21st Century Misfit

Musings on Art, Music, and Tech

About

I enjoy good conversation and a good beer or two... "Beer is far more than a drink, it is a token that a man can move his limbs and stretch in safety."
- Erich Remarque

Archive for the 'Propaganda' Category

An early lesson in Orwell

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

While discussing Fahrenheit 451 with a coworker this week, I was suddenly reminded of a 4th grade experience that was to teach me a lasting lesson.
While attending school in Eastern Oregon, my 4th grade teacher, Mrs. T. (no relation to Mr. T) told the class we would be starting daily journals. We were to write [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

Love as Propaganda

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Marvin Minsky, a researcher in artificial intelligence, has an interesting theory on love. He says that love is a reaction that convinces you to do something that is not in your best interest. It taxes your resources and ties you down, possibly for years at a time. It is for the good of the [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

State Secrecy: Ultimate Propaganda Trick

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

After reading an article in Wired (U.S. Policies Under the Spotlight) about the ever-increasing amount of classified information held by the U.S. government, I realized that this is the ultimate form of downplaying. If your critics, your customers, your constituents don’t know what you’re really doing, it’s simple to downplay. Even hiding partial [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

The Story of Stuff

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Ever notice that things don’t last as long as they used to? It’s a concept called “Planned Obsolescence” which was promoted in the 1950’s by Brooks Stevens. Where does our stuff come from? Where does it go?
Check out this awesome video; it’s only 20 minutes long. There is some great info [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

Bloggers: a focus group of 15 million

Friday, January 4th, 2008

From the Old-But-Interesting News Department:
The WSJ has an interesting article on market research. Essentially, researchers use blog “chatter” to determine product interest and opinion. They can monitor searches and keyword use and compare with ad campaigns. The technique is referred to as “online anthropology,” and it kinda reminds me of a Sim [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

Neil Postman presaged by Berger, Ellul

Friday, January 4th, 2008

As I’m reading through the first few chapters of Amusing Ourselves to Death, I’m reminded of similar concepts regarding advertising and media motivation. Essentially, an ad isn’t supposed to inform the consumer about what a product is or does; the ad tells the consumer how the product will make them feel, thereby relieving the [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

An Army of One? No longer.

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Whenever I saw these ads, I wondered, “what the hell are they thinking?” Are you an army of one because all your comrades were killed? Did they desert? Did they hold a war and no one else came? I’m not sure the Army even knew what message they were sending.
Apparently they [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

RIAA Propaganda

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

I thought this was timely and apropos; the RIAA released this holiday “news clip” for use by local news channels too lazy to do their own research. To my mind, this is a classic example of propaganda. Interestingly and ironically, their bullet points mock their own amateurish production (maybe they want to make it seem [...]

Read the rest of this entry »

Google Maps doesn’t know Israel?

Monday, December 17th, 2007

I was surprised when I tried locating some Israeli cities for a history course and noticed that Google Maps is noticeably lacking any info on Israel. Both Google Maps and Microsoft Live Maps know that Jaffa (formerly an ancient city and battle site of the Crusades) is now a neighborhood in Tel Aviv.
What Google Maps [...]

Read the rest of this entry »