During the early stages of this project we thought of a lot of different people who we could interview. While we were sifting through dozens of potential document subjects that we did not personally, our dear friend Karim Doumar, who was a local journalist, gave Aidan a call. As the phone sat in front of us buzzing away, our eyes grew double in sized. We looked at each other, both thinking the same thing, why weren’t we doing a project about someone like Karim who was someone we knew that was actually making a difference in their community. I guess it never occurred to us that someone we knew personally could be making such a big difference in their community. So we sent our documentary crew on down to Berkeley, California to find out who our friend Karim Doumar really was and how he was making a difference in his community. Once in Karim Doumar’s backyard, we immediately got to work on uncovering this exciting story. First, we found out a little about what Doumar does for the community. We thought this was the most important thing to start off with because it gave us an idea as to why he does the things he does which is what we did second. We found out why he writes for the specific newspaper he does and why he writes for any newspaper at all. As you can see in the video, Doumar is so passionate about his newspaper because it is free and is helping all members of the community, not just the affluent one. He also does this job for free because it is something he is passionate about. We finally found out how what he is doing is actually making a difference, which you can see in the video. As you can see Citizen Doumar is being a great influence in his community and is obviously very concerned. An outside media source that was very influential in the making of this documentary was Spotlight because we’d like to think that Doumar is headed in the right direction in breaking national news. In the reading for this assignment, Goldbard talks about the right that everyone has “to participate in the cultural life of the community”. We felt that Doumar was not only acting upon this right but also allowing others to more easily have this right by providing everyone with the local newspaper for free.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-D5rqgJaUU&feature=youtu.be
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Monday, March 21, 2016
Game for Change
Play this
This week’s
assignment presented an unprecedented challenge for me. I am fairly bad with
technology, or at least slow to learn it. Game for Change requires proficiency
with Twine to express ideas, and that was a major restriction. Besides the
technological learning curve, it required thought about how to format ideas in
the format of a sort of webquest. I have no experience in that, so I felt like
I had very little vision for the project.
On the other
hand I am extremely passionate about the issue I presented. I believe that
climate change is an existential threat to all humans, but especially to the
disadvantaged. The more I read about it, the more there is to frighten me about
what this phenomenon can do, if left unchecked. It is infuriating to see people
unschooled in science rationalize the findings of scientists. It is also
infuriating to see industries that stand to lose from action against climate
change attempt to influence the political machine away from action. I believe
they do it out of greed, and that there actions will have the most severe
impact on my hypothetical children. It is the kind of issue that should force
common people into action.
But the media
has not spoken enough about its disproportionate impact on the impoverished.
Perhaps this is because the media still has not been able to convince enough of
the public that climate change is real at all. But examining its effect on
various groups of people essentially makes it social issue (though not
exclusively).
I wanted my game
to be genuinely informative. It ultimately was probably too wordy. But I found
it difficult to separate what information was crucial and what was expendable.
I tried to choose alarming information. I do not think this was a
sensationalist decision. The problem of climate change is an alarming one,
especially for the poor. When we discuss it, we should be aware of its worst
possible ramifications.
I also wanted my
game to reflect the absurdity of choosing not to respond to climate change. This
may have been somewhat mean spirited. Its a good thing to try to genuinely
understand those who have a different point of view than yourself. However, its
also truly insane that educated people want to prevent action against climate
change, or refuse to believe there is any such thing. So I think it was a valid
choice to reflect an absurdity in the opposition to my cause.
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
World Building
Masks, as mentioned in the interview
Interview, and the interview transcript:
Sir Thenjamin Bevenin, a child of British royalty who made his name by virtue of his revolutionary discoveries regarding string theory, and improving our mathematical understanding of gravity. Since then, Sir Bevenin's fate has taken an unexpected turn. After a lengthy disappearance from his station at Cambridge University, Sir Bevenin reappeared with scientific reports that first threatened to discredit his scientific renown. Sir Thenjamin Bevenin claimed no less than to have broken dimensional barriers and entered a parallel universe. His claims were rebuked by the scientific community with the same unilateral strength disavowing creationism, climate change denial, and the danger of GMO's. Still, Thevenin fiercely defended his claims. What came next was, perhaps, the most shocking development. Thevenin began to politicize his scientific claims, dangling his ability to reach parallel dimensions as a promise to the desperate. He established an organization, The Beveninists, and offered those who ascended its rank the promise of his radical exodus. To bemusement and shock, the world has watched for three years, as his organization has grown in size, power, and violence.
Newsman: Sir Thenjamin Bevenin, thank you for joining me.
Bevenin: Thanks for having me.
Newsman: How do you respond to the overwhelming dismissal of your findings by the scientific community?
Bevenin: Well (snorts cocaine), people have incredible capacity to rationalize information. Consult any psychologist, and they will tell you that. My findings are the most important in human history. This also makes them an existential threat to many. Others see the salvation in what I am saying. The fact remains, you will find no scientist who can account for the nature of my findings.
Newsman: Could you attempt to explain the nature of your findings? Why are they definitive?
Bevenin: The physical properties I identified simply cannot exist on earth. I measured them using instruments from Cambridge that are designed to be averse to tampering. I have no idea how to tamper them, because they are designed by engineers of the highest degree, and I have no expertise in that field.
Newsman: What physical properties specifically?
Bevenin: Higher rates of gravity, strange chemical compositions, as yet undiscovered chemicals, and time anomalies that I am still examining.
Newsman: So there are aspects of this other dimension you do not understand?
Bevenin: Well of course. It is literally a new world, and one with new physical properties, and I am only one scientist. It does not make my data less compelling. I am making new and pertinent discoveries daily. For example, having studied my samples, I believe that the new ecosystem may impair facial nerve functions in some, approximately 27% if I am correct, so my organization is now constructing masks that will allow rudimentary expression and communication.
Newsman: Let us ignore the question of your data for a moment. Do you think that the conditions of today’s world - environmental desolation, looming famine, and the renewed promise of nuclear conflict - make people more susceptible to joining extreme cults and religions?
Bevenin: Yes of course those things affect people, and of course religion is an answer. There is desperation, and religion can be a valid way to satiate that.
Newsman: Does the mass desperation undermine your credibility?
Bevenin: Certainly not. If my findings are valid, then the people have found a good home for their desperation. And my findings are incontrovertible.
Newsman: Sir, could you describe to me what this place looks like.
Interview cuts off here.
Artist's Statement:
I think Alfonso Cuaron’s Children of Men is an amazing movie for several reasons. As it pertains to this assignment, I want to discuss its environment. There is so much obvious care in the establishment of that world. I love the way Cuaron uses his camera to explore the foreground and the background of his shots. I think it was also quite prescient to establish reactionary religious cults, in the wake of destructive infertility. I considered possibilities for reactionary sects in the face of an increasingly bleak world.
This idea stuck with me. I think there is a pretty clear connection to current politics. People turn to Donald Trump and to Bernie Sanders out of desperation (though I do not mean to liken them more than is fair). This idea did not begin with any political thought, I just found it could be an interesting narrative. But I think that connection makes sense.
So for me, this weirdness was about the idea of increasing desperation. I am not totally pessimistic about the world’s prospects. I think most of our problems are solvable, but that does not mean we will make a political choice to solve them. If we do not solve the most serious ones, increased desperation will be a given and absurdities, like Donald Trump as president, will become realistic.
Science fiction has always been a medium that creatively explores and elevates realistic content. Cuaron’s film applies neatly to that. Children of Men is haunting because it makes current the sort of crisis many feel is looming. Specifically that environmental abuse will manifest in horrifying and confounding ways, and that the western neoconservative world order may collapse leaving the unknown in its place. Increasingly this project became, for me at least, an attempt to express thoughts about my world and future.
Julian Bleecker says in his article, Design Fiction, “ [Design fiction] objects are totems through which a larger story can be told, imagined or expressed…” this was important in creating the artifacts that represented our world because we focused on what aspects of this world were the most important and then created our artifacts in such a way that they could allude to the rest of the story. We also did not go into great detail or explain much of what the cult leader’s intentions were because we decided to implicitly explore them by only showing the audience bits of what he believes in and what he is actually attempting. This was important to us because we wanted the character to not seem too crazy explicitly but actually have pretty messed up intentions. This is also a political issue that is relevant in our own world, especially now during the presidential race.
Monday, March 7, 2016
Webspinna
Both of us might
designate Webspinna as the most challenging of this class. This is, in large
part, because it demanded performance. But the nature of the project also
required time and meticulousness. I think that the best performances were the
most obviously strategized, and intricate. The project asks for a broad sense
of meaning. Some sort of conflict must take place. But these broader strokes
are comprised of sonic intricacies that take time and effort to shape, like
with pointillism or mosaic art.
The
most enabling thing for us was to have a subject that we not only love, but are
well versed in. Hopefully our project made it clear that this subject is horror
movies, something we have both loved since a young age. The specific tension
that informed our battle is the struggle for supremacy between slasher films,
or otherwise non-fantastical horror, and horror of fantasy. The latter consists
of ghost stories, some urban legends (think of It Follows), fairy tales, most science fiction, and the horror of
folktale beasts like the vampire. Basically, it is The Shining and The Exorcist vs.
Halloween and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Due
to our shared genre affinity, there was a mutual feeling of vast material to
draw from. Thus, the challenge was to filter. Filtering consisted of choosing
what might add to a larger statement. We used The Goblins soundtrack from Dario Argento’s Suspiria, because the eerie breathing captured the spine tingling
nature of that which is supernatural. The other major source for the supernatural
side was Disasterpiece’s main theme
for David Mitchell’s aforementioned It
Follows. This song was meant to express a sense of beauty and adventure
that can be found in horror films, as opposed to the horrors of life. This was
meant to underscore the idea of horror film as inherent fantasy. Art is a
simulation of true emotions (I hope that is not read disparagingly, it is not
meant that way), and the idea of horror based on things most people do not
believe in is an important part of that conversation.
We
also included samples of dialogue from Stanley Kubrick’s film The Shining. These samples derive from a
conversation between Jack Torrance, an increasingly insane father, and the
apparition of a man called Delbert Grady, who is known to have killed his
family and then himself. He tells Jack that he has “always been there”, in
reference to the haunted Overlook Hotel. That was meant as a chilling addition
to the ascent of the Disasterpiece song.
It was also a kind of love note to supernatural horror. Ghosts are less
immediate, less manageable than the terrors of films like Scream or The Texas Chainsaw
Massacre. In Stephen King’s novel The
Shining, the Overlook Hotel is destroyed. But the characters specifically
take note that the area still feels lethal. Its evil could not be destroyed by
fire. It has always been there, and it always will be.
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