Saturday, July 29, 2006

YouTube Shifts Our Semiosis

"Now with the advent of the internet we have the first medium that is oral and written, private and public, individual and collective at the same time." Derek de Kerckhove - from The Skin of Culture, 1995.

And, as Tom Scocca describes in The YouTube Devolution from The New York Observer, we have a medium that preserves and shares moving visuals, clips from TV, movies, and home videos that are searchable and replayable in a way we humans have never seen before. For a world-wide audience too, as I described here. YouTube allows us to find and watch as many times as we want videos - in a manner similar to how we can find text(s) in libraries or through Web search engines.

Scocca says:

Memory has always been a shaky witness. But writing was checkable, to one degree or another. There could be differences of taste or opinion, but there was the text lurking, waiting to settle the question. If you told someone else a piece of writing was good (or gorgeous, or moving, or persuasive), that claim would have to survive the other person’s reading of it.

NYO - Off the Record

And ...

The Internet left writers more exposed than ever. If you were published from the mid-90’s onward, you ended up in a text-based panopticon: At any time, someone, somewhere, could conceivably be reading something you had written.

NYO - Off the Record

(I love the word "panopticon" - it is so brutal, and so descriptive of what the Web is.)

Writing text led to the development of indices and, consequently, to libraries, and the Web is not the enemy of libraries but part of their natural evolution.

These opportunities represent, in part, a surprise victory for library science. As we plunged into the digital age, one of the great fears was of format obsolescence: People would throw out old-fashioned paper in favor of electronic archives, only to suddenly find that they had all the works of human knowledge stored on five-and-a-quarter-inch floppies and nobody was making floppy drives anymore. But with Web video, people are raiding their personal, inaccessible stashes of VHS tapes, winding through them till they find the important bits, and transferring them from a near-obsolete medium to a current one.

NYO - Off the Record

YouTube is a bold new step into the culture we humans are creating with our media -

YouTube stands as the opposite of old television because, above all, it’s easy. It doesn’t demand that you install a player; it doesn’t crash your browser. It embeds in blogs and plays there, freely.

NYO - Off the Record

YouTube and similar sites are taking us into a new semiosis, away from text which demands analysis and a distancing objectivity, the stalwart standards of our academic culture, into the sensational media that provides the experience without demanding the analysis.

I recommend Scocca's article - The YouTube Devolution.


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Friday, July 28, 2006

Grey's Anatomy - My TV Fav

ABC.com: Grey's Anatomy

I watched two back-to-back episodes yesterday evening. I'd seen both before, but I still totally enjoyed them. Why? Because they show people behaving badly but trying to do their best. And they might be simplified psychologically, but they aren't widely inaccurate, as many TV shows are.

Ellen Pompeo

Take Meredith, the central figure. She has a difficult but brilliant mother with Alzheimer's, and Meredith has to struggle to be responsible. she's no plaster saint, but she's understandable, and she tries!

The same thing with her love interest and his wife. The situation's is acknowledged, but all three try to behave with as much grace and ethics as they can, and their struggles are heroic, IMHO.

Sandra Oh

Then there's Sandra Oh as Christina. I absolutely love her. She's beyond difficult, and she knows she is, but she accepts herself, and still works at becoming more human. The way she connects with her friends and Preston Burke enthralls me. She's my favorite character/actor in the cast.

Chandra Wilson

Dr Bailey is my second favorite. I guess I like testy women who take no prisoners. She (the character) is blunt and firm, yet ethically-based, rather than power-hungry or ego-biased. She is a really positive female role model.

T.R. Knight

I like the men too, especially George as he surprises himself as he develops into maturity. In some ways he's the most overtly immature, but all the characters in this show are facing their developmental challenges and trying their best in human (as well as surgical) terms.

Watching the episodes for the second time through the summer re-runs, I see that this was a fully thought out set of episodes, with character consistency clearly evident. As you can tell, I like it a lot!

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Thursday, July 27, 2006

Design and Ugly MySpace

the show with zefrank - 07-14-06

The video linked to the page linked above (did you get that?) Anyway, the video with the image shown below is amusing and insightful. zefrank, as this blogger calls himself, gives the big picture of what is currently happening with design, and tells us why. It the accessibility of the tools! When design tools were rare, expensive, and demanded a high level of skill, a small group could define what good design was. With the democratising of the tools, the small group no longer rules. A new definition of good design is emerging as more and more people play with the new tools.


Or that's what I thought he was saying/showing.

Link to his blog post and see what you think!

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Sunday, July 23, 2006

An Artist Reports From Beirut

Mazen Kerbaj sends out words, images, and music from Beirut at http://mazenkerblog.blogspot.com/

This appears not to be a political site, but rather stories and descriptions of being in the middle of a war the blogger doesn't want to be part of.

To avoid the spin of more political blogs, and to see how it feels to be in Beirut now, check out this blog.

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