "Capitalism will recreate your likeness and project it in front of millions, so it may posthumously profit off you for eternity," wrote one disparaging Twitter user. "There are truly no limits to its ethical depravity. Nothing is sacred."

Another wrote, "Utterly disrespectful and disgusting. Let the greats Rest In Power. Shameful they're using her name and likeness for this. An evening with Whitney? "That" is NOT Whitney Houston. I'm sorry Nippy, you deserved better."

It's true that Whitney Houston will have have no say in where her image is going to be sent and what she's going to sing on this tour. This raises a lot of questions about the dead and what it means to respect a person's posthumous legacy and autonomy.

Namely, what do we owe the dead? Is a hologram tour that different from a posthumous biographical film that pieces together a person's narrative? And if so, why?

Whitney Houston seems like an inevitable choice for a hologram tour, but in some ways she's also a particularly terrible selection because of how widely and deeply beloved she was and is. Fans are so tenaciously invested in her legacy that it seems like this concert has a good chance of being canceled, in both the real world and the digital one (the lines between these worlds, of course, are feeling blurrier by the day).

Still, is a hologram tour so different from what record companies have always done to artists, creating images and projections of who they are and selling them at thousands of dollars a seat? Regardless, there's something so profoundly uncanny about the concept of buying tickets to see a 3D representation of a deceased person that it's hard to imagine one of these tours ever sitting right.

In the end, hologram tours seem like the logical result of late capitalism's desire to drag every last penny out of each product and consumer, humanity's desire to transcend death, and the emergence of the technology that theoretically makes this transcendence possible. The problem is that Whitney Houston herself never signed off on her own rebirth—but if she had signed a waiver allowing her hologram to be projected after she dies, would that make a hologram tour more okay? What if a living artist started sending out holograms instead of (or even while) actually touring, and would it make a difference if the holograms were broadcast live? Or is there something irreplaceable and sacred about seeing your favorite artist in the flesh?


MUSIC

Is Virtual Reality the Future of Concerts? Rezz's EP Debut Showed the Potential (and the Glitches)

EDM artist and multimedia pioneer Rezz released her newest EP last night—in an unconventional format.

Rezz "Beyond The Senses" In Virtual Reality!

At 3 PM in Los Angeles, the EDM artist Rezz began performing her EP, which would be released on streaming services later that night.

She played live, under a vast starry sky, as a massive skull floated over her head.

Meanwhile, at 6 PM at the VR Space in Koreatown, New York, I slipped on the Oculus and entered that starlit venue, which was simultaneously out of this world and accessible from anywhere if you happened to have access to a headset. It took me a while to figure out how to use the set, and some kinks were definitely still being worked out with the app—but soon enough, I was standing inside an alien landscape, staring up at streams of code floating in the sky. I'd entered an alternate dimension without taking a single step.

That's the power of the virtual reality concert, which Rezz used to premier her EP, Beyond the Senses. Using the app TheWaveVR, which has helped other artists such as Imogen Heap perform shows in the virtual realm, Rezz effectively played a show in multiple places at once. Her show also featured the platform Twitch, actually allowing fans to influence the visuals in real time as the performance unfolded.

REZZ - "Beyond The Senses" LIVE world premiere listening partywww.youtube.com

The performance began with the song "Dark Age," which places minor-key guitar riffs over a slow-moving beat to create a dark, mystical haze. It was the perfect initiation to the strange, holographic, industrial world that audience members were transported into.

"Is it enough that I feel like I'm falling / is it enough that I can't stop?" sings Underoath on the EP's second track, "Falling." Like the first track, it blends elements of emo rock with EDM beats. Its lyrics might as well be talking about the rapidly advancing pace of technology, which has changed the DNA of the music industry, altering everything about how music is created and consumed.

The third track Rezz performed, "Kiss of Death," plants industrial beats against floaty, hyper-processed vocals, to create a psychedelic soundscape. The EP's final track, "Lonely (feat. the Rigs)," is one of its best, using a sultry beat to pull audiences in, then breaking down into a sparse, echoey drop in the second half.

Overall, Rezz's EP is a tightly wound, high-stakes collection of furious rhythms and alternatively harsh and dreamlike soundscapes. Certainly, if any genre is to be matched with VR, it would be this kind of disorienting, intensely transportive emo-EDM fusion. VR and EDM blend together perfectly, both using synthetic sounds and super-advanced processing techniques to create otherworldly dimensions that test the limits of space and sound, all through the mediums of MIDI and code.

In a virtual reality concert, you lose some of the vividness and impact of real shows—for example, you don't get the pounding, booming grind of a live bass or the smoke and sweat of a real venue (depending on your headphones and surroundings, of course). But in the technosphere, things that could never have happened in the real world become possible. Red lightning flared out of Rezz's hands as soldiers, gigantic hands, and disembodied objects careened like UFOs through the space. Sinewy tendrils floated across the domed sky, reflecting the soundwaves. Huge trees grew towards the stars, then split into smoke. Other concertgoers looked like floating Pillsbury Doughboys with screen names glowing above their heads.

VR concerts have not become quite as popular as people thought they might when the Oculus debuted, maybe because of the cumbersome nature of the headset, the likelihood of glitches, or the still-holographic appearance of the simulated performers. Still, acts like Rezz's prove that there's still a very promising future for VR, which has the potential to revolutionize the touring industry. She's not alone in taking advantage of the medium. Recently, the startup MelodyVR signed deals with 600 artists, including Jay-Z, and festivals such as Coachella and Global Citizen have both incorporated VR into their concert-going experiences.

Many have raised the concern that VR concerts might not be the best thing for music. After all, touring is one of the most profitable parts of modern musicians' careers, and if audience members start choosing to stream shows through VR instead of paying for a live experience, this could threaten the lucrative stadium circuit.

It's hard to deny the amazing spectrum of possibilities that VR presents for music, though. Audience members could immerse themselves in music videos or communicate directly with each other and the performers, or they could see shows they were previously unable to access or afford. In addition, VR audiences can't use cell phones (yet), so they have to focus solely on the music.

Image via thissongissick.com

And just imagine if musicians never had to board a plane to perform, and if you never had to miss a concert again—if all you had to do was slip on a headset in order to enter an alternate dimension of your favorite musician's design?

VR could very well determine the future of music. Before that happens, though, there's still work to be done. I was able to see Rezz's broadcast, but the whole time I was gaping at the beauty of the simulated landscape and testing out my new virtual body, I couldn't hear any music. Staff members were running around, trying to fix the glitch and promising that it wasn't caused by their software; by the time they got it working, the show had finished.

The experience revealed that although VR concerts have huge potential, for now, there's still nothing to rival good old-fashioned live music.