The Quiet Ones
In a 2006 interview David Foster Wallace said, “it seems significant that we don’t want things to be quiet, ever, anymore.” Stores and restaurants have their ubiquitous Muzak or satellite radio; bars have anywhere between 1 and 17 TVs blaring Fox and soccer; ads and 30-second news cycles play on screens in cabs, elevators and restrooms .. People are louder, too. They complain at length and in detail about their divorces or gallbladders a foot away from you in restaurants. A dreaded Amtrak type is the passenger who commences prattling on her cellphone the instant she sits down and doesn’t hang up until she gets to her stop, unable to bear an undistracted instant in her own company. People practice rap lyrics on the bus or the subway, barking doggerel along with their iPods as though they were alone in the shower
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This entry was posted on Thursday, November 22nd, 2012 at 9:29 AM and filed under 1st Amendment (speech), Articles, Civil Rights, Human Interest, Peace, Privacy. Follow comments here with the RSS 2.0 feed. Skip to the end and leave a response. Trackbacks are closed.
