-
2 votes
-
A review of the Lego Mini Chef restaurant in Denmark – in which a meal prepared by tiny plastic people sparks a revelation about hospitality
12 votes -
Non-college educated White men used to be ahead in the American economy. Now they’ve fallen behind.
31 votes -
How elderly dementia patients are unwittingly fueling political campaigns
22 votes -
How guayule, a small shrub, could help the US rubber industry
12 votes -
What are Hubble and Webb looking at right this minute?
27 votes -
How to build greener, affordable AC for high humidity and hotter summers
27 votes -
Inside Annapurna Interactive's mass walkout: Internal politics, the surprise Remedy deal, and why it all happened
50 votes -
Annapurna video-game team resigns, leaving partners scrambling
45 votes -
When Rob Barrett surveyed one of Norway's largest seabird colonies in the '70s there were too many birds to count – stark before and after photographs reveal sharp decline
13 votes -
Where do you fit in the US political typology?
29 votes -
Will AI make us overconfident?
7 votes -
Annapurna and Remedy Entertainment announce partnership on Control 2, adapting Control and Alan Wake for film and TV
19 votes -
PhD Simulator
26 votes -
What makes Sweden's Armand “Mondo” Duplantis fly? The world's best pole vaulter turns a harrowing sport into something almost musical.
3 votes -
MILGRAM: An interactive Japanese music project
So this is pretty different from the typical stuff on here. I want to share an interactive music project that showed up on my YouTube feed called MILGRAM. It's produced by Deco*27, a popular...
So this is pretty different from the typical stuff on here. I want to share an interactive music project that showed up on my YouTube feed called MILGRAM. It's produced by Deco*27, a popular Vocaloid/Utauite, and Yamanaka Takuya, a member of the band The Oral Cigarettes who's also been a key figure in producing some anime and video games (Caligula Effect is a major one). This could probably fit into ~anime too, but this is specifically a music project so I figured this is the best place for it.
To quote the MILGRAM wiki:
MILGRAM, established April 2020, is an ongoing interactive music project by DECO*27 and Takuya Yamanaka.
The premise is that there are 10 prisoners residing in the Milgram Prison; they have all committed "murder". Over time, their mental images will be projected into a music video, containing hints and clues hidden in it. With these videos in mind, it is up to you to find out the truth behind their actions and deem whether they should be forgiven (innocent) or not (guilty).
In Milgram, there's a three trial system. Each prisoner will have 3 different MVs. For each video, you will be able to vote on their verdict (for the specific prisoner). Dependant on their previous verdict, their trial will change it's direction. Keep this in mind when you vote!
I like songs that tell stories, and MILGRAM definitely fits that criteria. I haven't finished listening to all of the songs released yet, but it's fun to watch the music videos while searching for clues to whatever murders they committed. Sometimes it's fairly obvious from the first video and lyrics. Other times, we're doing a lot of extrapolation. If you didn't know the context of the overall project, a couple of the songs and videos seem pretty typical for their musical genre. Just look at the top comment of that one: "imagine my confusion clicking onto a seemingly cute and catchy song only to scroll down and see people talking about abortion, murder and death??"
Even without that context though, I think all of the songs and music videos can stand on their own. I wouldn't have realized they were part of a series if they didn't mention "X Trial Music Video" in the title. The songs span multiple genres, ranging from rock to J-pop to metal to... I guess more jazzy and classical/blues? Not sure how exactly to classify that last one, the music video has my brain biased towards seeing it as a "musical theater song". Anyways, there's probably a little bit of something for everyone, and all of them are incredibly well done. I've been playing Undercover in particular on loop, and the melodies of a couple others have gotten stuck in my head.
Currently, the second trial/season recently wrapped up, and no word on when the third season/trial will start releasing, so the interactive aspect is currently on pause. But I figured this might be a fun rabbit hole for some others to go into. And there's some emphasis on it being a rabbit hole. There's a lot of related content like voice dramas and a Japanese mobile app that provide additional context. The wiki I linked at least has translated transcripts for the voice dramas and interrogations, and some of the messages on the app. Meanwhile, the music videos have some Japanese text that's left untranslated, but have YouTube comments mentioning rough translations. Basically, the music videos are just the surface of the story.
Mainly though? I just want to share some cool music and music videos. So I hope someone here enjoys this as much as I am!
7 votes -
Read the US Supreme Court’s ruling on immunity
55 votes -
The USDA’s gardening zones shifted. This map shows you what’s changed in vivid detail.
32 votes -
Why the pandemic probably started in a lab, in five key points
44 votes -
What my dog taught me about mortality
10 votes -
Fast-rising seas could swamp septic systems in parts of the American South
7 votes -
Consider the Consequences!, the 1930 pioneer of interactive fiction, remade as a Twine game
11 votes -
How the internet revived the world's first work of interactive fiction
13 votes -
‘Hopeless and broken’: why the world’s top climate scientists are in despair
63 votes -
The migrant highway that could sway the US election
11 votes -
The fish doorbell
17 votes -
The Yemen Listening Project
11 votes -
When vision and hearing decline with age
16 votes -
On popular online platforms, predatory groups coerce children into self-harm
15 votes -
Inside the brazen Arctic trip supplying Vladimir Putin’s flagship energy scheme
7 votes -
The endangered languages of New York
16 votes -
The 355 million dollar US civil fraud ruling against Donald Trump, annotated
30 votes -
Interactive: The impacts of climate change at 1.5°C, 2°C and beyond
18 votes -
He spent his life building a $1 million stereo. The real cost was unfathomable.
46 votes -
Choose Your Own Adventure - 45 years ago, one kids book series taught a generation how to make bad decisions
25 votes -
The perfect webpage: How the internet reshaped itself around Google’s search algorithms
15 votes -
What if American farmers had to pay for water?
41 votes -
NY Times 2023 Faces Quiz
25 votes -
The year Twitter died: a special series from The Verge
26 votes -
How electricity is changing, country by country
15 votes -
stranger video
9 votes -
The Canterbury Tales Project collated the Canterbury Tales original manuscripts. It translates each line into modern English and reads it aloud into the way the text wold be read in its own time.
16 votes -
This is how AI image generators see the world
16 votes -
Global CO₂ levels
21 votes -
Internet Artifacts
61 votes -
How AI art reduces the world to stereotypes
33 votes -
Arnold Schwarzenegger is here to pump you up (emotionally)
9 votes -
A guide to the running gags on Arrested Development
20 votes -
Saltwater is pushing its way up the Mississippi River
22 votes -
‘Instant credibility’: The evolution of sneakers from functional kicks to high-value commodities
11 votes