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Metafilter tags 1966, 2000, AI, Automation, BBC, Children, ClimateChange, Computers, FactoryFarming, Future, Futurism, NuclearWar, Overpopulation, Predictions, Robotics, Tildes, Transcript, UK, UnitedKingdom, Y2K, Year2000
Author: Rhaomi

From the BBC Archives: Schoolchildren in 1966 Predict Life in the Year 2000 [6:17]

"If something's gone wrong with their nuclear bombs, I may be sort of coming back from hunting in a cave."

"I don't like the idea of sort of getting up and finding you've got a cabbage pill to eat for breakfast or something."

"Computers are taking over now, computers and automation. And in the year 2000, there just won't be enough jobs to go around, and the only jobs there will be will be for people with high IQ who can work computers and such things, and other people are just not going to have jobs."

"I don't think I'll still be on Earth. I think I'll be under the sea."

[transcript, via Tildes]


Other Y2K predictions from years past:

IDEAS for the YEAR 2000 [Blue Peter, 1974]

James Burke and the Blue Peter team announced the winners of the Year 2000 competition in which children sent in their ideas for the future. The team share their thoughts on a selection of innovative entries including a cloud machine, a recycling dishwasher and a submarine city.

School Kids Predict Life In 2000 [KNOT-TV, 1985]

At the time, the year 2000 was 15 years away - it might as well have been the far distant future for 2nd and 3rd graders at Perkett Elementary School in Minot. I asked them to draw pictures showing what life might be like in 2000 and wite a little about what they hope to be doing then.

1999 A.D. [Philco-Ford Corporation, 1967]

The appliance and radio manufacturer looked ahead to the turn of the 21st century to imagine what life would be like for a family in a home maintained by a central computer and powered by fuel cells.

Lost Futures: A 19th-Century Vision of the Year 2000

Some technologies are wonderfully prescient. Chicken eggs are incubated with machines. Tailoring is partially automated. Crowds assemble at the symphony for electronic music. The most accurate depictions are in the theaters of warfare and industrial agriculture — testament to the driving economic forces of technological development across the twentieth century: gatling guns affixed to automobiles, blimp-like battleships, fields cut with combine harvesters. As is so often the case, other predictions fall some way off the mark, failing to go far enough in thinking outside the confines of their current technological milieu (hence the ubiquity of propellers, a radium fireplace, not to mention the distinctly nineteenth-century dress). Still other predictions remain bizarre, mainly those that anticipated rapid nautical conquest: submarine divers trawling the sea's surface for seagulls, underwater croquet, a whale bus (exactly as it sounds).

Earth 2100 [ABC, 2009]

Hosted by ABC journalist Bob Woodruff, the two-hour special explored what "a worst-case" future might look like if humans do not take action on current or impending problems that could threaten civilization. The problems addressed in the program include current climate change, overpopulation, and misuse of energy resources.

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