Joseph Arthur - We Stand As One (#occupywallstreet)
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WRH_Mike_Rivero Michael Rivero
Occupy Albany -Braving the first snow storm. http://tinyurl.com/4xtkqlr #OWS #OccupyAMERICA #OccupyWallStreet #revolution #OccupyEVERYWHERE
27 minutes ago
Fantastic photo collection at link. Hard core!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/timraabnor ... 3077/show/
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Satire To-Go: Occupy Wall Street To Be Mobile Game
One of the advantages of app-based gaming is the lower barrier to entry relative to traditional console games. As the living-room game boxes became ever more technically capable, they called for design sophistication and production values that have constrained creativity at many major publishers.
When game development budgets rival feature films, it is not surprising to see the industry veer toward the sure-thing franchises and sequels common to Hollywood. Mobile game development is a bargain in comparison to other video game platforms. As a result, there is a flowering of creativity, and arguably a greater range of artistic expression.
Spur of the Moment Games announced this week it is developing a mobile game designed partly to support the Occupy Wall Street movement with both funds and satire. “Clear the Park” will be an iOS and Android game that allows you to play a high-profile and apparently seething corporate executive who wants to clear the nearby park of protesters because they are ruining his view.
Your company stock increases as you come up with successful tactics for scaring or luring them from their occupation. You might toss watercoolers out the window at them or try negotiation. If you lose, then the protesters get to set up a Ken & Gerri’s Ice Cream Shop out of your former office building.
Some of the proceeds of the game will be donated to the Occupy movement in the form of gift cards that protesters can use to buy necessities while they protest.
Playing on the “99%” slogan adopted by many Wall Street occupiers, the game’s tagline is “Being 1% is 100% Awesome.” “It is all in good fun, but with an underlying sarcasm,” say co-creators Brad Thorne and Jerry Broughton. Thorne says there is an opportunity for games to widen their scope. Mobile has introduced more affordable means of production and distribution than ever before.
“It is an art form if you want to express yourself in a game, and not do what everyone else is doing. You can now push out a more consistent product faster,” Thorne says. “Henry Ford would be proud.”
The longtime Web developers have never deployed a game before but they say it is on track for a November release. “We have some PlayStation expatriates helping,” he says.
In fact, Thorne and Broughton have much more ambitious plans for blending gaming and hot issues. They are developing a project called NewsPlay that ties breaking news headlines in with topically relevant casual game play. Thorne envisions a “Daily Show” style of delivery. but in a mobile gaming format where real-world news is included in an entertaining and often satirical package of casual games. He sees a market for this approach in the post-newspaper era where many young people get more of their news from Jon Stewart than from the networks. “We are carrying mobile phones, but just making them mimic 200 year-old newspapers and just reading headlines. Yet we make interactive books for children on mobile.“
He envisions news + gaming as a kind of mobilized, interactive political cartoon, a way of communicating news that is both funny and insightful. And perhaps it opens up a hybrid model for digital news that seems to have eluded many media companies thus far. After all, as Thorne points out, “people won’t pay for news content, but they will pay for games.”
http://www.mediapost.com/publications/a ... -game.html
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Another Public Radio Freelancer Gets the Ax Over Occupy Wall Street
The people who make shows for NPR stations, dinged by the perception that they're a bunch of kneejerk liberals, are proving themselves to be very, very touchy about how their employees participate with Occupy Wall Street. Today, Gawker has posted the first-hand account of Caitlin E. Curran, a Brooklyn-based former freelancer for The Takeaway, which is co-produced by NPR-member station WNYC and Public Radio International, who was fired from her public radio gig as a part-time web producer after her boss discovered she (briefly) participated in an Occupy protest.
Update: We initially used "NPR" in the headline for this story which is incorrect because the show The Takeaway is more identified with NPR competitor PRI even though it airs alongside NPR programming. We've corrected the error, but there's also this point to make: the public radio economy contains many independent actors alongside NPR. There is the national organization, local broadcasters, independent producers and distributors all involved in programming on what listeners would consider "NPR stations." So, while NPR is not a centralized organization that controls all of public radio, the "NPR is liberal" critics are prone to paint with a broad brush. If anything, Curran's story illustrate how far the fear of looking too liberal has permeated the entire public radio ecosystem.
Curran was canned after her boss found the now-famous photo of her (right) holding a sign with paraphrased text from The Atlantic's Conor Friedersdorf, from his post on the Occupy movement. She chronicles what happened after that in her post:
My boyfriend, Will, and I decided to take Friedersdorf's words and use them, perhaps more literally than he intended. We printed them out, taped them to poster board, and headed to the Occupy Wall Street march in Times Square, on October 15. The plan was for Will to hold the sign, and for me to observe what happened and post reports to my personal Twitter account ... But, inevitably, Will developed sign-holding fatigue, and I took over momentarily.
That's when a photographer snapped the Occupy picture reblogged 'round the world. So she decided that all of this notoriety would make for great radio, so he pitched a segment idea on her experience on The Takeaway. But a day later, she got the boot from The Takeaway, which said she "violated every ethic of journalism," according to Curran. All this of course echoes the firing of Lisa Simeone after she was found to be working as a spokesperson for Occupy D.C. Curran, like Simeone, offered a defense of her actions on Gawker:
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http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national ... eet/44278/