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Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Week 11 - The Future of Popular Media: The Internet, Social Networking, and the Blogosphere

The music industry and the Internet have a very interesting relationship. Back in 1999, Napster came to the forefront with a revolutionary idea that changed the way anyone thought about music: peer-to-peer file sharing which allowed users to swap music files for free, with no regard to copyrights. This new service neglected copyrights of music, which meant that the artist would not get royalties despite everyone getting their music. People thought this new idea was justified; popular musicians were already rich and unknown musicians would benefit from exposure that they previously did not get.

Illegal downloading of music continued and rose enormously in popularity. This eventually led to numerous lawsuits from musicians and record labels, causing the shut down of Napster and forcing them to pay millions in copyright restitution. But illegal downloading was too popular to stop entirely. This led to waves and waves of other free p2p downloading programs and networks, like Kazaa and Limewire. The music industry had changed. It needed to adapt.

Eventually, legal music downloading became the industry's answer, with the likes of Apple's iTunes, where anyone can download music for a fee, which helped rectify artist's royalties and ensuring the artists get paid for the music that they create.

But with the music industry going digital, it created a brand new way for people to view and hear new music. The internet has done some wonderful things for the music industry, like allowing just about anyone to be recognized and be able to produce and publish music for millions to see, but at the same time still features many illegal downloads of music files.

It is a love/hate relationship.


But, everyone is a pirate ;)

Week 10 - The Cyborg Cometh: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?


Having never seen Blade Runner before, the movie was certainly interesting! Harrison Ford is one of my favourite actors and was really interesting in this type of role.

The film definitely plays into Jean Beaudrillard's idea of "hyper-reality", in which everything is more real than real itself. The film even depicts the same type of mantra, spoken by Tyrell: "more human than human", in regards to the replicants. The idea of machines that adopt human characteristics and even eventually adopt emotions is a scary concept. Man's obsession to create an equal to himself never ends well.

I was reading up on the movie and noticed this little bit of trivia: "After the film had changed its name from 'Dangerous Days' to 'Blade Runner', Ridley Scott decided he didn't like the new name, and tried to call the film 'Gotham City', but Bob Kane (comic book creator of Batman) wouldn't see the rights to the name, so it returned to being called 'Blade Runner'." Being a gigantic Batman fan, I am so glad Bob Kane didn't sell the rights, haha.

One of the funny aspects of the movie I saw, was that all these events took place in 2o19. Guess we better get ready for flying cars and replicants! It's only 8 years away!