I think the quality of something like the Beveridge, for instance, will have a life of its own.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
People do eventually see something that's quality.
Quality survives.
The quality, not the longevity, of one's life is what is important.
In their search for quality, people seem to be looking for permanency in a time of change.
In terms of long-term durable storage, the human mind, paradoxically, is pretty good, but it's very fragile.
Old-school viewers remain adamant that 'The Real World' has deteriorated, as if the original enterprise were some pristine experiment that got sullied as the conditions in the lab got sloppier.
When a product is made, everyone hopes for the best. Whether it could have been better or not is more of an afterthought.
No matter the risks we take, we always consider the end to be too soon, even though in life, more than anything else, quality should be more important than quantity.
Everything will change. The only question is growing up or decaying.
Classics are constantly being re-imagined and transformed, and the originals are none the worse for it; they endure.
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