Tuesday, March 30, 2010

HW 3-30

Dear Kalle Lasn,

When I finished your book I had a lot of questions that I felt went unanswered. I wonder why I've never heard of the Situationist movement before, or the events that took place in French towns and cities in 1968.
But more important than my questions about the past, are my questions about the future. The book was written over ten years ago, yet I often struggle to see many improvements since then.
Principally, what I think you missed, but not due to any fault but timing, was the rapid commercialization of the internet. Social Networking sites I suspect would've been the bane of your existence in particular.
After asking and criticizing on the book alone for a while I decided to look up the Ad Busters website. I was pleasantly discovered that TV turnoff week has been re-titled as digital detox week and encourages people to give up all screens for a week.
I liked Culture Jam very much and beyond my questions I just hope that you keep up your high standard of work.

While watching the second half of The Corporation I was really struck by Michael Moore's explanation that the corporations didn't care about anything but profit so they'll put him up on the screen just so he can put them down. It's a chilling construction that would have such a hand in its own potential demise.
I'm always upset when I see the banal reaction those in the highest power have towards the violent protesters.
I'm surprised by the positive attitude the carpet CEO had and I realized that while the people do have some fault, the true flaw lies in the system not individuals.
The ending of the film isn't very satisfying in my opinion. It's a tad grim and shifting the scope from a person to a legal entity was a dramatic reveal. I see now that governments should somehow regulate these entities more effectively. The Corporation, not Cars or Agriculture and the biggest cause of global warming.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

3-21 HW

1. The dismantling of Car Culture is a huge step forward, and one that will be hard to take. Our culture is built around the assumption that transportation is little to no problem for most people. However, I did see a glimmer of hope. On S. Union St in our own Burlington is a sign reminding drivers that there is a bike lane next to theirs, go bikes!
2. Once I read about the ISEW, the GDP in comparison seems so laughably flawed that it's hard to imagine why we use it. Then I think for two seconds and realized that the skewing of economic information towards the benefit of corporate entities is just as obvious as the GDP's failure.
3. The situationist movement seems so relevant considering today's problems that it is a real shock and chill to the bones that I've never even heard of it til now.
4. Lasn's rejection of the leftist label is one that I see as personally important. A book that references Buddhism so much is so obviously influenced by it. Buddhism being the middle way deplores either political extreme, conservative and liberal, the only sensible stance I think.
5. I really like that this book isn't just a call to arms, it's a how-to manual as well. A pretty refreshing change from what often seem to amount to mere empty gestures.

The Corporation-
After studying the way the world works for the short number of years I've been on it, I've only come to a few conclusions. One of the strongest is that nothing is the result of only one factor. I think the reason myself, and the rest of the country it feels like, were unaware of a corporation's power is a combination of the attempts of those entities to mask their powers from us, and our own willful forgetting that allows the corporations to do what they please. As Culture Jam describes, both a top-down and bottom-up approach is needed.

Monday, March 1, 2010

HW 2-28

1
A.
I think the author sums himself up quite well, to quote Hodgkinson, "Facebook is some kind of extension of the American imperialist programme crossed with a massive information-gathering tool."
B.
What I agree with is Hodgkinson's conviction that Facebook is nothing more than an elaborate market research organism disguised as a method of social interaction.
Additionally, after reading this article I found myself so swayed that I deleted my facebook account, finally.
What I disagree with is his implication that Paypal is a step in the wrong direction. I think the dissemination of wealth virtually can improve many many people's lives, as long as money-hungry digital robber barons are regulated, which is of course the problem today.
2.
The article seemed to really reinforce the message of Consuming Kids. It's hard to develop a central point of reference swimming in a sea of media, something that's really dangerous for young children, but even adults today too.
3.
Five things that stuck out for me in Killing Us Softly 3
1-The line in the ad that said "the more you subtract the more you add" really shocked me, but then that was a theme for me.
2-I'd never been aware of the usage of, cut the weight, as a metaphor for, undercut women's power.
3-The correlation media has drawn between sexy and innocent seems like it's putting people in danger.
4-Advertising is America's biggest and greatest pornographer, who knew?
5-A real shocker moment for me, the US has the highest rate of teen pregnancy in the developed world?!