In short, I would like to thank ta, because of ta's publicity, those addicts, vampires, and zombies who live and wander around must like this place very much. They seem to have a place to hang out together.
When I went out for a walk at night, I passed a building under construction. A billboard was erected on the side of the building near the road. The content on it caught the attention of Mr. Banban.
So, the curious Banban-jun took the photo below with his mobile phone. After careful research, Banban-jun couldn't help but sneered and then was amazed.
why? And listen to the board board and slowly give you the board down.
Well, the key point is the red mushroom in the lower right corner of the photo.
In Jim Jarmusch's movie "Only Love Will Live Forever", Ava, a veteran vampire from Morocco, came to Detroit thousands of miles from Morocco to visit her independent musician, electrical engineering expert, Adam, the slash vampire lover. Veteran vampires who have lived for hundreds of years, after they have sucked fresh blood, their expressions are like this:
Yes, this is the climax face that has been turned upside down.
Vampires suck blood, just like humans smoke marijuana, or ice skating.
Across mountains and seas, two people who haven't seen each other for a long time suck blood in the house, chat about literature, listen to songs, dance, play chess... After doing all the things that literary youth like to do (well, Wen Qing may not suck blood) , and walk outside the house together. Eve made a discovery by the wall:
As two senior addicts, they recognized it at a glance. This red mushroom is Amanita muscaria (the red mushroom in the billboard above is Amanita muscaria!), so what the hell is Amanita muscaria? Let's go find Du Niang.
Amanita muscaria (scientific name: Amanita muscaria), also known as Amanita muscaria, fly agaric or fly Amanita in English, is a neurotoxic Basidiomycota fungus, one of the genus Amanita. The fruiting bodies of the bacteria are larger. The cap is 6-20cm wide. The edges have obvious short ribs, the surface is bright red or orange-red, and there are white or slightly yellow granular scales. Gills pure white, dense, distinct, unequal length. The flesh is white, and the skin is red near the lid. The stipe is long, upright, pure white, 12-25cm long, 1-2.5cm thick, and there are often small scales on the surface that grow in groups on the ground in the forest in summer and autumn.
This mushroom is named for its ability to poison flies. Its toxins are muscarinic, muscarinic, kiskason, and leopard-spot agaricin. Severe nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, confusion, sweating, chills, muscle twitching, slowed pulse, difficulty breathing or trismus, dizziness, confusion, etc. . The use of atropine works well. Even though it is widely recognized that Amanita muscaria is poisonous, deaths due to this mushroom are extremely rare, and after being cooked in large amounts of water, it has become a widely used food in Europe, Asia and North America. .
OK, here's the point:
Today, however, Amanita muscaria is mainly known for its hallucinogenic toxicity, and its psychostimulant component is a compound, muscimol. The toxin is used by the inhabitants of Siberia as a hallucination and out-of-body drug and has religious significance in their culture. The Tunguses and Yakus of Siberia used human beings as traditional holiday mushrooms. Generally, adults will feel intoxicated after eating one, and they think it is a kind of enjoyment. India uses it as a magician's potion. In some countries it is used as a sleeping pill. In northeastern China, this toadstool is broken and mixed with rice to kill flies, even mice and other harmful animals. There has been a lot of speculation about the use of this mushroom for traditional purposes, and it is believed that the toxin of this mushroom is used across Siberia to induce hallucinations, but these legends are too old to get a complete picture research. American banker and amateur behavioral mycologist Robert Gordon Watson has proposed that Amanita muscaria is in fact the soma mentioned in the Indian religious text, the Rig Veda; The refutation was generally accepted when the theory was first published in 1968.
After reading the above, let's look back at that real estate ad.
So, can we now understand the meaning of this advertisement as follows:
With Amanita muscaria, in this place where ASEAN faces east and is gifted with mountains and rivers, we are born graceful and die without regrets, because we are overwhelmed and die, and finally we can live up to the green hills, and the green hills bury our souls, and even more so. It's up to you.
According to Banbanjun's personal speculation, the designer who made this advertisement either lacks common sense of plants, or is a high-level black, psychedelic boy or psychedelic girl, a profound genius.
Advertising, the sugarcoating of an unreliable economic logic, through thousands of unmotivated phantoms denying this logic for its better implementation. Advertising neither makes people understand nor learn, but creates illusions that make people hope. In a certain sense, adding the hallucinogenic Amanita muscaria element to the phantom carrier (billboard) can also be seen as an unexpected, extremely sincere and even ironic move . This move is to tell those People who can understand, billboards are just like this poisonous mushroom, it is just a hallucinogen, don't believe this bullshit.
As for the real estate bosses who are keen to create illusions and the middle-class people who are lured and persuaded by illusions to buy this real estate, I dare not speculate.
In short, I would like to thank ta, because of ta's publicity, those addicts, vampires, and zombies who live and wander around must like this place very much. They seem to have a place to hang out together.
▼
Click this QR code to quickly follow Dajia
Board Movies Watch Photos Read Articles Listen to Stories
●All articles and photos of "Dajia" are original unless otherwise marked and reprinted.
Welcome to reprint, reprint please indicate the source.
View more about Only Lovers Left Alive reviews