“With a purposeful grimace and a terrible sound, he pulls the spitting high
tension wires down.” In 1977 the band Blue Öyster Cult released the song
Godzilla. In 2019 a cover of the song was included in the non-stop Godzilla
franchise, “Godzilla: King of the Monsters”. Eminem also released a sweet
Godzilla tune with a run time of 3:30 in 2020, charting world-wide. For those
who cannot remember, the original rock song “Godzilla”, it was a massive
stadium-rock-level hit which carried a song titled “Nosferatu” on the B-side of
the record. It is safe to say that by 1977 very few minds in this world were
“free” of the delivery mechanism that is Godzilla. The imaginary creature first
entered public consciousness in 1954 via Toho Co., Ltd. who released 33
Godzilla films. The franchise is still going strong to this day, to include
many television shows and cameos, comic books, merchandise, video games and
books. The lyrics from 1977 that I used in the title of this episode, and
opening text, come as close as anything to explaining why this
radio-active-monster is so firmly fixed in the world mind. “History shows again
and again, how nature points out the folly of men.” But, in actuality, there is
a core reason, among many reasons, for the ongoing production of Godzilla
content. In a word, that reason is programming. In two words – social
engineering… with a steroidal boost due to popularity and iconic standing on
the world stage. And to be clear, this is in no way peculiar to the Godzilla
franchise. This is true of entertainment as a whole. One could easily argue
that the core reason for all entertainment, at this point, is to manipulate
culture world-wide. One proof of this is the gender and race games currently
being played with some of the most loved TV and film franchises, regardless of
audience and income loss. This is about what can be “normalized” into culture
in a world where culture is increasingly a product of entertainment, and in
some countries, like the US, culture has been based on music, TV and film, for
a very long time. Young minds currently exposed to entertainment delivered
programming will look back with nostalgia as adults, at which point the
conscious, and subconscious programming will be firmly embedded in culture.
Questions: Has Godzilla had any effect on how your family thinks about and
considers dinosaurs, nuclear radiation, space and the Big Bang “theory”? How
about if you add Godzilla to every TV show and film they have ever
“experienced”? Has it then played a major role in how your family thinks about
the world, to include what you accept as real – or possible? “Oh no, there goes
Chernobyl, Go, Go Godzilla, yeah.”
Original post on Crrow777 Radio