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Music

The Neoliberal Night Out: Why Clubbing Doesn't Feel Radical Any More

Nightlife is bigger business than ever, but we're forgetting why it was so vital in the first place.

We are the sorry descendants of SATs, GCSEs, BTECs and A-Levels. Our early lives have been dominated by the insistence that everything we experience, learn and know must be a quantifiable and dry exchange of information and analysis.

In our dismal working lives we spend 40-hour weeks analysing spreadsheets, fetching our superiors coffee, resetting self-checkout machines, or generating sponsored content for a trainer company in the "creative industries"—our education didn't just leave us adequately prepared for our future: we were ready to be unchallenged, sleepwalking in a perpetual and existential boredom.

During your meal-deal lunch-break you scroll through your phone. A Facebook acquaintance displays an intricate satellite survey of the route their round the world flight took them on; another shares the speed of their heart rate and the length of their evening jog in kilometres to the decimal point; another gives the exact sale price of their first home and a tiled photo of its various interiors, it includes their home office set-up with his and hers MacBooks, and a reed diffuser. Above these artefacts is a framed canvas printed with some inspirational text—it reads: Never, ever, ever, give up.

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