I'm assuming this will be a realistic look into a possible future, correct?A couple quick notes from the main thread:
It was mentioned by @OvertheHorizon that it would probably be best to start by asking, what is the story we are trying to tell?
What do the people of today, care about the most in regards to the future.
And as a suggestion, we should probably look further forward than the first Horizons did, which was a future that was supposedly some 30 to 40 years away. I suggest looking 100 years forward into the 22nd century.
As a result, I like the idea officially calling the attraction: Horizons, Century IV.
Thoughts?
I'm assuming this will be a realistic look into a possible future, correct?
Excellent. Okay, I just wanted to verify before we started so there's no confusion as to what we want to include. I also agree with @spacemt354 suggestion of possibly using different locations.It probably should, given what's happened in other works that looked into what the future would be like, (if you'll recall, the original Tomorrowland at Disneyland looked into the far far future of 1986.) Perhaps one scene should acknowledge that what will see (or just saw) is only a guess based on what we know today, and that it could look vastly different when we actually get there.
Excellent. Okay, I just wanted to verify before we started so there's no confusion as to what we want to include. I also agree with @spacemt354 suggestion of possibly using different locations.
I watched a video of floating cities that could end up saving humanity if the ice caps melt and the continents start to flood. This seems like to step in the right direction as far as tech. Something the average person has not seen before but still grounded in real world issues and tech.
For space I'd also look to some moons in the outer Solar System, that could possibly be future deep space missionsYES!! And for space, we could talk about colonies on the moon or other planets. I know NASA's been talking about colonizing mars for years now.
I imagine that 100 years from now, Mars would at least have a decent sized village, if not a full on city.
I agree that we should be thinking about what we care about most for the future. What kind of a world do we want for our children and grandchildren.A couple quick notes from the main thread:
It was mentioned by @OvertheHorizon that it would probably be best to start by asking, what is the story we are trying to tell?
What do the people of today, care about the most in regards to the future.
And as a suggestion, we should probably look further forward than the first Horizons did, which was a future that was supposedly some 30 to 40 years away. I suggest looking 100 years forward into the 22nd century.
As a result, I like the idea officially calling the attraction: Horizons, Century IV.
Thoughts?
I agree that we should be thinking about what we care about most for the future. What kind of a world do we want for our children and grandchildren.
On the topic of Century IV. (Building from a prior suggested name of Century III.) When Epcot opened in 1982, America had just entered its third century as a nation. If that is what Century III referred to, then perhaps we might want to give it a less American outlook and more of a world outlook - especially in view of Epcot as site for the world to visit. Century 22?
To the extent that Horizons (1983) was seen as a successor to the Carousel of Progress, one of the underlying themes was how "labor saving devices" and technology transformed our lives and gave us more time for leisure activities. Based on a few earlier suggestions that have been tossed out, there are now thoughts about how we can sustain our lives on this planet with growing population, global warming, etc. I've also mentioned how technology has added to the "clutter" of our lives. In the spirit of brainstorming (I believe in tossing out ideas because it will hopefully prompt other - different - ideas) what if our focus was on harnessing the human spirit to solve problems. Almost a flip side - the practical side - of an imagination pavilion.
I kind of agree. I did a New Horizons prompt a while back, and I had the "look back" portion in the queue where people can look and be informed there, but if bypassed won't affect the attraction. I'm partial to keeping the attraction relegated to a look towards the future instead of a combination of past and future. Just my opinion though.In my view, what dated Horizons was the "look back" portions of the ride. "Future from the 50s" - for the 45 - 55 year olds that saw the attraction when it opened represented a futuristic view of things when they were children/teens. But twenty years later it wasn't relevant to most riders.
I've been thinking that whatever prelude the attraction requires should be a "current" look. In many ways, the vision of desert colony, space colony, and undersea colony would still be relevant today (not suggesting we recreate those).
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