McKenzie Wark on Wed, 15 May 2002 15:27:30 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Robot Journalists and the Ironies of Tactical Media |
The Weird Global Media Event and the Tactical Intellectual McKenzie Wark [version 3.0] part 4/4 6. Afghan eXplorer The Afghan eXplorer is described on its website as "a tele-operated, robotic war reporting system, able to provide images, sound, and interviews in real time." It bears an uncanny resemblance to the Mars Explorer. As the website notes "One central advantage of Afghanistan over Mars is that Afghanistan features tens of thousands of miles of functioning roadways." It's makers note "the system may be retrofitted, with only minor software modifications, to work in other potential hotspots, such as Palestine, Israel, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Lebanon, Indonesia, Pakistan and Qatar." These might all qualify, in the eXplorer's subtle and ironic displacement, as alien landscapes to Western journalism and its audience. Chris Csikszentmihályi, who led the team that designed it at MIT's Media Lab, reports that when journalists started to hear about the eXplorer, interest rapidly snowballed. Journalists love to write about themselves, and journalists tend to write about what other journalists are writing about. So Csikszentmihályi found himself fielding calls from journalists in a wide range of media, all interested in the eXplorer. The eXplorer touches on the interzone of journalistic experience. Csikszentmihályi says he studied Noam Chomsky's approach to responding to interviews, and learned from Chomsky the practice of ignoring the journalist's questions and hammering away at one's own agenda. The agenda as far as he was concerned was to emphasize the closure of the field of conflict to fair and unbiased reporting by the military, and the use of what he calls "robotic killing machines" in Operation Infinite Justice. The eXplorer calls attention to the effect of the vector in a double sense: the robotic war vector appears in a displaced form as the robotic journalism vector, which in turn refers to the absence of journalists from infrastructural deployment of military vectoral power. While Csikszentmihályi would not necessarily embrace the term, I want to use the Afghan eXplorer as a striking instance of tactical intellectual work. Csikszentmihályi was able to exploit mainstream media's fascination with its own practices of reporting, and also a fascination with technological solutions to political problems to his advantage, inserting a point of view into the media feed that is not oppositional, but which cuts across Wedom and Theydom at an ironic tangent, displacing the terms within which one may think about the event. The eXplorer manages to reconnect the naturalism of the experience with its quirky form and function, with the realism of the abstract relations of vectoral power for which it is so ironic, and iconic, an interzone. Csikszentmihályi was able to insert at least some mention of this other perspective into interviews with journalists not only in the United States, but also in Pakistan, and at the BBC World Service. He notes that live radio and television interviews were particularly good tactical opportunities. Print media journalists usually plug the facts of the Afghan eXplorer story into pre-existing scripts. The eXplorer provides the tactical leverage for a fact gathering mission into what for many artists or scholars is the alien world of news media time. One way of disentangling this practice of the tactical intellectual from opposititional or alternative media strategies is to see it as being a kind of micro-event in itself. The media tactician presents an images that endangers the conventions of journalistic narrative time, yet which is capable of inserting itself into it. This kind of tactical media ironically displaces the boundaries drawn by the machine of the news story. The moment when such a tactic is most likely to be successful is when news media time has itself already been disrupted by an event of a much larger scale -- a weird global media event, for instance. In that moment of instability, the ironic displacement of a tactical media micro-event may find its purchase on media time. ___________________________________________________ http://www.feelergauge.net/projects/hackermanifesto/version_2.0/ ... we no longer have roots, we have aerials ... ___________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________ MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net