291 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
291 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
The Merry Pranksters And the Art of the Hoax
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By Mark Dery
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Sunday, December 23, 1990
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Transcribed by Dr. Strangelove
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Just Say Yes: 415-922-2008
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"HAVEN'T YOU EVER WANTED TO PUT YOUR foot through your
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television screen?" asked an actor in "media burn," an outdoor
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spectacle staged in 1975 by the performance art collective Ant
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Farm. The answer, 15 Years later, is a resounding, "Yes!" Now, a
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generation of artists who grew up with television are beginning to
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rebel against it. Following Ant Farm's lead, they are kicking a
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hole - metaphorically, at least - in the cathode-ray tube.
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Some of today's most incendiary artists derive the structure,
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style, and subject matter of their art from mass media. Mordantly
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funny, frighteningly Orwellian and very much a product of the
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times, their work challenges the image merchants. Moreover, it
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constitutes a search for truth in the technetronic age, where,
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increasingly, perception is reality.
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These artists are "cultural jammers", exposing the ways in which
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corporate and political interests use the media as a tool of
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behavior modification. Jamming is CB slang for the illegal practice
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of electronically interrupting radio broadcasts, conversations
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between fellow hams or the audio portions of television shows.
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Cultural jamming, by extension, is artistic "terrorism" directed
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against the information society in which we live.
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Negativland, a techno-yippie rock band, assembles bits and
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pieces of advertising jingles, commercial voice-overs and news-
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casts to make "media about media about media," as one of the
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group's prerecorded voices puts it. The artist Robbie Conal covers
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urban walls with the Madison Avenue equivalent of Dorian Gray's
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portrait - grotesque renderings of Oliver North, Edwin Meese and
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other political figures whose careers have been darkened by an
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ethical cloud. The billboard provocateur Jerry Johnson borrows
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smiling faces and gee-whiz phrases from 40's and 50's magazines to
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create absurdist ads that resemble the pop art of James Rosenquist
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in style and the punk cartoons of Gary panter in spirit. Joey
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Skaggs tries to hoodwink journalists into covering his elaborately
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staged, exaustively researched con jobs.
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Mr. Skaggs's art is designed to dramatize the inherent dangers
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in a media that, according to its critics, accepts photo ops and
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buzzwords as meaningful discourse. Two weeks ago, he exposed his
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latest hoaxes: Comacocoon, a cybernetic vacation service with a
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promotional letter that promised "complete relaxation while your
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imagination is guided to the destination of your choice" via
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anesthesia, subliminal programming and computers; Hair Today
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offered a ghoulish remedy for baldness- scalp transplants for
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hairless professionals fed up with "camouflage combing . . . or
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wishful thinking."
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Cultural jamming, like 60's Conceptual art, often produces no
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salable residue; most jammers subsidize their art through 9-to-5
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jobs. Mr. Skaggs, who supports himself by selling his paintings
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and lecturing on communications at colleges throughout the country,
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observes: "What sets media jammers apart from the art world is that
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our work isn't designed to make money. lt's designed to make a
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statement."
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Gemo redriguez, executive director and chief curator of the
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Alterative Museum in Manhattan, offers another perspective. "Some
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of these media artists are very effective," he says. "Certainly,
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the idea of guerrilla art, trying to communicate with society at
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large instead of an elite art group, is timely. ln a sense, these
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pirate artists are the future. "Unfortunately, some artists who
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purport to be critiquing the media are actually exploiting it,
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using it for self-aggrandizement."
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While Mr. Redriguez`s assertion may hold true for those whose
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work has earned them fame in art circles, most cultural jammers
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will never know the 15 minutes of celebrity argued by Andy
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Warhol. Walking a fine line between petty crime and Conceptual art,
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they often labor undercover to make public statements. Their work
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owes its impact to the anonymity of the artist and the hit-and-run
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nature of the art. For these reasons, jammers are loath to predict
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when and where they will strike.
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The San Francisco-based Negativland, for example, is set to
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release a 12-inch single in February that will incorporate the
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foul-mouthed ranting of a radio personality known for his warm-
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milk-and-cookies demeanor; to reveal its exact nature could result
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in legal action that might prevent its release. Mr. Conal has just
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finished a postering blitz in cities across the United States,
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plastering walls with unsigned paintings that look radically
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different from his earlier efforts; publicity, says Mr. Conal, is
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beginning to undermine his potency as a cultural jammer.
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Audio Dadaism For the Computer Age
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The term cultural jamming was first used by Negativland in 1984
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to describe billboard alteration and other underground art that
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seeks to shed light on the dark side of the computer age. Not
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exactly a rock band, not quite a theatrical company, Negativeland
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creates audio Dada whose closest reference point is the Firesign
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Theater, an avant-garde comedy troupe of the 1970's.
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On the cassette "Jamcon '94," a band member observes: "As
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awareness of how the media environment we occupy affects and
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directs our inner life grows, some resist. The skillfully reworked
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billboard . . . directs the public viewer to a consideration of the
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original corporate strategy. The studio for the cultural jammer is
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the world at large."
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"Helter Stupid," Negativland's latest record, is a nonpareil act
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of cultural jamming, the aural equivalent of a moustache on the
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Mona Lisa. A raucous collage of newscasts, interviews and musical
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fragments, it documents an artful hoax perotrated by Negativland on
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the American media.
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ln 1988, the band stumbled on an article about a 15-year-old boy
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who butchered his family after an argument, purportedly over the
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teenager's musical tastes. Inspired, Negativland issued a press
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release implying that the multiple ax murders were precipitated by
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"Christianity is Stupid," a Negativland song that marries the
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fire-spitting sermon of a Pentecostal preacher to crunch rock
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of saurian ponderousness. In the months that followed, the
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group granted Interviews and dispatched communiques, reiterating
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that the connection was based on rumor. Numerous hints were dropped
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in the hope that observant news hounds would sniff them out. During
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one interview, a tape loop of a voice chortling "lt's a monstrous
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joke" could be heard endlessly repeating in the background.
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Nonetheless, Pulse! magazine, The San Francisco Chronicle and
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countless other publications digested the group's disinformation,
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regurgitating it in article form. In the liner notes to "Helter
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Stupid," the group offers insight into its prank: "Negativland
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chose to exploit the media's eager appetite for particularly
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sensational stories by becoming a subject they couldn't resist -
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the latest version of a ridiculous media cliche that proposes that
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rock song lyrics instigate murder."
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Satiric Portraits
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Of Power Brokers
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Robbie Conal and Jerry Johnson work in a similar vein. Mr. Conal,
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who lives in Los Angeles, paints bitingly satiric portraits of
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profiteers and power brokers, adds a punning tag line, runs them
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off in poster form and, with the aid of volunteers, papers
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major cities. One work, a cadaverous rendering of the evangelists
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Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, bears the legend "False profit."
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Another portrays a lipless, prune-faced Ronald Reagan framed by the
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words "Contra Diction." Recently, Mr. Conal rented a billboard
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in West Hollywood and adorned it with an image of Senator
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Jesse Helms looking somewhat disgruntled - understandable in light
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of the fact that his head was impaled on an artist's palette.
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Mr. Conal is a guerrilla semmiotician who asserts that "art
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galleries are luxury item-stores, like jewelry stores," in which
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cultural signs and symbols are both bought and sold. With the world
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as his open-air gallery, he deconstructs popular culture for all to
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see, unscrambling the media signals with which society is
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constantly bombarded. "I'm interested in counter-advertising," he
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says, "using the streamlined sign language of advertising. I
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combine a stripped-down image with a one-liner to attack
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politicians and bureaucrats who have abused their power."
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Jerry Johnson has been painting ironic murals on a building at
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the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Nevins Street in the Boerum Bill
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section of Brooklyn since 1982. His first depicted a 1940's trio in
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snazzy attire lounging beside a shiny car, accompanied by the
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admonishment "Dress right . . . and get a better shake out of
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life." Smaller lettering informed the viewer that the message was
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"Courtesy of the President's Council on Appearances."
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Completed during Ronald Reagan's first term in office, it
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juggled ideas about dressing for success and right-wing politics.
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"Cash," a 1987 work in which a glassy-eyed woman is shown dreaming
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of dollar signs and consumer goods, poked fun at the plummeting
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status of bills and coins in an age of Plastic money. In
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"plates," from 1985, a chef proffers an egg on a plate. lt is a
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simple gesture that manages to be political, making points about
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synthetic food and polystyrene containers.
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"I started doing these billboards because l had something to say,
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other than what l said from 9 to 5," the artist explains. "I
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thought, `why not use the existing medium and language in its most
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classic format to address some of the things going on today?'
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Billboards are honest. I have real problems with the art world,
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where someone can paint a painting that makes a condemnatory
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statement about capitalism and sell it for $80,000. The artist gets
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rich and the patron sits on the painting until it appreciates, then
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dumps it. It's so hypocritical, it's ludicrous."
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Coping With Information Anxiety
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Ludicrousness, seasoned with savage wit and subversive thought in
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equal parts, is the tactic used by the Dallas-based Church of the
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SubGenius to lampoon religious cults, motivational sales programs
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and other forms of groupthink. Billing itself as an organization
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for "Scoffers and Blasphemers," the church preaches the gospel
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according to J. R. (Bob) Dobbs, the smirking, pipe-smoking prophet
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of sex, sales and slack (slack being a hard-to-define state of
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Sub-Genius enlightenment best described as a cross between couch
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potato and ascended master. "Pull the wool over your own
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eyes," the church's literature exhorts. "Relax in the safety of
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your own delusions." It's a sardonic send up of a society afflicted
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with "information anxiety," the post-modern neurosis that results
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from life lived in a vortex of factoids, trivia and prefab
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opinions.
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Founded in 1979 by lvan Stang, an underground film maker, the
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church now claims a paying membership of more than 5,000. Its
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bible, "Book of the SubGenius" (simon & schuster), is in it's sixth
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printing, and SubGenuis rallies called Devivals draw large crowds.
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Clearly, the Church of the SubGenius has struck a chord.
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According to Mr. Stang, known to the faithful as Sacred Scribe
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No. 27s, the surreal cult is most popular among information
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addicts involved in desktop publishing and pirate radio. :This
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never would have happened if it weren`t for xerox machines," he
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informs. "There`s no telling what will happen years from now, when
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communications technologies have become cheaper and more
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sophisticated. l don't think big media is going to take over
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because small media will always be there. The more they spray, the
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heartier the cockroaches get."
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Sociopolitical Satire
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As an Art Form
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Joey Skaggs - who once convinced United press International
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and WNBC-Tv in New York to carry his fraudulent claim that
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hormones extracted from mutant cockroaches could cure arthritis,
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acne and radiation poisoning - would surely agree. A conceptual con
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artist, he is an example of cultural jamming in its purest form.
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To Mr. Skaggs, a formally trained painter, sociopolitical
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satire is an art. "I started doing hoaxes to point out the
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inadequacies and dangers of an irresponsible press," he said in an
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interview in the 1957 book "Franks." "Rather than sticking with oil
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paint, the media became my medium."
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Since 1966, he has been flimflamming members of the fourth
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estate. He goes to great lengths, he says, to insure that no laws
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are broken, no innocent victims hurt, by his acts of ontological
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sabotage. "l don`t falsify police reports or take money from the
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public, and I'm absolutely careful not to hurt anyone." Mr. Skaggs
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Streses. "When I did the roach vitamin-pill hoax and sick people
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called, willing to spend any amount of money, it broke my heart. l
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said, `Listen, l`m doing this to illustrate that people who say
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they have cures for certain diseases are charlatans.' "
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In 1976, Mr. Skaggs conceptualized the Cathouse for Dogs, a
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canine bordello that offered a "savory selection" of doggie
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Delilahs, ranging from pedigree (Fifi, the French Poodle) to mutt
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(Lady the Tramp). The Mayor's office was outraged, the
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now-defunct SoHo News was incensed, and WABC-TV in New YorK devoted
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a segment to it that received an Emmy nomination for best
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news broadcast of the year.
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In time, Mr. Skaggs reappeared a the leader of Walk Right!, a
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combat booted, black-clad, Guardian Angels meet-Emily Post outfit
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determined to improve sidewalk etiquette. In an other guise, as
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Jo-Jo, King of the New York Gypsies, he sported a pair of cardboard
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insect wings and brandished a sign demanding that gypsy moth be
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renamed. Many have taken the prankster's bait; in 1982, The New
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York Times called Mr. Skagg's fictitious organization, Gypsies
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Against Stereotypical propaganda, "a new civil rights group."
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There are those who say that Mr. Skaggs and his ilk are not
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artistic agitpropists but sophomoric troublemakers, or worse.
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Critics aver that media hoaxes are potentially as disruptive as
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computer viruses; they posit a situation in which the credibility
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of the news-gathering network has been undermined.
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But Stephen Isaacs, associate dean of the Graduate School of
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Journalism at Columbia University, suggests otherwise, "When one of
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these media hoaxers pulls off a stunt, l find it fairly amusing.
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l don't think it presents a problem. You simply print a
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corrections Column. When you admit error, it makes you more
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human. There's also the implication that every other fact in your
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paper is true."
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Thomas J. Colin, managing editor of The Washington Journalism
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Review, adds: "From Piltdown Man to fake lottery winners, the media
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needs to be reminded of its own hubris."
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Mr. Skaggs and other jammers are questioning the contemporary
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world view at a time when the big picture, for most, is made up of
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video pixels and Benday dots, of white noise and half-truths.
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Cultural jamming, on it's most profound level, is about remaking
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reality.
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"The dominant culture utilizes media to promulgate the notion of
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the commodity as the highest form of existence," says stuart Ewen,
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author of the 1988 book "all-consuming Images: The politics of
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Style in Contemporary Culture." "cultural jammers draw upon the
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cacophony of fragmentary media images. At the heart of their
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reassembligns is the hope that there could be another kind of a
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world, a world where rather than a devaluation of the human in
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favor of the commodity, there could be an understanding of the
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commodity in the service of the human."
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X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
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Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
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& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
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Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
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realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
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Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
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The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
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The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
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Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
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"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
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