FutureNews
The Latest News from the World of Cryonics and Beyond
‘A Father’s Wish To Be Preserved’:
The New Yorker Presents A Cryonics Documentary
In filmmaker Ömer Sami’s October 2024 documentary short, a man’s wish to be cryogenically frozen is given a tour of a cryonics facility and discussions his decision with his wife and children.
“Nasar Ghafoor started a family late in life, and fears that he won’t be there to see his four young children grow up. The average life expectancy for men—around seventy-eight years—looms large on his mental horizon. He decides he is interested in being frozen after death, in the hope of being reanimated.
“Sami captures the family’s warmth and closeness, and the scope of the question that weighs on them: What lengths would you go to for more time with those you love?”
See the entire documentary video here:
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-new-yorker-documentary/a-family-reckons-with-a-fathers-wish-to-be-preserved-using-cryonics-in-eternal-father
‘Patient One’:
Australian Cryonics Firm Freezes First Patient in Southern Hemisphere
Southern Cryonics, a newly founded cryonics firm which began operations in May 2024, and operates the Southern Hemisphere’s first known cryonics facility, announced that it has cryogenically frozen its first client at its Holbrook facility. The client, a man in his 80s, died in Sydney before being frozen at minus 200 degrees Celsius. He has become what the company refers to as ‘Patient One’.
“His family rang up out of the blue and we had about a week to prepare and get organised,” the Southern Cryonics representative stated. He explained that his team tested all the cryonics equipment, though this was their first actual a cryopreservation. “It’s still a little bit different when you are doing a real case,” he said.
According to ABC News Australia, ‘Patient One’ died on May 12 at a hospital in Sydney. The 10-hour process of preserving his body in the hope of bringing it back to life then began immediately.
The cryopreservation was announced on Southern Cryonics’ account on X/Twitter.
All The Cryonics News That’s Fit To Print
Miss curling up by the fireplace with a cup of hot tea and the latest news magazine? Just take out your laptop: the top two cryonics companies in the world, Alcor and the Cryonics Institute, have put out their latest publications for the year 2024 and are busy putting together new issues for a new year. You may not find them on the magazine rack at Barnes & Noble, but we’ve got them here.
Catch up on what’s happening with the industry leaders. Clicking on the links below, and read the PDFs directly, or print them out on the printer at home.
Cryonics Institute Magazine (the Cryonics Institute)
Alabama Rules That Cryopreserved Embryos Are Children
The decision was issued in a pair of wrongful death cases brought by three couples who had frozen embryos destroyed in an accident at a fertility clinic. Justices, citing anti-abortion language in the Alabama Constitution, ruled that an 1872 state law allowing parents to sue over the death of a minor child “applies to all unborn children, regardless of their location.”
What are the possible implications not just for the over one million embryos currently cryoreserved, but for the protection of cryonics patients?
Read about the decision here:
CNN: Alabama Rules Frozen Embryos Are Children
AP: Impact After Frozen Embryo Ruling
AI Videos of a Retro Future
One of the objections to cryonics is that patients will wake up in an unrecognizable future so different that that won’t be able to adjust. But is that really likely? Or will the future not only preserve a good deal of the past, but restore some of its most enjoyable features, and celebrate them?
Artists and AI are showing the way. An entire series of AI-generated jazz videos are appearing on YouTube showing us panoramas of a Retro Future that viewers in love with the Fifties would die die for–or maybe be willing to buy a cryonics ticket and live for.
Below are several of the most charming and striking of these videos. Have a click. The future will never quite look the same.
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Nordic Cryonics Convention 2024
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