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Archive for the tag “Jules Verne”

Let’s Predict The Year 2100

Technology is changing the way we live at a faster pace than ever before. It’s hard to even imagine what people’s lives will be like at the end of this century. But hey, what the heck, let’s give it a try.

Join me as I play Joestradamus and try to predict how the long-term trends in communication, transportation, economics and space travel will continue to guide the future and how they will shape what the world looks like in the year 2100. Here’s more from Joe Scott.

Ivanka Trump’s Time Travel

The following video, one of several mysterious clips found on Telegram recently, details Ivanka Trump’s connection to time travel.

A series of photographs and messages eerily tie Trump to the 1889 adventures of New York reporter Nellie Bly, who was inspired by the Jules Verne novel, Around the World in 80 Days, to complete a circumnavigation in less time. Meanwhile, another New York writer, Elizabeth Blisland, was attempting a similar trip in the opposite direction. Here’s more on the fascinating story from the new Gene Decode channel.

Esoteric Voyages Of Jules Verne

Jules Verne was a prolific French author whose writings laid much of the foundation of modern science fiction, with several of his novels adapted into successful films. Born in 1828, Verne’s influence extends beyond literature and film into the world of science and technology. He inspired generations of scientists, inventors, and explorers. More from Robert Sepehr, author and anthropologist.

Voyages Of Jules Verne

This is an extraordinary voyage into the world of Jules Verne, the father of science fiction. In this film, we dissect the most famous of tales and discover the truth behind them. More from Ancient Secret Discoveries.

https://www.bitchute.com/video/7VghSSG79WWG/

Sci-Fi Predicts the Future

While just about everyone from governments to military leaders are employing futurists to forecast what lies ahead, science fiction once–and still does in many cases–ruled the roost. Sci-Fi emerged as a new form of literature during the Industrial Revolution, and the era’s futurists, such as H.G. Wells, Jules Verne and other prolific writers, explored fantastic scenarios depicting new frontiers of human endeavor. Storytellers continued to share their visions of the future into the 20th and 21st centuries, correctly predicting many aspects of the world we inhabit many decades later. Learn more from Ted-Ed.

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Know Your Monster: 2

ATRAGON

Atragon isn’t a living, breathing monster per se, but something even more invincible — the greatest warship ever created. A renegade sea captain fabricated this supersub to restore Japanese supremacy after its defeat in WWII. Now, he must be convinced to release the nuclear-powered Atragon — his mechanical Kraken — to save the planet from being annihilated by invaders from the lost underseas continent of Mu. The Atragon can not only navigate the oceans, but also can fly and drill into the Earth’s core. It’s armed with a top-secret weapon — the Absolute Zero Cannon.

Atragon — short for “Atomic Dragon” — first surfaced in a 1963 film, proving so popular that the weapon was subsequently featured in several other movies, battling both monsters and aliens. In the original feature, it’s pitted in a death match against Manda, a gigantic Chinese sea serpent, unleashed by the Empress of Mu.

Fans of Jules Verne will recognize his influence over the fanciful Atragon adventures. They were adapted from a series of novels, written by Shunrō Oshikawa, and hugely popular with young boys.

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Tomorrow: Baragon.

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