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Episode: 2396
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Title: HPR2396: Information Underground: State of independence
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2396/hpr2396.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 02:17:46
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,396 entitled Information Underground State of Independence.
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It is hosted by Lost in Drunks and is about 43 minutes long and currently in a clean
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flag.
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The summary is Deep Geek Lost in Drunks and Glad to talk about the State of Independent
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Art.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
|
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With 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everyone, you're listening to Information Underground, I'm Glad to and with me today
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I have Deep Geek and Lost in Drunks.
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Hi everybody.
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I wanted to talk today about the State of Independent Art which last time we did a show,
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we spoke a little bit about that in a way because of Lost in Drunks sort of question
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of how's Independent Art taken over.
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And so Art I think is important to humans.
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It's a therapeutic thing, it's a cathartic thing.
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It's really kind of one of those things that distinguishes us from really all the other
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animals that we share the planet with.
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And so it kind of, it does concern me when Art starts to get subjugated by sort of you
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know the classic big impersonal corporations.
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When a selection of Art gets branded as kind of a premium commodity that's going to, going
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to get promoted and sold, which I think implies possibly that the other Art that doesn't
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get selected is somehow less valuable, which if you look at it objectively is kind of
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goes against the truth that actually Art has essentially no value or said another way
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all Art has ultimate potential value given the eye of the beholder, which is really the
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only way to get a true measure of any individual work of Art.
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But Art and Artists exist in an economy.
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We are all bound to a certain number of rules for survival.
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And so I don't see the commodification of Art as necessarily a bad thing.
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I'm not saying that it shouldn't ever happen.
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But I do think that it's, I mean, and it's even possibly arguable that the only way
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that Art can be effective is that it gets commodified because I mean part of, and I think
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we were talking about this a little bit in Lost in Bronx episode, part of the effectiveness
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of Art is in its sharing.
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You know, we want to watch Art or experience Art and then we want to turn to someone
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and talk about it.
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Like that's part of the, that's part of the process.
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And certainly for the Artists, that's part of the process.
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Like you can make Art in the privacy of your own home.
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But whether that's actually super satisfying to you before you share it, it may or may
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not be.
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I mean, it kind of depends on you.
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But I think generally speaking, the point of Art is that yes, you shared it.
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So corporations do that really well.
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You know, they, they, they, one of the things that corporate sponsorship or, or, or adoption
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of Art, one of the advantages is that they can, they can distribute that Art really,
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really effectively because they have the money to do that.
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They have, they have all these outlets through which they can, they can distribute this stuff.
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And when I moved to New Zealand, I started seeing a lot of local musical acts.
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I mean, I, I, I'd gone to lots of local musical acts back in the US.
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But in New Zealand, I started noticing it more because here in New Zealand, there's, as
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in many places, there's the predominant sort of white, British, descendant culture that
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came through colonization.
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And then there's the, the native culture that, that was here before the British got here.
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And so I would start seeing lots of local acts.
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And it was specifically just by chance, a lot of Maori artists were, were, were the people
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that I was seeing.
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And it kind of struck me that these artists that I was seeing, they were local acts.
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And they were playing these small venues.
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And a lot of people didn't really, weren't really seeking them out.
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And here in New Zealand, and New Zealand is a small country, like compared to the US,
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you have no idea.
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It's tiny, right?
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I mean, New Zealand could fit inside of probably Pennsylvania.
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It's, it's not a big place.
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So there, there's every opportunity to find out about local artists in your area because
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it's just two little islands.
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And yet people are kind of defaulting by and large to US import art, you know, the stuff
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coming from the USA, which has no real cultural connection to anything happening in New Zealand.
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I mean, it's, it's completely outside.
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And yet that is by and large the default.
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And that kind of concerned me, that right there sort of made me wonder about whether
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the commodification of, of art by corporations that specialize in distribution of art, if
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that was somehow possibly hurting or affecting the local art scene.
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So if, if part of the process of creating and, and distributing art is actually boosted
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by, by corporate involvement, what's my problem?
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And, and my problem simply is that there's, there's no real cultural connection being made
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between, for instance, mass-produced art from the US to, you know, anywhere else and
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possibly just even within the US itself.
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I, I feel like that's kind of possibly threatening a certain amount of cultural identity.
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And at the end of the day, that's, that's really sort of all art is all about.
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I mean, it's not, it's not food, it's not water, it's not shelter, it's not something
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that we literally depend on.
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But it is something that I think we, we, we need for better health because it is part
|
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of our cultural identity.
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And when we hand that cultural identity over to a corporation or to, to, to something that's
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just tailored for, well, exclusively for making money, I feel like we're probably losing
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a little something.
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And so I started thinking about this a lot since moving to New Zealand.
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And I kind of, I kind of started questioning, well, what is, what, what are the corporations
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not good at?
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But what do they have a hard time like what, what, what can't they take from us?
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What do, what can't they do?
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And I realized that one of the things that corporations cannot do effectively, like they can,
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they can broadcast a message to a room full of people and, and all of those people in
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that room will hear it.
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That's, that's what corporations are really good at.
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But what they're not good at is getting in, down in amongst the people themselves and kind
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of like getting, getting between the people.
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It's like those little connections, the spaces between the people.
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Of course, that's things that corporations just can't, they can't do because it won't,
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it doesn't pay off for them.
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So in other words, the corporations kryptonite is inefficiency essentially.
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And while inefficiency seems to kind of be exactly what any artist would not want, I think
|
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culturally it has a benefit so that that local art stays somewhat local, not because it
|
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needs to stay local, but just kind of because inherently it stays local because it's affecting
|
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the people in that area and it's speaking to the people in that area.
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And since we are in the age of the internet, I don't think that it needs to be a geographic
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locality.
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I think that it can be sort of like your interest groups, your like the things that, that,
|
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that appeal to you.
|
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And it still becomes local and it, it simply can't blow up because it, it doesn't appeal
|
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to enough people and it's not going to become something that can be commodified and, and
|
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distributed on a wide scale because just not enough people actually think that that speaks
|
||||
to them.
|
||||
It doesn't speak to them as much as, as, as something that they find, you know, appealing,
|
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something local to their interest levels.
|
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One of the ways that I've tried to encourage this, just for myself and I'd be interested
|
||||
in hearing what you guys, how you guys manage this or if you manage this, but one of the things
|
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that I did some time ago was I said, okay, I'm not going to listen, I'm, I'm, I'm going
|
||||
to take all of my albums, all of my musical albums that I have on my hard drive.
|
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And I'm going to, I'm going to sort them literally by, by record label and, and people
|
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got horrified when they heard that I did this, like my brother who is a music major just
|
||||
thought this was the worst thing in the world.
|
||||
But I, I, I sorted them by label.
|
||||
And if it wasn't an independent music label, I would not, I just decided I'm going to
|
||||
put it into this folder and I'm not going to listen to it.
|
||||
And that was like three years ago or four years ago.
|
||||
And I haven't opened that folder in about as long.
|
||||
And the, the music that, that fell under the independent label or, you know, no label
|
||||
directory, just that's what I've been defaulting to.
|
||||
And it's, it's really worked out for me, in fact.
|
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And, and I think one of the things that I have found is that by restricting myself to
|
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the independent directory, I am encouraged then to seek out more of the same, you know,
|
||||
it's kind of like, well, I really like that artist.
|
||||
And I see that after about two years of putting stuff out, he kind of fell off, you know,
|
||||
he went to college, had to get a real job, whatever.
|
||||
But, but maybe I can find something similar to that somewhere else and, and sure enough,
|
||||
eventually I do.
|
||||
And, and the same kind of goes for, for movies, movies, my relationship, movies is a little
|
||||
bit different than my relationship to music.
|
||||
So it's not, not completely analogous, but, but I, I did kind of segregate off.
|
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Okay, well, I'm not going to listen, I'm not going to watch movies over here and I'm
|
||||
going to seek out movies, you know, on YouTube or, or, wherever.
|
||||
And again, the same thing goes with books, you know, like, I'll, I'll, I'll look on
|
||||
Smashwords or I'll look on Lulu.com or, or, or whatever, for, for, for stuff to read
|
||||
rather than defaulting to like this, the safe bet with like this one sci-fi franchise
|
||||
that I may, that I might have otherwise defaulted to.
|
||||
And again, that's a little bit different because you've got, you've got books from like
|
||||
all stages of history.
|
||||
So you can't, you know, at some point, it becomes a meaningless sort of delineation.
|
||||
But so it's not a scientific process at all.
|
||||
But what I've been trying to do with myself is just trying to encourage myself to seek
|
||||
out the independent art out there that has no real connection to the corporate marketing
|
||||
machine.
|
||||
And I found that it's been really, really, really good and it's very, very fulfilling.
|
||||
And the thing that, that has continued to encourage me even more is that the tools that
|
||||
the internet has started providing us have really been really powerful, like patreon.com
|
||||
where you can actually fund artists with micro payments, essentially, for everything that
|
||||
they do.
|
||||
And you're directly funding the artist.
|
||||
And that kind of, that brings it back into an economy, which you can feel what, however
|
||||
you want to feel about.
|
||||
But I think that there's a necessity there, people, we all do exist in an economy.
|
||||
So we can encourage the art and it's very direct.
|
||||
And again, that's not something I don't think that corporate corporations can, can deal
|
||||
with.
|
||||
That kind of inefficiency, like they, they couldn't go out and try to find funding for every
|
||||
artist that they want to produce because that's just not, that doesn't, it doesn't pay off
|
||||
that way.
|
||||
Whereas the artist, if they reach out to, to people who might like them and start getting
|
||||
paid by patreon, or if they successfully kickstart and musical album because there's
|
||||
enough people out there who want to hear whatever they have to offer, it's, it's like this
|
||||
direct kind of truly democratic economy that's been working out really well.
|
||||
That's what I've got for you really.
|
||||
That's, I think, the state of independent art is, is pretty, pretty great, really, pretty
|
||||
healthy.
|
||||
And I think it's down to direct funding and, and better distribution.
|
||||
What do you guys think?
|
||||
I, I think, I think you really hit the nail on the head, I mean, I, I, I see, I see
|
||||
things now that are so, that are fringe enough where they, a corporation would never, you
|
||||
know, spend the development budget on it.
|
||||
And you can turn around now and go out to the public and say, do you want me to do this?
|
||||
But it's, it's, it's not only a matter of, of, uh, indiegogo and kickstarter and whatnot
|
||||
serving to, you know, fund an album that the artist is going, wants to make.
|
||||
It's also a good way to do a large market survey over what people would like to see produced.
|
||||
There's an efficiency there that a corporation can't access because if you have an idea
|
||||
for a show and you're not sure you're going to do it or an idea for a movie or what have
|
||||
you and you go to indiegogo, you can actually say, you know, if I can make this thing live
|
||||
enough to make the indiegogo thing float, I'll do it, you know, and there's an efficiency
|
||||
there that something doesn't have to be done unless you know it will be well received
|
||||
as opposed to just making your thing out there and sticking out there and, and causing
|
||||
your fingers.
|
||||
And not to be, you know, the voice of dissension here, but I don't know what the, well,
|
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first off, indiegogo is a company.
|
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Let's start off by saying that and others, like, um, patreon is a company.
|
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You know, all of these, all these things are company.
|
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Yeah.
|
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I don't know.
|
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I like kickstarter.
|
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Kickstarter is too, right?
|
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Kickstarter is a company and they're not, in other words, they're not projects in the
|
||||
sense of like, you know, say a, an open source project would be.
|
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They're actually companies and they're for profit.
|
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Something like patreon, which I have looked into and I've, you know, I'm a content creator
|
||||
myself.
|
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So I've looked into this.
|
||||
What would happen if say patreon, now I don't know what their corporate structure is.
|
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If it is an independently owned company right now, or if it's actually been sold and, you
|
||||
know, as a VC project, if it was sold to a larger company, um, I'm going to go with the idea
|
||||
that it's independent right now.
|
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As far as I understand it, I'm about three degrees separated from, from the, the owners
|
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of patreon.
|
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But as far as I know, unless, unless I'm not being told the whole story, yes, they are
|
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independent.
|
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Okay.
|
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Well, I think we can all agree that as soon as they start showing a good profit, they
|
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will be sold almost certainly.
|
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Okay.
|
||||
Now, if that were to have, now so long as it's independent, I will say that probably
|
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none of what I'm about to suggest as possible is possible.
|
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But the moment it gets sold, if it gets sold, if when it gets sold, what would stop a company
|
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that owns something like Patreon from looking at the numbers and saying, well, we do get
|
||||
a cut of everything that goes through here, you know, and they do, you know, the Patreon
|
||||
gets a certain percentage of all the money that comes in because they have operating costs
|
||||
and employees and all that.
|
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What would stop some being counter in a company like that from saying, you know, these, you
|
||||
know, these independent audiobooks, which is what I produce, these independent audiobooks
|
||||
and I don't make any money.
|
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People don't care about those.
|
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We're talking nickels and dimes compared to dollars, okay, with someone doing a graphic
|
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novel that's a big hit or someone doing music, musicians, especially doing, you know, that's
|
||||
where the real money is.
|
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We should start promoting them.
|
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And suddenly their front page changes and they start having promoted things on the front.
|
||||
Suddenly.
|
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So now they're a label.
|
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So now they're a label and no longer is the little guy, you know, yes, there's stuff
|
||||
is still there and they can share out those links, you know, to everybody that's out there.
|
||||
But suddenly these guys, we took in our last episode, we talked about the concept of curators
|
||||
that these large guys, you know, like Google or other search engines, they, you know, at
|
||||
some point they were trusting their algorithms to serve up the kind of thing that we're actually
|
||||
looking for.
|
||||
And at some point, some, what would stop a corporation from taking a product like Patreon and turning
|
||||
it into something like that, where now it's no longer really what it was.
|
||||
Now it's much more like Amazon.
|
||||
I think that's a distinct possibility.
|
||||
So I'm not saying it's going to happen or that it has happened, but I'm saying the
|
||||
potential is absolutely there.
|
||||
I, I assume because I guess I'm a cynic, I don't know, but I assume it's going to happen.
|
||||
I think that's kind of the direction of, of all these things.
|
||||
Like once the corporations see that there is a pool of money to get their hand into that,
|
||||
then that's what they're going to, that's, they're going to move towards that.
|
||||
But I think, and again, I think that the, the part that they can't really, I don't think
|
||||
they're ever going to be able to get, to get down, they're, they're naturally drawn
|
||||
to things that are, that are pooling into a big bucket of money.
|
||||
And I think that the inefficiency of independent art, distribution and promotion is the thing
|
||||
that the, the corporation really can't, they cannot, they, they don't want to get involved
|
||||
in that side of things.
|
||||
So they're only going to show, come to the party when there's a bunch of money to be made.
|
||||
And so I think as the internet evolves, and I don't know, I, I still think where, I
|
||||
don't think Patreon's the end game.
|
||||
I, I think, and even Kickstarter, I don't think that's quite the end yet.
|
||||
I think there's going to be, at some point, and the brave web browser, I don't know if
|
||||
you guys have tried it, but they're kind of working towards this like really micro payments.
|
||||
I think that eventually it's going to get to the point where, where you can pay directly
|
||||
to the thing that you want to pay simply by visiting their website or, or, you know, whatever.
|
||||
And it's just going to be kind of like, you have this fund set up for, I'm hoping that
|
||||
you have this fund set up for, for contribution to the stuff that you like.
|
||||
And, and it's going to be super easy for you to, to pay directly to that, to that target.
|
||||
And I'm sure that some corporation is going to try to get in between you and that target.
|
||||
But I think, I think the internet is moving towards direct, direct contribution.
|
||||
And I think if that happens, then I think a lot of independent artists are going to be sort
|
||||
of empowered.
|
||||
Unless that becomes a decentralized thing, either the, you know, the organization of the content
|
||||
that you're, that you're visiting, or the internet itself becomes much more decentralized
|
||||
than it is right now.
|
||||
There's always going to be a way for, for large corporations to gamify something like
|
||||
that they're always going to be able to, to, to, you know, get, as you say, get between
|
||||
you and the artist, there's always going to be a middleman for this sort of thing.
|
||||
But I wanted to address another point that you brought up, because there's, there's
|
||||
this is a huge topic and it's very juicy.
|
||||
The idea that a large corporation, you're right, they will not approach something like
|
||||
the independent artist or an even an independent art movement until his money to actually be
|
||||
made.
|
||||
However, there's an awful lot of money to be made in the aggregate of things, right?
|
||||
So as I say, you know, Patreon might, you know, this, this future evil, but, you know,
|
||||
the mirror universe of Patreon where it's evil looks at the, the small projects and
|
||||
say they're not making enough money.
|
||||
We're not going to promote those.
|
||||
We'll promote the big ones that make a lot of money that, while that is true, I also
|
||||
think they'll never get rid of the little guys because they do in aggregate make a lot
|
||||
of money.
|
||||
Amazon is right.
|
||||
It is packed with indie writers, you know, Amazon is the biggest bookseller in the world,
|
||||
not just in terms of volume, but in terms of dollars and cents, they make more money than
|
||||
any other bookseller on the earth.
|
||||
And they are filled with independent artists.
|
||||
Are those artists easy to find?
|
||||
No, because they're not being promoted.
|
||||
And there's your problem and it's something that I've said as a content creator that
|
||||
I've been saying for many years, your problem is not distribution anymore.
|
||||
Distribution is easy.
|
||||
You're fighting the great silence.
|
||||
You're fighting the noise, right?
|
||||
The great silence is when you throw your stuff out there and you get nothing back.
|
||||
That's how I define it.
|
||||
But the noise, you're lost in the roar, you know, of all this.
|
||||
So the onus comes on the artist to find their audience.
|
||||
They actually have to go out and find the audience themselves.
|
||||
They can't just sit on the street corner with a tin cup anymore unless they're literally
|
||||
doing that, you know, with a guitar sitting on a street corner, you know, in certain street
|
||||
corners, that could be very lucrative, but most street corners, it is not.
|
||||
And most places in the internet, if you, you know, unless you actively participate in
|
||||
a great, you know, there's certain, there's a certain special sauce, you know, when it
|
||||
comes to media marketing.
|
||||
And suddenly, you're no longer, you're no longer an artist.
|
||||
Now you have to be a media guru to your media specialist to find, you know, to start
|
||||
getting these things.
|
||||
Unless you happen, you know, by chance, as it always does, you know, you, you happen to
|
||||
get picked up and you, you know, you become generally popular or popular within a particular
|
||||
audience.
|
||||
But to be fair, to be fair, that's how it is.
|
||||
That's how it's been for artists, most artists, 90% of artists, that's that's the
|
||||
game anyway.
|
||||
Like, that's always been the game.
|
||||
And it's just been that small selection of artists anyway who get promoted, you know,
|
||||
the Beatles and the Marilyn Monroe's and whoever else, like, that's, that's them.
|
||||
So I don't think that the state of, of having to, yeah, promote your own wares has really
|
||||
changed that much.
|
||||
In the old days, you couldn't promote your wares.
|
||||
There really wasn't much you could do, you know, you, you really, you know, especially
|
||||
say if you were a musician, if you were lucky, you could get local gigs and get an audience
|
||||
and find people.
|
||||
But what if your stuff really was experimental, it was really out there and you lived some
|
||||
place where that was simply not popular, it was, it was just not what people were listening
|
||||
to.
|
||||
And you, you were never going to get popular there.
|
||||
So you did have to move and you had to go where the, the quote, unquote, scene was in
|
||||
order to, to participate in that.
|
||||
And of course, I don't, you know, there's still, that still exists.
|
||||
But I think by and large, a lot of that has been mitigated and changed through, you
|
||||
know, the internet and through, you know, networked individuals to the point where if you're
|
||||
producing something that isn't substantially, you know, different so that it's so bizarre,
|
||||
it gets picked, you know, people notice it immediately, maybe not even for its own merits,
|
||||
just because of the novelty of it.
|
||||
If you aren't doing something like that, you are still dealing, you know, it is still
|
||||
competition.
|
||||
You're dealing for not necessarily for dollars and cents, you know, especially if you're
|
||||
independent artists, odds are you're not going to get rich.
|
||||
You're not necessarily competing for dollars and cents, you're competing for people's attention.
|
||||
And in that regard, you, you are, you know, when it comes to competing for attention,
|
||||
you are standing right next to major corporations, major, major media corporations who are doing
|
||||
the exact same thing.
|
||||
They are trying to find an audience.
|
||||
As you say, that isn't much different than it has been at least since the internet arose.
|
||||
But prior to that, you didn't really even have that sort of standing.
|
||||
You didn't have that ability to try to attract your own audience and understand that the
|
||||
idea of a, an art distribution company, art distribution corporations, that is an entirely
|
||||
new concept within human history, you know, I mean, that, that's come about in the 20th
|
||||
century.
|
||||
That's a good plan, you know, or maybe the late 19th century with sheet music and stuff
|
||||
like that.
|
||||
And it is a modern concept.
|
||||
The technology has changed a lot of these things, but it's still, you know, it can be,
|
||||
as Deep Geek has mentioned in a previous episode, it can be very, very difficult to find what
|
||||
you're looking for, even with all our search engines.
|
||||
And even with our, you know, algorithmic curators, it can be very, very hard to find the independent
|
||||
artists that you're looking for.
|
||||
And I think, I think that's our biggest problem.
|
||||
Discoverability is the biggest problem that an indie artist faces.
|
||||
You're absolutely right about the discoverability.
|
||||
You know, it's, it's always, you know, we did talk in the, in the prior episode you mentioned
|
||||
about, about my newscast and, you know, I, I think I suffer a little bit from what, what
|
||||
some people call language and language syndrome.
|
||||
Have you heard about this term?
|
||||
No.
|
||||
The language syndrome was named after the language that did, um, lug radio, and he complained
|
||||
about, I told you the truth about operating systems on podcasts, how can he didn't change
|
||||
anything?
|
||||
And it's because the viral nature of it was not expressed, the word didn't go out far
|
||||
and wide enough.
|
||||
It wasn't discovered enough.
|
||||
And I felt the same, I felt the same way.
|
||||
I felt the same way where it's like, what, only 350 listeners.
|
||||
Well, in a lot of way, you know, again, as I say, I'm a content, we're all content creators.
|
||||
We're creating it right now.
|
||||
It isn't necessarily the size of your audience, unless you, unless you have another goal, okay?
|
||||
Like art for art's sake doesn't have another goal, right?
|
||||
But as Klaatu says, we live in the world, you know, commerce is important because you
|
||||
got to pay the bills and you got to eat.
|
||||
But art in and of itself is often, it is the end goal to produce the art, to produce
|
||||
the content is the end goal.
|
||||
And what other people do with that is out of the artist's hands.
|
||||
So how an art, how, how the audience sees their art, consumes their art, understands their
|
||||
art, how your listeners, you know, perceived your art and what they did with, you know,
|
||||
with your newscast, what they did with that information, how they perceived it, whether
|
||||
they agreed, disagreed, liked it, passed it on to their friends, whatever.
|
||||
That is entirely out of your hands until you start getting into media and marketing, right?
|
||||
Now, I think that's a very ugly turn of events for an artist, frankly.
|
||||
Now Klaatu feels that it, it actually, it's nothing new and that an artist has always
|
||||
kind of had to sell themselves.
|
||||
And I guess that's true.
|
||||
I guess that's true.
|
||||
Otherwise, the starving artist, you know, you get the starving artist.
|
||||
But that, the starving artist exists because artists by and large don't either don't want
|
||||
to do that or don't know how to do it or are truly incapable of doing it.
|
||||
And if that all feeds into discoverability because if they can't sell themselves, you
|
||||
never find out about them.
|
||||
And if they're no good at that, if that's just an area that they do not excel at, I don't
|
||||
feel an artist should be penalized for that.
|
||||
And yet they are simply by the nature of the fact that you will never hear them.
|
||||
You'll never find them because they were no good at selling it.
|
||||
Yeah, you absolutely want to talk it there.
|
||||
Yeah, I mean, I think you're correct about, again, discoverability, but also kind of
|
||||
the responsibility of the artist to have enough confidence in themselves, to want to promote
|
||||
their own work.
|
||||
And that the truth is that doesn't always happen.
|
||||
And I don't know, you know, I don't think that there's really a solution for that to
|
||||
be honest.
|
||||
It's kind of like a personal battle for every artist.
|
||||
But I mean, not every artist needs the audience number, you know, like I really don't, for
|
||||
my, whatever I put out, I generally like my, what, I don't know what it is, but like
|
||||
my ego does not require a large number of people to experience that work.
|
||||
I think I'd be, I'd be hurt if zero people experienced something that I put out.
|
||||
I do like to know that someone heard something or saw something, but generally speaking, I
|
||||
don't go for numbers.
|
||||
But then again, I'm not trying to make a living off of this anymore.
|
||||
So, you know, there's, there's kind of like a trade off there.
|
||||
And I know that some people do try to make a living off of this.
|
||||
And that's a, that's tough.
|
||||
But I mean, so is any kind of living, you know, like we all have to go to work.
|
||||
We all have to do stuff that we don't want.
|
||||
So it's, it's kind of, it's something.
|
||||
Well, in a way, Clot 2, and people who work, you know, have careers for companies or even
|
||||
working class careers, at some point, they have to ask for a job, they have to know how
|
||||
to do that.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
You know, by the way, that wasn't an ego thing.
|
||||
My, my, my, my thirst for numbers, but it was because I, I wanted to bring about some,
|
||||
I had a feeling of going to bring about some kind of change in the world, as did Stuart
|
||||
Languages with the radio.
|
||||
But, you know what, David, like I think, I think what Lawson Bronx was probably saying,
|
||||
or unless I imposed this, but I mean, like you don't know the 350 listeners that you had
|
||||
at one point.
|
||||
You don't know whether something, some story that you brought to light, utterly changed
|
||||
their life forever, you know, like we don't know how our, how our art or whatever,
|
||||
how our output affects people.
|
||||
So you may have had like a huge impact on a small number of people, but I would have to
|
||||
argue because I've been one of the people who have been impacted by small output, you
|
||||
know, like, well, hacker public radio, as we're all saying, like, I mean, huge changes in
|
||||
my life has come from, from stuff that probably me and like, you know, yeah, 350 or 10 other
|
||||
people have even heard.
|
||||
And, but that doesn't make it less important to me, the recipient.
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
You got a good point there.
|
||||
You bring up hacker public radio itself, the media were, we're using to get this, to
|
||||
get this out.
|
||||
And that always remind me of, of, at one point, painters used to group themselves into
|
||||
schools, like the Hudson Valley School, or they used to like, you know, make groups out
|
||||
themselves in order to cross promote each other.
|
||||
And in a way, I think hacker public radio as a network of podcast producers has that kind
|
||||
of a function.
|
||||
And they did that because, of course, painters and other artists in, you know, probably earlier
|
||||
times, or maybe even concurrent with this concept, they had patrons, many of them had
|
||||
very wealthy, either, you know, merchants or royalty or would have you that would do nothing
|
||||
but pay these people to create art.
|
||||
And of course, that went away with the dinosaur, you know, that, you know, that, that doesn't
|
||||
really exist to any great extent anymore.
|
||||
And of course, today, that would be corporations that do this, or occasionally funding grants
|
||||
and things like that.
|
||||
And some schools will have an artist and residents of some sort, but that, I mean, those
|
||||
are, I mean, very, very rare.
|
||||
But so is patronage as a whole in the past that it was always pretty rare.
|
||||
And finding individual patrons now is where the content creator has their challenge, find
|
||||
their audience essentially is what the issue is.
|
||||
And, you know, Clat 2 mentions that, you know, again, if you intend to try to make this
|
||||
you're living, you have a very tough path to travel.
|
||||
You have a very difficult thing to do and you will end up inevitably if you want to make
|
||||
a living with your content, you will inevitably either have to, I mean, I guess it's a matter
|
||||
of perspective and, you know, just the way you want to define a thing.
|
||||
But you'll either have to a, learn some new skills that you didn't expect you'd have
|
||||
to, or alternatively, you'll have to learn to do something you really, really don't want
|
||||
to do.
|
||||
And you'll have to do it anyway.
|
||||
Well, you know, if you're in the, I've said this many times, you know, I, if I wanted
|
||||
to, you know, sell a lot of books or sell a lot of audiobooks or something like that,
|
||||
I, there's tons of, there, there's certain types of content that always sell and they
|
||||
sell well, right?
|
||||
But they're not what I want to do.
|
||||
So if that's what I have to produce, if that's the sort of thing I have to produce in
|
||||
order to sell, in order to be an independent content producer, then I may as well just
|
||||
be flipping burgers at McDonald's because I'm not going to be doing what I want to do
|
||||
anyway.
|
||||
And if that's the choice that the content creator, you know, has, then they really cannot
|
||||
make a living at what they're doing and what they're doing will be an application.
|
||||
It will never be their profession, which makes it no less valid.
|
||||
It makes it no less valid, but there are suddenly some major constraints that come along
|
||||
with that.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
They, the, the, the amount of content that they can produce will naturally be less.
|
||||
And possibly the quality will be less because they, maybe they can't afford the right
|
||||
equipment or they, or the training or, you know, they, they, or maybe they won't simply
|
||||
have enough time to perfect their craft, whatever it happens to be.
|
||||
In other words, you might have someone who's very, very good at what they do, but they
|
||||
will never reach their peak.
|
||||
They'll never reach their peak and maybe never really find their audience.
|
||||
They may, you know, they may be producing quality stuff that, you know, it could possibly,
|
||||
maybe it'll never be huge, but it could possibly change someone's life.
|
||||
And they will never hear it because it is lost in that noise.
|
||||
They cannot be discovered.
|
||||
They're not found.
|
||||
I think anybody, if it's, if it's a corporation or an individual, anybody that can crack
|
||||
that nut that can give the, you know, a content creator the, the ability to market themselves
|
||||
without becoming a market specialist, I think that will change content creation more than
|
||||
anything else.
|
||||
That will change independent art forever, in my opinion.
|
||||
That would be fantastic.
|
||||
I'd never really thought about that angle, but yeah, honestly, like, you know, DP did
|
||||
a news show.
|
||||
Now, the most that I can do is post on some social media site.
|
||||
If you're looking for news, you've never heard, but you should be hearing, listen to
|
||||
this show.
|
||||
I'm going to be get, you know, who the hell would care?
|
||||
That has no contact and trying to get across what we know emotionally and intellectually
|
||||
that this is good for some of you people out there.
|
||||
This is going to be a really good fit for you, but how do you get that across to those
|
||||
people?
|
||||
You know, because I can say what I just said and it will have no meaning on those people
|
||||
because if someone put that in my streams, whatever social media I happen to be on, if they
|
||||
put that in my stream, I won't even finish reading the posting.
|
||||
I'll just go to the next one.
|
||||
It is, it's meaningless to me.
|
||||
You see, if I'm meaning it's to you, but it would not be meaningless to other people.
|
||||
If you or on Facebook, Western Bronx, presumably I would be, you and I would be Facebook friends,
|
||||
if you posted a positive status on a piece of media, I would be fascinated.
|
||||
I would hunt it down if I thought it pertained to me and I would try it out and that would
|
||||
be based on the strength of our friendship.
|
||||
Well, that's, that's all well and good, but I understand that the people on this show
|
||||
right now are kind of biased towards each other's content because we're friends.
|
||||
We're friends because we like what the other person's done, right?
|
||||
I sought out you guys because I had heard you guys, you know, on HPR and other places
|
||||
and I sought your friendship out because I liked what I was hearing.
|
||||
These were guys that were saying things that mattered that I thought was important and
|
||||
then I got to know you and I liked you guys, right?
|
||||
And you know, that's all well and good.
|
||||
That's all well and good, but most, the vast majority of people that may be following
|
||||
me on, on social media, they don't really know me from Adam.
|
||||
Some of them might know that I produce content.
|
||||
Most of them probably don't.
|
||||
So many of them, it's an auto follow, I follow them and bank, they follow me, but they
|
||||
have no idea who I am.
|
||||
I tell them I like this particular, you know, podcast that's producing, you know, news
|
||||
content that they almost certainly have not, they don't care, you know, it's noise.
|
||||
It's all noise.
|
||||
You know, there's so much of it out there, it's so difficult for the independent content
|
||||
producer.
|
||||
I'm using that term instead of artists because it's, it's a little, you know, it's a little
|
||||
broader.
|
||||
Yeah, it's a little broader.
|
||||
The independent content producer is fighting all of this noise and we got these giant
|
||||
corporate machines standing right next to us, produce, you know, and they got very big
|
||||
microphones and they're producing an awful lot of noise and an awful lot of noise.
|
||||
But there's also a legion of other independence also standing on the other shoulder, making
|
||||
as much noise as they possibly can to find their audience.
|
||||
And it's the people that are very good at this are the ones that get found occasionally.
|
||||
Yes, there are some people that just got lucky.
|
||||
They caught lightning in a bottle.
|
||||
They got picked up generally by what they call influencers that is to say someone very
|
||||
popular already says, oh, check this thing out.
|
||||
And then, you know, it's like being, it's like having the king come down and say, I
|
||||
give this my okay, I touch them on the shoulder, they have my blessing.
|
||||
You can check them out.
|
||||
No.
|
||||
I think that crap has got to go the way of the dinosaur.
|
||||
I think it's got to go away because I don't think it's, you know, there's, there are voices
|
||||
so lost, we will never hear them.
|
||||
And they might be the best thing.
|
||||
They might change my life.
|
||||
There might be somebody out there whose content is so meaningful to me.
|
||||
It will change the course of my life.
|
||||
I will never meet them even in this era where we supposedly all have an equal voice on
|
||||
the internet.
|
||||
I will never hear these people because of all that noise.
|
||||
To me, that's where the challenge for independent art lies.
|
||||
I 100% agree with you, but I think that the key, at least in my mind, and I could be
|
||||
making this up, but the key is not to try to out, to out megaphone the corporations.
|
||||
It's, the key is to make the personal connections and to start the little mesh network and, and
|
||||
get the word through the mesh rather than through the broadcast.
|
||||
That's, that's the key.
|
||||
And it's not efficient, but I think that's the, the strength of the method is that it's
|
||||
not efficient.
|
||||
That, that's where like some of the Facebook, I don't know what particular social media
|
||||
platform you're talking about.
|
||||
I assume it's not Facebook, lots of rocks, but I'm very careful with, with, I don't do
|
||||
the order follow thing, I don't, I don't let anyone just follow me either.
|
||||
I, I, I choose people who have a meaning to me, they work with me, or I know them through,
|
||||
through, through, through, through a fraternity, or I know them through some other way, or I,
|
||||
I went to school with them at some point, something, and then I get to see just with these
|
||||
people that presumably I have something in common with, are talking about, and that's
|
||||
the goal.
|
||||
And even then sometime talk about noise, some people are noise, some people are just repeating
|
||||
what, I don't know, the democratically republican party are saying, and, you know, I, I, I
|
||||
eventually mute them, I eventually, or, or, or deafened them, whatever you call it, you
|
||||
know what I mean.
|
||||
Yeah, I do, and what you're describing is an ideal way for social media to work.
|
||||
I have, that has not been my experience, you know, that has not been my experience, mostly
|
||||
because I don't really want to talk to people.
|
||||
This is a personal problem I might have, and I have it in real life too.
|
||||
I don't really want to talk to them.
|
||||
I want to hear what they have to say, but I don't necessarily want to talk to them.
|
||||
The only time I really have anything to post is when I've produced a new piece of content.
|
||||
No, that's advertisement.
|
||||
When I post that, it's just advertisement.
|
||||
No one wants that either.
|
||||
So it's a, it's a difficult, you know, thing for me personally, but that's not really
|
||||
the point I'm trying to make, you know, because there are many, many people who, first off,
|
||||
it's been shown at least for independent writing.
|
||||
They found that there's no real correlation to having a large social media presence
|
||||
with an awful lot of followers, and actually, that doesn't necessarily directly translate
|
||||
into sales.
|
||||
So there's an argument to be made that a large social platform is not a good basis for
|
||||
an independent content creator, probably exactly what Clat 2 said, you have to find the
|
||||
correct community, either you either have to find it or you have to create it around
|
||||
your, around your content.
|
||||
And that is the only way you're going to find true fan.
|
||||
If you want to put it that way, true patrons of your art, that is not an easy thing to
|
||||
do, because again, not everybody is good at that.
|
||||
I am very bad at social media, and there are people that are also very bad, not because
|
||||
they're like me, but because maybe they're like, as Deepkeek said, they make a lot of
|
||||
noise.
|
||||
All they do is shout and make a lot of noise, you know, maybe they are producing content
|
||||
that would, could find a good audience, but they're making too much noise.
|
||||
And they, you know, people mute them, people don't listen to them, no one takes them seriously.
|
||||
In other words, they're very bad at it, just like I am in a different way, but just like
|
||||
I am, they're very bad at it, and they're not finding their audience, you know, even
|
||||
though they may have one, whatever content they're producing, they may, there may be an
|
||||
audience for these guys, but they can't use the tools that are out there right now.
|
||||
I guess ultimately, honestly, this is probably a really roundabout way of saying that I don't
|
||||
think there is a level playing field.
|
||||
I don't think the tools are very good for everybody anyway.
|
||||
I think the tools are really good for some people, they work really well for some people,
|
||||
they work increasingly better and better for major corporations, but I still think that
|
||||
the indie artist is still lost, they're still alone by and large, you know, I think it's
|
||||
very hard for many, many indie artists, indie content producers to find their audience.
|
||||
I won't argue with that.
|
||||
So I guess to sum up, here's a little story that actually stars Lost in Bronx.
|
||||
I'm going to paraphrase heavily because this happened a long time ago, but I was interviewing
|
||||
Lost in Bronx for my show, Ganyu World Order, found at GanyuWorldOrder.info, and as part
|
||||
of my intro to Lost in Bronx, I think I was saying, you know, well, everyone knows Lost
|
||||
in Bronx, and now I'm going to talk to them.
|
||||
And Lost in Bronx said, clatoon, nobody knows who I am.
|
||||
Like we are existing in a tiny, tiny little niche, and nobody knows who I am.
|
||||
And that to me, but no, but everybody that I am talking to right now knows who Lost
|
||||
in Bronx is.
|
||||
And to me, that meant that everyone knew who Lost in Bronx was.
|
||||
And I think there's, that's the key right there, is that there are little bubbles and there's
|
||||
the audience within that bubble.
|
||||
And to some degree, we can all kind of be stars within our little bubble.
|
||||
It's a lot like when you go to a Linux convention and you meet someone off in the corner who's
|
||||
trying to fade into the wallpaper and you go and talk to them and you guys are getting
|
||||
along and it's kind of cool.
|
||||
And then you discover that that person is the person who wrote that one application that
|
||||
you use all day every day.
|
||||
These moments of artistic genius in whatever form it takes.
|
||||
And to you, that makes all the difference in the world.
|
||||
So these bubbles may be a variable size, but they're super, super important.
|
||||
They're important to individuals, they're important to communities.
|
||||
And I think it's part of our sort of duty as, as cultural beings to promote the stuff
|
||||
that we find like, you know, so that deep geek can find cool new stuff.
|
||||
We should tell other people about the cool new thing that we found and promote local
|
||||
and independent art that we like, because I think that's spreading a healthy culture,
|
||||
a healthy human culture.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HBR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
|
||||
how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dot org and the Infonomicom Computer Club.
|
||||
And it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
|
||||
the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the Creative Commons' Attribution
|
||||
ShareLight 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user