geert lovink on Fri, 5 Sep 2003 09:02:16 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> call for a campaign to save amsterdams free media |
(posted to nettime-l with the permission of the authors. there are efforts under way to get this campaign up and running. a lot of the communication will in the first instance be coordinated via nettime-nl. more information such as email addresses, lists and blogs will be available next week during the next five minutes festival. /geert) From: "David Garcia" <davidg@xs4all.nl> "Help Amsterdam Free Media" campaign. Over recent months there have been many discussions, naturally in Dutch, of the progressive destruction of Amsterdam's unique legacy of community access and independent media networks. This hatchet job has been achieved by a combination of ruthless corporate greed, the lack of knowledge and (frankly) incompetence of local politicians, (supposedly the guardians of the uniquely local democratic freedoms of expression) and the (almost total) apathetic cultural, social and political media makers and artists that have used Amsterdam's media but seem unwilling to put up a real fight when it is threatened. To demonstrate the dimension of what is being lost here let me make a direct comparison. In London at Hyde Park Corner there is something called Speaker's Corner. It is known around the world that any one can turn up and stand on a soap box and say what they like. If Speakers Corner were to be snuffed out by a powerful real-estate developer, and simply re-located without warning to a suburb (it is situated in a prime piece of London Real estate worth millions) with the icompetence or worse connivence of local politicians, it would warrent more than an indifferent shrug it would cause a national (and maybe international) outcry. But the equivelent decimation in the common space of the media landscape so far illicits bearly a ripple of public indignation. There are a few voices raised in anger notably of media artist and activist Mauz who for more than a year has been a Jeremiah warning (with an astute technical analasys of the weapons being mobilised against our local media culture) there have been a few others. Next 5 Minutes began a decade ago as an event which was built around "Tactical Television". N5M would not have happened without a uniquely local media culture generating certain forms of media freedom and energy that made Amsterdam briefly "a pirate utopia for tactical media". This week the final embers of those freedoms were snuffed out as the company managing the cable networks UPC changed -with little or no warning- the frequencies by which Amsterdam TVs are tuned to the community access channels. At a stroke the carefully nurtured viewing publics of Amsterdam's community media makers were instantly decimated as few people know how to (or are willing) to re-tune their TV sets. And meanwhile the organisation SALTO which is the appointed guardian of the community access dimension continues to sail on with its ambitious projects as though nothing has happened. community access TV makers will continue to beaver away but public has left the building forgetting only to turn off the lights. The current edition of Next 5 Minutes, Amsterdam's festival of Tactical Media has coincided with these developments. Of all the editors of N5M only Menno Grootveldt has fully embraced the implications of these developments he has been the only one of us editors who fought hard for a debate on the crisis (well the crisis was probably years ago, we are far to late) of Amsterdam tactical media. Time to admit that Menno and Mauz should have been heeded long ago and that we must use the festival to (at least try) to reverse the tide of indifference. Time for a campaign. Time for important programs and long-time users of Amsterdam's media including PARK, Belisma but above all Hoeksteen (including all the politicians of all parties that have benefited from that platform and social network) to stand up for Amsterdam's media freedoms. Although little valued at home, Amsterdam's tactical and community media projects has a significance way beyond the boarders of the city. Next 5 Minutes is one of the events that made people outside of the Netherlands aware of our the city's remarkable media structure as a unique laboratory for cultural experimentation. A campaign against the its summary extinction by corporate greed must be launched at the Next 5 Minutes and if possible be internationalised. Our enemy may not be an obvious tyrant like Milosovic shutting down a local radio station like B92. it is a less obvious, faceless and even more dangerous enemy a - winner takes all capitalist fundementalism- ruthlessly crushing oppositional media. After the Help B92 campaign we now desperately need a "Help Amsterdam's Free Media" campaign. David Garcia -- Hi David, I love your story & phrasing so far, I will have a more indepth look in it later. But also I would request you also mention the reperession on the Free radios. Not just in Amsterdam/ The Netherlands, because i see many simularities with the capitalist globilisation threath to Public Access TV in Amsterdam. Actually the Radio situation is even worse, since the government decided to sell FM band frequencies to the highest bidder. This auction was ealier this year and now, September 1st, is is in full effect: Much more of the same commercial rubbish on the Dutch airwaves, by stations owned by foreign multinationals. Free, non-commercial, UNSUBSIDIZED Stations, who have been running independently , autonomously for more the TWENTY years are forced of the air, peacefull sinceer people who do nobody any harm are being criminalized and getting harsh juridical punishments after decennia of being tolerated / accepted by authorities & the public.While they do the contrary of criminal activities: They dont steal anything, THEY GIVE! ( volunteer radio work with art, alternative music, and information for cultural and social communities.) In fact the only Radiostations left on air in the Netherlands WITHOUT commercial breaks in programming are ILLEGAL by law!! And again, the Netherlands is not unique on the planet in all this, maybe even the capitalistic globalisation crushing free/open media is even a bit late here... But if we even cannot save it here (with the relative 'strong Amsterdam potential),where can we? It is a major threath to real democracy (iI can get more specific about this if wanted). Amsterdam is good as a basis to help it save or even return anywhere on the planet. I'll write more later, bye for now. Groetjez, MauzZ # 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