How does this city that’s switched on 24/7 affect people?
The city is a cruel imposition on people. Not everybody experiences it like that, but the 24-hour nature of it is particularly distressing. What the city does is try to reverse nature. It’s difficult to find an exit in the casinos. There’s no natural light and they pump in oxygen. They try to keep you in a functionally drunk state so you’ll stay awake but not make good judgments. There’s no time, and they want everything now, with no sense of continuity.
The parents of the children I interviewed have been completely colonised by the city. They haven’t been able to keep their balance in this city that screams enticement at them all the time. So the children came to see the city as oppressive. They would look at the lights and think, those are the lights that hurt me. People would disappear all the time. Nevada Stupak’s father called and said he would be back in ten minutes and he wouldn’t appear for three weeks.
There’s timelessness about the slot machines because it’s very repetitive. Each time there’s a new story, there’s a kick in finding out how the story would end if I pull this lever and press this button. Their parents could go there getting junkie like sensations from the stories and stay there for days, eating casino food, nodding off in a chair and their children were at home eating peanut butter out of a jar with a spoon.