VVork, Nasty Nets, Your Daily Awesome

Blogger wizardishungry said on his del.icio.us page that the Nasty Nets "halloween" thread was divisive and split along generational lines. The thread ensued after blogger Paddy Johnson lumped Nasty Nets into blogger Jason Kottke's list of Group Curated Blogs That Will Replace Snooty Art Experts In The Near Future. (This premise of Kottke's, standard new media triumphalism from the web/design/hacker community, rather ignores the drive already underway to democratize art within the art world via collectives, alternative spaces, etc., as well as the rich history of discriminating found object-finding from Duchamp to Richard Prince and beyond.) Kottke's list includes ffffound.com, Your Daily Awesome, and VVork as examples of sites that offer "designers and design aficionados a constant flood of typographic morsels, interesting photos, arresting new art, and the like."

Kottke doesn't differentiate between art and morsels and Johnson, by including Nasty Nets in her diatribe that this lack of focus spawns mediocrity, was, in effect, issuing a challenge to Nasty to explain how they are different from the sites Kottke mentions.

Some Nasty Netters rose to the occasion and posited Nasty as a virtual Parisian cafe where art is discussed and trial balloons floated, or a MUD (Multi-User Dungeon, Domain or Dimension). One saw it as an opportunity to attack Johnson, and some internet weirdos piled on.

So I disagree with wizardishungry. The "split," rather than being generational, was more between the polite and the rude, and between people who valued Johnson's criticism and those who responded by attacking her.

My own contribution was to note that since Nasty and some Nasty Nets users are being validated by at least one major art institution, they are open to criticism as an "art blog." Some may have characterized this as "hating" but it was really just an attempt to "up the ante" on the discussion. And be a jerk.

Update: edited slightly after spending a bit more time perusing the sites on Kottke's list. I had forgotten that a lot of Your Daily Awesome is, in fact, awesome. But there's something about the daily format and the endless flood of images that has a leveling effect, which is also VVork's problem. That's a dilemma inherent to digital media and blogging, in that it's so damn easy to pop up a jpeg. As opposed to museum curating or even magazine editing where it takes a long time and mucho dinero to assemble content, and things therefore have to count more.

Update 2: Nasty Nets could never be mistaken for VVork or Your Daily Awesome, because the content is overall too computercentric and self-mocking. Where it might need to be careful is in looking too much like B3TA, 4Chan, ebaum's world, or somethingawful.com. All these sites are pulling from the same pool of internet fun and awfulness. What's different is attitude or a certain "art mindset"--but that could be easily lost if a consumer sees only a string of posts with too many obvious "memes." Is that bad? Johnson thinks so, and I occasionally think so.

More From Tasered Student

Everything you need to know about our airhead media is in this excerpt from the Today show Q&A of Andrew Meyer, the student tasered for asking pointed questions of our rulers:

TODAYshow.com: What is your biggest criticism of the media in covering your story?

Meyer: I haven’t seen any mainstream news outlet once dissect the questions I asked the Senator. Everything is about me personally or the taser. This is the type of tabloid journalism prevalent in America today. When my story is over, they won’t start covering Blackwater or Ron Paul. It’ll be Britney Spears and Paris Hilton, business as usual.

Without missing a beat, the TODAY interviewer responds:

TODAYshow.com: “Don’t Tase me, bro” has been printed on T-shirts, coffee mugs, parodied on YouTube. It’s even a ring tone. Do you own any of these items? What’s your general reaction? Do you think the message on these commercial items sends a good reminder to people, or do you feel it merely represents people trying to profit off of your situation?

Meyer: I have not profited from my catch phrase at all. The YouTube music videos and the ring tones and such, sometimes it amuses me, sometimes it saddens me. I think “Don’t Tase me, bro” genuinely makes some people think about the growing threat to American rights. But I think most people are having a laugh, disregarding the seriousness of the situation. Thank you Jon Stewart.

Private individuals: 1
Media airheads: 0
I still haven't seen Today's interview with Meyer but I note that NBC introduces the clip online with a big headline about him "apologizing" and saying the police were doing their job in Tasing him. I didn't read that anywhere in Today's email interview with him so it's either a gotcha moment from TeeVee or they just made it up to affirm the status quo that private individuals must never question the security state.

Nasty Nets Returns

Nasty Nets is back in active blog mode, after it went down and was replaced by a giant puppy. The rumors regarding its disappearance published here were just that, rumors. It even said that, that they were rumors. There were no "beefs," although there had been one in the past. A fictional one.

Don't Tase Me Guy on Today Show

From Greg Palast. I'm not planning to watch the Today show so don't know if TV will make the tasered student look like a fool (it's a power they can use on anyone they want to discredit, via editing, lighting, etc). If you read his plain words on the page he is the voice of sanity in what Palast calls our "armed madhouse."

In the media frenzy that has surrounded the Tasering of University of Florida student Andrew Meyer during a September John Kerry forum, one voice has been missing from the conversation — Meyer’s. Now that he has been cleared of criminal charges, Meyer, 21, is speaking out for the first time on TODAYshow.com.

In the following Q&A completed via e-mail, Meyer sets the record straight about whether or not his arrest was planned, his motives for attending the Kerry event and what he has learned from the experience...

TODAYshow.com: A lot of people have weighed in on your arrest and the events surrounding it, but we have heard nothing from you. Why have you remained silent?

Meyer: On the advice of my attorney, the inimitable Robert Griscti, I went against my instincts and stayed silent. I’m glad that I did. Not only did I have a criminal case pending, but the time away from the spotlight has allowed me to cool off and gain perspective.

TODAYshow.com: Was your arrest planned? Did you ask anyone to tape you at the John Kerry event?

Meyer: My arrest was absolutely not planned. You would have to be a fool to intentionally get arrested and incur the cost of cleaning up this mess legally (ask my lawyer, it wasn’t cheap).

I did bring my video camera along. I obviously knew I was going to ask the Senator some tough questions, and I wanted to have it on tape. Before I started asking the Senator my questions, I gave my camera to a woman in line I had never met before who also did not leave when Accent instructed her to, named Clarissa Jessup. Clarissa, I can’t thank you enough for both posting the video you shot and returning my camera to me.

TODAYshow.com: Your arrest has sparked a lot of questions about free speech and police brutality, but one of the biggest questions remains your motive for attending the John Kerry event. What was the point you were trying to make?

Meyer: The first question I asked the Senator was about his concession of the 2004 election. Greg Palast, author of “Armed Madhouse,” the book I was holding up at the forum, proved that John Kerry won the 2004 election. The ultimate point I was trying to make was to bring up was the heinous way millions of American votes were chucked in the garbage on Election Day. Not only is this a total assault on democracy, but the same tactics used to throw away votes in 2004 will be used again in 2008. Read about the Help America Vote Act and see for yourself. HAVA helps America vote in about the same way the PATRIOT Act patriotically dismantles the Bill of Rights. In other words, it’s completely Un-American.

The second question I asked was why haven’t Kerry and the Democratic Congress made any moves to impeach Bush, considering he has led us into two wars of aggression in Iraq and Afghanistan, and wasn’t even legitimately elected (as Kerry knows since, as he told me, he has read “Armed Madhouse.”) If Kerry is so concerned about the aggressive posturing the administration is taking towards Iran, why don’t he and the Democrats running Congress do something about it? They have the impeachment power. Millions of Americans believe they should use it.

Update: "Armed madhouse" is Palast' s term for the Bush administration; I was using it more inclusively to mean America dominated by the War Party.