wade tillett on Mon, 17 Nov 2003 04:40:01 +0100 (CET)


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: <nettime> Heaton on The Live Coverage Revolution (Digital Journalist)


I wrote the following in 1999, seemed appropriate reply (though of course I would write it differently now):


The end of mass media (a media strategy).

You can almost picture the special programs - full blowout news coverage on
every channel, computer animated intros with lots of dramatic whooshing and
crashing sounds and various icons flying at you, interviews with all the famous
movie stars and politicians and sports celebrities. And for the end, a sappy
long good bye with music by celine dione or someone and various snippets of
slow motion crying and laughing. (It always did amaze me how they could have
one of these cheesy videos incorporating even the last game of the world series
made and played as soon as the last game is over.)

Everyone can cry and lament the passing of this great shared mass culture.
Advertisers will come on and explain how worried they are and how they just
dont think they will make any money any more but since it is for the best, they
will go along with it. The genX'ers will all whine about the good ol' days when
they could all get together with anyone and have something in common with them
- their amazed love and awe of Seinfeld. Religious leaders will talk about the
death of absolute truth and social responsibility and how great newspapers
were.

Think about it - if one celebrities death (a princess or former football star)
is worth so many billions of dollars to the media industry, think how many
trillions they could make by staging their own death. (Coca-cola already did
this trick of staging its own death when it introduced the 'new' coke. They got
advertising beyond what you could pay for through the news, word of mouth,
special programs. All by pretending to be idiots. All by removing their
product. And then the triumphant return of coca-cola 'classic'. One of the
greatest media scams ever.)

Where has the media gone? It used to cost X dollars to get a certain candy
eaten by ET, or a certain car driven by James Bond, certain toys with the happy
meal. It costs more to get jeans with an advertisement sewn into them than
jeans without an advertisement sen into them.

But now it is time for a customizable environment. The user designs the
product. The user chooses the media s/he wants to experience. Now it is about
the possibilities that are offered by a certain company. One stop shopping
allows more possibilities because of the inter-relations within. Now we can get
insurance from our bank. (A big thanks to congress for clearing the way for
mega-corporations like we've never seen before so that the United States can
expand its international monopoly of money transactions through the sale of
stocks, insurance, loans, etc. through goliath banks with more money than
almost any countries GNP) Through product personalization we have the ability
to purchase our self. The media absorbs into the interface. The media plays
dead. The media pretends to be transparent, neutral, a tool merely, better yet,
an aid.

"The search engines can occupy such a central position only because they are
assumed to be neutral in a certain way. Offering a service as opposed to
content, they appear as neutral mediators. Is the mediator in fact neutral?...
the less resistance offered by the access system, the more neutral,
transparent, and weightless it seems, and the more plausible appears the
suspicion that it cannot be a question of the nature of a thing, but of a
naturalization strategy." (Harmut Winkler, Subject: Search Engines: Metamedia
on the Internet?, Readme!

* Demographic Summary
* AltaVista users are an upscale and educated audience who make more 
  purchases online.
* -86% of all users have attended college, the highest of any search engine.
* -AltaVista households have an average income of $64,000
  AltaVista User Profile

"GoTo.com ranks query responses by how much a company is willing to pay to have
its listing posted, with the highest placement going to the highest bidder."
GoTo Searches With a Capitalist Engine (Wired)

The media creates an entire world of media and does not call it media. Everyone
is invited to join in the utopic world of language and entertainment where
'anything goes'. So long as it does not end in action outside of this language
world of non-action. Media sets up a sandbox. Like they did for "the rebel"
with James Dean. Like they did for the political acitivists of the 60's. Like
they did for all of art. By absorbing the Dadaists the media could relegate
them to a desried and limited area. Activism that is held as the highest and
most ethical form of political discourse in the media world is non-action
activism because this can be limited and absorbed into a media world which has
no risk. Free speech - not free action. This is the founding of the
capitalistic political subversion. By fooling oppositions into operating within
the limits of a harmless virtual world whose physical power structure increases
upon usage - no matter the content. (The media runs its own 'oppositional' news
programs on whether the media is spending too much time on the presidential
scandal story.)

"To seek new blood in its own death, to renew the cycle through the mirror of
crisis, negativity, and antipower: this is the only solution-alibi of every
power, of every instititution attempting to break the vicious circle of its
irresposibility and of its fundamental nonexistence, of its already seen and of
its already dead." (Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation, 19)

http://63.65.120.45/~super89/the_scheme/massm.htm


---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: "Soenke Zehle" <soenke.zehle@web.de>
Reply-To: "Soenke Zehle" <soenke.zehle@web.de>
Date:  Tue, 11 Nov 2003 22:09:00 +0100

>Heaton, Terry L. "TV News in a Postmodern World: The Live Coverage
>Revolution." Digital Journalist 73 (Nov 2003).
><http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0311/heaton.html>
>>
>      In the end, we'll see that the whole top-down media culture, whereby
>information is trickled down to the masses through institutional channels,
>is replaced by one that is much more user-centric and connected.
>Involvement in all of life at the local level will increase, including
>participation in the political process.
>
>      These are, indeed, exciting times.

#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net