Watch: Us Now

27 05 2009

I’m two days into my new internship at the Center for American Progress and I’m excited to be working here at this time – i.e. at the beginning of the Obama administration and helping to build CAP’s social network engagement. Working full time from 9-6 means a “real world” kind of summer. As for my previous Debbie Downer post, I’m okay now and adjusting much better. I feel oriented in DC and have begun to make some friends.

I’ve also been trying to get a start on my rationale/colloquium topic for graduation (trust me, it’s still in its convoluted/overbroad stage). Trying to find some inspiration, I watched this documentary that was recently launched online (May 12) by London-based Banyak Films – it’s titled Us Now. The documentary helped me formulate some key ideas on the topic of “mass collaboration, government, and the internet.” It takes a look at collaborative websites such as CouchSurfing.org, Mumsnet.com, and MyFootballClub.co.uk.  The case study of MyFootballClub.co.uk is particularly intriguing – the club is the first web community to own a football (read: U.S. soccer) team, Ebbsfleet United, while also deciding how the team plays by vote (e.g. player positions, budget, etc.); not to mention Ebbsfleet United went on to win the FA trophy at Wembley in 2008.

Us Now examines these sites’ successes as precursors to new forms of participatory government. The video below is only a teaser clip of some especially insightful parts of the documentary.

You can watch the hour-long documentary online in its entirety HERE.





Reasons to be excited

12 11 2008

Oh hey, I’m alive, don’t worry. I’ve just been swamped with papers (which is always the case, I know). Since I’ve finished four out of five at this point, I’m feeling pretty good. That is, I’m really excited to finish the last of the bunch so that I can actually relax and spend my time outside of the library. Aside from being distracted by these papers, of course, I’m looking forward to several other things:

  • This Thursday, 11/13, the Gallatin Journal of Global Affairs will be holding its delayed launch party for the 2008 edition in which my paper (“From Combined to Green Propaganda: BP’s Decade-Long Greenwashing Cycle”) is published. I originally wrote the research paper for my Propaganda course last fall. I volunteered to do a 5-minute reading of it at the event, which will probably be small and intimate (true Gallatin-style). Any NYU student can come so if you’re interested in free “global” food and drinks, and my nervous tongue-tied reading, definitely come (715 Broadway, Rm. 522, 7 pm)!
  • On an equally (if not more) dorky note, I can’t wait to register for spring semester courses. My top choices? New Media Research Studio, Finance for Social Theorists, Law & Society, and Biology & Society. It would be fair at this point to conclude that I like society and all things social. If you were my mom (and yes, my mom does read my blog), this would be the point at which you ask me what I plan to do with my life…to which I would respond with a deeply-frustrated sigh and again bring up the possibility of law school to assuage her (and my) anxiety.

Since I actually abandoned this post halfway through and have now returned to it whilst in the middle of writing said fifth paper, I will make this last point short.

I AM EXCITED THAT BARACK OBAMA IS NOW PRESIDENT-ELECT.

pic from Maxs iPhone

notice "flagboy" who eventually got arrested. pic from Max's iPhone.

A little delayed, but there we go. It’s old news but it’s amazing news. Max and I spent Election Day (that is to say, Election Night) celebrating with the huge crowds in Union Square and in the East Village. Everyone was ecstatic, high-fiving, cheering, and simultaneously shouting variations of “Obama,” “No More Bush,” “Yes We Can (Si Se Puede),” and “Yes We Did.” There was one guy who kept trying to start a “The Red is Dead” chant, which signified to me the bipartisanship/divisiveness which Obama denounces. What immediately ran through my head was the following: “We have never been just a collection of individuals or a collection of red states and blue states. We are, and always will be, the United States of America.” So in the unifying spirit of Obama’s victory and an unbelievable Election Day, I started cheering “USA,” and people joined in (that is, after the guy with the bullhorn helped).

Maxs again.

Max's again.

And the fact that Obama’s victory was largely attributed to his engagement with and mobilization of people on the internet is unprecedented. Change.gov allows people to send in their stories and reactions to the election, submit their ideas on what the next administration should do, and also apply for a job. Seriously. This website, along with the fact that my.barackobama.com is going to “live on” (thanks Mike for the link) makes me excited about the ways in which the people will interact and communicate with the next President of the United States. There has been much talk about digital “fireside chats.” TechPresident is also a website tracking the presidential campaign/administration’s relationship with the internet (Barack + internet = BFF, IMO). Bottom line: A new and connected kind of presidential administration? Yes, please. I will work for your new media team anyday, Barack!

Badass.

Badass.

I have to return to my paper now but expect a post soon about the possible deterioration of intellectual life in college and why I think that is bull.





Born Digital

1 10 2008

“Stop Motion Day In the Life of a Born Digital Human” – An Undercurrent project (by Micah Spear).

Look familiar?





A Little Thing Called “The Internet”

23 09 2008

I’ll admit that I’ve been relatively ambivalent about my courses this semester. Well I mean relative to last year, in which my interests started intersecting and overlapping so that I couldn’t help but enthusiastically articulate my Gallatin concentration.  Inching back toward academic uncertainty is disconcerting because I have less than three semesters left at NYU (I’m graduating a semester early for the sake of saving money).

But as I was becoming blase about feeling blase, I started realizing a new common thread throughout my current courses.  The internet.  A lot of my class discussions have led to the phenomenon of the internet – questions of community, the individual, representation, knowledge, generational shifts, and the total collapse of spatio-temporal limits.  So it’s the internet that is here and now (and the reason why this blog is here, now). It’s a rapidly-developing medium and, as my professor said, another Industrial Revolution.

A visualization of the internet, taken from Wikipedia.  I think I see this blog at the top left corner, yup.

A visualization of the internet, taken from Wikipedia. I think I see this blog at the top right?

The worldwideweb has basically permeated my existence – from my beloved internship at Undercurrent to my tutorial about “The Politics of Digital Media.” In my sociology class, I completely shut down the pretentious kid who was monopolizing the discussion in order to change the topic to a more interesting/relevant one – online social communities. And on a sadder note – following the recent death of an NYU student and a flood of comments to his Facebook, his self-created profile has become a digital memorial where friends have gathered as a community to mourn and remember.

No, my new concentration is not just “THE INTERNET.”  I’m more interested in the relationship between the individual/the self and the social group; the power dynamics within those relationships; if/how people represent themselves or are represented in the media; (and now) how the internet completely transforms and expands the scope of all these questions. 

Though I’m not planning on becoming the next Danah Boyd, I definitely have similar interests. I’m not sure where this digital fascination is headed but, in terms of commercial/popular use, the internet is still barely out of its teens (Yes, I just Googled “the internet” on the internet to find out when it was invented – how meta).





Digital Memories & Minimalism

2 09 2008

Classes start tomorrow, meaning tonight is my first school night in four months. And in which case, I’m exactly where I should be – the last one awake, sitting in front of the computer and occasionally lurking Facebook, putting off sleep by watching the latest episode of Weeds with my earphones in. Though tonight I’m significantly less tired and I also (thankfully) don’t have any reading or writing to plow through yet.

After cramming an entire summer of traipsing-around-NYC-like-a-tourist-and-partying-like-it’s-1999* into these past eight days, I’ve reached the final stages of unpacking. And I cannot believe how much stuff I’ve accumulated in the two-and-a-half years I’ve been in college. I blame this pack rat habit on my sentimental tendency to bestow meaning upon (and subsequently save) everythingg. I mean, today I found the pack of cigarettes that I legally bought when I turned eighteen and never smoked; 2007 birthday cards still in their envelopes; and several cute, heart-shaped notes from my mother reminding me that she loves me.

My wall from last year - lotsss of outdated pictures that I still have but probably wont use anymore.

Maria, Emily, and I (roommates!) last year. My wall = so many pictures! Too many to keep up with/update.

Since this packing and moving process is now routine – regularly transitioning between dorm, home, and apartment every year – it has become impractical and unnecessary to hold onto everything. So I’ve decided to take a page from Max’s book and attempt some form of minimalism. I need less stuff.  Because it’s too tiring to physically take my entire past with me and because it’s entirely possible to remain sentimental/nostalgic by looking through old Facebook photos and commenting on old friends’ walls. And by reading old blog posts. Yup, the internet is my digital anti(-hoarding)drug. That, and I can access my memories on any web device without having to strap a crate of pictures/mementos to my back.

*Oh, and speaking of summer of 1999…[click that link by the asterisk.]