Enjoy this charming little horror-themed parody of the cute children's show, Peppa Pig, (at your own risk). The grotesque-looking pigs look as if they climbed out of the depths of hell. The artist nailed it. Take a look at an image of the real Peppa Pig right next to the creepy pigs for a good chuckle. โ Read the rest
Following last week's death of Elvis's daughter Lisa Marie Presley, this classic video of Elvis with the music removed and sound effects added has once again been making the rounds. Mario Wienerroither's entire series of "Musicless Musicvideos" is pure genius. โ Read the rest
Over the weekend I launched Ring Log, which is simultaneously a critique of surveillance culture and a parody of machine vision in suburbia. In the interactive artist statement I call Ring Log an experiment in speculative surveillance.
โSpeculativeโ in this context means what if?
What if Amazonโs Ring doorbell cams began integrating AI-powered object detection in order to identify, catalog, and report what the cameras โseeโ as they passively await for friends, neighbors, and strangers alike to visit your home? This is the question Ring Log asks. And, given the season (I write this on October 29, 2019), what would the cameras see and report on Halloween, when many of the figures that appear on your front stoop defy categorization?
I dive into the technical details and my inspirations in the artist statement, so no need to repeat myself here. I will add that I was very much inspired by an old Twilight Zone episode, even including several Easter Eggs to that effect. I was also inspired by the ridiculous posts I see on NextDoor, where paranoid neighbors routinely share Ring videos of โsuspiciousโ visitors to their houses. Finally, Iโm in debt to Everest Pipkin, whose work โWhat if Jupiter had turned into a Starโ provided some of the underlying JavaScript effects for Ring Log. Everestโs work, like my own, appears with a permissive copyright license that allows for the reuse and modification of the code. Wouldnโt it be awesome if creative coders borrowed from Jupiter and Ring Log and made their own adaptations of these works, similar to what happened with Nick Montfortโs Taroko Gorge?
(Yeah, thatโs a hint about what my students will be doing in my Electronic Literature course next semester!)