If you aren’t aware of the show, here’s a quick look at Peacock’s version of the book: So it would seem a ripe picking for a modern remake. It is very similar in feel to the book 1984 and is just a fantastic dark prediction of where our society has been going in the past centennial. For example, there are interesting predictions about reproduction science, his prediction of sleep learning, and psychological marketing manipulations. One of the cool parts of the novel (if you haven’t read it yet, if you have – I don’t know what to tell you, just nod your head a lot through this bit) is how Huxley anticipated technological and scientific leaps in our world over the past 100 years. And in said futuristic world state, the citizens are all engineered into a strata of engineered DNA based hierarchies. The original Brave New World novel is a dystopian novel written what, 90 years ago, and is set in a futuristic dystopian state. Both very very similar re-envisionings of classics. “Peacock’s Brave New World Compared w Original and Ending Explained” – which means, I want to see how the show and the book differ, and I also want to see if we can get that ending explained for you all.įirst, I have to say, if you enjoyed Peacock’s Brave New World – you might also really enjoy HBO’s Westworld – or Hulu’s Handmade’s Tales. So today I have a tall order to accomplish for you all. And I have to admit that the only reason I was trying to learn more was because of one show – their adaptation of Brave New World, based on Aldous Huxley’s book by the same title. But then I realized it was “free,” you just needed an account? Oh. I wasn’t hot on this whole Peacock idea at all at first.
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