Now showing- Peter Joseph’s Zeitgeist the movie sequel- Zeitgeist addendum

October 6, 2008

I’m right now watching the newly released feature length sequel to Zeitgeist: the movie- Zeitgeist addendum. Here’s a link and embed where you can watch along. So far, it appears to be mostly about the economic issues covered in part 3 of zeitgeist in more detail, but I’m not too far into it yet.

The Venus Project and its founder, Jacque Fresco, feature fairly prominently in the second half of the movie, so you might want to give their site a visit.

spoiler alert:

my gist notes/quotes from the end solutions below-

Actions for social transformation:

1.) expose the banking fraud (Fed Cartel)
boycott Citibank, JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America

2.) boycott the news networks
CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, etc.
use and protect the internet

3.) boycott the military

4.) boycott the energy companies
get off the grid and make your home and car self sustainable

5.) reject the political system
focus on working to dissolve the outdated system of Politics, in favor of technological redesign

6.) create critical mass

thezeitgeistmovement.com


193 miles by lawnchair and balloons and living in a closet for a year

May 31, 2008

Just a few links to recent news stories which I actually bothered to visit. I guess I figure since I’m not going to get any real news from the lamestream media anymore I may as well give them clicks when they report on something other than celebrity gossip or political shams.

A homeless woman in Japan manages to live for over a year in a stranger’s closet before being discovered? Wow. That’s all I can say, just wow.

And long lost video surfaces of an imitator of Larry Walters, the original lawn chair balloonist. This video is of Kent Couch, who made his ascent in July of 2007. Here I was thinking I’d get to see video of Larry’s flight, but noooo…


Updated multiple Fortune 500 Board of Directors names list

May 11, 2008

Richard A. Gephardt


Checking in on Sibel Edmonds news

May 5, 2008

The unfortunate news is that there hasn’t really been much of it lately. Brad Friedman mentioned a couple of months back that there was a planned fourth story in the UK Sunday Times, but so far we haven’t seen that. Meanwhile, Congress’s 90 days to amend or block the legislation legalizing sales of nuclear technology to Turkey has passed. I haven’t heard anything on that, so I think we can safely assume they let it ride…

YouTube user glenrose2008 recently uploaded footage of Ashcroft and Grassley on Sibel Edmonds from 2002. Sorry I don’t have more for you. But you can keep checking for new news stories. There are a few recent news mentions of her name, but nothing new in those, really.


Here comes everybody- Gin, Television and Social Surplus

May 4, 2008

Here Comes Everybody has a great post (Clay Shirkyon’s lightly edited transcript of a speech at a web 2.0 conference) about the social surplus which television (and I’d add in to the picture associated passive consumption media- radio, movies, etc.) have been using. I’ll quote a few parts of the article below and add a few thoughts of my own below that.

First, a little background intro for the meat of the piece:

The transformation from rural to urban life was so sudden, and so wrenching, that the only thing society could do to manage was to drink itself into a stupor for a generation. The stories from that era are amazing– there were gin pushcarts working their way through the streets of London.

And it wasn’t until society woke up from that collective bender that we actually started to get the institutional structures that we associate with the industrial revolution today. Things like public libraries and museums, increasingly broad education for children, elected leaders–a lot of things we like–didn’t happen until having all of those people together stopped seeming like a crisis and started seeming like an asset.

It wasn’t until people started thinking of this as a vast civic surplus, one they could design for rather than just dissipate, that we started to get what we think of now as an industrial society.

If I had to pick the critical technology for the 20th century, the bit of social lubricant without which the wheels would’ve come off the whole enterprise, I’d say it was the sitcom.

 

Clay has apparently recently finished writing a book called Here Comes Everybody and was being interviewed by a television producer for possible inclusion on a TV program. He gives as an example of something interesting that’s “out there” the editing of wikipedia’s page on Pluto after its downgrade from planetary status.

she shook her head and said, “Where do people find the time?” That was her question. And I just kind of snapped. And I said, “No one who works in TV gets to ask that question. You know where the time comes from. It comes from the cognitive surplus you’ve been masking for 50 years.”

So how big is that surplus? So if you take Wikipedia as a kind of unit, all of Wikipedia, the whole project–every page, every edit, every talk page, every line of code, in every language that Wikipedia exists in–that represents something like the cumulation of 100 million hours of human thought. I worked this out with Martin Wattenberg at IBM; it’s a back-of-the-envelope calculation, but it’s the right order of magnitude, about 100 million hours of thought.

And television watching? Two hundred billion hours, in the U.S. alone, every year. Put another way, now that we have a unit, that’s 2,000 Wikipedia projects a year spent watching television. Or put still another way, in the U.S., we spend 100 million hours every weekend, just watching the ads.

Down a bit further, Clay continues

However lousy it is to sit in your basement and pretend to be an elf, I can tell you from personal experience it’s worse to sit in your basement and try to figure if Ginger or Mary Ann is cuter.

And I’m willing to raise that to a general principle. It’s better to do something than to do nothing. Even lolcats, even cute pictures of kittens made even cuter with the addition of cute captions, hold out an invitation to participation. When you see a lolcat, one of the things it says to the viewer is, “If you have some sans-serif fonts on your computer, you can play this game, too.” And that’s message–I can do that, too–is a big change.

This is something that people in the media world don’t understand. Media in the 20th century was run as a single race–consumption. How much can we produce? How much can you consume? Can we produce more and you’ll consume more? And the answer to that question has generally been yes. But media is actually a triathlon, it ’s three different events. People like to consume, but they also like to produce, and they like to share.

and

this is the other thing about the size of the cognitive surplus we’re talking about. It’s so large that even a small change could have huge ramifications. Let’s say that everything stays 99 percent the same, that people watch 99 percent as much television as they used to, but 1 percent of that is carved out for producing and for sharing. The Internet-connected population watches roughly a trillion hours of TV a year. That’s about five times the size of the annual U.S. consumption. One per cent of that is 100 Wikipedia projects per year worth of participation.

Read Clay’s piece in its entirety here

Now, here are some of my thoughts/ideas which seem related enough to this post by Clay to merit inclusion. Leading Sustainable Conversations tipped me off to Clay’s piece through tag surfing WordPress and has some interesting thoughts along the lines of- what if instead of 1% taken from TV and added to wikipedia it could be 10% added to face to face social networking?

I’ll link here to a future post which I’m about to write on mixtapes 2.0.

Then, I’m also reminded of the food surplus which we can create eating lower on the food chain and/or finding more efficient sources for our nutritional needs, as I mentioned earlier in a comment on the politics of food.

One of the other things I enjoy speculating about is when/where/whether the downward spiral of the consumer infotainment mass media trend gets upstaged by economic/environmental issues or people seeking/creating actual information which has value to them.

And, given the opportunity and tools to produce something I’m interested in I’ll find/make the time- witness the muckety maps (the latest one is here, it’s on- how did you guess- the media) I’ve shared here, for one example.