I can’t tell if I feel a little creeped out or it’s just adjusting to the next step of AI-ness.
Amongst all the nonsense I see on Facebook these days, I’m starting to see videos of movie stars hugging each other, one the younger version of the other.
At first I thought that was cool. This is young Russell Crowe from Gladiator hugging an old, oversized version of himself. Here is a young Keanu Reeves Point Break age hugging a 60-year-old long haired version of himself.
Then it started getting creepy.
Half the ones I see are younger versions hugging an AI older version of themselves with wings, meaning they have passed along.
Maybe it’s that I don’t like being reminded of my own mortality by all those wings.
Unless someone is taken younger in life, your last memory of them is the last time you saw them. I don’t try guessing what my parents or my son would look like today — I’m happy with the memories I have.
Same is true with movie and music stars.
I loved the Beatles when I was in my early teens. They were cute and bubbly and dreamy, and, like millions of others, I fell in love with them then and there. I don’t care about the older hippy versions or the old balding versions I see cross my Facebook. I want to remember them as I loved them.
Maybe this is one of those “living in the past” moments.
But what is life but looking back at moments? The moment I type this blog the words are in the past. You don’t need to see a picture of my high school graduation to know it’s still me.
If I want to see younger versions of famous people I’ll Google them or watch their movies.
I’ll hug those in wings when I get there.