Dr. Future on Mon, 29 Jun 1998 20:57:20 +0200 (MET DST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> The Apple Pie : Towards a New Theory of Media Culture |
The Apple Pie : Towards a New Theory of Media Culture June, 1998 The BBC Radio One disk jockey John Peel once described the range of popular music as being like an apple pie. The centre of the pie is soft and sweet and easy to swallow, but John Peel stated that he was more interested in the hard crusty parts around the edge. These areas required more chewing in order to extract their nutrition and the taste could be a little more unpredictable. In expanding this metatphor to include the whole range of cultural practices from the conventional genre orientated mainstream out to experimental and 'difficult' art-forms, it would be prudent to recognise that for a well balanced cultural diet both parts are necessary. If one eats too much of the soggy apple centre, then the build up of citric acids on the stomach could lead to heart burn. A high proportion of fruit may also not contain enough calories for an active life style unlike the pastry rich circumference. On the other hand (OTOH), a diet consisting mainly of the less moist outer edges could lead to dryness of the mouth and excessive mastication causing fatigue of the jaws. Apples are also likely to contain more fibre than the pastry which has been shown to improve digestion and encourage regular bowel movements in children and older people. Unless you use wholemeal flour. Further research shows that when the flakey crust has been over cooked and hardened then it can scrape the roof of the mouth during chewing causing soreness and boredom in the audience. However, if the freshly served pie is eaten in too much of a hurry the fruit juice in the centre can be very hot and scald the mouth of the impatient subscriber, but the outer circumference is always the first to cool when the pie is removed from the oven and can generally be consumed at a pace suited to the user. Furthermore, the outer crust often picks up residue left from previous pies baked in the same baking tray as well as slightly burnt areas where insufficient greasing has been applied. This fact can lead to a much more diverse range of flavours in the viewing experience to cater for different individual and minority tastes. Obviously, both pie exterior and interior are radically dependent on each other. Without the crust to provide support the soft interior would simply collapse through lack of original ideas (or something) and similarly without a centre the pie would just have a big hole in it which would look ugly. Of course, some pies have a little white plastic table thing put inside the centre to stop the middle of the pastry sagging which is bit like providing government subsidies to encourage investment by international corporations. And if you chop the pie up along with some other pies and pile the pieces up on a plate then that's a bit like the internet I suppose. What are other Nettime readers favourite media metaphors? A bag of chips for the winning suggestion. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl