As the last two movies box office have shown no one cares about the reviews.
The fact that these are considered moderate budgets make me feel old as dirt. I still remember the Hollywoo scuttlebutt about how insane it was that Terminator 2 cost $100 million to make.![]()
Because money is inherently imaginary.I admit, I've never really understood inflation. Why is it that a book that cost $2.50 when I was a kid would cost $16 or more today? Why does the amount you can buy for a dollar keep decreasing? Why doesn't it ever go the other way? It all seems so arbitrary.
It made less at a point in time when many cinemas around the world were closed or operating at limited capacity.
How quickly we forget history.
I admit, I've never really understood inflation. Why is it that a book that cost $2.50 when I was a kid would cost $16 or more today? Why does the amount you can buy for a dollar keep decreasing? Why doesn't it ever go the other way? It all seems so arbitrary.
Because money is inherently imaginary.
Er, I'm the farthest thing from an economist, but the answer seems obvious to me: there are far more humans around than when you were a kid, and all those humans mean more people making money. More people making money means more competition for limited resources, and that drives prices ever higher. (Real estate is the clearest example of this, because, as Lex Luthor noted in Superman Returns, land is the one thing nobody's making more of.) Higher prices require higher incomes, thus maintaining that darn old wealth gap that endures in virtually all modern societies, and higher incomes normalize and lock in higher prices, such that prices rarely go significantly down.
Likewise, fewer consumers means cheaper products. At the end of a school year, college students without space in their cars (or who're flying home) will give/discard all sorts of chairs and lamps mini-fridges and stuff away, not because the stuff is suddenly broken or has no utility, but because no one's offering them any money for it. And surely we all remember how cheap used cars were after the Snap?![]()
It does for technology.... computers with less memory than a basic Word file or conputing power of a modern coffemaker cost thousands of dollars 35 years ago. Or my basement TV... 17 years ago this 50 inch cost us $1500 plus interest in installment payments. I can get a bigger one (but weighing less) with higher definition and waaaay more apps for like $300I admit, I've never really understood inflation. Why is it that a book that cost $2.50 when I was a kid would cost $16 or more today? Why does the amount you can buy for a dollar keep decreasing? Why doesn't it ever go the other way? It all seems so arbitrary.
A blind man on a galloping horse?Aaaaaanyway.
Venom 3 is getting a lot of mediocre-to-bad reviews. Who could have possibly seen that coming?!![]()
It does for technology.... computers with less memory than a basic Word file or conputing power of a modern coffemaker cost thousands of dollars 35 years ago. Or my basement TV... 17 years ago this 50 inch cost us $1500 plus interest in installment payments. I can get a bigger one (but weighing less) with higher definition and waaaay more apps for like $300
Which shows just how poorly Morbius (roughly broke even) and Madame Web (bombed) did at the box office.
The fact that these are considered moderate budgets make me feel old as dirt. I still remember the Hollywoo scuttlebutt about how insane it was that Terminator 2 cost $100 million to make.![]()
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