Love Letter to Bubble Gore
Susie,
I was just being curious about who lives there now. Is this a current website of yours? I would love it if you were there now. I had an excellent run in that suite. We called it Bubblegore Productions. It was also a woodshop. Very cool. I lost it in a breakup situation. I have never and will never stop loving this place for as long as I live and I hope my creative energy lives on with you. We/I did a lot of fantastic work there. My run was 2015-2018. I've got a book in the works just about this place, and it will be featured in many upcoming projects. I have not been able to bring myself to work on those projects as they conjure up these dead-lover feelings. WE were in love with each other. Such is life's ebb and flow. Maybe part of the reason it all fell apart is because I loved IT more than my human relationships. It was much more satisfying and giving and capable of communicating effectively with my spirit. I spoke to it directly each day like I did my cats. Also, the loves of my life. I am happy for you to be in this unit. Tell it I say hello. :) Brice www.sekdek.com
ps. Try not to let all the neighbors ruin your experience. Know that the owner is probably autistic or whatever eccentric and that he is definitely not the enemy like so many who live there seemed to think and express openly and consistently to the incredible audacity and shock of my mind. Seems to me he has offered the Bay Area an amazing thing and is quite logical and fair. That is to say if the whole thing is not some Black Mirror experiment...which I also suspected the entire time as it was always too good to be true. Haha. I digress. Still worth it even if it was.
4/22/24 no response yet
In the film A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Jude Law plays the character Gigolo Joe. When he is taken away by the authorities, he says, "I am, I was." This simple, poignant line underscores the existential plight of the robots in the film, reflecting on their identity and their programmed impermanence.