Like a vibrant echo of electric energy on the dance floor, GOOD VIBES have energy to spare. Both voluptuous and spicy, they enhance your gaze and bring the good vibes you need to make your look groove. Follow the movement, let yourself be guided: good vibes straight ahead!

I am embarrassed by how much I have been enjoying Threads!! I enjoy watching these chaotic first few days unfold, and watching people wrestle in real time with who they want to be on Threads and who they want OTHER PEOPLE to be to them on this platform. It's fascinating. I also am 10000% more comfortable in a text based medium, as opposed to Instagram, because I am messy and my home is messy and I'm too impatient to craft compelling visuals of just about anything. It's just not my native language, so I'm always fumbling and struggling to communicate. Threads feels easy; I feel like I get what it is, at least right now. But I completely agree about the vibes being just totally unhinged and the content not translating across platforms! It's bizarre to see how something that would have seemed fine on Instagram just falls flat (for me!) on Threads.


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Vibes (or sometimes \u201Cvibez\u201D) are everywhere now. As the two tweets above show, vibes are models for everything from gender to markets. In the past year, both DaBaby and Zayn Malik each released a song called \u201CVibez.\u201D Vibes are contiguous with moods, such as the moods Spotify uses to organize playlists and the Seattle bookstore Oh Hello Again uses to organize their books in place of genre. A 2019 HotelTonight advertisement used moods to categorize bookings in place of a five-star ranking system. The \u201Clo fi\u201D in \u201Clofi study beats\u201D is a vibe.

According to Amoore, \u201Cinviting speculation and inference in to calculation\u201D (Politics of Possibility 75) allows math to do more than it could on its own--namely, identify and enclose counterfactual (and improbable) scenarios. Bluntly, finance capitalism uses speculative rationalities to turn non-existent realities into markets, and the tools they use to do that are common to both Wall Street and Silicon Valley. Those tools run on vibes. As scholars such as Patricia Ticineto Clough and Mark Hansen have argued, the speculative calculus common in contemporary data analytics and machine learning measure \u201Ctendencies\u201D rather than events. Similarly, Amoore describes how relying on things like \u201Cpersonal convictions\u201D (Amoore 45), \u201Cguesswork, gut feelings, and instincts\u201D (Amoore 30), one can \u201Capproximate beyond the limit point of measurement\u201D (Amoore 32). Vibes make math more productive (for capitalism, for white supremacy).

Vibes, moods, feels--these are the instruments the culture of speculative finance capitalism uses to connect status-laden people to status-laden cultural objects and practices. This is the gist of the book I\u2019m working on right now that follows up on the work in Resilience & Melancholy and The Sonic Episteme. The argument is something like: vibes/moods/feels/orientations are the object of governance in post-normative (in the Foucaultian sense) neoliberalisms. Orientations are subject to discourses of legitimation (i.e., the capacity to privately assume risks and costs), and that\u2019s how the break between persons and non-persons is made. This has numerous implications for popular culture, from music industry\u2019s hard turn to copyright as the main way to make money from music, to \u201Cremixability\u201D being key for chart success, to songs like \u201Cdrivers license\u201D using mood contrast in place of more traditional tension/release structures. This is in very embryonic stages at the moment while I work on finishing my WOXY book. But this project is starting to gel more firmly than it has before, so be on the lookout for more issues exploring content from this project.

Markets are a profit-maximizing system. That is the point of All of This - the reason that people feel bad, the reason that the vibes are off, part of the reason that people get fired, companies go under, that McKinsey incentivized the opioid crisis - they knew it would kill people, but it would make *money*.

So when the vibes are off - when we think about how Recessions come about (beyond the technical aspects) it makes sense that we would somehow end up with the vibes of a Recession, but maybe not the economic reality of one (yet).

i used to wonder, economics is more about how humans behave, feel, than data. this piece vindicates that thesis strongly, even if things are sunny (which they are, relatively speaking), they might to appear bad (really bad, which also they are). thus, vibes matter. a lot. As of yet, vibes are suppressed & they compound sooner than later which gives a murky, blurry picture of how things are.

Some of the reasons that the vibes are off are because gasoline and food prices are so high. Energy is the common denominator to everything. When people see high gas prices, they feel bad. It sucks. But as George highlights - there is a difference between \u2018high gas prices\u2019 and a \u2018recession\u2019. ff782bc1db

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