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😢+⏳+😍=🤑 Welcome to the nostalgia economy

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Mon, Dec 11, 2017 08:52 PM

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Hot Wheels, the tiny-car franchise Mattel launched in 1968, is revving its engines, Hasbro is bankin

[Quartz Obsession] The nostalgia economy December 11, 2017 Heart and purse strings --------------------------------------------------------------- This year, instead of newfangled gizmos and shiny whatchamacallits, the gifts that Santa brings might look a little … familiar. Super Mario Odyssey, which has a vibe similar to the much-loved mid-’90s classic Super Mario 64, is expected to be the [fastest selling video game of the season.]( Hot Wheels, the tiny-car franchise Mattel launched in 1968, is revving its engines, Hasbro is banking on a [Nerf gun]( comeback, and Tamagotchi just [re-released its needy digital pets]( to celebrate its 20th anniversary (and remind you what a neglectful parent you are). Nostalgia holds an economic power. Brands and advertisers from Kodak to Coca-Cola act as its puppet masters, pulling at heartstrings and lulling us into making purchases through the promises of the past. Nostalgia encourages us to buy a piece of a memory—a moment in time when things seemed simpler and we thought we were happier. This is never more apparent than it is during the holiday season. Watch This! Wise words --------------------------------------------------------------- “Nostalgia. It’s delicate, but potent. Teddy told me that in Greek, ‘nostalgia’ literally means ‘the pain from an old wound.’ It’s a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone.” —Don Draper, Mad Men 👋⏰🤔 welcome to nostalgia week This week, the Quartz Obsession is exploring the ways nostalgia and the economy intersect. Read the Quartz Ideas series on the[nostalgia economy here.]( And let us know what topics would you like to see covered in future emails! BY THE DIGITS [8:]( Number of copies of Super Mario Odyssey sold per second in the first three days of its release, making it the fastest-selling Super Mario game in the US, ever. [34:]( The number of [TV spin-offs]( of old franchises in 2017, including new versions of Dynasty, Twin Peaks, and Heathers. [11%:]( The percentage lift Twin Peaks gave Showtime’s cable-network operating income in the second quarter of 2017, according to CEO David Nevins. [2:]( Number of new properties in the top 10 grossing movies for 2016. The others drew from films dating back to 1894, 1938, 1959, 1977, 1991, 1997, and 2003. [1994:]( Year that The Magic School Bus aired. Netflix relaunched the series this year with Kate McKinnon voicing the new protagonist, Fiona Felicity Frizzle. [11:]( The number of years between the first episode of Hey Arnold! and this year’s telemovie, Hey Arnold!: The Jungle Movie. A moment of appreciation Like a fine wine --------------------------------------------------------------- [As behavioral economist Ben Ho explains,]( the value of some properties wither away and depreciate as they grow older, as others gain value with maturity. The term “appreciation” is used in finance to describe a financial asset that grows in value over time. While most physical assets depreciate, some, like classic cars or vintage wines, appreciate. It can be risky to bet on appreciation. The potential value a bottle of wine holds increases each year the bottle matures—but the chance that the bottle turns into vinegar increases each year, too. But when a memory appreciates with time, marketers take advantage. It’s cheaper and easier to keep pumping out the same tired intellectual property year after year rather than coming up with a new, risky franchise that could flop; it’s safer to bet on a blue-chip stock that’s always done well instead of an unknown IPO. (CANDY) CRUSHING IT Gaming the system --------------------------------------------------------------- In video games, Nintendo has long profited from players wanting to revisit its 1990s heyday. The Pokémon and [Zelda]( empires have both experienced recent renaissances, with the Pokémon Go app reaching [three quarters of a billion downloads]( and a new Zelda game driving initial sales of [their best-selling game console]( the Switch. Nintendo also released a reboot of the classic NES console last year, which it couldn’t make fast enough to keep up with demand. Department of Jargon In the late 1600s, Swiss medical student Johannes Hofer noticed a pattern in his patients who were living far from home. Those who were obsessed with returning to their estranged locations became physically, sometimes fatally, sick. To reflect this phenomena, he coined the medical term “nostalgia” in 1688, [which he created by combining the Greek words nostos (homecoming) and alga (pain).]( Psych!! If we could turn back time --------------------------------------------------------------- Neuroscientist [Robert Sapolsky argues]( that our preferences for music (and other media) is formed in our teenage years and early twenties, when our brain is most primed to explore new things. Spotify [recently launched a time capsule playlist]( that features songs from when the listener was a teenager—it quickly became one of the streaming service’s most popular offerings. Music and movies that trigger memories of our carefree younger years [put us in a good mood]( and [increase the likelihood we’ll buy related products](. Content creators know this and attempt to create value by triggering our happiest memories. FUN FACT $3 billion worth of Star Wars toys were sold in 2011—a year no new installment in the franchise was released. Take me down this 🐰 hole Philosopher Jacques Derrida coined the term Hauntology in 1993 to describe nostalgia for an impossible future—a possible future that has since been overtaken by the events of reality. A sort of “what if” reverie, it is also a wordplay on the philosophical term ontology, or the study of the nature of being. “[Hauntology]( is probably the first major trend in critical theory to have flourished online,” Andrew Gallix writes in the [Guardian](. “Today, hauntology inspires many fields of investigation, from the visual arts to philosophy through [electronic music]( politics, fiction and literary criticism. At its most basic level, it ties in with the popularity of [faux-vintage photography]( [abandoned spaces]( and TV series like [Life on Mars]( Pop Quiz Which of the following movies was NOT a remake? Twelve Monkeys (1995)Cape Fear (1991)3 Men and a Baby (1987)Jumanji (1995) Correct. A standalone sequel, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, is due out this month. Incorrect. Sorry, that's been done before. If your inbox doesn’t support this quiz, find the solution at bottom of email. WHAT GOES AROUND The trifecta of nostalgic influence --------------------------------------------------------------- Feel like life is just one never-ending superhero film? Marvel and other franchises from the late 1970s to the early 1990s—such as Star Wars, Blade Runner, and Jurassic Park—enjoy the perfect trifecta of economic forces: - Something old: Franchises that are 20 to 40 years old appeal to the memories of those aged 35–55, the demographic for which earnings and spending power begin to peak. - Something new: Franchises from that era are also just old enough for younger generations to view them as novel media properties, which circumvents depreciation. - This ability to appeal to two different generations is amplified by our social connectedness. To illustrate: Marvel fans who were teenagers during the comics’ heyday are at the peak of their spending power today; their nostalgia for their younger years helps drive ticket sales. But Marvel also takes advantage of some compounding interest: today’s teenagers who are experiencing the franchise afresh. Here’s a Google Trends chart showing how searches for the term “Marvel” trend over time. This is compounded by another component psychologists identify with nostalgia: its ability to [induce feelings of social connectedness](. The economic study of conformity concerns itself with how our consumption choices depend on our connections to other people. Memories acquire meaning not just in the connections made in our own mind, but in the connections of the collective consciousness. Quotable “Say you not, ‘What is the cause that the former days were better than these?’ For you do not inquire wisely concerning this.” —Ecclesiastes, Chapter 7, Verse 10 NAUGHTY OR NICE The nostalgia trap --------------------------------------------------------------- Nostalgia does something insidious to our present—it acts as a drain on our empathy towards those actually around us. Rather than live in the actual emotions and environs of the present, nostalgics manufacture a kind of trap for themselves—a sweet pain of longing for a circumstance that can never be, and never really was. For those who complain that “nothing is new anymore,” we have no one to blame but ourselves. Firms supply the nostalgia that consumers demand, but there is a way to game the system: We can become more aware of how sellers manipulate our memories to peddle their wares. Nostalgia is a form of privilege—the idea that there’s anything in our real or imagined pasts to return to means that we have been fortunate so far. So rather than look back, we should turn our gazes forward and create a present that we can one day remember as truly better than what came before. Poll How do you feel about nostalgia now? [Click here to vote]( Eyes ahead; I’m leaving memories of the past behindThinking about the old days hurts so good, even if my mind has idealized themShh, I’m constructing a hauntology where Hillary is president The fine print In Friday’s poll about [FICO scores]( 43% of you said yours is the first thing you mention on a date. Today’s email was edited by [Georgia Frances King]( and[Paul Smalera](. Images: Reuters/Chris Helgren (movie screening) The correct answer to the quiz is Jumanji (1995). Enjoying the Quartz Obsession? [Send this link]( to a friend! Not enjoying it? No worries. [Click here]( to unsubscribe. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10011 | United States Share this email

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