One of our favorite things to daydream about is what the future will look like. We’re huge fans of sci-fi, and it’s a personal hobby of ours to try and try to make personal predictions not just for the upcoming year, but what the next decade and even century might offer. This love of futurology is nothing new—people have been trying to foresee the distant past for ages.
Paul Fairie, a researcher at the University of Calgary, put together a viral thread about the predictions made by people in 1923 about life in 2023. Some of these are wild and come with a very definite retrofuturistic, utopian twist! Scroll down to check out how folks living a century ago imagined our present, upvote the newspaper clippings that caught your eye the most, and take a peek at how the internet reacted to Paul’s post.
What do you think 2023 will bring, dear Pandas? What do you imagine 2123 might look like? Share your thoughts in the comments.
Image credits: paulisci
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By 2023 there'll be no mail between New York and San Francisco. Pittsburgh and London concerns will record, on talking films, orders from merchants in Peking, and 1,000-mile-an-hour freighters will make deliveries of goods before sunset. Watch-size radio telephones will keep everybody in communication with the ends of the earth.
No More Hard Work by 2023!
DR. CHARLES P. STEIN- METZ, the electrical expert, believes that the time is coming when there will be no long drudgery and that people will toil not more than four hours a day, owing to the work of electricity. He visualizes an amazing transformation in life in 2023. Every city will be a "spotless town." That is to be the work of electricity, also.
At the time of writing, Paul’s thread was viewed nearly 9 million times, and got over 56k likes on the social media platform. And it’s no wonder. He made the thread incredibly relatable, provided entertainment as well as education, and really got Twitter thinking about the past, as well as the far future.
Some of the most interesting predictions that people in 1923 made included how by the current year, we’d have 4-hour workweeks, everyone will be disease-free and beautiful, and how we might all live till we’re 300. Cancer would also be a thing of the past. Someone even predicted that radio would replace gasoline, and that’s a retrofuturistic aesthetic that we’d very much want to see play out in a movie or TV show.
Cancer, tuberculosis, infantile paralysis, locomotor ataxia, and leprosy will be eradicated.
Fewer Doctors and Present Diseases Unknown; All People Beautiful
Beauty contests will be unnecessary as there will be so many beautiful people that it wil be almost impossible to select winners. The same will apply to baby contests.
Would love the eradication of beauty pagents. Especially child beauty pagents
Beauty pageants seem to be fun with the right people, then you get the parents making up for their miserable life
Load More Replies...People probably are, on average, more beautiful now than in the past. Less childhood malnutrition, more vaccines for disease that lead to scarring (like smallpox), better dental care and hygiene, and readily available skincare and plastic surgery give us a decent edge.
Emphasis on "plastic" surgery. It's crazy to my how cookie cutter a number of celebrities and influencers are becoming...
Load More Replies...Well, we HAD a lot of diseases nearly eradicated, but the goddamned anti-vaxxer ignoramuses totally f****d that all up.
I know what baby contests are, but they sound like "who can birth their baby the fastest"
Well they got it spot on about beauty - filters make everyone beautiful for a given value of beauty. The same applies to kids beauty pageants.
beauty pageants are so toxic. like the ones with young girls are just not healthy for kids
Correct in the eradication of certain diseases but did not see the fact that doctors are always needed as people will always be dying.
i mean this is sort of true, in the way that we’re opening our eyes to many different types of beauty rather than just a singular definition
Stinky, curdled, and even the stray cat looks at me like "Are you nuts?".
Load More Replies...well they are kinda right, i think everyone is beautiful in there own way, if there ugly on the outside, they beautiful on the inside!
They have not met me obviously....I'm still ugly. (But ok with it)
I mean....they're not wrong. I've never met an ugly person. Diseases are still everywhere but the beautiful people are too.
Baby contests have always been "unnecessary" for exactly that reason. I do chuckle (and also die a little inside) at the idea of it being necessary to decide who is the most attractive. I'll buy that it's a source of entertainment for some (seriously messed up) people, but necessary?
Well there you have it, folks! You're beautiful, I'm beautiful, we're all beautiful! Yay!
Beauty pageants will be "unnecessary"? Does that mean as long as there are less attractive people about, they are necessary?
But all people are beautiful through any time in history. It's just the stupidity of trend and baseless standard that creates the illusion of ugliness.
One prediction that was eerily accurate was that the United States would have a population of 300 million. As it stands currently, there are nearly 332 million people living in the US.
However, the person who thought that there would be 100 million Canadians in a hundred years was wrong: right now, there are just over 38 million people living in Canada.
The population of the United States in the year 2023, probably 300.000,000, will imply an immense progress in the drainage of our low lands, in the irrigation of arid lands.
In reading a forecast of 2023 when many varieties of aircraft are flying thru the heavens, we do not begin the day by reading the world's news, but by listening to it for the newspaper has gone out of business more than half a century before.
Predicting the future is never easy, but there are some things that we can do to make our guesses a bit more accurate. A while back, Bored Panda spoke to Aaron Genest, an expert on labor in the tech and innovation industry and manager at Siemens. He explained to us that we have to take a peek at the investment space if we want to know what the technological landscape will likely look like in a few years’ time.
"I'd argue that most people underestimate the timelines necessary to produce the technological goods on which we rely and the investment made to allow them to exist. By looking 'upstream' in that investment space, we can have a pretty good idea of what whole industries are betting on," he told us.
"For instance, it takes almost two years to develop and produce a computer chip and get it to market for a phone, and five years to get something into a new kind of car. So if we want to have a sense for what, for instance, the gadgets in our cars will look like in 2026, we just need to look at what the car manufacturers are asking their suppliers to design today,” the expert told Bored Panda earlier.
A new Polar airline is opened making flights across the north pole from Chicago to Hamburg possible in 18 hours.
A scientist says a century from now the average length of human life will be 300 years. Quite a change. We of today have been living that long about once a month.
As such, ‘futurists’ and prognosticators don’t have some crystal ball that they look into to divine the future. They look at where billions upon billions of dollars are invested. The way that work is managed might change as well. The Covid-19 pandemic forced the world to embrace hybrid or fully remote work.
Teleworking suddenly became a viable alternative to showing up at the office. Though, of course, the exact opinion on this varies wildly from company to company and from industry to industry.
WS SHOULD WORRY.
Good night! It is now predicted that by the year 2023 - only a mere little stretch of a century ahead - women will probably be shaving their heads! And the men will be wearing curls. Also the maidens may pronounce it the height of style in personal primping to blacken their teeth. Won't we be pretty? - Savannah News.
CURLS FOR MEN BY 2023 PREDICTS ANTHROPOLOGIST
Bases His Statement on Trend of Masculine and Feminine Styles.
Meanwhile, during another interview, Ramona Pringle, the Director of the Creative Innovation Studio and an Associate Professor at the RTA School of Media at Ryerson University, explained to Bored Panda what tech trends we might see. Storytelling. Connectivity. Entertainment. These are the things that should survive in the coming decades.
“We don’t know what the future holds, and anyone who says that they do is selling snake oil. But, there are certain things we can count on: we love stories, and we love to be part of something bigger than ourselves. Be it oral storytelling, books, blogs, movies, or video games, we’ve never lost our love of narrative,” the expert said.
“Equally true, even when we can’t go into a concert hall or colosseum, we look for ways to be together, connected, and part of a communal experience. The tech might change, but these will continue to be the drivers of our entertainment experiences,” Pringle told Bored Panda some time ago.
The private kitchen will disappear. Tomorrow's food will be seasoned and prepared by chemical formulas, which will preserve the freshness of fruits and meats, rid them of indigestible qualities, and send them to the table ready to use. Instead of sauces that merely cozen the palate, we shall have delectable blends of concentrated vitamines, calories, ferments, and tissue tonics.
"Kidney cosies" will be worn to protect the kidneys on chilly days, just the same as a teapot in the north is kept warm by a "tea cosy."
“Immersion and interactivity have long been goals for creators and media makers when it comes to how technology can influence entertainment,” she said.
“For the last decade, we’ve leaned into virtual reality because of how it enables both of these. We can step inside a world and have influence over it, and the story or experience that unfolds. I think one of the things we can expect moving forward is, in a sense, the opposite of virtual reality. Instead, more of an enhanced reality or fictional reality, wherein the entertainment isn’t in a headset, but instead, all around us,” the expert noted.
“A decade ago, we didn’t talk to robots. Today, many of us do. Siri and Alexa are some of the more common bots, but we already interface with non-human characters regularly. As technology advances, including augmented reality and mixed reality, I think we can expect that entertainment will be something we can engage with off of the screen, but out in the world, with characters and stories we can engage with throughout the day, or throughout our houses,” she told Bored Panda.
THE WAR OF A.D. 2023.
Professor Forecasts Wireless Wonders.
|How we shall fight in A.D. 2023" is the subject of a contribution by Professor A. M. Low to the September "Nineteenth Century and After." The professor dwells on latest scientific war terrors, and refers to an invention of his own-jets of water highly charged with electricity- which will render cavalry obsolete.
"The war of 2023," he proceeds, "will naturally be a wireless war, for there is no end to the possibilities of this wonderful force."
"Wireless telephony, sight, heat, power and writing may all play important parts.
Professor Low states that at the present time he can, by an expenditure of about three horse-power destroy a wire at a distance of more than a yard without any connection at all.
Professor Low concludes that it is quite possible that when civilisation has advanced another century, mental telepathy will exist in embryo, and will form a very useful method of communication.
Drone warfare. As for telepathy...quick what am I thinking right now?
By 2023 the average life of man could be increased to 100 years. In individual cases it could be increased to 150, perhaps 200 years.
“Whoever would have thought that people would pay money to watch other people play games? Media that engages us and gives us something to gather around, be it together, or virtually, is something that will always appeal to us,” she said.
“In the last few years, we’ve seen the rise of interactive and immersive venues like the museum of ice cream or the Dr. Seuss experience. These are places we can go, with friends and family, and have a shared experience. It feeds back into our online experiences because we can share photos or memories and these environments are designed to foster that,” the researcher explained to us back in 2020.
Canada may well have 100,000,000 people. She is powerful now, with her fine equipment for transport, of commerce and trade, equipment sufficient to serve twice the number of people she has today, and with 100,000,000 population, who can set bounds to the power of Canada 100 years from now.
Utensils and dwellings will be manufactured largely of pulps and cements so as to utilize vegetation and stone in every stage of decay, ordinary waste or unfitness.
We're working on it! https://www.residentialproductsonline.com/rise-plant-based-building-materials
“Certainly, as we find ourselves in a time of social distancing, we’re seeing new creative ways of ‘being together’ even when we’re apart. So I think we can expect to see entertainment that helps us connect, be it online or off, and immerses us in an experience, story, or community.”
Minneapolis Journal: It is an attractive prophecy that Glenn Curtiss, the airplane authority, gives of airflight. He predicts that by the year 2023 gasoline as a motive power will have been replaced by radio, and that the skies will be filled with myriad craft sailing over well-defined routes.
Which predictions caught you by surprise? What do you personally think the future will look like, a century from now? Share some of your thoughts in the comments.
When you’re done with this list, check out Bored Panda’s feature about Paul’s earlier thread about how “nobody wants to work anymore,” going all the way back to 1894.
My new goal is to make all of these come true this year. Gonna figure out how to cure a few diseases and increase life expectancy, but I should be able to do that by April. The REAL challenge will be getting guys to curl their hair.
aren't a lot of young guys already curling their hair for that broccoli hairdo?
Load More Replies...What a great, thought-provoking post! So much better than the never ending stream of AITAs and TikTok idiocy.
I didn't see the flying car that was always predicted. I've been waiting for it all my life.
Taxi drones might be a thing soon, but too noisy and awkward to be used to replace cars.
Load More Replies...My great aunt was 99 when she died 8 years ago. She came to Canada in a covered wagon--the technological advancements she witnessed in her lifetime are amazing, along with social change.
I love how the prediction of a 300 year lifespan is somehow proven after only 100 years.
What futurists always forget is our attachment to older, inefficient ways. We LIKE making things by hand, we value home cooked meals and our grandmother's recipe. Newspapers really could have gone out of business but although circulation is tiny now I think there may be a limited market purely because people enjoy the physicality of them. Kinda like how vinyl records have hung on..
and that applies to other things as well, like fashion or music. Most of the "new trends" are just recycled things that were introduced 20-30 years ago. I don't particularly like the 70's or 80's fashion, but I envy that they got to wear extravagant clothes and hairdos, and it was normal, but in my lifetime I've only got to wear "normal" clothes. Like, most people just wear a variant of jeans and shirts, sober colors for the most part. No weird shapes or textures. And with music, I guess the early 2000's were the last time I heard a new kind of sound, after that it's just sounds recycled from previous eras. It's like people are allergic to original things that have never been seen or heard before.
Load More Replies...I'm still waiting for all the stuff that was supposed to happen by 2000 - moon bases, shiny silver lycra, alien contact, hover cars...
Yeah! I'm still looking for my damm flying car!!
Load More Replies...There is an episode of Bob Hope's radio show from the 50's where he predicted telephones and television in cars. "Wife calls and says on the way home stop and get some tomatoes. And keep your eyes on the road and off the tomato on the TV!"
Shall I add a pessimistic prediction for year 2123 CE? Only a century off. Alas, humanity likely extincts itself (all of us) by then via chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, and just general hydrosphere pollution and toxic spills. Who is left? A small Martian colony, maybe. Maybe not. ;(
Hi Pandarians. Lets us together make predictions of what will happen in 100 years from now (year 2123). Hopefully, some future Super-Bored Pandarians in 2123 will dig-up this post and laugh / amuse at our predictions. I'll start. I think meat eating will be considered savage. People will eat artificial (lab grown) meat that comes in variety of tastes such as chicken, horse, dolphin, T-rex. Who knows, maybe half-boiled velociraptor's eggs with honey for breakfast is as mundane as having corn flakes today. Animal farming will be considered archaic and in-humane. That being said, there will be some small segments of them that will disagree. They may (secretly) kill live animals for food on the grounds of personal belief, freedom of will, etc.
Shame the Simpson wasnt around 100 years ago. Then more then half of these would have been right lol
So future generations will know, what are your predictions for what will happen by 2123?
Mass chaos and destruction based on the way we're heading now :(
Load More Replies...My new goal is to make all of these come true this year. Gonna figure out how to cure a few diseases and increase life expectancy, but I should be able to do that by April. The REAL challenge will be getting guys to curl their hair.
aren't a lot of young guys already curling their hair for that broccoli hairdo?
Load More Replies...What a great, thought-provoking post! So much better than the never ending stream of AITAs and TikTok idiocy.
I didn't see the flying car that was always predicted. I've been waiting for it all my life.
Taxi drones might be a thing soon, but too noisy and awkward to be used to replace cars.
Load More Replies...My great aunt was 99 when she died 8 years ago. She came to Canada in a covered wagon--the technological advancements she witnessed in her lifetime are amazing, along with social change.
I love how the prediction of a 300 year lifespan is somehow proven after only 100 years.
What futurists always forget is our attachment to older, inefficient ways. We LIKE making things by hand, we value home cooked meals and our grandmother's recipe. Newspapers really could have gone out of business but although circulation is tiny now I think there may be a limited market purely because people enjoy the physicality of them. Kinda like how vinyl records have hung on..
and that applies to other things as well, like fashion or music. Most of the "new trends" are just recycled things that were introduced 20-30 years ago. I don't particularly like the 70's or 80's fashion, but I envy that they got to wear extravagant clothes and hairdos, and it was normal, but in my lifetime I've only got to wear "normal" clothes. Like, most people just wear a variant of jeans and shirts, sober colors for the most part. No weird shapes or textures. And with music, I guess the early 2000's were the last time I heard a new kind of sound, after that it's just sounds recycled from previous eras. It's like people are allergic to original things that have never been seen or heard before.
Load More Replies...I'm still waiting for all the stuff that was supposed to happen by 2000 - moon bases, shiny silver lycra, alien contact, hover cars...
Yeah! I'm still looking for my damm flying car!!
Load More Replies...There is an episode of Bob Hope's radio show from the 50's where he predicted telephones and television in cars. "Wife calls and says on the way home stop and get some tomatoes. And keep your eyes on the road and off the tomato on the TV!"
Shall I add a pessimistic prediction for year 2123 CE? Only a century off. Alas, humanity likely extincts itself (all of us) by then via chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, and just general hydrosphere pollution and toxic spills. Who is left? A small Martian colony, maybe. Maybe not. ;(
Hi Pandarians. Lets us together make predictions of what will happen in 100 years from now (year 2123). Hopefully, some future Super-Bored Pandarians in 2123 will dig-up this post and laugh / amuse at our predictions. I'll start. I think meat eating will be considered savage. People will eat artificial (lab grown) meat that comes in variety of tastes such as chicken, horse, dolphin, T-rex. Who knows, maybe half-boiled velociraptor's eggs with honey for breakfast is as mundane as having corn flakes today. Animal farming will be considered archaic and in-humane. That being said, there will be some small segments of them that will disagree. They may (secretly) kill live animals for food on the grounds of personal belief, freedom of will, etc.
Shame the Simpson wasnt around 100 years ago. Then more then half of these would have been right lol
So future generations will know, what are your predictions for what will happen by 2123?
Mass chaos and destruction based on the way we're heading now :(
Load More Replies...