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About Neighborhoodist

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Neighborhoodist

Location:
CHI/LA/LDN/NYC (USA)
Joined on:
02/10/08
Occupation:
neighborhood enthusiast

The story thus far:

Born in london, raised in norcal, schooled (formally, informally, professionally, and unprofessionally) in los angeles, london, new york, and chicago. Currently pursuing academic pursuits, bicycling, and an enthusiasm for neighborhoods and the people in them, mostly in chicago.

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The latest from Neighborhoodist (3)

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    Media

    response to  andrewprice's post Digital Billboard Assault

    a new twist

    Uh oh... what if opposing a digital billboards is simultaneously endangering the chance for a much-needed new park?

    This LAT article describes the ironic dilemma of a proposal for a massive new digital billboard that downtown, partial revenues from which would go towards building a new wetlands preserve in park-poor South LA!

    pretty crafty on somebody's part.

    also, yeah orion's a badass.

    Comments (0)

    Commented on April 8, 2008 by - Neighborhoodist

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    Media

    response to  andrewprice's post Digital Billboard Assault

    channels of resistance

    word. And no, we absolutely should not acquiesce to the commodification of public space - that's what 'spatial resistance' is all about (whether the result is any net social gain is a different debate). I'm all for formal channels of challenging this issue as well - see this interesting post from LA Weekly for example - although 'city/citizen v. corporation' is war with many battles not regularly lost by the latter.

    And re: China, clearly 'resistance' does not always equal something positive. sometimes its very sad and bloody and sometimes the violence of resistance is no better or worse than what it is trying to resist. And I suppose some would argue that graffiti does more violence to someone's personal property than a digital billboard does to our collective eyes and minds. But I'm not sure I buy that one is less violent or more ok just because it has been paid for.

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    Commented on April 5, 2008 by - Neighborhoodist

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    Media

    response to  andrewprice's post Digital Billboard Assault

    commodification as opportunity

    Hmmm. Should this be stopped? No more than any of the other large-scale corporate advertising cluttering our visual landscape. Other than a line of argument about road safety perhaps, it doesn't seem much worse than the enormous golden arches towering above communities of all sizes throughout the country (it's potentially even a little less monotonous).

    Should it be countered, altered, reinterpreted and taken full advantage of? Absolutely. As the digital billboards and Meyer's quote illustrate, cities and public spaces are more hyper-commodified and corporate-dominated than ever, yet as long as there have been cities, the people have contended the use of space and challenged who symbolically owns the built environment. From tagged walls and stenciled sidewalks to 'ad-busted' billboards and electronic googlebombing, popular spatial resistance shows little sign of acquiescing to new technology or persistent scrubbing.

    There's no doubt that digital billboards are an obnoxious (if not unexpected) ratcheting up of corporate domination of public space. But this new advertising angle presents many potential opportunities for resistance as well.

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    Commented on April 1, 2008 by - Neighborhoodist

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