<div>Are these theme communities the same as the New Urbanist developments championed by people such as James Howard Kunstler (<A href="http://www.kunstler.com">http://www.kunstler.com</A>)? Or is there just some degree of overlap? One of these developments (Seaside, Florida) served as the setting for The Truman Show. Creepily uniform. Perhaps a Seaside 2.0 could try to simulate diversity as well as community.</div> <div> </div> <div>Kunstler rants, but his descriptions of air travel, suburban sprawl ("crudscape"), and other outrages (such as the eyesore of the month) can be fun.</div> <div> </div> <div>K. </div> <div><BR><BR><B><I>"B." <docile_body@yahoo.com></I></B> wrote:</div> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">So it's a bit like a Thomas Kinkade painting. "There is even a Thomas Kinkade-themed community of homes, 'The Village at Hiddenbrooke,' outside of
Vallejo, California," says WIkipedia -- a nostalgia for a time that never really existed but which the American popular psyche is so good at inventing. <BR>-B. <BR><BR><BR><BR>Carl Remick wrote: <BR><BR>"[Best article on the Iraq war I've seen in a while.] <BR><BR>Living in a Fantasy <BR>At Home and Abroad <BR><BR>These places are better than simple gated communities; these are gated communities of the mind and imagination, the final step out of the 21st century into timelessness, into never-never land, a sweet and safe place which did not exist in any of the wonderful back-thens but have become such a large part of the American here and now. What a strange situation: a backward-peddling nation, unable to look at its present, much less deal with contemporary problems, physically constructing a series of back-lot movie sets for itself to live in.
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