Best 57 quotes of Ian Bogost on MyQuotes

Ian Bogost

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Actually a lot of the supposedly serious and meaningful and worthwhile content on the podcast or on the television is no more or less meaningful than the clothes in the laundry basket or the dishes in the sink. It's more a matter of the attention you're willing to bring to them, where you're willing to allow meaning and pleasure and the light to escape.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    A fun movie is something that is pleasurable without being demanding, you don't have to think too hard.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Be contemporary. Have impact. Strive for it. Be of the world. Move it. Be bold, don’t hold back. Then the moment you think you’ve been bold, be bolder. We are all alive today, ever so briefly here now, not then, not ago, not in some dreamworld of a hypothetical future. Whatever you do, you must make it contemporary. Make it matter now. You must give us a new path to tread, even if it carries the footfalls of old soles. You must not be immune to the weird urgency of today.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Even when we tell kids to go play, what do the kids do? They come up with a set of constraints and structures. "Oh, we're gonna build a fort out of clothes, and now that we're in the fort we're going to pretend that we're prisoners," or whatever.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Every now and then if you try, you can discover something new.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Forcing your spouse to stop doing that bad habit that drives you crazy, or making your kid be better at math or at art or at swimming, or making your parents or your in-laws not be annoying in the way that they're annoying, these are sometimes doomed goals.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    For me, what fun means is finding novelty in the suffocating familiarity of ordinary life.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Fun has to do with habitual activities but then also terrifically novel or unusual ones. It works as a sort of strange milkshake of those concepts.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Generally speaking, when people use the word fun, it's like a placeholder. You know, "How was your evening?" "Oh it was fun.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    God will not speak to me and tell me to mow my lawn today.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    If you start the day not really expecting substantial change, but anticipating some small new revelation or some small alteration, then over time you're able to find them in more places.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    If you stop someone who's talking about something being fun, and say "Well what do you mean?" it's almost impossible to answer.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    If you think about the contexts in which we talk about things being fun, often there's a certain kind of misery or effort that's involved with it. The difficulty of travel, getting all your bags packed and your work done and navigating the airports and all that. That sort of struggle.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    I think a lot of the misery that people experience comes from that sensation of boundlessness, of infinite possibility.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    I think the most important way to understand play is that it's this property that's in things. Like there's play in a mechanism. For example, there's some play in the steering column before it engages as you're turning the wheel.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    I think this dichotomy or opposition between work and play, between leisure and serious stuff, is definitely a bad way of thinking about the useful insights that play provides.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    It's helpful to be prepared to celebrate the tiny things that you can do, where you meet the world and you negotiate an outcome that's quite tiny. But you can still make it feel remarkable.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    It's not even that finding laundry pleasurable or delightful should be our goal rather than finding television delightful. It's that both laundry and television can be delightful.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Looking for meaning in the ordinary seems like the most urgent thing that we can do.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    My lawnmower can't change in the way that my son can or that I can.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    My wife, there's certain kinds of housework that she just doesn't see as necessary to do in the way that I do. Things like the state of our closet or where things are in the kitchen. I have this almost unhealthily obsessive desire to have things in their place and she just totally doesn't. And this is a potential point of conflict, of course.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    No one wakes up and says, "Yay I get to mow the lawn!" But if I can find meaning there, then there's nowhere I can't find meaning.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Normally if you're dating, you're looking for compatibility, and then the moment that there's incompatibility, you're like, "Well, swipe left on that, let's just keep looking." In some ways I think the same lessons apply to people that apply to objects. It's just much easier to see that lesson in things because they're these fixed intangible lumps of stuff. People are not. They can change.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Normally we think of play as the opposite of work. Work is the thing you have to do, and then there's play, the thing you choose to do.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Once you get yourself on that path where you're willing to find something delightful in laundry and in dishwashers, it means that you train yourself to be able to find it almost anywhere in almost anything.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Our ideas of happiness, gratification, contentment, satisfaction, all demand that those feelings come from within us. If you flip that on its head and say "What if I took the world at face value?" and then ask "What can I do with what is given?" it's an interesting trick to turn around the whole problem of how you feel.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Play becomes a distraction, something you don't really need to do. It's not for serious people. They work hard, they don't play hard. Yes, you can say play hard, but that really means, keep working hard, right?

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Play isn't you being clever, or finding a trick, or finding a way of covering over your own misery, or persuading someone to do what you want. It's the process of working with the materials that you find and discovering what's possible with them.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Play is this process of operating the world, of manipulating things. It's related to experimentation, and it's related to pleasure, but not defined by it.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    The actual effort that you can exert upon the universe is fairly limited.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    The idea of thinking of our relationships with people as also being structured by limitations and constraints can be useful.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    The modern world is very wealthy, it's full of options. It's not like "This is the land I was born on and I have to make the most of it, and these are the people who are near me, and so they will become my family.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    The more you're drowning in familiarity, the better the fun is. It requires less novelty to produce even more gratification. And it's something that didn't come from you. It was about the other thing - the thing you were experiencing, or the people you were with, or the mechanism you were operating, or whatever it might be.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    The playful perspective is not meant to turn your life into a game or a jungle gym. It's rather that the activity is looking outside of yourself.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    There are also many things my wife can't stand about me, and there are certain capacities that she has that are different than mine. The trick is to find compatibilities.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    There are personality traits, or baggage from their backgrounds, goals that they have and the first thing I need to do is understand and then acknowledge and then accept those properties. That's kind of the baseline requirement to have a productive relationship.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    There are things about us that make us who we are, personality traits, or capacities that we have, or knowledge we possess or that we don't possess, habits we have that are good or bad.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    There's just an enormous vast universe of possible intrigue out there and why not pay attention to it? Because then you're not burdened with trying to find that meaning in yourself all the time.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    The whole idea of play is in finding, acknowledging, and then working with the natural constraints and limitations that you find in the world.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    This willingness to be frank and plain about the way that the world is, is a good first step. But that doesn't mean that you get what you want.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    Today, all our wives and husbands have Blackberries or iPhones or Android devices or whatever-the progeny of those original 950 and 957 models that put data in our pockets. Now we all check their email (or Twitter, or Facebook, or Instagram, or) compulsively at the dinner table, or the traffic light. Now we all stow our devices on the nightstand before bed, and check them first thing in the morning. We all do. It's not abnormal, and it's not just for business. It's just what people do. Like smoking in 1965, it's just life.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    To me, being able to find gratification in more venues, rather than greater gratification in a few, seems like a much more sane way of living.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We have been trained to think we have enormous power over the world. Whatever you dream, you can do. Anything can be bent to your will. But actually isn't it much more interesting to imagine that you're quite small?

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We have so many choices that it's only always our fault if we're malcontent.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We have to always spread sugar on top of it in order that we can tolerate swallowing the things we're supposed to do, which is an incredibly depressing way of thinking about living your life. Not just that your work or your home life would be so miserable that you have to slather sugar on it, but then the sugar is all you're tasting. If that's the only way that I'm finding meaning, then we have this sort of mental diabetes that we're descending into.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We know exactly where the path to despair and insanity lies. It's in that sense that life is meaningless, there's nothing about today that's worth doing because it's just like yesterday and it's going to be just like tomorrow.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We're stuck in these situations with other people and our stuff and our jobs, and thinking that we can extract ourselves from those seems doomed to me. Instead, how can we live within those systems of constraints? We don't have to enjoy them, exactly, but at least acknowledge that those boundaries are real and that they structure our response to the world. And then once you do that, you allow yourself to say "I did my best given the circumstances.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We're used to thinking of fun as a sort of synonym for light pleasure.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    We think we want enjoyment, and that enjoyment is incompatible with work, and somehow we have to import the pleasure into these miserable experiences. That takes for granted that there's not fun or play to be found in the work itself.

  • By Anonym
    Ian Bogost

    When we think about play and games and the situations in which having fun is seen as an outcome, they often have to do with repetition. You're returning to something again, and even despite that similarity, you squeeze something new out of it.