‘Smart Drugs’ features experiment among those fuelled by need to succeed
VANCOUVER — Toronto filmmaker Ann Shin was so intrigued by an animator’s tales about doing some of his best work with the help of “smart drugs” that she wanted to learn how they would work if someone tried them as part of a months-long experiment.
She recruited Nikolas Badminton, who was then based in Vancouver and calls himself a “futurist” who speaks and writes about trends, to take on the task in California’s Silicon Valley, the epicentre of a subculture known for using smart drugs, or nootropics.
Badminton spent five months working a hectic schedule and popping pills and powdered mixtures used by tech types aiming to enhance cognitive function as they power through projects, ward off sleep and seemingly operate like machines.