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Serial Experiments Lain

In 1998, when you were still using Windows 95 (or Windows 98 if you're lucky), a television show came out of Japan called "Serial Experiments Lain." As far as animation quality goes, it was pretty much on par with anything else from that period - no fancy 3D CG or expensive Korean inbetweeners. However, something about the show made it popular enough in America that it's been seen by a large portion of Internet users and the theme song is a cult hit, even becoming certain dramacrats' ringtone.
Why This Show Matters to You
In the early days of home computing, before Encyclopædia Dramatica, 4chan, or Satan's lair had been invented, the internet was a fresh, new thing which wasn't even used by most people and couldn't be found in the nearest Starbucks. It held exciting possibilities and many technology columnists and academic types made great promises of a future ability for all people to connect and grow. It was a rosy world which Bill Gates predicted in The Road Ahead, a world of instant and customizable content being shipped from person to person everywhere.
In hindsight, the optimism of the early nineties was generally unwarranted. In 2010, cable companies have yet to deliver decent and egalitarian internet service (which was a prediction in The Road Ahead), and Facebook and smartphones are the closest things to a global network dense with easy access to all of one's own personal information. The grandiose projections were nothing but useless conjecture because they ignored the unpleasant underbelly of newsgroups, which would only be magnified by graphics and real-time communications into the downright degenerate realm of the modern internet.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the chans. Before any were actually invented, folks would have said that nothing could be better for advancing knowledge than a group of anonymous users writing on a shared bulletin board. Now we know that chans are only good for furry propaganda and the human waste called the "hivemind."
But That Didn't Actually Help Me Understand
"Serial Experiments Lain" weaves itself into the tapestry of the Web's development because Madman (the show's production house) didn't have the rose-colored glasses everyone else had. That's right - Madman was pessimistic, so they were able to make a hit. In the show, a young girl named "Lain" decides to get on the internet because a girl she walked home with once committed suicide. On the internet, she discovers all of the bad things that we're quite naive about today. She sees folks addicted to computers in general and people addicted to small computerized mind-control devices. She runs up against mysterious gun-toting strangers, a bizarre monster, and merry pranksters.
Eventually, she realizes she's caught up in a huge mystery. The clues that informed her were that her sister went totally freaking insane and her parents decided to just quit. She goes farther into the internet as she quests for an answer. What she finds, with wires dangling out of her head and computers stacked up all over her room, is that she isn't even a human being. Not a human, but a person "born on the internet," in the absurd wording of the show. Though no concrete explanation is ever given, a focused viewer can elicit that she is a collective consciousness. She's just all of the memories and ideas that folks have written online.
This is The Crazy Part, Kind of Like Every Episode of Code Geass
Even though she's like 11, Lain gets busy doing deep thinking. She starts to remember the girl who jumped off a high-rise in the first episode. She comes to the conclusion that she's God and should delete herself from everyone's memories. What this amounts to is an IRL flounce. Her "mind" is still alive online, but the body everyone had hallucinated about for over a decade just disappears.
Madhouse, in 1998, was able to visualize the modern internet. Lain is essentially a more benevolent version of the "hivemind" that comes out of places like 4chan. She is the personification of modern internet subculture.
Madhouse? More like Arthouse, eh? Eh?
Serial Experiments Lain caught a lot of attention just for presenting a strange viewing experience. Just listening to the show is hard on some viewers because the sound engineers decided to stick a 60Hz hum in the background. Wearing sunglasses is probably a good idea because many of the daytime scenes are so very bright as to cause macular degeneration in susceptible viewers. As the show progresses, strange visual elements are brought in to help out with storytelling through symbols. This mostly amounts to bizarre patterns floating around in shadows - things like pools of blood and weird 2D CG vortexes.
Layers
Weird: A high school girl becomes an hero, and her spirit lives on in the Wired, where God exists, apparently. The An Hero e-mails her classmates for the lulz, which prompts the main character, Lain Iwakura, to beg to her father for a new computer. This marks the beginning of a long, downward spiral into the world of an average /b/tard.
Girls: Lain joins her friends at a retarded techno club, where someone chimps the fuck out and goes on a shooting spree. Lain tells the man to GTFO, and then he kills himself.
Psyche: The Partyvan stalks Lain as she slowly becomes a paranoid schizophrenic.
Religion: Lain plays an MMORPG called PHANTOMa, a game that emo bitches like to obsess over. While playing this game, she discovers a group of 1337 hax0rz known as "the Knights of the Eastern Calculus", who are apparently causing suicide rates to increase in Japan.
Distortion: Lain hallucinates, and upgrades her Battlestation to the size of the kitchen she should be confined to.
Kids: Lain discovers the truth behind the botched 'KIDS experiment' that took place 15 years ago. Said experiment killed dozens of small children, and the Knights have obtained the project's schematics. The Knights attempt to bomb Lain's residence for being an edgy fuck, but fail because she is God.
Society: The FBI escort Lain to an office where she is forced to do manual labor for them.
Rumors: Lain puts her Sysop powers into use by "reverting" the rumors that have spread about her friend, Alice, having sexual fantasies about an oldfag teacher.
Protocol: Lain discovers Archive.org, and wastes moar time in the Wired. She also asks a guy out on a "date" to her house, where he fucks kisses her.
Love: Lain publishes the Knights' dox, and summons Eiri, the God of the Wired.
Infornogrpahy: Eiri wraps Lain's body in electrical cords and transforms her into a supercomputer.
Landscape: Eiri and Lain have a bitchfight over who should rule the internets.
Ego: Lain decides to do a "factory reset" on her life, after traumatizing everyone with her internet addiction.
This is 4chan's Brain on Lain
4chan is very proud to be what they are. They more or less worship the "hivemind" that they've become, and because of that, it's an unwritten rule that Lain was queen of /b/ before Boxxy or anyone else showed up to claim the title. Lurking on any 4chan board for an hour will result in seeing a couple of Lain jokes, at the very least.
The Lain fanclub extends farther than 4chan, though. Countless websites left over from the early days when Geocities was hot stuff are buried on the web. They include such things as plagiarism, primitive simulations of Lain's computer interface, and a drinking game. The drinking game has been lovingly reposted below.
[Errybuddy in da Wired get tipsy]
Related Articles
External Links
- Ancient Lain linksite
- Wired simulator (IE4 only, lol)
- Other Wired simulator (This one actually works, and the URL was shown briefly in the anime)
- The original source for the drinking game
- AnimeNewsNetwork's encyclopedia entry
- an actual attempt to create an OS like Lain uses (the nerds use FreeBSD as a basis)
- lainchan (a Cyberpunk chan dedicated to SEL)
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Serial Experiments Lain is part of a series on Visit the Anime Portal for complete coverage. |
![]() Serial Experiments Lain is part of a series on Web 1.0 |
[ANCIENT HISTORY] |
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Serial Experiments Lain is part of a series on Visit the Chans Portal for complete coverage. |
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Serial Experiments Lain is part of a series on Visit the Television Portal for complete coverage. |