Man After Man is Gross

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BewareCast

BewareCast

Күн бұрын

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Пікірлер: 315
@i.l.l.l.l.
@i.l.l.l.l. Жыл бұрын
The creepiest, most unsettling All Tomorrows images (like that of The Colonials) are downright charming compared to anything in Man After Man. The Man After Man illustrations are just willfully ugly. They're good illustrations made by a talented artist, but they look very deliberately gross.
@kookbrah640
@kookbrah640 Жыл бұрын
All tomorrows succeeded what man after man tried to do with their artistic depictions. All tomorrows was very unsettling and stayed with me for a while. Man after man was just ugly and kinda stupid
@chang7347
@chang7347 Жыл бұрын
That is the entire point....
@eggbag4182
@eggbag4182 10 ай бұрын
One of the most important evolutions in All Tomorrows is an incredibly lanky person with a several inch long butthole idk if it’s really exempt
@ochettekamishashan6814
@ochettekamishashan6814 9 ай бұрын
they would take the hottest, sexiest models on earth and still draw them as eldritch abominations
@That_One_French_Lad
@That_One_French_Lad Ай бұрын
That's why they're great
@dimanosov5393
@dimanosov5393 Жыл бұрын
I think the big difference between the two novels is hope All Tomarrows is humanity going through horrific apocalypses, one after the other, but there's always that base human drive to survive and thrive and conquer and love and hate and be tender and control through it Man after Man is... return to monke never come back
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
You've said exactly what I wanted to say.
@robertpatter5509
@robertpatter5509 11 ай бұрын
Return to Le Monke.
@AverageBloxxer-425
@AverageBloxxer-425 11 ай бұрын
M O N K E
@AverageBloxxer-425
@AverageBloxxer-425 11 ай бұрын
*Tomorrows
@Spiritstage
@Spiritstage 4 ай бұрын
Based on
@ultimazillarex1076
@ultimazillarex1076 Жыл бұрын
My main gripe with Man After Man is, like you said, how misanthropic it is. It's bad enough I see that mindset everywhere else, especially on the Internet. This is also one of the main reasons I love All Tomorrows; overall, it is far more optimistic in regards to humanity.
@The_Natalist
@The_Natalist Жыл бұрын
I really hated how misanthropic this story is, like i had a very visceral reaction to it. Partly it bothered me that: Realistically, the common folk would have A: survived, the natural disaster wasn't nearly bad enough to kill them, and B: they would have likely gone full political extremists on the tics and their creations. It implies that people are too incompetent to live in this world we have lived in for so long, and frankly that offends me. Its a total crap on the human spirt.
@jdhh1801
@jdhh1801 11 ай бұрын
Lmao if you think a story like this is so misanthropic just look at real life and where our species is headed.
@ultimazillarex1076
@ultimazillarex1076 11 ай бұрын
@@jdhh1801 Maybe if you overcame your inherent negativity bias like I have, you’d see things a bit differently.
@The_Natalist
@The_Natalist 11 ай бұрын
@@ultimazillarex1076 *_I HATE KLAUS SCHAWB, I WILL NOT EAT THE BUGS_* ahem, excuse me.
@ultimazillarex1076
@ultimazillarex1076 11 ай бұрын
@@The_Natalist What are you saying?
@typicaldoomer7196
@typicaldoomer7196 Жыл бұрын
I love speculative evolution but Man After Man just makes me feel ill for some reason, it's awesome but the art/the way afterhumans are portrayed are gross and creepy
@mymom1462
@mymom1462 Жыл бұрын
exactly same
@IwouldBeImmortal
@IwouldBeImmortal Жыл бұрын
To me thats exactly the point tho, I love this feeling I got the first time I listened to the audiobook, of humanity doing horrific things to itself and theses horrendous creatures suffering the consequences. Being themselves something that our brains instinctively feels its wrong, shouldn't even exist.
@minimayhem1996
@minimayhem1996 Жыл бұрын
I mean, there's a lot of humans that are pretty gross and creepy. So to that extent, it's quite accurate.
@FrancisTheBerd
@FrancisTheBerd 11 ай бұрын
I mean all tomorrows can be just as gross with their distorted cones of meat with muitlated genitalia
@somerandomdudeonline637
@somerandomdudeonline637 10 ай бұрын
yeah, I think even Dougal was speculative about this book considering that most of these were extremely bizarre even for the author
@shads3955
@shads3955 Жыл бұрын
It’s weird how the Colonials from All Tomorrows don’t phase me nearly as much as the Mechanical Hitek Humans from Man After Man
@kanna-san.
@kanna-san. Жыл бұрын
Colonials got the happy ending they deserved.
@lilmisstarabear
@lilmisstarabear Жыл бұрын
I prefer All Tomorrows, it's easier to read and more interesting, but what ruined an otherwise ok read for me was the constant humanity sucks message through it all. Especially the ending. Yes, all the post human species eventually died out in All Tomorrows but there was a message that they were still there, their stories mattered and deserved to be told. Man after Man was like: "And then everyone died and good riddance, the universe never knew or cared." It was depressing and hard to care about the characters you met along the way.
@demonking86420
@demonking86420 Жыл бұрын
What's funny is MaM went out of its way to craft individuals from each species, from name, to current struggle they're going through. You get names like Cralym, Jimez Smoot, Kyshu Kristaan, Haron Solto, etc. But you don't really empathize with them. AT didn't do that, and yet it made you care about the posthumans more. The closest AT went to making individualized descriptions of each species was in the pictures, best examples are with the Pterosapien, Assymetric, and the Bug Facer. I agree with what BtQ said about how Dixon kinda lets it(his misanthropy) show through the writing
@cmkosemen
@cmkosemen 6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the shout-out! :) I'm always happy when my creations inspire others...
@senorMckenzie
@senorMckenzie Жыл бұрын
Man After Man and All Tomorrows both left me like physically sick and mentally scared for a few days after learning about them and seeing the pictures. I was a bit more prepared for Man After Man cus I saw All Tomorrows first but it still just left me with a gross feeling. But it didn't take away from how cool they both are and introduced me to the topic. Ofc All Tomorrows is better but Man After Man still is quite formative for this extremely niche topic.
@nomi_M
@nomi_M Жыл бұрын
I think you verbalized exactly how it made me feel the first time I checked it out, as you said physically sick/grossed out. It's weird, some concepts and designs in AT came pretty close but not quite.
@harambo88
@harambo88 Жыл бұрын
ignorant ppl are way more disgusting than nature.
@saulgoodmanKAZAKH
@saulgoodmanKAZAKH Жыл бұрын
I guess body horror is not your thing, huh?
@senorMckenzie
@senorMckenzie Жыл бұрын
I mean there's good and bad ones, all tomorrows does it well, man after man not such much. Some movies do it well others its just the shock factor. I think that's why I liked all tomorrows so much cus it stuck with me for so long just thinking about it. Movies like human centipede are just dumb (idk if that's a hot take or not) and while it can "stick" with you it's not in the same way as good body horror. But no I don't actively seek out the genre cus it can make me sick lmao@@saulgoodmanKAZAKH
@Sluggadome_Rotunda_Bernardson
@Sluggadome_Rotunda_Bernardson 9 ай бұрын
@@saulgoodmanKAZAKHbut that’s like the whole point of body horror, so it is his thing
@MosheMedia2000
@MosheMedia2000 Жыл бұрын
I'm grateful for your audiobook of 'Man After Man' cause I'd wanted to read it since I was prolly a Junior or Senior in High School. I'm 34 now; the book is so outrageously priced it was never feasible. It usually runs around $90-$200USD. Much obliged to you! 😎✌️
@AetherNoble
@AetherNoble Жыл бұрын
I feel you, I looked up the price on Amazon once and had my dreams shattered too 😂
@michaelamend3637
@michaelamend3637 Жыл бұрын
Same!
@JeevasJerico13
@JeevasJerico13 Жыл бұрын
I completely agree with your opinion on the whole "anti human" idea. We are so much more than our heads of state.
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Exactly.
@ametxa9
@ametxa9 2 ай бұрын
On one level I agree with you, but on the other, its unfortunate because we don't make the history books like our corrupt heads of state do and I think Man After Man leans heavily onto that which I personally enjoy, but I understand if others don't.
@ametxa9
@ametxa9 2 ай бұрын
As a big fan of Man After Man, I completely understand your critiques. I did attend university for anthropology so maybe that influenced my view on it that it isn't as otherworldly as All Tomorrows (which is also fantastic), but I also tend to lean towards the more cynical. The art definitely made me feel ill as well and I think that was intentional. Great vid!
@Spiritstage
@Spiritstage 6 күн бұрын
I mean, it doesn’t mean that people are gonna shut up about the whole left and right side of of view and basically racism and sexism. Religious. Stuff I’m mean why give a shit anymore about are kind. of we see depressing stuff happening basically I’m have a considerate family who is bath ties and born Christian why care about anything human doesn’t matter if Asian, black, white I’m basically whites so no matter what people think about me being racist towards people, even with my confederate family I do agree with the book on this anyway, back to the subject of humanity. Indian. Native American. South American, Russia,Korean, Australian this even goes to sexuality too gay, straight,transgender, bisexual,pansexul, and religion, Jewish,Catholic, islamic. Does not really care anymore basically this book speaks the truth about pathetic human lives. On anyone who thinks white people or any sort of color is perfect. You’re just a product.
@razkrunk3169
@razkrunk3169 Жыл бұрын
The illustrations remind me of old science text book diagrams. I didnt find them horribly unsettling, but entirely fascinating. Especially towards the end when they it turned more into body horror with grotesque human forms.
@DarthInsomnis
@DarthInsomnis Жыл бұрын
To add to your thoughts on All Tomorrow’s: I think because the book is shorter, and the creatures CM created, along with the more imaginative scenario he put fourth, I believe that that combo sets up a more engaging and interesting story. You look at Man After Man, the story just seems more tedious than anything, and after the first read through, there’s really nothing to draw you back to want to read it again when compared to All Tomorrows
@ronan2004
@ronan2004 Жыл бұрын
I wish the book spent more time focused on the hitek, a society where everybody is too fucked up to function properly is both horrifying and intriguing.
@SiriusSphynx
@SiriusSphynx Жыл бұрын
One of the things I did like about man after man was the ending and how it tied into this running theme of what it means to be "a man" for each of the creatures. You have all the various creatures seeing themselves as a true person while looking down on the other creatures they interact with. The theme was sharply noted with one of the monkey tribes that interacted with the fish guy that was stranded. There is a brief moment of empathy that was quickly torn down. You also had humanity leaving with hope in the future only to return later seemingly unaware that Earth was their home planet and they just ravaged it and move on as that is what they do now since they are a completely different species. There was this very loose definition of humanity as being the superior creature, with a divine right to everything, and that there is nothing else like you. And without getting into rather that is true or not I just found it interesting how it was laid out. That being said I do think all tomorrow's was better. Also I do believe that our understanding of DNA is different now. We've come to understand that it's a lot more subtle and not the straightforward code of life that we thought it was. For instance there are two very different creatures (I can't recall what they are) that have exactly the same DNA structure but how that encryption is read by the mother's egg determines how the organism will grow. So in a sense DNA doesn't hold all the information it's just the content of a code but the context of the code is in the mother's egg. And one last thing you do make a very good point about people hating on Humanity. I struggle with that sentimentality too but when I stop to really reflect I realize deep down inside that that's not really what I think. When you get away from the media, and perhaps driving on the roads, you realize most people really are decent normal people thet usually just want to be left alone.
@Sluggadome_Rotunda_Bernardson
@Sluggadome_Rotunda_Bernardson 9 ай бұрын
Very good points all around, love this comment bro. Haven’t read either of these books I just think his voice is nice so I fall asleep to it
@EvilSnips
@EvilSnips Жыл бұрын
I have to address, Man after Man is definitely a glass-half-empty approach when it comes to humanity and it also takes place on a much shorter time scale so that is why the humans are less evolved. I feel like in 1 million years humans would have a sort of uncanny valley look rather than true alien.
@42NORRIS
@42NORRIS Жыл бұрын
Not only did I find the images disgusting but the idea of humanity failing to protect itself and the environment we live in and are forced by both nature and its own hand to transform into bizarre "monstrosities" is highly disturbing.😮
@a_Potato_person
@a_Potato_person Жыл бұрын
humans genetical modifying humans:NOOOOOOO cool ailens genetical modifying humans:yeees
@zombiesalmon4997
@zombiesalmon4997 Жыл бұрын
Man after man or “how to give yourself free nightmares” as its known elsewhere, was definitely my first major plunge into the speculative evolution pipeline. I remember seeing some images of it in science class one afternoon in highschool and being so impressed by the pictures. It was so unlike any other evolution or science book id even seen at the time. Seeing human faces on animal like beings messed my young mind up for a few days. Even the story itself without the genetically modified people feels slightly cursed. Brilliant video as always, Mr. Qu 💙
@alexlea6777
@alexlea6777 Жыл бұрын
The thing with Man after Man that really gives me issues are not the illustrations, not the long intro chapters before we get to the main story, but just the overall depressing mood of the book. If we remember, the goal of the Hitek was to repopulate the wild areas of the planet in the hopes that one of the post human species would be able to restart human civilization...and none of them succeeded in doing so. The travelers say (as Dixon wrote) "it is a sign of strength that they know to make their life easier, but ignore the knowledge." and how the boat builders were basically forced to go into hiding because they rediscovered how to make tools and use them. It's not that these species aren't capable of doing it, the Hivers proved that they were somewhat capable, its just that they won't do it
@Sara3346
@Sara3346 8 ай бұрын
It's because the book has psychic misanthropes in it the relatives of the boatbuilders absolutely went out of their way to snuff out burgening civilizations . The one thing I hate about this book is that such is almost celebrated instead of being rightly demonized as the most vile sort of behavior.
@llanero4069
@llanero4069 Жыл бұрын
Hello Mr. Qu Good to hear from you again. Man after man was tough to hang on to cause of the way it's written. Interesting in it's own way.
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Well said
@whiteegretx
@whiteegretx Жыл бұрын
I like your assessment on human nature. Humans aren't bad. It's a few bad apples, as they say. For 99% of human history, we did rather well when interacting with our environment. A few hiccups, but rather well.
@troin3925
@troin3925 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if you mention this, but Man After Man was going to be an entirely different book. It was in some ways gonna be a continuation of After Man where humans have time traveled to that book's world and destroyed the environment in a way similar to the end of Man After Man. But because of publisher meddling, he was forced to change the book to be about humans evolving instead. Dougal Dixon hated the way it turned out and to this day, he doesn't look back fondly on the book (and considering he republished After Man with newer artwork and updated scientific info and is going to do the same with The New Dinosaurs at some point, it safe to say that Man After Man won't get officially rereleased anytime soon, if at all). Though, Dixon's original concept for Man After Man did come to fruition with his book Greenworld, with it being about an alien planet rather than a future earth. Unfortunately, the book was only released in Japan and has yet to be released in English in the west.
@ultimazillarex1076
@ultimazillarex1076 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, the original idea of Man After Man sounds more tragic. Many readers would've already read After Man, and fell in love with its wonderous animals. Imagine their horror, when that ecosystem suddenly gets destroyed. As messed up as Man After Man is, at least it doesn't mess with Dixon's prior works. Besides, one ecosystem being destroyed is sad enough.
@AetherNoble
@AetherNoble Жыл бұрын
Man After Man is extremely weak when it comes to the science and chronology as you pointed out, I agree. I mean, human species are evolving and going extinct in the matter of 3000 years. The ‘grounded’ feel of the book in comparison to All Tomorrows can go both ways - sometimes it’s nice to fall asleep to a visual storytelling rather than facts and figures. Also, All Tomorrows is way too short! At least Man after Man gives you plenty of it. Overall though, All Tomorrows is the superior story because it goes more in depth with the biology and, as you said, is cooler, but Man After Man is my favourite. I’ve only listened to your audiobooks - maybe that makes a difference.
@TheoAndHisPedals
@TheoAndHisPedals Жыл бұрын
For some reason my school had this in their library. I found it fascinating and borrowed it a few times.
@commanderpotoo
@commanderpotoo Жыл бұрын
I think the illustrations in Man After Man are meant to be uncanny. These creatures are not quite human, but human enough to be recognizable and that's disturbing to us on a primal level. I imagine that was the illustrator's goal and he clearly achieved it. Not all art is meant to be beautiful.
@Redem10
@Redem10 Жыл бұрын
I prefer All Tommorow. For some reason I'm always a bit annoyed that first human offshoot in MaM aren't anything close to human sapiens and are completely adapted to space from the start.
@Meggey
@Meggey Жыл бұрын
Body horror type of entertainment is so fun to watch/read. Your content is great to listen to when I’m at work. I always have hours to be alone and productive.
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@princeshadow13
@princeshadow13 Жыл бұрын
I find Man After Man more depressing than gross
@GrandRegentSScratch
@GrandRegentSScratch Жыл бұрын
I always thought man after man was more of a theory then a story, it felt more of something you would read if you were high on weed or hallucinogenics. Keep up the content💪🏻🔥
@endomorfis
@endomorfis Жыл бұрын
It's not just you, and it's not just the weird creatures, even the baseline humans give me chills.
@The_Natalist
@The_Natalist Жыл бұрын
This book is so anti-human that it reads like a WEF fan fiction
@troin3925
@troin3925 Жыл бұрын
WEF?
@The_Natalist
@The_Natalist 11 ай бұрын
@@troin3925 World Economic Forum, the counterpart to the World Bank and UN
@Spiritstage
@Spiritstage 5 ай бұрын
Bro I was bath tied in church so I love future is wild and man after man I remember seeing clip of the book on the internet so I fucking love this book to my heart it paints a true picture of are society in future
@toivokorhonen3158
@toivokorhonen3158 Жыл бұрын
Have you seen the spec evo documentary from 2002 called "The Future is Wild"? I find it interesting and inspiring as a fantasy world creator. Sadly the premise is that all humans have disappeared so we don't see any human evolution and it may be bordering the "humans have to be wiped out" kind of thinking you mentioned but I think it's mostly to give room for the animals to evolve. I recommend watching it for fun
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Yeah it's a fun watch, I have the DVD boxset.
@Death_Gremlin
@Death_Gremlin 11 ай бұрын
Yknow what Thank you I was on the side of "fuck humanity the world would probably be better without us" even if there are many good people and its juat easier to see the bad, though if we went instinct then something else would probably gain similer intelegence over time unless people destroyed the planet But the way you described humans made me feel better, we are just trying to live and not purposely trying to fuck things up, besides the really fucked up people I was kinda in this state of, we all are mentally ill and panicked but we just are trying to keep going, and I sappose im still there but instead of being so against humanity Now im conflicted, hearing that people just want peace is really brightening for me, thank you for opening my eyes abit more
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 11 ай бұрын
Stay positive, my friend. Most people are just trying to get by, but you don't hear about those people on the news.
@despicablememe4140
@despicablememe4140 Жыл бұрын
This is crazy. This morning I got recommended your man after man playlist and started to listen to it and a few hours later you upload this.
@dannyhernandez1212
@dannyhernandez1212 Жыл бұрын
Do be fair, working with people has caused me to hate people.
@junkmail91
@junkmail91 Жыл бұрын
I think it's possible to admire something you don't enjoy
@MrRandomcommentguy
@MrRandomcommentguy 3 ай бұрын
Apparently Dougal Dixon was rather unhappy with Man After Man
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 3 ай бұрын
He was. He seems to have basically disowned it. His Japan-exclusive "Greenworld" is what he wanted MAM to be apparently.
@wren9841
@wren9841 Жыл бұрын
I work at a book distribution warehouse, this book is for sale on the place's website for around $200 or so? Due to how rare it is to find copies. I got to look at it briefly myself thanks to the warehouse having a copy- the art is definitely nauseatingly uncanny but part of me feels like it was meant to be that way ( if it was the artist hit the nail on the head with it) but I look at it under the category of 'morbidly fascinating' tbh. Especially after looking at both at this point, I do like All Tomorrows a lot more- I find the different species in that one much more fascinating with their diversity. But Man After Man is still bizarrely interesting to look through. I like that it goes more specifically into social structures/individual day-to-day moments of the different species in it, compared to looking at each species as a collective whole- both have their own interesting takes on the narrative for everything. All of this just makes me wish for more speculative evolution books honestly...
@cmkosemen
@cmkosemen 6 ай бұрын
Your take on antihumanism on 17:50 is BASED
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 6 ай бұрын
Thanks man, the prevailing antihumanist attitude of the modern age is something of a bugbear for me.
@kave9482
@kave9482 Ай бұрын
Oh hey what's up😂
@Wolede
@Wolede Жыл бұрын
I want to like Man After Man but it peaks in the beginning and stops being interesting after the tics go extinct. It only picks up again at the very, very end of the book when the builders show up. The only highlight of the middle part was the parasite species. I was so mad when the book didn't bring back the vacuumorphs and replaced the fish man aquamorphs with lame manatee aquatics. I also didn't like how some of the later species weren't illustrated. It's like Dixon had a great idea, but got bored halfway through. There are things I did like aside from the beginning and end. I like how the little stories were told through the perspective of individual characters instead of just glossing over entire species like in All Tomorrows.
@veritasinvicta8128
@veritasinvicta8128 Жыл бұрын
I agree concerning humanity being tainted by a small group of powerful families that conspire to keep everyone enslaved.
@Wolede
@Wolede Жыл бұрын
How was Man After Man misanthropic? I remember it being just plain depressing, but not misanthropic. Everything is dead, dying, or beyond repair, thousands of years of human civilization have been set back to caveman times only worse, the best and brightest are hauling ass offworld, and the only solution left is different kinds of monkey people while the regular humans suffer and die out.
@motsuuuu
@motsuuuu 11 ай бұрын
idk if it’s cause i read man after man first, but while all tomorrows is more cohesive, i still find the slivers of humanity in man after man’s narrative chapters…weirdly comforting? it definitely hit me harder than all tomorrows did, and even the artistic depictions of the aquatics and the infamous “season’s greasons” art made me feel really sentimental
@RNGvideoinator
@RNGvideoinator 3 ай бұрын
man after man walked so that all tomorrows could run
@_NIKOS9_NIKOS
@_NIKOS9_NIKOS 10 ай бұрын
Hot take: I actually like the designs in Man After Man Because of how creepy,gross and uncanny they look. Dont get me wrong, All Tomorrows is the better story in every single way but I think there is also a certain appeal when something decides to go full on nightmare fuel
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 10 ай бұрын
Fair enough
@kprojectskurt
@kprojectskurt Жыл бұрын
I believe the disgusting feeling of the Man after man illustrations is completely intended
@hoopsonwheels
@hoopsonwheels Жыл бұрын
The art on man after man gave me a strong disgust response with a few species. That big red sloth one, the fishing ones and a few others and tic were just absolutely repulsive. I didn’t get any type of real messaging from the book. It depicts the world in it as pretty uncaring and humans have to adapt to it at the expense of what made us human for the sake of survival. All tomorrows on the other hand if you can get past the disgusting body horror has a good message about humanity and what it means to be human
@peterestrada9420
@peterestrada9420 Жыл бұрын
The 5hr. Run, is The Best❣️🤙 LOVE the production’s, please keep Goin’ 🙏😉
@cmkosemen
@cmkosemen 6 ай бұрын
The off-the-cuff style is GREAT and your channel is doing amazing my friend. I personally would love to listen to more conversational podcasts like this from you...
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 6 ай бұрын
Thank you! Perhaps I will try to do more of it.
@sukuna_king_of_curses
@sukuna_king_of_curses 4 ай бұрын
Only 2 people:) koseman is so chill lmao
@wendydomino
@wendydomino Жыл бұрын
I've liked the concept of Spec Evo since I saw "The Future is Wild" on I think Animal Planet back in the day. There was also another one in a similar vein that I remember watching where it showed future evolution if humans suddenly left. I have to admit some of the ones that go into weird forms humans might take really make me sick. I think I like the non-human animal ones a lot more.
@inigomontoya73
@inigomontoya73 Жыл бұрын
Don't ever be sorry m8!
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Haha I know, it's a shame we have to apologise in advance for having an opinion on things, but this is the internet after all and I can't be bothered with my inbox being flooded with death threats.
@peterestrada9420
@peterestrada9420 Жыл бұрын
LOVE the All Tomorrow’s, Run, even More🙏❣️ Great Work🤙😉 Cheerz
@theoldman5896
@theoldman5896 10 ай бұрын
16:00 Nothing irritates me more than the infamous "humans bad" propaganda spewed at us from academia non-stop. Thank you for being a "fellow noticer."
@JadenTapscott
@JadenTapscott Жыл бұрын
A spec evo project I'd recommend is Biblaridion's Alien Biospheres series. The finale about the evolution of sapient life should be out in a few months (as of the time of my comment). C.M. Kösemen (same one who did All Tomorrows) is involved in the series creation process by being one of the many people who's done art for it.
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Sounds cool
@rustyshackleford234
@rustyshackleford234 Жыл бұрын
It’s what got me into speculative evolution believe it or not 😂
@eld2310
@eld2310 Жыл бұрын
Today I learned that my hardcover of Man after Man is worth something! Unfortunately I can't find it and now I wonder if I got rid of it in a book purge I did last year. :/
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Damn, that's a shame, I hope you find it.
@Nervadane
@Nervadane Жыл бұрын
Sometimes High Brow critique doesn't quite get the point, so a bit of simple blunt banter is needed!
@HarenunHoppus
@HarenunHoppus Жыл бұрын
I have noticed that too, why are certain groups of people especially the university educated tend to have this suicidal anti-human sentiment?
@olivergrams5212
@olivergrams5212 Жыл бұрын
It’s cool to hear your side of things you were the one who introduced me to speculative evolution thanks for the video
@mileidyclass
@mileidyclass Жыл бұрын
I like videos like this where you give your thoughts. I hope to see more of this kind of content in the future.
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
Thank you Mileidy, more like this on the way.
@Stitch1235
@Stitch1235 10 ай бұрын
THANK YOU FOR SAYING IT!! I thought the same with the pictures in Man After Man. They would better work for horror stories, which is kinda how I pictured Man After Man. Kind of a Horrific possible future.
@dylvatron2005
@dylvatron2005 Жыл бұрын
I do love the intro from man after man, I’d feel that if that served as the prologue for all tomorrows, it would be even more of a masterpiece.
@Spiritstage
@Spiritstage 7 ай бұрын
Something to do with Covid 19 vaccines maybe Dixon was predicting something
@dwaugh2215
@dwaugh2215 Жыл бұрын
It would have been more interesting to see more post human species had they not all have the same human-faces or perhaps rebuilt civilization from scratch, but it did have a lot of inspirations for authors and artists everywhere. And yeah, all Tomorrows is really popular
@gabrielschmitt4712
@gabrielschmitt4712 Жыл бұрын
I wonder how many times i have listened to your reading of this... A LOT 10/10 reading.
@troin3925
@troin3925 Жыл бұрын
A lot of people have called the book “eco-fascist” which I can definitely see. It’s very cynical towards technology, not just in how it affects the environment, but also because it flat out believes that technology and our modern way of living have helped us defy natural selection, preventing us from evolving and changing, which isn’t how it works. It also acts like mother nature would eventually take everything back and destroy technology.
@william3100
@william3100 6 ай бұрын
In ways, technology does kinda do that, and it is especially possible in the future. Plus, the idea of mother nature eventually taking everything back and us becoming and staying as animals is a possibility and is arguably more plausible than in All Tomorrows. The thing I found ridiculous about All Tomorrows was that somehow most of the species that were transformed into animals became sapient, even animals that are not capable of doing so like those lizard creatures. It took MANY hundreds of million years for just us to evolve, showing that something like us is probably very rare in the universe, yet somehow, human-level intelligence is pretty easy to achieve in All Tomorrows. Also, I didn't find Man After Man to be misanthropic, but just more naturalistic and down to earth. Stating that despite how powerful and intelligent we are, we are still animals and are still prone to the brutality of nature and are very much capable of reverting back. The end has a glimmer of hope as the remaining human descendants survive and continue to do so and adapt. A misanthropic book wouldn't include that.
@AJScraps
@AJScraps Жыл бұрын
Yea true this book did show humanity in such a grotesque light😆😆 P.s. loved your entire Man after Man series🙏
@Sluggadome_Rotunda_Bernardson
@Sluggadome_Rotunda_Bernardson 9 ай бұрын
When I watch these videos I imagine that he’s like some old dude that I’m hanging out with and I asked him what his favorite book was and now he’s just rambling at me about some random book I’ve never heard of. But in a good way
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 9 ай бұрын
Lol
@HaughtyToast
@HaughtyToast 5 ай бұрын
I suspect part of the reason it looks the way it does is that they were trying to make some of the more unusual ones look alien or at least give off that same feel. They do remind me of illustrations you see on old magazine and comic book covers from the 70s and 80s. It's also worth noting that this book had a troubled production and Dixon considered it a failure. The story he originally wanted to tell is apparently used in Greenworld. It seems like purpose of the pessimism was that he was originally trying to have it be a more gritty Lorax type story, though it reads like a German fable where the mistake is made and everything just sucks by the end.
@whiteegretx
@whiteegretx Жыл бұрын
Love your videos, BtQ. No worries about getting videos out frequently. As long as KZbin isn't your job, it's not important. Life comes first always.
@spruceisloose
@spruceisloose Жыл бұрын
Your reading of Man after Man is one of my favorite bedtime stories when I want to have nightmares
@Sara3346
@Sara3346 8 ай бұрын
Last and First Men might be a very good contrast between both Man After Man and All Tomorrows when you get around to it.
@beastvg123
@beastvg123 11 ай бұрын
I don't have any problems with this book, I also don't have any issues with a misanthropic view of humanity, since I tend to view humans as overall neutral, but inherently lazy and selfish. Most of our errors to me seem to be because we are misinformed or don't actually think very deeply about our actions on the whole, not because we are malicious or anything. The range of human experience can produce great evils, but also important goods. Also I didn't get any uncanny valley from this book, I find it wonderfully weird, personally!
@quantumpalmtree
@quantumpalmtree Жыл бұрын
I was so disappointed when i read man after man, after all its hype. After man is much better. I just don't like how misanthropic and pessimistic it is... It's not a realistic evolution book, which isn't a problem in itself but it can be annoying when you are into actual biology. But maybe he just wanted to create new humans without caring about science... it's still fiction, after all. It's an old book that kinda aged like milk.
@NuclearSpring
@NuclearSpring Жыл бұрын
I mean, I got the impression that the illustrations making you feel sick was the point? Like it's supposed to almost be horror, that this definitely isn't the good ending for humanity.
@jamjarsaranja3900
@jamjarsaranja3900 10 ай бұрын
I really liked how Man After Man has the creatures you're reading about early in the story stick around in their various weird forms through the book. You get to see creature A become creature B, then C, etc. All Tomorrow's was more disappointing in that regard for me because of something that happened partway through that interrupted the whole narrative - that wasn't satisfying to me at all. Dixon's approach to conflict also made a lot more sense, you see detailed descriptions of the creatures preying on each other and the environment changing, and THEN later you get told how some of them went extinct. Contrast this with Kösemen's approach which felt much more abstract, galactic civilizations being wiped out and massive interstellar wars being glossed over. I'm like, wut? Why don't you tell me about these wars in greater detail, are those not important? In terms of the art style Kösemen has a much more John Blanche stylized looking technique while Dixon's book is much more like illustrations in a textbook. I feel like the slightly worse quality in the creature designs of Man After Man are redeemed because they're nice and colorful, I don't like everything having a grimy sepia tone. They're both definitely great books, I'd give them both an 8/10 and say the main difference is just the scale. If you want to read about a hypothetical future for a whole galaxy read All Tomorrow's, if you want to read about a specific planet read Man After Man. And if you don't want man turning into hideous abominations in the future I guess you'll need some kind of 40k-style government that enforces genetic rules
@jamjarsaranja3900
@jamjarsaranja3900 10 ай бұрын
[spoilers] All Tomorrows could have really used something, like, a short story from the perspective of one of those creatures that got their sun blacked out by the evil mechanical spheres when they randomly showed up. What does that feel like? idk. Man After Man really has that personal touch, like Dixon did a good job putting me in the skin of a deformed looking animal creature grazing and deciding if it wanted to mate or not. On the side of All Tomorrow's the things presented are really more alien, the time scale is larger, there were some big "whoah" moments like when they discovered those snake creature aliens
@misterbubbles6389
@misterbubbles6389 Жыл бұрын
While I have issues with you describing the bad decision-makers as mentally ill (mentally ill people can be perfectly kind and the people in charge can be perfectly sane and yet completely selfish and horrible), I agree completely with this anti-human rhetoric being stupid. What especially rubbed me the wrong way with this book is how Dixon seems to perpetuate dysgenics, or the idea that deleterious negative traits will emerge if people with "bad DNA" are allowed to reproduce, and that it'll bring down the fitness of the species as a whole. Not only is it gross, it's an idea that doesn't even make sense within the context of MaM, where genetic engineering advanced enough to create sub-species of humans is around. We can do that, but we can't repair or replace harmful mutations or traits? That seems like such an obvious and easy fix for the entire premise, yet it's completely ignored. That really took me out of the story, personally.
@AliceBowie
@AliceBowie Жыл бұрын
I kind of thought the book was supposed to make you sick.
@Shug-Goff
@Shug-Goff Жыл бұрын
Definately got that body horror vibe for sure. Almost like David Croenberg had a bad trip having an Altered States moment.
@toivokorhonen3158
@toivokorhonen3158 Жыл бұрын
I think these unscripted videos bring out more of your own personality which is important for youtubers in my opinion. Your personality often sells your videos. But one youtuber I follow also says that cream always rises to the top. That when you make quality content it will be noticed by the audience at some point.
@tirtoule
@tirtoule Жыл бұрын
I was actually going to listen to man after man as i loved your reading of all tomorrows. But... two things stopped me from listening up till this point: the length AND the cover art. Like you said, the art made me feel absolutely sick. I hated it. The art is amazing with the light and shadow and colours, but i just cant take looking at it (something i didnt get from All Tomorrows, All Tomorrows was disturbing but utterly interesting). My sister seemed to enjoy the book and i have always planned to listen to it, but i just kind of dont want to for those reasons. Doesn't mean I'll never read it, I just need to find the time (as I have memory of a goldfish, I like to read/listen things in one go) and also need to get over the frankly impressive and disgusting art.
@loganlogon3720
@loganlogon3720 Жыл бұрын
In all fairness I never think of the text part of this book when I think of Man After Man, just the images. It just simply didn't captivate me like All Tomorrows did.😮‍💨 Can't say the art ever made me "sick" per se, but I have always thought the creatures were just too much of a mix of bland and ugly. I guess it also didn't help that my first encounter with this story was a meme from the early 2000's, specifically a cropped version of the manhandled/maltreated Tundra Dweller with the caption "Seasons Greetings", I just couldn't take this thing seriously after that.😅 The Hitek and the subsequent "Tics" depictions did bother me, both were far too unwieldy/cumbersome/unrealistic to ever be able to function in any sort of environment. The Astromorphs were the only ones that I really thought had an interesting design and they were barely a blip in the book. Any way, thanks for another afternoons brain stimulation Qu, can't wait for the next one!😄
@troin3925
@troin3925 Жыл бұрын
I think you mean Vacuumorphs, not Astromorphs.
@loganlogon3720
@loganlogon3720 Жыл бұрын
@@troin3925 Whoops!😆
@joshuacanales6419
@joshuacanales6419 Ай бұрын
Now that you mentioned it most of them look like sentient barfed oatmeal
@Galactic.90
@Galactic.90 Жыл бұрын
Any chance on some videos on Last and First men by Olaf Stapledon? It was written in the 30s and has some really cool old timey sci fi speculative evolution stuff in it.
@Phobe6656
@Phobe6656 2 ай бұрын
my first exposure to all tomorrows was 3 3d animations thinking it was a series or something while my first exposure to man after man was those shorts about how humans would look like if they adapted themselves to ertain habitats, not knowing it was man after man, and ngl i was intrigued despite them being repetitive
@toivokorhonen3158
@toivokorhonen3158 Жыл бұрын
Yes I do think the artwork in Man After Man is very uncanny. I also get a bit of it from All Tomorrows. Some characters just look so weird with human noses or eyes which I believe is also the intent of the art.
@Nmh86
@Nmh86 Жыл бұрын
I wish I could be an astromorph for Halloween
@crossoverqueen1775
@crossoverqueen1775 Жыл бұрын
I learned that autistic people are less likely to be affected by the uncanny valley. I wish it affected me as I feel that I am missing out, would love to understand why people are affected by it and how it feels, but alas, as an autistic person, it doesn’t affect me.
@crossoverqueen1775
@crossoverqueen1775 Жыл бұрын
Also your voice is really good for reading, it’s nice to listen to.
@JonathanGhost42
@JonathanGhost42 Жыл бұрын
I feel the same way. There is a bit of an uncanny element, but there seems not to be this strong effect that other people are describing with seeing such illustrations.
@ultimazillarex1076
@ultimazillarex1076 Жыл бұрын
Same here. Also on the Spectrum, and while I do find it creepy, I’m not that heavily affected by it.
@heybestie6440
@heybestie6440 Жыл бұрын
lol funny coincidence, i gotta write an essay for one of my uni classes and i chose exactly this topic - how autistic people are affected by uncanny valley
@JonathanGhost42
@JonathanGhost42 Жыл бұрын
@@heybestie6440 That sounds fascinating!
@Vix2066
@Vix2066 Жыл бұрын
Dougal Dixon is such a cool name😂
@theastrogoth8624
@theastrogoth8624 Жыл бұрын
Extremely ironic video considering that ‘All Tomorrows’ is full eldritch monstrosities. However, I can agree with you that the book was considerably underwhelming compared with CM Kosemen’s works. I think one fully unscientific chapter, maybe you mentioned it I don’t remember, was the one with the ape-things which somehow inherited knowledge from their forebears because of a dormant gene or something. Please do correct me if I’m wrong, but I think anyone, even without a scientific background would be very well capable of knowing this is fundamentally wrong.
@markness90s13
@markness90s13 6 ай бұрын
Dougal Dixon actually disowns this book. His original plan for it was to essentially have humanity time travel to the world of “After Man” and destroy it. But that idea was rejected and he was forced to come up with the weird body horror plot for “Man After Man.”
@BewareCast
@BewareCast 6 ай бұрын
Yep. Then his original idea eventually became his book Greenworld, released only in Japanese, in Japan, and is impossible to find.
@joanofaardvark6129
@joanofaardvark6129 3 ай бұрын
my headcanon is that after man is connected to the world of man after man
@troin3925
@troin3925 Жыл бұрын
Another thing I like about this book are the names of the characters in each story. They all sound very strange like they came from an alien language.
@shaalis
@shaalis 7 ай бұрын
BTW I had so share this amazing video. I love both books. And Your channel has been a wonderul joy to me. It was YOUR channel that introduced me to both stories. Keep up your amazing work! And you DO an excellent job with the sudiobooks; mistakes and all. You have a very enjoyable voice.
@L1ncore
@L1ncore Жыл бұрын
The man after man illustrations definitely make me feel ill too…. But i wont lie i really like that aspect haha.
@E.T.whisperer
@E.T.whisperer Жыл бұрын
I love that this is a thing. Thanks. Beware The Qu.
@MDLi0n
@MDLi0n Жыл бұрын
A glorious year ago already
@JohnSmith13334
@JohnSmith13334 Жыл бұрын
Cheers mate lovely to see such a perfectly put together video
@brianstiles1701
@brianstiles1701 Жыл бұрын
The "Eschaton Sequence" series by John C Wright has a lot of fun of fun with speculative evolution/species engineering over vast swaths of time and and space. Highly recommend!
@friendofdragons763
@friendofdragons763 Жыл бұрын
Why do they all have weird faces but kept their noses 😭😭😭
@TyCollage
@TyCollage Жыл бұрын
Ok so, my younger brother listened to all tomorrow's and saw the art work. Bizarre as it was he never commented on the designs outside of the occasional joke about how mean, petty and malicious the Qu were in some of their outrageous genetic experiments clearly meant to punish the humans who gave a resistance. So got a good laugh here and there because it's so extreme... Later on I showed him the man after man designs and I *KID YOU NOT* my brother took one look at those and said: "Oh come on man this is just ridiculous right here geez, it doesnt even make sen- whys this thing wearin the silly pornstar moustache? What the hell is this machine? *HOW* do they reproduce? They swing into each other!?" He didn't even crack a smile he was so annoyed by the one with an *AC UNIT* for a head and face and the one with all the arms and fat I had to chance the subject 😅😅😅. All he kept saying was *WHY??? How does this make any---......just how bro....WHY!!? Please help me understand..."* 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 😢
@BewareCast
@BewareCast Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@TyCollage
@TyCollage 11 ай бұрын
​@@BewareCastAnd I 💩you not that was his feedback
@Sara3346
@Sara3346 8 ай бұрын
He didn't read the book then, the AC unit creature is literally a biological air filter. Also yes the swing into each other, the Hitek have serious problems with reproduction so I i am glad he could see that at a glance though.
@The_Natalist
@The_Natalist Жыл бұрын
I think its supposed to be gross, the tics and the high tics made me so grossed out, i cant believe the tradesman class even worked for them. I only get this level of sheer disgust when i listen to politics, well done author and artist if that was your intent
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