As the gamut of profitable goods becomes stagnant and market competition reaches its limit, the final marketable aspect is experience. This is why high-end restaurants have turned into performance art shows. You can't really compete just on food anymore, you have to provide a unique experience. The future of commerce is selling experiences more than selling quality goods.

I don't know much about Italian politics but I assume Rome is strapped for cash as well as other major tourist locations featuring historical sites. I think the various orgs who own and run these sites are going to start doing this kind of stuff. They're going to turn the sites into unique locals for restaurants, venues, and other businesses. A restaurant in The Great Pyramid. A U2 concert in the Colosseum. A strip mall on Stonehenge.

Of course it won't happen fast and it won't be as gaudy starting out.

https://archive.is/5V4Yf#selection-991.0-995.244

One decision has already been made which may disappoint fans of Gladiator, the Oscar-winning film. Despite earlier plans to bring back gladiators for mock battles, Ms Russo said that the ministry was aiming higher. She said: “The arena will be used for high culture, meaning concerts or theatre but no gladiator shows.”

Yes it will start out as high-tech but historically respectful. Preserve the site, but offer some flexibility in how it's displayed. Only "high culture" allowed. So opera, theater, that kind of stuff. That is until a decade or two from now when Rome needs even more cash and they decide to start letting pop bands play there. If they can pull it off then other places will start doing it to make up revenue.

Sure this isn't super new. People have been exploiting these sites for centuries. But I feel a lot of them have been able to strike a balance between commercialization and being a museum. With everything going to shit though, I think things will tip into commercialization's favor and we're going to get billboards on the great wonders of the world. Or they'll slowly be chopped up and sold off to commercial/private interests. We're going to see a hiving off of culture the way we've seen it happen to all public interests.

  • penguin_von_doom [she/her]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Meh, if they can make it without damaging the building it's kinda cool... problem is they probably wont

      • penguin_von_doom [she/her]
        ·
        4 years ago

        Depends on how it is run, but historical sites such as this often do not run at a very big profit, even the Colloseum, or the profits end up ocvering for other less popular sites. Museums are notoriously underfunded everywhere in the world. Very often curators and the like are also looking at ways to bring more people in, both for profit but to inspire interest, promote culture, etc.

        So yes, it is a capitalism move, because we live in a capitalism system, and things in it have to use the tools of capitalism in order to survive. Is it just a money-grab? Could be. But it could be a number of other things, perhaps a bit of all.