Ramblings – 15th November 2024

Abundance of choice leaves us wanting for more

THERE’S no such thing as too much choice … or is there?

If you are old enough to remember life before internet connectivity, you probably recall evening routines going something like this.

Television broadcasts started at 5pm with children’s programs, the news went on at 8pm and adult shows played once kids had gone to bed.

I remember watching American sitcoms like The Golden Girls and Full House. In those programs, households had something called cable television.

As a child, I wanted to visit America, stay in a hotel and watch TV shows on all the different channels.

In South Africa, we had one channel and it only ‘switched on’ at 5pm.

Fast forward to 2024 and there are literally hundreds of channels available to us.

Yet there we sit, remotes in hand and say, ‘there’s nothing to watch’.

I have Foxtel, Prime Video, Stan, Disney plus, Netflix and Paramount pay to view channels at my fingertips.

Then there’s YouTube and its smorgasbord of literally anything and everything.

Still, ‘nothing good is on’ and I fade in and out of shows that fail to hold my attention within the first minute.

I’ve become fickle.

We all have.

I spend around $150 a month on different streaming channels.

That’s an extra $150 I wouldn’t be spending back in the 90s and early 2000s.

I interviewed an English farmer, two years ago.

I asked if the cost-of-living crisis and price of food was as concerning to the British as it was to Australians.

His perspective has stuck with me ever since.

He said 20 years ago, people spent their wage on housing, education, food and transport.

Nowadays, people pay for all that plus a plethora of streaming channels, then complain money doesn’t go as far as it used to.

It’s not just television shows fighting for our attention, it’s the same with human beings.

Literally the same.

Take the dating app Tinder for example, the choice factor there is ridiculous.

My three sons are in their mid to late 20s.

They say there is so much choice, people have become flaky.

Something and someone better is always on the horizon.

Swipe left, swipe right – it’s a production line.

Tinder isn’t the only dating app, there are a multitude of them.

Many singles have profiles across them all.

Like streaming services, we are happy to pay to have as many prospects as possible.

You pay for premium access to dating apps and complain ‘money doesn’t go as far as it used to’.

Doh!

We live in the age of instant gratification.

Feel like a hamburger meal?

Get it delivered to you within 15 minutes through Uber Eats or Deliveroo.

Want that new handbag and pair of jeans?

Use Afterpay to get it now and pay it off over four weeks.

Got a big weekend planned but only get paid the week after?

Get a payday loan.

There are even apps where you can order booze and have it delivered to you if you’ve been drinking and can’t drive to the bottle-o.

It’s no wonder we can’t settle on who we’d like to spend our lives with.

Too much choice is slowing us down and we are stagnating.

People are holding off making important decisions because better options seem ‘just around the corner’.

The Internet and modern-day technology comes with a price.

In ancient Greek mythology, coins were placed on the eyes of the deceased or under their tongue so they could pay the toll to cross from this world into the next.

We all pay the ferryman at some point, but it seems many will still be deciding on the destination when the last ship has sailed.

Digital Editions


More News

  • Youths speak up

    Youths speak up

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 543849 The Regional Finals for the Lions Youth of the Year Quest was held at Kalbar last weekend. The contestants were Alison Boettcher, Isabella…

  • When life gets ruff

    When life gets ruff

    There are ways to divide society in conversations covering politics, religion and whether pineapple belongs on pizza, but none are as revealing as this; ‘are you a cat person or…

  • Heavy hitters in the world of giants

    Heavy hitters in the world of giants

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 544284 The Frohloff family are the premiers of the 2026 Brisbane Ekka’s Giant Pumpkin competition … again. Their reputation as Queensland’s most consistent champion…

  • Water security and sustainable living

    Water security and sustainable living

    A four bedroom, two bathroom brick and tile home on an acre block at Minden sold last month for $926,111. The Luther Court residence is located along a cul-de-sac and…

  • Sale highlights rise in land values

    Sale highlights rise in land values

    The sale of a 2,023sqm residential block outside Rosewood is indicative of the significant change in local land values since the Covid years. In early 2020, the property sold for…

  • Rosewood women’s group raise funds for RFDS

    Rosewood women’s group raise funds for RFDS

    The Rosewood Women’s Group hosted a fundraising morning in March at the Memorial Hall in Rosewood, raising funds for the Royal Flying Doctor Service via games, raffles and community activities.…

  • Cracker of a grant

    Cracker of a grant

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 543903 Harrisville Women’s Shed were successful in their bid for a grant that brought almost $5,000 into the organisation’s coffers. The founder of the…

  • Boonah courts big dream

    Boonah courts big dream

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 543959 A love of basketball that began on the quiet courts of Boonah is now fuelling big ambitions for teenager Louie Berrington, who has…

  • Community dignity boxes launch event

    Community dignity boxes launch event

    Families enjoyed a vibrant and welcoming afternoon on Tuesday, 24 March, as the Rosewood Community Centre hosted the official launch of the new Community Dignity Boxes. Held at the Centre…

  • New fuel supply taskforce

    New fuel supply taskforce

    Federal Member for Blair Shayne Neumann has welcomed the Albanese Government’s announcement it had established a Fuel Supply Taskforce to be led by Coordinator Anthea Harris, following a meeting of…