satire about reality tv
what we need is a tv show that satirizes reality tv by being about the production of a reality tv or similar concept show. so the show about the show, not the show itself, is the show. It would be hilarious, you could entitle it 'the making of' or some other representation of the medium of tv. ideas could be guest directors, and special guests on the tv show. every season you get to change out a significant number of the people, which would keep it fresh. you could spoof just about everything, and believe me, most people think it needs spoofed. this pops into my mind because i just saw the add for an espn reality show, which nearly spoofs itself…. while i was reading the multitudes list's postings on negri and balibar
copyright j.w.h. owner of this blog, distributed free as an idea, all other rights retained
May 7, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 07 May 2003 22:43:14 GMT
The saving of pte Lynch. More on the “bullshit the American public” saga. The real saving of Pte Lynch. [MetaFilter]
this looks like an interesting presentation of the case, but be careful, someone might be misrepresenting their understanding of the truth…..
May 7, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 07 May 2003 22:41:00 GMT
Robots Have Feelings Too – a group art show. Robots Have Feelings Too is a group art show at the Culture Cache gallery in San Francisco through mid-May. It features work by more than 60 established and emerging artists, illustrators, cartoonists and graffiti writers. The online exhibit is fun to surf, with samples and biogs for each artist, and links to their web page. Meet some new artists! (via HOPPE) [MetaFilter]
This looks like it will be a good show. Certainly it is pertinent to the discussions about mechanics of robothood, which is on everyone's mind more and more.
May 7, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 07 May 2003 14:44:17 GMT
Overpeer and Media Defender are two of about a dozen tech companies developing software that would “sabotage the computers and Internet connections of people who download pirated music”, according to the New York Times. Programs, developed for record companies, include 'silence', which searches for and deletes music files from hard drives, 'freeze' which locks up a computer for 'minutes or hours', Trojan Horses and viruses. A Wired News article identifies Overpeer as appearing to be the leading generator of 'spoof' music files. If this wasn't in the New York Times, I would have considered it apocryphal hacker community jive… [www.gulker.com - words and pictures from Silicon Valley]
mmmm, yes, always nice to see that there are companies out there that are orienting themselves to harm people and people's possessions
May 7, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 07 May 2003 14:42:06 GMT
This just in — now the mainstream media knows what everyone else does!. Did Bush know? An article in today's New York Times (link to mirrored site with no reg. req.) pieces together data that the author claims proves that Bush and his inner circle were well-aware that they were using false “evidence” of Iraqi WMD. Sy Hersh from the New Yorker is also chiming in, as is Salon's Joe Connason and Katha Pollitt of The Nation. A pretty decent subsection of media is finally descending on this story. If Bush or Powell or Rumsfeld are proven to have been knowingly deceitful, will the American public be even half as angry as the rest of the world? [MetaFilter]
as if everyone didn't know this….. once again, the is primarily about money, and by that i mean exploitation of natural resources.
May 7, 2003 No Comments
comments aren't quite worthless
Who should own comments?. If nobody owns the writing (or if each entry is owned by its author), that pretty much guarantees that the whole lot will be tossed into the garbage sooner or later. [Mark Bernstein]
It isn't rendered worthless, but the subjective value does not get transformed into objective value. Thus when the subjective value of the pursute disappears, the real value approaches the point where they may be 'trashed'. However, then we have the problem of author-owner vs audience-owner….
May 7, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 07 May 2003 13:50:53 GMT
Skinning Our Tools. The Banff Centre is in one of the most beautiful locations you could ever hope to see, and since I really enjoyed the Banff New Media Institute summit I attended last year, I'm thinking of going to Skinning Our Tools: Designing for Context and Culture, October 2-5, 2003″Computer game players trade and steal skins from allies and enemies to shift identity, to signify conquest and character. [Purse Lip Square Jaw]
This looks like it could be a good conference/learning opportunity
May 7, 2003 No Comments
the intruder
The Intruder. The most fun I've ever had playing a Jorge Luis Borges story!The Intruder by Natalie Bookchin. “A story in 8 games. Shoot, score, catch, hit a ball or kill an alien! All in the name of love.”Hmm. According to the artist, it's “like a game but . [Purse Lip Square Jaw]
This is a great art/game project, check it out.
May 7, 2003 No Comments
Wed, 07 May 2003 13:00:24 GMT
You see model cars based on real cars all the time, but how often do you see a real car based on a toy car? GK, our Tokyo correspondent, writes in that:
Takara Toys, maker of a popular Japanese line of toy cars (think Japanese Matchbox cars or penny racers) has built a human-size car based on their Choro-Q line. The real CQ Motors (Choro-Q) car has been out for a while but is rarely seen, even in Tokyo. Not sure if it is street-legal. Gamers may know Choro-Q from the Game Cube and GameBoy Advance game platforms.
[Gizmodo]
mmmm this is funny, we need more 'cars' like this i think.
May 7, 2003 No Comments