Videos
We believe image-making and storytelling are powerful instruments of social change.
why videos?
Our videos examine the myths of the modern world, attempting the opening our minds and hearts to new possibilities. Much of the information needed to inspire societal transformation is challenging to grasp because:
It requires people to recognize and reflect on their own interpretations of reality. As we like to say, it is akin to examining our glasses while looking through them—often without realizing we were even wearing glasses;
It is often entangled in academic jargon, creating a disconnect from our everyday lives. Stories and images resonate more closely with our embodied experiences.
Season 01
Stories for New Futures
We created these videos to share ideas that are often buried in academic texts in a more approachable, visual form. Futures belong to everyone, and we know many people are eager to explore what more desirable tomorrows might look like. This is our first season experimenting with media as a tool for collective imagination—please watch, comment, and share your feedback. We would love to know what resonates with you and what you’d like to see next.
myths of modernity
Have we outgrown mythology?
Are myths relics from ancient cultures?
No. Myths and archetypes continue to structure the modern world, quietly shaping our design, politics, philosophy, economics, technology, and even our fiction.
In this educational video, we explore the dominant narratives that construct the "modern, Western" world—the Global North. We examine how these myths assert themselves while simultaneously undermining other worlds—those that honor and sustain Earth’s web of life.
Credits
COMING SOON
The Conventional Future: What does the future really mean?
Have we outgrown mythology? Are myths relics from ancient cultures?
Why does the future look like that? You know, the robots, the shiny buildings, the spaceships. In video, we explore a hundred year tradition that decides what the future is allowed to look like.
How did the term “the Future” become so associated with this aestheticized vision of technology? How does science fiction shape how we view the future? Where does consumerism fit into all this?