A viral game change

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MEDICINE

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ADATO

A VIRAL GAME CHANGE?

01_20

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How It All Started

A Viral Game Change?

https://www.youtube. com/watch?v=ImaH51F4HBw

WATCH THE LECTURE Marshall Mcluhan Full lecture: The medium is the message (1977)

Dana Popescu

I wrote this article while sheltering in place at my home in Luxembourg this past April. Since the end of 2019, the whole world has been facing a health crisis, a pandemic of a new deadly virus. During this period, I have realised that I am living in a connected world, in constant interaction with other people in the virtual world, while being isolated in the real world. In this context, I felt that we no longer can approach the idea of a virus in a traditional way* (please see the note at the end of this article). I wish to define the term from a more radical perspective, with the « virus » as the spirit of our time, its « Zeitgeist ». This article will help the reader better understand how the world has evolved into a connected bubble, spreading ideas and western life models through media and the internet. Travelling is one of the habits of wealthy societies, and it has historically exacerbated the rapid spread of pandemics, to the point where this time around countries and regions closed their respective borders in the hopes of containing the virus. This article concludes by exploring how the world may develop in the future, in the near and long term. I wish to thank a good friend who wishes to remain anonymous for her help in writing on this subject.

A New Religion or “The medium is the message”

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Marshall McLuhan, 1965 © CBC Still Photo Collection

Our understanding of the word “virus” has been evolving since the internet became ubiquitous in the late 1990s. According to Collins Dictionary, “Going viral” describes the phenomenon of a “video, image, or story [that] spreads quickly and widely on the Internet through social media and e-mail.” The most “viral” video to date has been “Despacito” by Luis Fonsi ft. Daddy Yankee, which has racked up nearly 7 Billion views on YouTube. In his 1964 book Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man, Canadian media theorist Marshal McLuhan explains his most-often-cited phrase: “the medium is the message.” Succinctly, with this idea McLuhan claims that different media, from books to radio and television, modify the effect of the message they convey. The word “message” refers to the idea of modern media (primarily television in McLuhan’s time) becoming an extension of the human senses. Information from a book, McLuhan would say, is more linear and oriented towards a precise idea and type of reader. Television on the other hand reaches more auditors in a so-called “tribal way;” it’s a much more sensorial method of communication, one that conditions the viewer to adopt a state of mind, from which it is difficult to take a step back. McLuhan anticipated and described the phenomenon of shrinking cultures with the expansion of technology as the “global village” we are living in today. The key idea is society’s shift towards immersion in electronic media, adapting to multiple sources of information that arrive simultaneously and becoming more concerned to integrate a group identity.

The Global Village in Isolation Since the end of the 20th century, globalized markets have flourished in large part due to the convergence of ideas and demand created by the media. Prior to globalization, people wanted more and more of the same. Technology pushed forward the virtual commercial platforms as an alternative to local vendors. Everything seems at our disposal to enable us to avoid direct contact with each other. The global community, however, encountered a new challenge in December of last year when China identified the spread of a novel human virus. By January, China had 11 million people in quarantine. As people continued to travel, the virus spread quickly to other continents. Soon Europe, Australia, America, and Africa recorded infections. Entire countries


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