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  • 00:01

    Hey Wisecrack, Jared in the pale flesh again.

  • 00:10

    Today, we’ve got an episode for you about Pokemon Go, urban exploration, and some dead

  • 00:14

    French guy.

  • 00:15

    You know, the usual.

  • 00:17

    Pokemon Go temporarily gripped the world like an epidemic.

  • 00:20

    The augmented reality mobile game, just days after its release, was installed on 5% of

  • 00:26

    all Android devices and even surpassed Tinder in downloads. to say that we were gripped

  • 00:31

    by Pokemania all over again is an understatement.

  • 00:34

    The media, and now Wisecrack, just wouldn’t shut up about it.

  • 00:38

    Pokemon Go-ers have discovered dead bodies, been lured into being robbed, crashed their

  • 00:42

    cars, and even trolled the Westboro Baptist church.

  • 00:46

    At the same time, plenty of people were less than enamored by Pokemon Go.

  • 00:50

    Filmmaker Oliver Stone decried the game’s rampant data collection as a new form of surveillance

  • 00:54

    capitalism: Totalitarianism.

  • 01:05

    So is Pokemon Go a nightmare confluence of phone addiction and corporate surveillance?

  • 01:10

    Maybe.

  • 01:11

    Let’s find out.

  • 01:12

    Welcome to this Wisecrack Edition on the Philosophy of Pokemon Go.

  • 01:15

    And for once, no spoilers ahead.

  • 01:18

    At it’s heart, Pokemon go is a game about walking.

  • 01:21

    You saunter over to a pokestop, dash towards a raid, stampede towards a Dragonite, trespass

  • 01:26

    into a neighbor’s yard, stumble into a crime scene, and so on.

  • 01:30

    And while “walking” may seem as philosophically unimportant as an Adam Sandler movie - you’d

  • 01:35

    be surprised.

  • 01:36

    But before we can understand how Pokemon Go radically changes how we interact with physical

  • 01:41

    spaces, we need a little history of walking.

  • 01:44

    Unsurprisingly, walking played a prominent role in society until the rise of the automobile.

  • 01:50

    Besides getting people from point A to point B, walking was a sort of sport in aristocratic

  • 01:55

    circles.

  • 01:56

    As Frédéric Gros writes in his book “A Philosophy of Walking, well-to-do men and

  • 02:00

    women would stroll around in fancy clothes, occasionally striking a pose to woo potential

  • 02:05

    suitors.

  • 02:06

    It was kind of like the physical manifestation of rich people selfies on Instagram.

  • 02:11

    For others, walking was a holy matter: every year scores of people would undergo a pilgrimage

  • 02:16

    to various sanctified sites.

  • 02:18

    Meanwhile, philosophers like Friedrich Nietzsche saw walking as an invaluable part of the philosophical

  • 02:23

    process.

  • 02:24

    Today, our walking, and movement in general, still serves a social function, though it’s

  • 02:30

    a little more pragmatic now.

  • 02:32

    Our morning commute, running to the grocery store, picking up Sonny Jim from soccer practice,

  • 02:37

    most of these comings and goings are programmed into our daily lives.

  • 02:41

    We move from place to place, generally unaware of our surroundings, and never venture far

  • 02:46

    from our planned route, all to fulfill our societal obligations.

  • 02:51

    As Gros writes, this kind of rushing around is always in the service of “doing something,”

  • 02:55

    and never to “just be.”

  • 02:58

    Walking, according to Gros, in its purest form is about doing nothing, which allows

  • 03:03

    us to “rediscover the simple joy of existing,” a kind of child-like wonderment with the world

  • 03:08

    surrounding us.

  • 03:10

    Some might argue that Pokemon Go, according to this logic, follows the “always doing

  • 03:14

    something” logic of our time.

  • 03:16

    Frantically running from Pokestop to Pokestop, chasing down Legendary raids, and battling

  • 03:20

    gyms isn’t exactly the kind of exploration Gros is writing about.

  • 03:24

    We’ll tackle that in just a second, but first, let’s talk about space.

  • 03:29

    Every street, building and open space carries with it an assumed social code.

  • 03:34

    You wouldn’t behave in an office building in the same way you would a concert, you don’t

  • 03:38

    play football on a freeway, and many would say it’s in poor taste to wear your Black

  • 03:43

    Sabbath t-shirt to church.

  • 03:45

    But those social codes change with time and culture.

  • 03:48

    Public bathing used to be a thing, bars used to be a place to find a date, and rivers used

  • 03:53

    to be a fine place to drop trou and do your business.

  • 03:57

    Pokemon Go, and the technology it uses, might change everything by radically recoding the

  • 04:02

    space we live in.

  • 04:04

    The game has literally mapped onto reality an entirely new set of social codes.

  • 04:10

    Parks for hiking?

  • 04:11

    More like a sweet place to battle a Mewtwo.

  • 04:14

    Churches for worship?

  • 04:16

    Pokeballs for days.

  • 04:18

    Panicked crowd all running in same direction?

  • 04:21

    Could be a zombie apocalypse, but it could be an unown.

  • 04:25

    Museums to memorialize the millions of people slaughtered?

  • 04:27

    Pokemon Go in holocaust museum?

  • 04:28

    More like… ok, seriously guys, don’t play Pokemon in the Holocaust Museum.

  • 04:33

    In short, Pokemon Go has disrupted how we perceive space.

  • 04:37

    There is a common fear with Pokemon Go: Should we really trust a massive corporation with

  • 04:43

    such intimate knowledge of where we’re going and how we’re getting there?

  • 04:47

    Is it a little scary that a company can so artfully tell us where to go?

  • 04:52

    Niantic has integrated sponsored pokestops, and Starbucks, for instance, as more than

  • 04:56

    happy to oblige.

  • 04:58

    The idea is to get you to buy a Pumpkin Spice Latte once you’ve decided to take a break

  • 05:02

    from catching mythical monsters.

  • 05:04

    So far, aside from some sponsored Pokestops, Niantic has taken the high road: organizing

  • 05:09

    things like beach cleanups for Earth Day.

  • 05:12

    But that doesn’t mean it can’t go downhill fairly quickly.

  • 05:16

    What if you could pay Niantic a couple million dollars to have rare pokemon spawn at your

  • 05:21

    political rally, or worse, your friend’s improv show?

  • 05:25

    For French philosopher Guy Debord, modern capitalism has neatly organized time and physical

  • 05:30

    space.

  • 05:31

    Where we are, where we’re going, and when we’re getting there is a function of of

  • 05:34

    the totalizing control the economy plays in our lives- we travel through life mesmerized

  • 05:40

    by our commodity-filled environment.

  • 05:41

    We go to work to make money, to a leisure activity to spend money, go home, go to sleep,

  • 05:47

    and repeat, with a sort of systemic pressure to do this in a more and more productive way

  • 05:52

    - work harder, enjoy more, sleep less.

  • 05:55

    You get the idea.

  • 05:57

    For some, Pokemon Go easily fits this dystopic narrative.

  • 06:01

    Yesterday we were mesmerized by billboards and where they told us go, probably some TGI

  • 06:06

    Fridays.

  • 06:07

    Today we’re mesmerized by our phone screens and and where they tell us to go.

  • 06:12

    What is missing from all of this is chance, randomness and discovery.

  • 06:16

    But before you think we’re being overly paranoid edgelords, those who decry Pokemon

  • 06:21

    Go as the harbinger of some dystopic augmented reality are only half right.

  • 06:27

    Pokemon Go, as Edwin Montoya Zorrilla writes in the Hong Kong Review of Books, resembles

  • 06:31

    “dérive,” a revolutionary strategy proposed by Debord to combat the entrenched and alienated

  • 06:37

    ways in which we move through cities.

  • 06:40

    Dérive, which is French for “drifting”, means abandoning the pre-programmed way in

  • 06:44

    which we interact with cities by performing a sort of experiment in space: wandering around

  • 06:50

    aimlessly.

  • 06:51

    Debord encourages people to walk around, be drawn in by their surroundings,interrogate

  • 06:55

    them, and to give themselves up to randomness.

  • 06:59

    And that’s kind of what Pokemon Go does.

  • 07:02

    Players venture to locations they never would have dreamed of going to -- namely, outside.

  • 07:07

    But if you’re anything like me, you’ve discovered new neighborhoods, new landmarks,

  • 07:11

    and even, and this one’s a shocker, made friends.

  • 07:15

    In the meatspace.

  • 07:17

    Pokemon Go is combating the kind of social alienation that our culture actively promotes.

  • 07:22

    While most games have you glued to a screen with headphones on, Pokemon Go encourages

  • 07:26

    you to explore and make new friends.

  • 07:28

    After the raid system was introduced, you could battle boss-level Pokemon for a limited

  • 07:32

    time with friends or strangers.

  • 07:34

    They also recently rolled out trading, adding new ways to meet new people.

  • 07:38

    Psychologists have even noticed that the game was helping their patients with anxiety and

  • 07:42

    depression by getting them out of the house and socializing.

  • 07:46

    In this way, Pokemon Go actively recodes the space around us in a positive way.

  • 07:51

    In might not be exactly the kind of revolutionary walking that Debord envisioned, or the useless

  • 07:56

    kind of walking Gros writes about, but it’s also better than the alternative that our

  • 08:01

    tech-obsessed society offers us.

  • 08:04

    Who knows - maybe Pokemon Go is a gateway drug for hiking and social interaction?

  • 08:09

    What do you think Wisecrack?

  • 08:10

    Is Pokemon Go society’s savior, or a harbinger of dismal times to come?

  • 08:15

    Or is it just a game about animals

  • 08:48

    in balls?

  • 08:52

    Let us know know in the comments.

  • 09:05

    Thanks for watching, y’all.

  • 09:15

    peace.

All

The example sentences of BILLBOARDS in videos (15 in total of 25)

the determiner brainchild noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner richards proper noun, singular group verb, non-3rd person singular present and coordinating conjunction the determiner first adjective of preposition or subordinating conjunction such adjective billboards noun, plural came verb, past tense up preposition or subordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction dallas proper noun, singular ,
yesterday proper noun, singular we personal pronoun were verb, past tense mesmerized verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural and coordinating conjunction where wh-adverb they personal pronoun told verb, past tense us personal pronoun go verb, non-3rd person singular present , probably adverb some determiner tgi proper noun, singular
billboards noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction always adverb were verb, past tense on preposition or subordinating conjunction your possessive pronoun way noun, singular or mass to to work verb, base form , but coordinating conjunction you personal pronoun never adverb notice verb, non-3rd person singular present them personal pronoun before preposition or subordinating conjunction .
this determiner allows verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner trains noun, plural to to slot noun, singular or mass through preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural , in preposition or subordinating conjunction between preposition or subordinating conjunction structures noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction on preposition or subordinating conjunction gatekeeper proper noun, singular at preposition or subordinating conjunction
billboards proper noun, singular were verb, past tense strewn noun, singular or mass throughout preposition or subordinating conjunction berlin proper noun, singular from preposition or subordinating conjunction 1938 cardinal number to to its possessive pronoun regulation noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction 1941 cardinal number as preposition or subordinating conjunction its possessive pronoun consumption noun, singular or mass
for preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural and coordinating conjunction tv proper noun, singular spots noun, plural , with preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction new proper noun, singular york proper noun, singular city proper noun, singular for preposition or subordinating conjunction instance noun, singular or mass , ranging verb, gerund or present participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction
on preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural and coordinating conjunction commercials noun, plural and coordinating conjunction banners noun, plural and coordinating conjunction here adverb 's verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner thing noun, singular or mass look noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner thing noun, singular or mass it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present everywhere adverb !
where wh-adverb the determiner theater noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner premiere noun, singular or mass was verb, past tense located verb, past participle , all predeterminer the determiner billboards noun, plural were verb, past tense covered verb, past participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction posters noun, plural
over preposition or subordinating conjunction 100 cardinal number million cardinal number dollars noun, plural were verb, past tense spent verb, past participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural and coordinating conjunction advertising noun, singular or mass to to get verb, base form the determiner word noun, singular or mass out preposition or subordinating conjunction that determiner the determiner
and coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun think verb, non-3rd person singular present it personal pronoun really adverb shows verb, 3rd person singular present through preposition or subordinating conjunction all determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun branding verb, gerund or present participle and coordinating conjunction their possessive pronoun billboards noun, plural and coordinating conjunction even adverb
you personal pronoun could modal walk verb, base form through preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner shopping noun, singular or mass center noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction down particle a determiner street noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction the determiner advertising noun, singular or mass billboards noun, plural
this determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present our possessive pronoun image noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction only adverb the determiner artificial adjective light noun, singular or mass that determiner s proper noun, singular coming verb, gerund or present participle from preposition or subordinating conjunction all predeterminer the determiner billboards noun, plural
that preposition or subordinating conjunction i personal pronoun never adverb thought verb, past tense the determiner billboards noun, plural but coordinating conjunction you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present being verb, gerund or present participle able adjective to to break verb, base form into preposition or subordinating conjunction some determiner
talk verb, base form shows noun, plural and coordinating conjunction feature noun, singular or mass your possessive pronoun book noun, singular or mass on preposition or subordinating conjunction billboards noun, plural and coordinating conjunction magazines noun, plural and coordinating conjunction secure verb, base form reviews noun, plural and coordinating conjunction even adverb sell verb, base form
they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present web noun, singular or mass slinging verb, gerund or present participle through preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner city noun, singular or mass past adjective all predeterminer these determiner billboards noun, plural with preposition or subordinating conjunction jay noun, singular or mass jonah noun, singular or mass jameson proper noun, singular yelling verb, gerund or present participle

Use "billboards" in a sentence | "billboards" example sentences

How to use "billboards" in a sentence?

  • I definitely consider myself extremely blessed to have great partners in endorsing products. It's not about being on billboards. I endorse something because I believe in it.
    -Tim Tebow-
  • I always thought marketing in general was an interesting kind of thing. I always liked commercials and billboards.
    -Carrot Top-
  • I think that I shall never see A billboard lovely as a tree. Perhaps, unless the billboards fall, I'll never see a tree at all.
    -Ogden Nash-
  • According to one critic, my works looked like scraped billboards. I went to look at the billboards and decided that more billboards should be scraped.
    -Mark Tobey-
  • It feels great seeing posters everywhere, and bus stops promoting 'Black Nativity,' and billboards in Los Angeles. It's overwhelming. I can't wait for everybody to see what I got.
    -Jacob Latimore-
  • Opportunity is often difficult to recognize; we usually expect it to beckon us with beepers and billboards.
    -William Arthur Ward-
  • In general, the churches, visited by me often on weekdays... bore for me the same relation to God that billboards did to Coca-Cola; they promoted thirst without quenching it.
    -John Updike-
  • Way up in the nosebleeds we watched him on the screen, they'd hung between the billboards so cheaper seats could see.
    -Tom Petty-

Definition and meaning of BILLBOARDS

What does "billboards mean?"

/ˈbilbôrd/

noun
large outdoor board for displaying advertisements.
other
Large outdoor signboard with an ad on it.