----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
Randall,

That sounds like a perfect teaching moment, if a bit harrowing for you.
Sounds like both you and the student survived unscathed! It's interesting
how fake stories flourish when they touch upon either likely content
("there they go again") or cultural panics.

What other assignments in fakery have folks on the list done?

I must admit that I have from time-to-time found myself in a little warmer
water with some of my teaching antics.

One was the seemingly innocuous LA Flood Project, which imagines Los
Angeles submerged under an epic deluge.  That project has a Twitter flood
simulation side to it that occasionally crosses paths with folks who
monitor either university news or weather news.

Some people get angry when they think we are in the Fony Fake territory,
when we thought we were in the Fantasy Fake or Funny Fake land.  I suppose
that just shows how subjective these realms are -- or to speak more to your
experience -- how the partial attention we pay to and partial context we
encounter on social media creates the perfect soup for misunderstanding.

Ah, misunderstanding soup.

Anyone else have similar stories to tell?

- Mark




On Mon, Jun 12, 2017 at 5:43 PM, Randall Packer <rpac...@zakros.com> wrote:

> Greetings Mark and greetings list, I wanted to jump in here at the
> suggestion of how to teach fake news. Well, I’m not sure I have any real
> answers to Fake News Pedagogy, but I wanted to share a little story about
> my Internet Art & Culture class at the School of Art, Design & Media /
> Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.
>
>
>
> Now Singapore may seem like an odd place to be infiltrating the academy
> with Fake News skills, but in fact my students embarked on a project to use
> Facebook Live to incorporate artistic fakery into their online practice.
> One of the students decided to stage a live broadcast from the student
> union as a fake reporter announcing that the university had gone 100%
> vegan. This seemingly harmless fake prank managed to get the attention of
> the university press office, and well in Singapore, you DO NOT WANT student
> parody to enter into the mainstream media (MSM) because people simply don’t
> do things like this and the press will think it’s the actual truth.
>
>
>
> This little incident made it all the way up the administrative ladder
> until our Chair asked the faculty whose student this was and that they
> needed to attach a disclaimer. I eagerly said me, because I recognized a
> real teaching moment here for my terrified student. The fact is, my student
> had a first-hand experience understanding how fakery can make its way into
> the MSM, and just how corrosive and disturbing it is to manipulate or
> distort the truth. In our everyday social media life on the Net, we forget
> just how volatile and viral our fake utterances can be.
>
>
>
> Of course, I have always believed that art should be dangerous and this
> assignment turned out to be the perfect way to educate the next generation
> of digital artists.
>
>
>
> Yours “truly,”
>
>
>
> Randall
>
>
>
> *From: *<empyre-boun...@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au> on behalf of Mark
> Marino <markcmar...@gmail.com>
> *Reply-To: *soft_skinned_space <empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au>
> *Date: *Sunday, June 11, 2017 at 12:21 AM
> *To: *soft_skinned_space <empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au>
> *Subject: *[-empyre-] Speaking of Fake...
>
>
>
> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>
> We continue our discussion of the art of Fake News and art and Fake News
> (etc.) with a somewhat unusual course.
>
>
>
> At the start of 2017, launching on Inauguration Day, Talan Memmott and I
> offered a course through UnderAcademy College entitled, How to Write and
> Read Fake News: Journullism in the Age of Trump.  UnderAcademy College is a
> non-degree granting un-institution founded on the model of Black Mountain
> College.
>
>
>
> The course offered to teach how to write Fake News (is my capitalization
> of that bugging anyone else but me?), although we may not have entirely
> been in bed with the devil.   Or if we were in bed with the devil, we were
> doing an awful lot of faking it.  And, consequently, were quite unsatisfied
> with his performance but had forfeited our right to blame other people for
> the bed we had made.  So you know, basically feeling like most of America.
> You can see the sillybus here:
>
> https://medium.com/the-fake-news-reader/the-fake-news-
> course-sillybus-d68953d6abf5
>
>
>
> All of the materials for this class are freely available online for your
> own adaptation and perversion.  And I should mention that this course, like
> all UnderAcademy College courses, is free and that I (still) have not been
> paid for teaching said course.
>
>
>
> Our first lesson was: How to Fake News, which you can see here.
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ex8Zi15UTJo
>
>
>
> In that lesson, we introduced our (patent-pending) 80-20-10 method for
> writing Fake News.  Now, none of our 100-or-so students, real and fake,
> have reported back on whether or not this lesson led to them making mad
> money from their  Fake News writing, but most accounts suggest that in
> spite of (or actually because of) a growing awareness of the scourge of
> Fake News, there's big money to be had.
>
>
>
> And in the age of Trump, what more evidence of a successful educational
> operation could their be than loads of money -- or at least lawsuits?
>
>
>
> How do you feel about teaching people to write Fake News as a response to
> Fake News? Does that sound sophomoric or are you just being uptight? We
> realize those aren't the only two options, so we have an open essay
> response we're also accepting but probably won't count towards your grade.
>
>
>
> Love,
>
> Mark
>
> _______________________________________________ empyre forum
> empyre@lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au http://empyre.library.cornell.edu
>



-- 
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