--- Real Time Bondage 2009 09 18 Head Games Marina Review

To the casual observer, it was just another Friday. The leaves were just beginning to hint at autumn in the Northern Hemisphere, and the global economy was showing shaky signs of life after the 2008 crash. But for a specific subculture—the yacht owners, the high-stakes poker players, and the consumers of a particular brand of late-night cable journalism— was a cultural inflection point.

The guests that night reflected the fractured zeitgeist. There was a neuroscientist arguing that the human brain is wired for irrational optimism—a "head game" we play to get out of bed in the morning. Across the table sat a conservative pundit still insisting the Iraq War was a net positive, and a liberal filmmaker who had just finished a documentary about the subprime mortgage collapse. --- Real Time Bondage 2009 09 18 Head Games Marina

Entertainment in the marina lifestyle was bifurcated. To the casual observer, it was just another Friday

If you type that string of characters into the Wayback Machine of your memory, or into an old DVR hard drive, you unlock a particular flavor of late-aughts entertainment. It was the night Bill Maher’s Real Time on HBO tackled the theme of “Head Games,” and coincidentally, the very same evening that the Marina lifestyle—the gleaming fiberglass, the clinking of champagne flutes on aft decks, the diplomatic plates on Range Rovers—reached its pre-financial-crisis zenith of absurdist luxury. The guests that night reflected the fractured zeitgeist

Let’s rewind the tape. The episode that aired on September 18, 2009, was titled “Head Games,” and it was a masterclass in late-night anxiety. Bill Maher, ever the provocateur, opened his monologue not with jokes about celebrity gossip, but with a scalpel aimed squarely at the psychology of denial.

In September 2009, the marinas from Fort Lauderdale to Monaco were a strange paradox. The headlines screamed “The Great Recession,” but the docks were still full. Why?

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