Showing posts with label Chris Weingarten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Weingarten. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Creative Commons, Crowdsourcing, and Animation through Collaboration



Most of the clips I took from the Intel Developer Forum in late September have been used for business blogs, but this panel I attended Sept. 23 was of more general interest, and raised some interesting questions regarding crowdsourcing and the antithesis to the so-called "wisdom of crowds," what Chris Weingarten of Rolling Stone called the "stupidity of crowdsourcing" at the recent 140 Character Conference.

Before filming excerpts from this panel, I asked Yair Landau, founder and president of the Mass Animation project that developed the short animated film, about Weingarten's observations. Landau said he was raised in a kibbutz, and was predisposed to believe in collaboration. Besides, he said, he did not want a single person claiming to have a superior opinion.

If you're not up to watching the clip, here's the backstory. Landau, formerly of Sony, decided he wanted to see what quality of animation he could garner from a collaborative project initiated worldwide through Facebook. He created Mass Animation, got together with ReelFX (Kyle Clark on the panel is COO), and Intel (John Cooney at the left end of the panel is Intel's online programs manager), and they launched an effort to collaboratively develop an animated short called "Live Music," which will be seen in theaters and online beginning Nov. 20. (In respect of their wishes, I am not including video clips of the draft, but am including a couple still shots below.)


As Landau mentioned, there was some general guidance from the Mass Animation crew on the story board, but animators could include new story elements. The story line and animation itself flows as well as anything I have seen from Pixar and DreamWorks. Panel moderator Jeremiah Owyang pointed out how much this is like journalism in the 21st century: Journalism sponsored by major media companies is on its death bed, so can collaborative efforts from Indymedia or blog collectives replace it? Landau made the very relevant point that there still needs to be a central source of coordination and funding that is strong enough to overcome the messiness of consensus-building over global dimensions. (And this is the missing link for journalism in the 21st century - who pays for the vetting and coordination function if all underwriters are dead?)

I'm a believer in collaborative creativity through social networking, but I also think Weingarten was on to something in his dismissal of crowdsourcing. Here's how both might be true: Landau is talking about collaboration among creators of content, which constitute an artistic elite of sorts to begin with. Weingarten was talking about the majority voting of observers and users of content (I hesitate to use the word "consumers," because too many people are using that word to replace the more critical word, "citizens"). If we listen to crowdsources of critiques, we find our musical choices come from the world of American Idol. More often than not, it's the eclectic and iconoclastic critic of art, literature, music, that finds the good stuff. I like to see artists themselves collaborate as they create. But when it comes to artistic criticism, I come down on the side of Weingarten: If most people like it, chances are, it sucks.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

"Crowdsourcing Killed Punk Rock"



Look at that! I'm excerpting a talk from 140 Character conference despite my deep annoyance with Jeff Pulver. Consider this Chris Weingarten speech a follow-on to the "You Can't Tweet Science" post. Call him a grumpy aging Twitter-hater, except most of his points are correct. Crowdsourcing kills most intelligent art appreciation, including music. Crowdsourcing is LCD because most members of crowds are idiots.

Sound elitist? You betcha. To Twitter-paters who insist that "Anything that can't be said in 140 characters isn't worth saying," I have dozens of two-word responses for you: James Joyce. Thomas Pynchon. Lester Bangs. I'd even go so far as to posit the opposite, "Anything that CAN be said in 140 characters probably isn't worth saying," and its corrolary, "Brevity is the soul of superficiality, so go long."