What Prometheus’ Alien reboot got right and wrong about Elon Musk
On Feb. 28, 2012, a video entitled “TED Conference, 2023” appeared on the website for the eponymous American-Canadian nonprofit organization. It was the first viral campaign that began with this futuristic, fake presentation. Prometheus, Ridley Scott’s then-upcoming attempt at revitalizing the science fiction horrors of the Alien franchise with a high-minded prequel. The video was a strange premonition.
Written by Prometheus co-writer Damon Lindelof and directed by Ridley’s son Luke Scott, the video starred Guy Pearce as a younger version of his character Peter Weyland, the ostensible antagonist of the film, delivering a defiant speech to a massive audience packed into Wembley Stadium, with floating cameras and real-time reactions scrolling across a massive projection screen. Before the film, Prometheus, Weyland was the previously unseen (and long-deceased) founder of Weyland Industries, which would eventually become the unscrupulous mega-corporation Weyland-Yutani (aka “The Company”) first glimpsed in the original 1979 Alien. But in “TED Conference, 2023,” Weyland is alive and well, a 32-year-old tech mogul and veritable titan of industry at the apex of his combined wealth, youth, and power with clear thoughts on the future.
“Prometheus takes place in the future, but it’s a movie about ideas, and I just felt like it would be really cool to have one of the characters from the movie give a TED Talk,” Lindelof said in a Q&A interview published on TED’s blog alongside the Peter Weyland video. “Obviously, since the movie is set in the distant future, it would have to be a little more contemporary. But wouldn’t it be cool if it was a TED talk from a decade in the future? What will a TED Talk look like 10 years from now? And what would this guy have to say?”
Peter Weyland’s TED Talk is just one example of how the inexorable march of time has eclipsed the wildest prognostications of speculative fiction. The video’s narrative or thematic relationship is what will be most fascinating in 2023. PrometheusBut it is an accidental time capsule of a moment during which tech CEOs were, collectively, held in higher regard.
It is like saying that 2023 was an entirely different time in 2012 than 2023. Reelected the first Black President of the United States. Natural and manmade disasters, including Hurricane Sandy and Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings, have rocked the country. The Avengers became one of the highest-grossing films in history — a record that would be eclipsed multiple times by Marvel itself over the next decade.
It is the most significant milestone for that year, however, because it refers to Prometheus TED Talk video, is the ascendant popularity of Elon Musk, who debuted on Forbes’ list of the world’s billionaires in March 2012 with a net worth of approximately $2 billion. In the late aughts to early 2010s, Musk was the golden boy of Silicon Valley, the “cool” billionaire who loved video games and Rick and Morty and inspired Robert Downey Jr.’s portrayal of Tony Stark in 2008’s Iron Man. He was the man who wanted to take humanity to Mars by 2021, and the subject of innumerable glowing profiles and op-eds penned by the likes of Esquire, Bloomberg, The Wall Street Journal, and more proselytizing the “triumph of his will” and his status as tech’s most eligible bachelor.
In 2023, Elon Musk is Silicon Valley’s wealthiest pariah, a man who was booed onstage at a comedy show and subsequently took to his bully pulpit atop the social media platform he purchased to crowdsource his self-esteem, stating, “Technically, it was 90% cheers & 10% boos.” A man suspected to be one of the inspirations behind Edward Norton’s character in Rian Johnson’s 2022 murder mystery Glass OnionPeacocking tech billionaire, with delusions (and possibly a penchant to murder). A man who posts cringe-inducing dad memes and dogwhistle conspiracy theories when he’s not busy banning and ducking from journalistsHe can boost his tweets or stream fart sounds livestreamed at 2 AM.
In 2012, Damon Lindelof imagined a character who was one of the world’s wealthiest and most powerful men, a billionaire several times over who, in the then-futuristic year of 2023, emerged from a self-imposed three-year media blackout to rapturous applause before proceeding to wax obtusely about Greek mythology, the history of human technology, and the folly of institutional regulation. In the reality of 2023, we’re at the point where we’re practically begging one of the world’s richest men to please log off and shut the fuck up.
Musk, as my colleague Susana Polo would put it, is a man who “wants to do whatever he wants, and, crucially […]Would love to be loved To be the man who is able to do anything he wishes.” Both he and the fictional Peter Weyland share that much in common. The final act of Prometheus, Peter Weyland funded Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and Charlie Holloway’s (Logan Marshall-Green) expedition to the distant moon of LV-223 so that he could beg the Engineers — the advanced alien species believed to have created humanity and the Xenomorphs — for a cure for death so that he could live forever. No spoilers, but… Well, you can guess how well that plan turned out.
Historical speculations and historical facts aside, Prometheus viral marketing campaign remains a fascinating touchstone of sci-fi popular culture and Hollywood ephemera, with the campaign’s most audacious element being the Peter Weyland TED Talk. It’s more than worth revisiting, if not to put into stark relief the ways in which our collective culture’s depiction of tech CEOs has or has not evolved, then just to see Guy Pearce hamming it up as Weyland in all his vainglorious glory.
PrometheusYou can stream it on Hulu.
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