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1When an idea is originally presented in a work of fiction, the creators probably thought it was the most insane, off the wall suggestion possible. But due to the influence of ValuesDissonance and TechnologyMarchesOn over time, the ideas presented, whether they be from a mental patient, a StrawmanPolitical, or just a cultural trend of the future that shows how low we've sunk, seem outright reasonable. In any case, the original author certainly didn't think so.
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3See also: AccidentallyCorrectWriting, HilariousInHindsight, HarsherInHindsight, OnceOriginalNowCommon, ScienceMarchesOn, StrawmanHasAPoint, ValuesResonance, and TheCuckoolanderWasRight.
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5For InUniverse examples where the writers invoke this on purpose, see ItWillNeverCatchOn.
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7----
8!!Examples:
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10[[foldercontrol]]
11
12[[folder:Advertising]]
13* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXKqdi0Wp0E One]] of the "Why haven't you called Advertising/{{GEICO}}?" ads from 2004 featured a fake reality show called ''Tiny House''. The ad was a good take on typical ads for reality shows of the time and probably fooled many people. The concept presented was two newlyweds who have to live together for one year in the titular tiny house. "The drama will be real... but it won't save you any money on car insurance." However, just look at the related videos on [=YouTube=] and you'll see a bunch of listings about actual tiny houses. Since the airing of the ad, an actual "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiny_house_movement tiny house movement]]" has gained a lot of traction, as well as ''actual'' reality shows about tiny houses such as ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiny_House_Nation Tiny House Nation]]''.
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16[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
17* The ''VideoGame/{{Area 88}}'' manga treated the use of armed drones in combat as alarming and strange. In the 21st century, drones are now an accepted part of warfare.
18* ''Anime/{{Gasaraki}}'' managed to do this ''three'' times, first with the U.S. invading a Middle Eastern country similar to Iraq on the basis of them having weapons of mass destruction, which turned out never to have existed, the use of unmanned flying drones becoming popular for use in the Army, and the idea that the U.S. could be nearly crippled by a global economic collapse. The only thing that hasn't happened yet is the MiniMecha for use in urban combat — and we're not that far from them either: many developed nations have the active research programs about them.
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21[[folder:Comic Books]]
22* The ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'' story, "The Laughing Fish", where ComicBook/TheJoker tries to declare the titular fish his intellectual property, sounded utterly ridiculous when first released and still did even in the 1990s, [[Recap/BatmanTheAnimatedSeriesE34TheLaughingFish when it was adapted by the animated series]]. But today, Joker's demand is reminiscent of how corporations routinely use genetic mapping to patent animal species.[[note]]The ''real'' problem is that (1) He's demanding ''copyright'' for what should be a patent issue, and (2) He's ''not'' using genetics to breed the fish into having smiles, but simply dumping poison onto already-born fish and disfiguring them. You know, like what he usually does to ''people''.[[/note]]
23* ComicStrip/DickTracy had a seemingly far-fetched wristwatch video cellphone called the "Two-Way Wrist TV" that looked fantastical at the time, but now...
24* In the ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' graphic novel ''[[Recap/TintinDestinationMoon Destination Moon]]'', Captain Haddock spends a lot of time ranting about how crazy Professor Calculus is for seriously attempting to send people to the moon. To anyone reading the book after 1969, Haddock is the one who sounds foolish.
25* ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' is an AlternateTimeline where the existence of costumed heroes and superheroes have a dramatic impact on the 20th century. One of the "Golden Age" heroes, Hollis Mason, a.k.a. Nite Owl, publicly retires and says he's going to run a car repair shop because it's simpler and car engines aren't going to radically change anytime soon. Dr. Manhattan, whose powers include matter manipulation, casually states that he is working on improving battery quality and synthesizing massive quantities of lithium and in the next few years (remember it's the '60s) electric cars make their way on the market. The idea of electric car proliferation was seen as every bit as fantastical as genetic engineering and Dr. Manhattan himself.
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28[[folder:Comic Strips]]
29* A 1920 British newspaper cartoon speculated on the impact of mobile phones, which had just been announced as a possibility in the future, and had them going off during weddings, in theaters, etc.
30* ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'': In one cartoon, Jon buys a "battery-powered battery charger", which is presented as a typical example of his [[TheDitz gullibility]]. Nowadays, it's fairly common for people to carry portable battery packs with which to recharge batteries in cell phones and other portable electronics when there's no electrical outlet handy.
31[[/folder]]
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33[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
34* ''Film/ShockTreatment'' is a strange 1981 film and sequel to ''Film/TheRockyHorrorPictureShow'' dealing with an everyday man being put through televised therapy and his girlfriend going fame mad after appearing on it. While there's something of a game show feel to the whole thing, it is otherwise a freakishly close to home prediction of tabloid TV, especially shows like ''Dr. Phil''.
35* The ubiquitous cell phones in ''Film/{{Clueless}}'' were meant to show how spoiled and wealthy the teenage characters were. Nowadays, people are more likely to be weirded out by the phones' size and outdated design rather than their presence.
36* ''Film/{{Heathers}}'' got made in the first place only because the idea of white, mid- to upper class high-schoolers killing each other was considered patently absurd. Post-UsefulNotes/{{Columbine}}, depending on the viewer's opinion, the movie either turns into DudeNotFunny, or is instead [[CrossesTheLineTwice all the funnier for its painful accuracy]].
37* The film ''Film/{{Network}}'', which revolves around the exploitation of a mentally unstable newscaster by a TV network for ratings, with events that would have been viewed as far-fetched back in the 1970s. Fast forward to the 21st century, where reality TV shows [[PointAndLaughShow ridicule and shame]] their contestants for sensational TV, and [[TwentyFourHourNewsNetworks 24-hour news networks]] have commentators ranting about the state of the world and what's wrong with it, and ''Network'' comes off as far less outrageous. Even the darkly comedic ending, which has the network executives [[spoiler:deciding to kill off the madman because the ratings for his TV show are dropping, and making his killers the stars of one of the network's reality shows in order to boost that show's UsefulNotes/{{ratings}}]], seems scarily plausible. Just look up what happened to R. Budd Dwyer.
38* ''Film/DemolitionMan'' presents the absolutely absurd idea that Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger became President of the USA... and when the main character asks how it happened, they say that he became Governor of California first. It's still unconstitutional for an immigrant to be president, though.
39* The premise of the 2008 thriller ''Film/EagleEye'' centers around two people who are spied on, tracked, and aided, and abetted by an A.I that can hack, and take control of things ranging from phones to cranes to even powerlines. Back then, such an idea was considered ridiculous, and something that could only exist in the realm of fiction. Not only is it now reality, it's actually a big problem that is projected to only going to get worse unless constant, and drastic preventatives are taken.
40* Several works of fiction that featured black presidents in a contemporary setting were often ridiculed for being unrealistic or overly optimistic about attitudes towards race. The lampooning died down when UsefulNotes/BarackObama was elected.
41* ''Film/TheSiege'' was about a terrorist attack against New York City, three years before 9/11. However, the World Trade Center was bombed in 1993, so the film had a precedent.
42* The Creator/DisneyChannel original movie ''Film/PixelPerfect'' features a VirtualCelebrity who is entirely holographic. But that's just science fiction and could never happen in real life, right? [[Music/{{Vocaloid}} Right?]]
43* ''Film/TomorrowNeverDies'' (1997): Although it [[TechnologyMarchesOn doesn't mention the Internet at all]], this film paints a surprisingly accurate picture of mass media scaremongering tactics today. Elliot Carver's line "Words are the new weapons; satellites, the new artillery" seemed plain hammy when first released, but the rise of 24-hour news networks, TV political pundits, increasingly polarized news judgments, and electronic warfare make it harder than ever. In addition to that, the major reason why the villain launches his whole scheme is because China refused to allow him access into their markets, similar to how many Western companies are either banned or must submit to heavy Chinese regulation to be able to operate within China today.
44* ''Film/{{Spaceballs}}'' (1987) has the joke about the [[ThePasswordIsAlwaysSwordfish silly password "12345"]], which is the code to ''both'' Druidia's air supply and President Skroob's luggage, that even some of the villains [[LampshadeHanging mock]]. Today it is one of the [[http://www.businessinsider.com/most-popular-passwords-of-2014-2015-1 most common passwords]], to the chagrin of network security experts everywhere.
45* ''Film/{{Americathon}}'' (1979) predicted several things: [[ChinaTakesOverTheWorld the rise of China as an economic superpower]], the growth of U.S. public debt, high energy prices, the decline of tobacco and the growing acceptability of marijuana, and the collapse of the USSR.
46* ''Film/{{Nighthawks}}'': At the time, the idea of a foreign terrorist attack on American soil was dismissed by some critics as ludicrous. Creator/SylvesterStallone himself later noted how prescient the plot was in 1993 after the bombing of the World Trade Center, and then of course 9/11 happened as well.
47* ''Film/{{Coneheads}}'': Seedling's suggestion to build an electrical fence along the Mexican border to prevent illegal immigrants from entering the country was utterly ludicrous at the time the movie was made (as shown by his superiors' reactions). Enter the '00s, when that exact same plan (minus the exploding collars) was seriously proposed several times, and in the '10s, one of UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump's greatest campaign promises was building a wall along the Mexican border.[[note]]Not that either is any less ludicrous, really...[[/note]]
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50[[folder:Literature]]
51%%* George Orwell's ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'' seemed rather absurd when it was published in 1949 and for many decades after. Now, not so much.
52* ''Literature/Fahrenheit451'' falls into Forgotten Trope territory. The TV sets in the movie were, in context of the fifties, ridiculously gigantic, and viewers would just look at them in awe of how unnecessarily large and room-centering they are. Today, [=TV=]s of such size are commonplace, and this is not something a modern viewer is likely to catch on to without knowledge of the original context.
53* ''Literature/TheMoteInGodsEye'' featured a parody of wine snobs, a "coffee connoisseur". When it was published, in the 1970s, the idea of someone taking coffee that seriously was inherently comical.
54* The novel ''Literature/ATaleOfTimeCity'' features a 42nd-century treat called a "butter-pie."[[note]][[Music/PaulMcCartney Butter pie? The butter wouldn't melt so I put it in a pie...]][[/note]] It is essentially a chilled cake on a stick, with a warm, buttery center. Not long after the book's writing, the "lava cake" became popular -- a cake with a solid exterior and molten interior. The only true difference between the two is the stick.
55* A Creator/JulesVerne example is the posthumously published ''Literature/ParisInTheTwentiethCentury''. Part of the reason the publisher rejected it whilst Verne was alive was that it was too unbelievable. Many modern commentators love to point out, however, just how accurate and resonant it is. (At the same time, others point out the things he missed, as well as the unbelievably pessimistic outlook, part of the reason the book got rejected in the first place!)
56* In the third ''Literature/{{Deathworld}}'' book (published in 1968), when Jason talks about how rich the uranium ore on another planet is, Meta says that a certain detail he mentions is obvious nonsense, and Jason admits he exaggerates. The detail is... that [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_nuclear_fission_reactor the ore can be used in reactors unrefined]].
57* One of the tales of Creator/HansChristianAndersen was entitled "In a Thousand Years". In it a couple on an aircraft visit the ruins of Europe. Do remember this was a long time before anything like an aircraft existed, and reads so naturally, some editions with drawings include a picture of a couple in a modern airplane seat with this story.
58* In the 1946 short story "A Logic Named Joe" by Murray Leinster, the network of "logics" (i.e. computers) suddenly develops greatly enhanced information processing abilities and starts providing information on everything from how to cure hangovers to how to commit [[ThePerfectCrime an untraceable murder]], which threatens to create problems much like those associated with the darker aspects of the modern Internet. On a lighter side, one popular use of "logics" is to rewatch past episodes of TV shows and/or cartoons. Video streaming, anyone?
59* A scene Creator/DouglasAdams wrote for ''Literature/LifeTheUniverseAndEverything'', but which didn't make it into the finished book, was written as Arthur's diary, and had him complaining that the pen Slartibartfast gave him kept writing words on its own based on what it thought he was thinking. Yes, Adams predicted predictive text.
60** Come to think of it, the titular GreatBigBookOfEverything from ''Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy'' series predicted both Website/TheOtherWiki and ebook readers. About the only thing it got wrong was the Guide being a single-purpose device rather than software installed on a portable computer, although there ''have'' been occasional attempts at making a dedicated "Wikipedia browser" device using obsolete PDA and e-reader parts, and it must be said that even with current technology a handheld device storing a complete offline copy of what's implied to be a truly ''enormous'' amount of data wouldn't have the storage space to be useful for much else anyway.[[note]]To put it in perspective, a complete data dump of every English-language article on Website/TheOtherWiki at time of writing is about 200GB including the browser app. Most tablets don't even have half that much internal storage even before being imaged with an operating system.[[/note]] The prop used in the TV series even looks a bit like the early laptop and handheld computers that would become available in the late 80s and early 90s.
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63[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
64* The first scene of ''Series/GetSmart'' (the 1965 series) involves the ''absolutely crazy'' idea of... a telephone ringing in the audience at a concert.
65* ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'' has [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uK92NYwBMts a sketch]] from 1969 that satirizes then-recent documentaries about homosexuality by substituting an invented alternative subculture where men dress up as mice. Since then, the rise of the UsefulNotes/FurryFandom has made the act of people dressing up as animals much more common.
66* ''Series/NotTheNineOClockNews'' later did the same thing but with fat (or [[InsistentTerminology stout]]) people as an oppressed group, and much the same defictionalization has since happened with the obesity debate.
67* Back in the day, ''Series/TheTwoRonnies'' did a sketch about the absolutely ludicrous idea of people paying money for bottled water, and paying large amounts for "expensive" bottles of water. WhoWouldBeStupidEnough Bottle water was also popular for centuries during the Enlightenment and Victorian eras. This was mainly because city water supplies were also as bad as dehydration. It was only around the time that water purification was done on a large scale that bottled water fell out of popularity. Or in other words, someone drinking from a public fountain is an example of this.
68* In ''Series/TheDickVanDykeShow'' episode "The Plots Thicken", Rob is flabbergasted while talking to a funeral home on the phone. After he gets off, he tells Laura, "How do you like that?! They have a layaway plan. You pay now, and go later." Nowadays, many people prepay for their "final expenses" without a second thought.
69* The ''Series/DoctorWho'' story "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS2E8TheChase The Chase]]" begins with Ian bopping to Music/TheBeatles on the timescanner. When he jokingly remarks that future girl Vicki has probably never heard of the Beatles she is indignant: "Of ''course'' I know about them. I've been to their Memorial Theatre in Liverpool. But I never knew they played classical music!" The idea of a memorial concert hall doesn't seem so silly in the 21st century.
70* The 2004 ''Series/JonathanCreek'' episode "Gorgon's Wood" had David Renwick satirise {{Reality Show}}s by imagining the most grotesquely unpleasant and gratuitous programme for Adam Klaus to be stuck on. In ''Animal Farm'', Klaus literally has to live like a pig. A mere five years later, BBC Three created ''My Life as an Animal''.
71* The ''Series/{{KYTV}}'' episode "2000 'n' Whither" made as many intentionally ludicrous predictions about the future as it could - one of them being ransomware.
72* The ''Series/RowanAndMartinsLaughIn'' news segment featured news items twenty years in the future. In a late 1968, show they reported (for the lols, obviously) that UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan would be president and that the UsefulNotes/BerlinWall would come down. Twenty years later, give or take a month or so, guess what happened.
73* A political sketch on German TV featured a strange auction: prices went down. Punchline was that the unemployed bid on the payment for a job. This was decades before "My Hammer" and the likes. For "standard" jobs, the thought is still a satire, but turbo capitalism marches on...
74* The season 1 ''Series/{{House}}'' episode "Role Model" has the patient of the week, an African-American United States senator, running for president. The episode both directly and indirectly pillories as unrealistic his odds of winning the White House. Fast forward four years and [[UsefulNotes/BarackObama an African-American US senator being elected president]] suddenly doesn't seem so unrealistic anymore.
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78[[folder:Music]]
79* Eric Prydz' video for his CoverVersion of Music/PinkFloyd's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IttkDYE33aU&list=RDIttkDYE33aU&start_radio=1 Proper Education]] showing kids committing vandalism by showing eco-friendly solutions in a tower block was seen as a bit eccentric in 2006, but 13 years later, when Greta Thunberg started to come into the public eye, it proved they were a bit ahead of their time, considering that in 2006, it was still the remnants of the UsefulNotes/WarOnTerror era, and that being "green" was seen as uncool.
80* When Music/FrankZappa released ''We're Only in It for the Money'' on May 4, 1968, a lot of people thought he had JumpedTheShark due to the number of songs describing police killing hippies. Just over two years later on May 4, 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen shot and killed four students at Kent State University.
81* Music/TomLehrer wrote a song called "George Murphy" in 1965, including it on his album ''Music/ThatWasTheYearThatWas''; it's a satiric mockery of an ex-showtunes star turned (Republican) senator and his statements about importing cheap Mexican labor to displace American farmers. Fifteen years later UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan was president and illegal immigration "taking jobs from Americans" had become a hot topic in American politics. In fact the lyrics to "George Murphy" include the opening lines:
82-->''Hollywood's often tried to mix\
83Show business and politics\
84From Helen Gahagan\
85To... [laugh] ''Ronald Reagan''?! ''
86** On the other hand, "MLF Lullaby" mistrustfully satirizes the supposedly peaceful intentions of the German military, an attitude which undoubtedly was quite reasonable in the wake of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, but feels rather paranoid and out of place to modern listeners who may not even remember a time before the Berlin Wall fell.
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89[[folder:Radio]]
90* One episode of ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' had Seagoon receive a telephone call on a phone he was carrying in his pocket. Random surrealism in the 1950s; daily life for millions in the 2010s.
91* ''Radio/TheShadow'' regularly included storylines intended to be as shocking and outlandish to the listening audience as possible; storylines such as... a town being afflicted with drug addicts (opium, from which the street drug known as heroin would later be derived), a politician being snagged in a bribery scandal (decades before Abscam), identity theft (with deceased people's passports rather than Social Security numbers) and counterfeit money plaguing a city. There was also a story about a shell-shocked veteran taking to shooting people with a silenced sniper rifle from high buildings, anticipating several all-too-real incidents of crime and terrorism by decades.
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94[[folder:Video Games]]
95* The original ''VideoGame/{{Tropico}}'' had "Pop Singer" as a possible background, in part so that pseudo-JokeCharacter Lou Bega (best known for "Mambo No. 5 (A Little Bit Of...)") could be properly represented in-game. In 2010, [[Music/TheFugees Wyclef Jean]] ran for the presidency of UsefulNotes/{{Haiti}}.
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98[[folder:Web Original]]
99* In a 1998 installment of the web humor column ''[[Creator/LoreSjoberg The Book of Ratings]]'', the "Mystical Creatures" rating contains a sarcastic quip about vampires going the way of the unicorn: "If it hasn't happened already, in a few months look for airbrushed posters of sad vampires in Wal-Marts everywhere, and in a decade look for female college students saying to each other "Were you into vampires when you were nine? Me too! We were such dorks!" Yeah, [[Literature/TheTwilightSaga about that...]]
100* In January 2000, Website/TheOnion ran an article titled "[[http://www.theonion.com/articles/area-man-consults-internet-whenever-possible,1515/ Area Man Consults Internet Whenever Possible]]". The idea was to satirize people who were obsessed with the Internet and made a point of using it for routine tasks. Some of the things Area Man uses the Internet for in the article are checking on movie times, getting directions, getting recipes, looking up colleges, and looking up word definitions — in other words, things that everybody would eventually use the Internet for all the time just a few years later.
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103[[folder:Western Animation]]
104* ''WesternAnimation/ACharlieBrownChristmas'', released in the mid-sixties, has Sally ask for money for Christmas and suggest "tens and twenties". While that amount of money is still absurd to give a child Sally's age fifty-plus years after the special's airing, inflation has resulted in it no longer sounding as excessive; in early-21st century terms, she's asking for the equivalent of fifties and hundreds.
105* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'', from 1994, includes a quick joke about RidiculousFutureSequelisation. The film in question? ''Film/HomeAlone 5''. ''Home Alone'' (which at the time only had [[Film/HomeAlone2LostInNewYork one sequel]]) hit its [[Film/HomeAloneTheHolidayHeist fifth]] installment in 2012, and released a ''[[Film/HomeSweetHomeAlone sixth]]'' film in 2021.
106* On ''WesternAnimation/DastardlyAndMuttleyInTheirFlyingMachines'', Dick Dastardly had essentially the UsefulNotes/WorldWarI version of the cell phone. The short "Ice See You" implies that it's a ''video'' cell phone.
107* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Doug}}'', Doug's grandma, who is presented as a wild and crazy CoolOldLady with a taste for the exotic, takes Doug to the most unimaginable and unusual place possible for lunch: a sushi restaurant. Fast forward to the 2010s, and sushi has become a mainstay of American cuisine, so much so that it would be more unusual for a kid of Doug's age to ''not'' know what sushi was.
108* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/DocMcStuffins'' revolves around a toy who doesn't want to be taken to the toy hospital because she's afraid she'll get sick there. The other toys reassure her that she has nothing to worry about, as a hospital is a place to help you get better, not someplace where you'll get sick. However, in the real world there's been a deepening public health crisis involving antibiotic-resistant infections people have picked up while staying in hospitals, and the Center for Disease Control estimates there are as many as 90,000 deaths a year from diseases acquired in hospitals. Given this, adult viewers in the know could easily see this toy's concern as being legitimate, especially given that they're taking her to a hospital she hasn't been able to personally check into to see if it's up to standard.
109* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
110** The show unintentionally predicted Creator/{{Disney}} buying Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox in the 1998 episode "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E5WhenYouDishUponAStar When You Dish Upon a Star]]".
111** The FlashForward episode "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS11E17BartToTheFuture Bart to the Future]]" from 2000 had Lisa Simpson becoming President of the United States, struggling to resolve problems caused by her predecessor, UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump. In 2016, Trump was elected president, defying all expectations. [[http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2016/mar/17/simpsons-president-trump-prediction-was-meant-as-warning-to-us Writer Dan Greaney said in an interview]] that he'd chosen Trump as president because it "just seemed like the logical last stop before hitting bottom. It was pitched because it was consistent with the vision of America going insane."
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114[[folder:Real Life]]
115* In the 1980s, there was a [[PublicServiceAnnouncement public service announcement-style]] movie shown in Australian schools about understanding the coercive influence of advertising. In order to illustrate the point, it included an attractive phony advertisement for the craziest product imaginable: bottled water.
116* Paleo-artist Luis Rey (whose work is, among many others, featured in ''Literature/DinosaursTheMostCompleteUpToDateEncyclopedia'') had been blacklisted by the British paleontologist community in the '90s because he gave his dinosaurs feathers and flamboyant colors. But ScienceMarchesOn, some dinosaurs are now known to have been ''very'' crazy-looking, and today this highly popular and sought-after dino artist actually considers his work to be rather conservative.
117* Creator/ArthurCClarke once said that we'd have a working SpaceElevator about 50 years after everyone stopped ridiculing the very notion. Almost everyone has.
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