Filtering by Category: 2010

Rap News re: Wikileaks

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Posted by Pinky.

Our talented musical pals Hugo & Giordano are back and this time they've made a great video about Wikileaks. Please watch it - we need more freedom on the internet, not less!

The lyrics can be found on the Rap News page at Reverb Nation.

And, please don't forget that The Juice Media, creators of Rap News, has a YouTube channel with all kinds of excellent video pieces that are very, very important to watch but are currently hardly getting any eyeballs. So please take a peek and if you are so inclined, pass the links around to your friends. Thank you!

Take care,
pinky

CFM Blogs about our Future Museums Report

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Posted by Bunny.

A few months ago Pinky guest-blogged on the Center for the Future of Museums' website. Now Elizabeth Merritt, director of the Center for the Future of Museums, returns the favor (well not really, I just lifted the entire entry from their blog). Her blog post from today is below. Read it while it's still warm.

< CFM blog entry begin >

 

​THURSDAY, JULY 29, 2010

The Pinky Show Cats’ Report on the Future

“We, three cats from the Pinky Show, went to the future. We brought back notes & stuff.” Read the report.

Those of you who attended the AAM annual meeting this spring may have stumbled upon a curious exhibit in MuseumExpo—a set of cases (generously lent by Gaylord) filled with artifacts documenting the time travel expeditions of the Pinky Show cats.​

 
 

You may be familiar with Kim’s interest in museums (documented in this wickedly accurate Pinky Show episode.) These recent expeditions resulted from Kim's desire to see how museums develop in the future.

While not formally trained in futurism, the cats caught on fast to the fundamental principles of our practice:

“One of the things we noticed when we first started time-traveling” reports Pinky, “was that often there seemed to be no obvious connections between the various moments-in-time we visited. In fact, many of the futures we experienced seemed wildly different - sometimes even apparently ‘opposite’ - from each other, even when separated by only a few years. We later learned ... that the reason for this is that the future, as it relates to the present, only exists as an infinite array of possibilities fanning outward.”

This is great description of what futurists call the Cone of Plausibility (depicting the range of possible futures diverging from the present.)​

 
futuremuseums_cone-of-plausibility-2.jpg
 

​Pinky and company visited six museums at times ranging from 2028 to 2098. Being thorough researchers, they checked out the cafes and gift shops and observed how people use museums in the future. They discover both bright futures (where people hang out in the museum 24/7, “doing their own thing” 365 days a year), and dark futures (characterized by an over reliance on blockbuster exhibits, safe predictable programming and “edutainment.”)

I particularly like their interviews with cats they encountered in their travels, (Section V: 2028-2098 Voices from the Future). Margarita-cat offered (will offer?) the following words of wisdom: “You don’t have to be in a position of power in order to do good in this world. But you must be fearless... What does a fearless museum-worker look like?” Good question, and one I will think about a lot.

There are many ways to explore the future, and this was a pretty interesting experiment. I hope you check out the report—as Pinky says, “perhaps the diversity of artifacts presented here will serve as a reminder that a positive future can only be what we are willing to desire and fight for.”

< CFM blog entry end >

Download & read the document here: The Pinky Show Future Museums Report: Some notes on our time-traveling expeditions, 2028-2098. (1.8 MB, PDF file)​

Future Museum Report now available

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Posted by Bunny.

Hey everybody. Pinky finally finished putting the report together, it is available here.

What amazes me is that she took two months to put together a 24-page report whereas it took yours truly only 40 days to design & build A FULLY FUNCTIONAL TIME-TRAVEL MACHINE AND LUGGAGE POD.

~Bunny.

....................................

Posted by Pinky: We'll see if my report lasts longer than a month before it falls apart though.

....................................

Posted by Kim: bunny, since your time-machine is not working any more, next time when you rebuild it can you please make it bigger because this one was really cramped inside.

....................................

Posted by Bunny: We would've had more room if somebody didn't beg me to install a four-shelf snack vending machine in it

.......................................

Posted by Kim: sorry.

Pinky Show comics?

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Posted by Pinky.

Hi everybody! I'm going to throw an opinion question out there.

A few months ago the people at FUSE magazine (www.fusemagazine.org) asked us if we'd like to contribute a cartoon to their magazine. Of course we said YES (we like to try new things). And, well, our first comic finally came out in the current issue - Volume 33 Number 3 for those of you who are curious - and wow, it was really neat for us to see a Pinky Show comic in a magazine. We are on the last page. And not to pat ourselves on the head too much (because that's bad manners, right?) but we really like the way it came out and I can imagine doing all kinds of neat things in a comic format!

​So... Bunny and I have been talking a lot about comics and how that might actually be a better format for the Pinky Show than videos. Basically we just think it's a lot more do-able. There's certain things we can do in videos that probably wouldn't translate well to a comic strip format, but the opposite is true too. And anyway, producing animated educational videos is really unsustainable as a two-cat operation. We haven't been able to figure out how to pay for stuff like electricity and food while making free videos & art. We seem to have lots of fans but don’t receive many donations. So we need to figure out a different way of doing things if we want to keep doing this kind of work.

So here's a question: What do you folks think about The Pinky Show changing formats, from videos to comics? Beyond sustainability issues, it might even help us to expand our audience (if we could get it into newspapers or whatever) and maybe in a few years, when we have enough comics, we could put them all together and sell them as a book (do people even still buy books??). We might still put out a video once in a while - "whenever possible" - but for now we have to figure out a way to survive, and don't people like to read comics?

What do you think? Good idea? No? Any feedback would be appreciated.

Take care,
pinky

No Pinky Show store at the moment...

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Posted by Pinky.

Announcement: We've closed the Pinky Show store. We did that because right now Bunny and I are working hard to build a permanent studio.

Details: Since we started this project five years ago, we've been making all our Pinky Show stuff in a cramped, dimly-lit, unruly mess of old computers, semi-functional audio equipment, tangled cables, crumpled/trampled scripts, etc. etc... arrgh, what a nightmare. Well, finally I had a nervous breakdown (or something like it) and after throwing my "I CAN'T TAKE THIS MESS ANY MORE!!!" mini-tantrum I asked Bunny to shut down the store so that we could have some time to focus on cleaning up. Hopefully in a few weeks we'll have a less crazy (and depressing) work environment to work in. So that's what we're doing at the moment. Well, actually we're still doing Pinky Show work (that stuff never really stops) but the work-space cleaning/rebuilding is the main reason why the store is closed now.

Oh, by the way, for those of you who were on the verge of ordering a Pinky Show t-shirt or some other item, we apologize for the unexpected wait. We're planning to open a new Pinky Show store after we have things cleaned up and organized around here - my guess is (I'm not good at guessing timetables)... sometime in September?

The new Pinky Show store will have its own URL:

pinkyandbunny.com

We'll make an announcement when it's open. Oh, and it will have some new stuff in it too!

Please take care,
pinky

AIM sends Pinky Show a letter

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Posted by Bunny.

Couldn't believe this letter we received yesterday:

"From: American Indian Movement
To: Pinky, Daisy et al:

The San Francisco chapter of the American Indian Movement (AIM) would like to commend your work for its insightful, innovative, and broad-scoped examination and criticism of current human power structures.

AIM would also like to applaud the Pinky Show for its consistent attention to Indigenous issues and current struggles. We believe that open-minded dialogue and exchange between the empowered European colonial culture and the indigenous and non-human cultures of the world is critical to our common survival.

Yours in struggle,
Mark Anquoe
AIM-West
http://www.aimwest.info "

Wow. AIM is an organization that’s been a huge inspiration to all of us, so it feels crazy to receive a letter from them. Still can't believe it.

~Bunny.

Pinky Show at the Berlin Biennale

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Posted by Bunny.

We've finally arrived home safely from Berlin. We did a lecture-type thing to a bunch of young curators from all over the world on the subject of failure. It was a good lecture, then we wished them much failure and departed. I ate quite a few sausages while I was there. The beer was fantastic. Special thanks to Rhea Dall and Ana Janevski for providing us with airplane tickets and a lovely hotel room, with the most delicious bread, in Berlin-Mitte. Also big hug and kisses to our friend and comrade Bojana Piskur from Radical Education Collective, Ljubljana, and art warriors Etcétera from Buenos Aries, errorists extraordinaire.

Last but not least, a very special thank you to our old friends Harry & Yana, for taking care of us like we are really your kittens, thank you, we love you very much.

Bunny & Pinky

Pinky Show at American Association of Museums Expo

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Posted by Bunny.

We just dismantled our installation and interviewing station at the American Association of Museums' giant annual conference/trade show/extravaganza-thing in Los Angeles. We're tired but happy with the results. It may take us a few weeks but as soon as we find the time we'll convert our installation into some kind of internet-friendly format so that everybody can see what we did.

Next week we are off to Berlin, to do a presentation at the Berlin Biennale.

~Bunny.

Mimi Has Kitten

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Posted by Bunny.

Mimi is now a mommy. Zoe Kitten was born today; welcome to this world! I asked Mimi if it was really painful and she said "not really". She made just one kitten, and she is very cute. So now we are all aunties!

~Bunny.

Three new videos from Daisy

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Posted by Bunny.

Our friend Daisy has been in Hawaii for the past several months doing research. In his spare time, sometimes Daisy documents talks and stuff, which is great because usually he sends us the video afterwards. He shoots, we edit. So, we now have three new videos posted for you to enjoy in the Pinky Presents area:

Donna Haraway on the movie Avatar.

Donna Haraway on the movie Avatar.

Sunsara Taylor on the oppression of women and the need for revolution.

Sunsara Taylor on the oppression of women and the need for revolution.

Greg Grandin on the Tea Party movement and American Exceptionalism.

Greg Grandin on the Tea Party movement and American Exceptionalism.

 

If you find any of this stuff mesmerizing, please support our activities. We (Daisy included) are broke.

~Bunny.

[ Update: Sorry, the Pinky Show website no longer has a “Pinky Presents” area. ]​

Please Circulate: Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth

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Posted by Bunny.

The Declaration below was adopted by the World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth, recently concluded in Cochabamba, Bolivia. The Bolivian government has submitted it to the United Nations (UNFCCC) for consideration. Please circulate this widely - this is an important document and needs to be read, contemplated and discussed by as many people as possible. Posted by Bunny.

< begin document >

Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth

Preamble

We, the peoples and nations of Earth:

considering that we are all part of Mother Earth, an indivisible, living community of interrelated and interdependent beings with a common destiny;

gratefully acknowledging that Mother Earth is the source of life, nourishment and learning and provides everything we need to live well;

recognizing that the capitalist system and all forms of depredation, exploitation, abuse and contamination have caused great destruction, degradation and disruption of Mother Earth, putting life as we know it today at risk through phenomena such as climate change;

convinced that in an interdependent living community it is not possible to recognize the rights of only human beings without causing an imbalance within Mother Earth;

affirming that to guarantee human rights it is necessary to recognize and defend the rights of Mother Earth and all beings in her and that there are existing cultures, practices and laws that do so;

conscious of the urgency of taking decisive, collective action to transform structures and systems that cause climate change and other threats to Mother Earth;

proclaim this Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth, and call on the General Assembly of the United Nation to adopt it, as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations of the world, and to the end that every individual and institution takes responsibility for promoting through teaching, education, and consciousness raising, respect for the rights recognized in this Declaration and ensure through prompt and progressive measures and mechanisms, national and international, their universal and effective recognition and observance among all peoples and States in the world.

Article 1. Mother Earth

(1) Mother Earth is a living being.

(2) Mother Earth is a unique, indivisible, self-regulating community of interrelated beings that sustains, contains and reproduces all beings.

(3) Each being is defined by its relationships as an integral part of Mother Earth.

(4) The inherent rights of Mother Earth are inalienable in that they arise from the same source as existence.

(5) Mother Earth and all beings are entitled to all the inherent rights recognized in this Declaration without distinction of any kind, such as may be made between organic and inorganic beings, species, origin, use to human beings, or any other status.

(6) Just as human beings have human rights, all other beings also have rights which are specific to their species or kind and appropriate for their role and function within the communities within which they exist.

(7) The rights of each being are limited by the rights of other beings and any conflict between their rights must be resolved in a way that maintains the integrity, balance and health of Mother Earth.

Article 2. Inherent Rights of Mother Earth

(1) Mother Earth and all beings of which she is composed have the following inherent rights:

(a) the right to life and to exist;

(b) the right to be respected;

(c) the right to regenerate its bio-capacity and to continue its vital cycles and processes free from human disruptions;

(d) the right to maintain its identity and integrity as a distinct, self-regulating and interrelated being;

(e) the right to water as a source of life;

(f) the right to clean air;

(g) the right to integral health;

(h) the right to be free from contamination, pollution and toxic or radioactive waste;

(i) the right to not have its genetic structure modified or disrupted in a manner that threatens it integrity or vital and healthy functioning;

(j) the right to full and prompt restoration the violation of the rights recognized in this Declaration caused by human activities;

(2) Each being has the right to a place and to play its role in Mother Earth for her harmonious functioning.

(3) Every being has the right to wellbeing and to live free from torture or cruel treatment by human beings.

Article 3. Obligations of human beings to Mother Earth

(1) Every human being is responsible for respecting and living in harmony with Mother Earth.

(2) Human beings, all States, and all public and private institutions must:

(a) act in accordance with the rights and obligations recognized in this Declaration;

(b) recognize and promote the full implementation and enforcement of the rights and obligations recognized in this Declaration;

(c) promote and participate in learning, analysis, interpretation and communication about how to live in harmony with Mother Earth in accordance with this Declaration;

(d) ensure that the pursuit of human wellbeing contributes to the wellbeing of Mother Earth, now and in the future;

(e) establish and apply effective norms and laws for the defence, protection and conservation of the rights of Mother Earth;

(f) respect, protect, conserve and where necessary, restore the integrity, of the vital ecological cycles, processes and balances of Mother Earth;

(g) guarantee that the damages caused by human violations of the inherent rights recognized in this Declaration are rectified and that those responsible are held accountable for restoring the integrity and health of Mother Earth;

(h) empower human beings and institutions to defend the rights of Mother Earth and of all beings;

(i) establish precautionary and restrictive measures to prevent human activities from causing species extinction, the destruction of ecosystems or the disruption of ecological cycles;

(j) guarantee peace and eliminate nuclear, chemical and biological weapons;

(k) promote and support practices of respect for Mother Earth and all beings, in accordance with their own cultures, traditions and customs;

(l) promote economic systems that are in harmony with Mother Earth and in accordance with the rights recognized in this Declaration.

Article 4. Definitions

(1) The term “being” includes ecosystems, natural communities, species and all other natural entities which exist as part of Mother Earth.

(2) Nothing in this Declaration restricts the recognition of other inherent rights of all beings or specified beings.

< end document >

For more information: http://pwccc.wordpress.com/

Pinky Show Guest Blog at CFM: PS in Los Angeles

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Posted by Bunny.

Here is a guest blog that Pinky wrote for the Center for the Future of Museums blog announcing our crashing the American Association of Museums' Annual Meeting and MuseumExpo next month in Los Angeles. Click here to go to the original post at the CFM blog.


< start blog entry >​

bunnypinky_180px.jpg

Hello Museum People!

My name is Pinky and I am from The Pinky Show. Bunny and I were invited do a guest CFM blog, so here we are. We realize that many of you may not know who we are or why we are interested in museums, so we will start with that.

We run an education project called The Pinky Show that studies social structures, ideology, and power. As you can imagine, this makes us particularly interested in certain institutional formations - especially schools and museums. For us, museums are fun to study because they're so often discussed via such a fascinating mess of contradictory, reductive representations that make it almost impossible to see clearly what they really are or how they're really functioning. For example:

Museums are instrumental in drawing attention to under-known histories and knowledge;
Museums are inherently conservative in nature.

Museums help educate the general public about democracy and injustice;
Museums are instrumental in maintaining the hegemony of the ruling class.

Museums try to be as fair as possible in the presentation of histories and ideas;
Museums allow themselves veto-power over marginalized people's ability to represent themselves.

Museums promote compassion and fairness;
Museum institutional culture is extremely hierarchical and anti-democratic.

Community programming is a high priority for most museums;
Museums' community programming is not done with communities, it is done for communities.

Museums want broad-base support and audience participation;
Certain classes of people are not welcome.

Museums are all about education;
Feminist, radical, grassroots, and other forms of counter-hegemonic educational practices don't count as legitimate forms of education in museum education departments.

Museums are interested in bettering society;
Museums uphold the dominant values and practices of capitalism.

Museums are constantly mindful of the future;
Museums people do not think revolution, only reform.

We could go on and on with a hundred more examples, but basically we just think (hope!) that trying to untangle this giant heap of narrative-static will bring us closer to unlocking the mysteries of how people understand their complicated relationships to history and power. Which reminds me...

Next month, May 24, 25, & 26, The Pinky Show will be at the American Association of Museum's Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo in Los Angeles. We'll be there, along with over 4,000 museum people from all over the world, to do two things:

1. We'll be exhibiting a small collection of museum-related artifacts that we brought back from our recent expedition to the future. (Actually, it would be more accurate to add an "s" - as in "futures" - since there are actually an infinite number of futures...) Our expedition was not a comprehensive survey of possible futures, but rather, due to the high cost of gasoline, we were only able to stop off at a few random future-moments. However, the objects that we were able to bring back with us are pretty neat to look at. Time-travel is a pretty big hassle so if you can stop by for even a few minutes that would make our day - especially for Bunny, who really wore herself out building the time travel machine.

2. We'll also be bringing a video camera & microphone and will be interviewing anyone willing to share their thoughts and ideas concerning the future of museums. We're focusing our attention on what you - museum people - have to say about where museums are headed because, One, you're the ones who perform the day-to-day, hands-on transformational work that will directly reshape museums' relationship with the general public; and Two, the general public isn't allowed inside the convention hall.

We're very excited to do something at the AAM Thing because we believe that museums are like everything else in the world - they can be used for good or they can be used for evil (or most likely some undetermined ratio of both), and of course if we can do something to nudge things more toward the former and away from the latter, that's wonderful. Coming at things from an education perspective, we always think it's a good idea to start where people are at, so showing up with a microphone and asking simple questions about the future of museums seems like a reasonable way to go. If you're going to be there, please come looking for us!

interviewflier_halfsheet_400px.jpg

Hope to see you in Los Angeles!

pinky & Bunny

< end blog entry >

Bunny Mailbag: "Class Treason show lacking hugely!"

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Posted by Bunny.

We just received a very provocative e-mail from someone who's obviously thought a lot about some of the issues we talked about in our Re: Power, Structure, Agency episode. However I disagree with many of her points and since she's posted at various places around the internet I thought this would be a good opportunity to respond in order to clarify where we are coming from. My responses are interspersed in blue:

To: The Pinky Show
From: diana
Subject: 'Class Treason' show lacking hugely!

[I] wrote the following on youtube, and on Facebook:

"I have some issues with this instalment: the attention aimed at women (who reinforce but are not the power-brokers in the system) and the focus on personal change (too-minimally challenged), and the trashing of theory. But most of all, the absence of class consciousness - "all classes of people just looking out for ...their own interests"??? WTF? Pinky - of all beings - just presumed a level playing field? OK, at just short of 18 minutes, it gets better. But I still hate the invisibilizing of working-class people."

Bunny: 1) Everybody, including women, who help maintain harmful social structures should be critiqued. 2) This episode is not so much about 'personal change' (a very ambiguous term) but rather the question of individual agency and its relationship to exploitative social/institutional structures. 3) We trash theory? Where did we do that? We use theory all the time. No further comment. 4) You quote out of context in order to make your own point, then accuse us of saying something we never said as a counter-example? Not cool. In the section of the video you reference, we were pointing out how society is not only broken up into political-economic binaries (bourgeoisie/proletariat, ruling class/working class, etc.) but also many other social, ideological, and other class-forms. We in no way imagine that society is a level playing field. Please re-watch the video more carefully. 5) Regarding our supposed rendering of working class people as "invisible" - and this is the most important point - Why do you think we've chosen not to speak to or about working-class people in a video about stucture/power/agency? Is it possible that our decision to focus on privileged people was a strategic one? Do you really think working class people need to be lectured on the logic of class treason?

In all fairness, the people who comment well on classism are ... either dead or not born yet?  but since we're all in bad company, it'd be useful to challenge the worst of our offerings.  And I suppose if you-all weren't so exceptionally good under other circumstances, I wouldn't be SOOO disappointed.  But I am.

Bunny: Actually there are lots of people who are very much alive that do talk about class struggle all the time. They're not often on t.v., especially here in the U.S., but they're out there. Please do not render them invisible.

Soccer moms?  These moms' SUVs?  Yes!  Because *women* are murdering the planet with their heavy industrialization, these goddesses of capitalism!  (No, we were a one-car family until I had to carpool to the alternative elementary school, a decent option for a working-class family - and even soccer was carpooled-to.  But even so, those other moms?  They didn't singlehandedly trash the world.  And my contribution meant nothing - it's *industry* that does 97% of the polluting, and all the moms in the world doing zero-waste processing still don't account for the 97%.)

Bunny: Yes, soccer moms are not solely responsible for destroying the planet - so what? Does that mean that we should not point out that an enormous number of ordinary people - including supposedly non-threatening soccer moms who may or may not resemble you in some way - actively contribute to the destruction of this planet on a daily basis? Like it or not, American soccer moms are a fair example of the kind of family-minded 'good citizens' that politely assist this planet toward Epic Planetary FAIL as they dutifully go about their daily activities. For you to imply that "Industry" (Who or What is this monolithic "Industry"? Does anybody work in it? Does anyone consume its products or services?) is The Real Culprit responsible for 97% of the destruction - as if it doesn't require a ravenous appetite by ordinary, not-fabulously-rich, relatively affluent First Worlders to consume and demand more of that production - your argument makes little sense to me. They are intertwined via the broader logic of capitalism, and you and me and probably everybody we know are firmly planted within it. And by the way, I do applaud you with my little cat-hands for carpooling and supporting alternative forms of education.

College means something very different for working-class people with activist backgrounds.  It's still problematic, but it's about the only way to get recognized by those who otherwise won't listen.  I'm an activist.  I write fairly awesome political theory, from which I work diligently.  I have one fan, maybe two, in Seattle.  I now have the attention of the head of the Gender & Women's Studies department of the local college in this small midwestern town - the college where I work as a clerk in the convenience store, so that my daughter has lowered tuition and can earn a degree that gives her credibility when she goes out to make social-justice change.  I know how far I can get.  Um, did I mention cashiering?  I can't guarantee she'll have better access, but it gives her a shot at it!

Bunny: Until there is some kind of radical transformation in the structure of society, it's likely that universities and other kinds of hegemonic institutions will be seen by most people as the only legitimate game in town. With this in mind, we do not go around telling oppressed people that they should not go to school. Instead, we are focused on telling privileged people of conscience to find creative ways of devaluing the social, political, and economic currency of hegemonic institutions. The one example given at the end of the video was the school teacher - he leaves his current position within an establishment institution in order to form a different (i.e., more ethical) kind of institution. It isn't easy and there are many complications AND it is not an instant societal fix. But we think it is a reasonable first step that ordinary people can actually do. Please try to consider the political utility of what this could produce if in every town and city several hundreds or thousands of people would actually do something like this.

What really frustrates me is the presumption that you're only talking to the elite.  Facebook, especially, is full of working-class activists who are either retired from their w-c jobs or are winding down into greater activism.  The one person who's commented on FB so far (and to whom I gave your link) is a retired gentleman several years older even than me, and decidedly working-class as well.  Please don't render us invisible!  We exist!  And please don't paint us as ineffective, either.  There are lots of us, and though the media writes us off, we don't expect it from 'our side.'  Please.

Bunny: I don't think we're rendering working class people invisible by creating a video aimed at privileged functionaries of the state. Class treason is a political strategy to change society. It's logic is rooted in an analysis of structure and power. It wouldn't make sense to make a video urging working class people to commit class treason. Oppressed people of all different kinds are already on the move - have been for quite some time - and don't need us to speak for them. And finally, just to be clear, we are not using this video to argue that the goal of transforming society should be to redistribute wealth in the U.S. so that the U.S. working class can have all the goodies they want or deserve. The question of the relative privilege enjoyed by most working class people in the U.S. - compared to what working people in so-called Third World countries experience - is an important reality that must be directly addressed by any vision of a more just future. What would be the point redistributing wealth here in the U.S., if in the end, it still required millions or billions of expendable people worldwide to exist under the weight of our desires?

Thank you.

Thank you for taking the time to write us. I hope you will consider my responses.

Posted by Bunny.

May 12 Update, posted by Bunny: We receive a lot of criticism via e-mail. Most of it is ridiculous and not worth responding to, sometimes it is more thoughtful (like the e-mail above). I responded to diana's comments because I think it's very important to examine how something can be thoughtful and wrong at the same time - especially when spoken by someone on 'our side'. We received a reply today and so I’m adding it below - if we're misogynist and classist then hopefully it is all more fully explained. Or this may be an example of how difficult it is to recognize or understand other arguments once we've claimed the positions from which we speak. Either way, the struggle continues. - B.

May 12 e-mail response from diana: "Everybody ... should be critiqued." Yeah, well, sure, if you're writing a book. But if you're not, then singling out certain people, and making others invisible, these are terribly political acts - for which you can expect to face the consequences. And targeting soccer moms, or any other group of women, is downright coerced, because the cultural feeling against women who've relatively made it is too easy to tap into. It's misogyny that makes it so easy. Target CEOs and senior execs? Well, no, rich white men don't get the same kind of indignation that wealthy/ish white women do. And "individual agency" - seriously? You've simply renamed 'personal change.' And you haven't added much, because any genuine foray into personal change will still examine it, if briefly, in relation to the structures of the culture around it. The reason my claim that you trash theory is even made, above, is because you have previously regularly used and promoted theory that was breathtaking in its clarity; I recommended Pinky to people *because* of the excellent theory. The fact you 'use it all the time' is a straw argument. And your 'where did we say that' right next to 'the section of the video you reference' is an odd pairing, showing that I really have told you 'where.' But most of all, to say *clearly,* if in essence, that 'all classes of people are just looking out for their own interests' truly flattens the perspective and renders invisible a great deal of dissimilarity in privilege and power. You can't choose not to speak about a group, and then leave it at that. That is exactly what renders a group invisible.

You know, I really don't want to do any more of this. You've been a great resource for gently explaining theory at a depth few others, short of authors of thousand-page books, have managed. You hit upon two of my areas of disprivilege, and I called you on it. Let's don't spend time arguing. Take a look at your own stuff, and either you'll see it over time, or you won't. I found this episode terribly, oddly misogynistic and classist, and way below your normal standard. I keep the bar pretty high for you guys because your show is normally so very good. Everyone - every single one of the people I initially posted to - knows that I have recommended your show repeatedly. And now are they gonna see your defensive response with some pretty weird claims back at me ("quote out of context ..."), and my challenges? Doesn't help clarity; doesn't help dialogue to have to engage in defensiveness. You can keep the last word (or not, your call). What I don't want is to drift toward a more-horizontal hostility. We eat each other up on the left, do the dirty work for The Powers, in getting locked into such engagements.

Take a look at the stuff I've called you on ... over time (and no, you haven't, it's in your defensive words). Or don't. But the revolution, or life post-collapse, or whatever it is we're all looking toward, will be much richer (in real wealth - Earth health) if misogyny and classism are also understood, and not furthered, and not accepted-in-passing. Thanks, diana

Bunny Mailbag: A letter from Eric & Nibblet TWK

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Posted by Bunny.

I don't need to preface this e-mail by saying much - it's just a good letter and I wanted our readers to be able to read it too. Very important to think about.

To: The Pinky Show
From: Eric and Nibblet the Wonder Kitty
Subject: Ancient Athens, Sparta, Rome, and the United States

message: Hello Pinky, Bunny, and the gang!  I've been thinking allot about history and current events.  We study the Ancient cultures of Athens, Sparta, and the Roman Empire and feel superior to them because so much of their populations were slaves or impoverished laborers who worked to support the small upper classes of their cultures.  We also study the antebellum South and feel proud that we have eliminated chattel slavery here in the United States.

Yet it strikes me to ask what price does the rest of the world pay so that we here in the United States, and the other 'developed' countries, might enjoy the lifestyle that we have come to see as our birth right?  How much of the world's arable land and water resources are devoted to growing crops for export to the U.S. and other 'developed' countries, rather than being used to grow food for the people living in the countries this land is in?  How much of the world's population toil in factories, fields, and slave labor colonies for almost nothing so that we can buy our shirts and toys cheaply in big box stores rather than paying the prices that would result from these people being paid what we consider a living wage?  How much hunger, disease, tyranny, and suffering are required to maintain our lifestyles?  In the end, are we really ethically superior to the ancient Athenians, Spartans, and Romans?  They, at least, were willing to be open and honest about their exploitation of other peoples and nations for their own comfort and convenience.

I realize that these are very dangerous questions to be asking.  Yet, someone needs to ask them.  Have you Ever thought about this?  Have a great Spring and I look forward to your future endeavors!

Sincerely,
Eric and Nibblet the Wonder Kitty

PS button design for AAM Thing not happening

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Posted by Pinky.

Here's a design I made for a pin-on button. We were thinking of possibly making some buttons as give-aways for the interviewing project we're doing with Center for the Future of Museums at the AAM Annual Meeting & Museum Expo next month in Los Angeles. Unfortunately in the end there was no money in the budget for their production, but rather than just send the design into my computer's virtual rubbish can I'm posting it here if anybody wants to use it to make their own Pinky Show button (you may have to expand the edges - I never made a button before so I don't know). There is a small print shop near here that has a button-making machine; I suspect most print shops (Kinko's and places like that?) will probably make one for you for a couple of dollars.​

Take care,
pinky​

button_isawthefuture_sm.jpg

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Posted by Bunny: That looks fun - I wish I had that machine. Apparently they're called "pin-back buttons". 

Annoying Happenings; Good News; The Shopping Song

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Posted by Bunny.

Too many ridiculous things have been happening around here lately. We recently lost our work-space to termites and 50-year old asbestos. Then Pinky's computer died again (this is the second time already - it's getting pretty old) and right after I finally got that fixed, a tree blew down and took our internet cable with it. So we didn't have internet until today. Or telephones either, because we actually use the internet to place telephone calls. We've been going to the library to use the internet and also "borrowing" (*ahem*) wi-fi to make Skype telephone calls. Add to all this the loss of our t.v., cell phone, water heater, and nearly all of our project funding, the past six months has felt more like a low-intensity war waged against The Pinky Show by electricity, electronic devices and... the universe.

In between trying to deal with all this ridiculousness, we've been keeping busy. Whenever possible we work on Pinky Show stuff and the rest of the time Pinky and I've been looking for jobs. Ah, job hunting - is there anything more amusing in life? So if you see a large fluffy grey/white cat flipping your hamburger soon, I guess that means I've successfully integrated myself into "the workforce".

But it's not all bad news, we have some good news too. First one is that we've started work on a Pinky Show comic strip. This came about when the folks at Fuse magazine asked us recently if we'd like to put a Pinky Show cartoon in their magazine on a regular basis. Well, we like Fuse magazine a lot so of course we said yes. We've been talking about making a Pinky Show cartoon for a long time, but without an actual place to put it we just kept putting it off while we worked on other things. Good timing, I say - comic strips are a nice format because they don't require a lot of fussy electronic equipment to make. This may be a good medium for us to work in while we try to figure out how to fund the production of more Pinky Show videos.

Second good news: ...I forgot. If I remember I'll post it later.

Finally, here is a song that you may enjoy. Kim wrote it. (You know Kim right? Tiny, black, long fur?) It's a traditional cat-form song, which means that you can use any melody you like when you sing it. In fact, if you and your friends sing it simultaneously, feel free to sing different melodies at the same time, which sounds terrific. Enjoy.​

I'll write again soon. ~Bunny.​

Pinky Show at extra-curricular (Toronto, CANADA)

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Posted by Bunny.

The extra-curricular conference Part II is now over. Special thanks to HR03, who accompanied us to Toronto to do all the human being stuff that's generally expected at these things -  presentations, workshops, etc. He did a good job (*sound of clapping*).

Here is a list of the other participants who participated in Part II.

Center for Urban Pedagogyy (NYC, United States)
colourschool (Vancouver, Canada)
Dodolab (Waterloo, Canada)
La Lleca (Mexico City, Mexico)
Radical Education Research Collective (RERC) (Toronto, Canada)
The Pinky Show (middle of nowhere)
Toronto School of Creativity & Inquiry (Toronto, Canada)
Ultra-Red (London, UK)
Annette Krauss (Utrecht, Netherlands)

We also did a joint-presentation with Winnipeg-based curator Milena Placentile for extra-curricular Part I last month (we did that one via video conference - awkward! - probably won't be trying that again until the technology improves...); the participants list is as follows:

Carmen Mörsch (Zurich)
Rubén A. Gaztambide-Fernández (Toronto, Canada)
Rodrigo Hernandez-Gomez (Toronto/Mexico City)
Andrew Hunter (Waterloo, Canada)
Michelle Jacques (Toronto, Canada)
Amos Latteier (Montreal, Canada)
Syrus Marcus Ware, Srimoyee Mitra and members from the AGO Youth Council (Toronto)
Darren O’Donnell (Toronto, Canada)
Milena Placentile (Winnipeg, Canada)
The Pinky Show (middle of nowhere)
Christine Shaw (Toronto, Canada)
Kim Simon (Toronto, Canada)
Stephanie Springgay (Toronto, Canada)
Daisuke Takeya (Toronto, Canada)
Maiko Tanaka (Toronto, Canada)
Xu Tan (Guangzhou, China)

A special, big thank you to Maiko Tanaka for organizing the whole thing. We hope you will come visit us soon.

Siya, the ice cream in the freezer is for you. xoxo

~Bunny.

Pinky Show in Lecture Performance Catalogue

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Posted by Bunny.

Today we received a nice surprise in the mail. Radmila Joksimovic, curator at Museum of Contemporary Art-Belgrade mailed us the catalogue for the Lecture Performance exhibition.

The exhibition and catalogue was a collaboration between MoCA-Belgrade (Serbia) and Kolnischer Kunstverein (Cologne, Germany). It's a very nice book so we've very pleased. Pinky and I spent the evening reading through a couple of the essays and looking at the work of the other artists in the show.

Introduction
Kathrin Jentjens, Radmilla Joksimovic, Anja Nathan-Dorn, Jelena Vesic

Ars Academica - the Lecture between Artistic and Academic Discourse
Jenny Dirksen

Doing Lectures. Performative Lectures as a Framework for Artistic Action
Marianne Wagner

A Piece about a Lecture
Vit Havranek and Boris Ondreicka

Performing Lecture Machine
Aldo Milohnic

Performance as Research and Production of Knowledge in Art
Ana Vujanovic and Jelena Vesic

Artists & other Lecturers/Performers:

Fia Backstrom
Walter Benjamin
Pauline Boudry/Renate Lorenz
Dan Graham
Andrea Fraser
Mark Leckey
Robert Morris
The Pinky Show
Piratbyran
Martha Rosler
Grupa Spomenik
TkH
V-Girls
Jeronimo Voss
Katarina Zdjelar/Jan Verwoert

This is fun. I will read the rest of the essays tomorrow.

~Bunny.

some random thoughts regarding hope & loss

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Posted by Pinky.

recently i made a drawing of a skull. i'm not sure exactly why i drew it - it was just a picture that i've been seeing in my head for the past few years.​

pinkyskull_400wide.jpg

to me, it's mostly a reminder to myself that i have a lot of things that i need to do and i better stay focused because you never know when you're going to drop dead. that's all. i sent it to my friend and she said something like "are you okay? there are so many dark thoughts in your head lately!" (this was news to me). she quoted nietzsche, "and if you gaze for long into the abyss, the abyss gazes into you".

i think i understand the meaning and usefulness of these kinds of statements. but i think maybe i also have a different relationship to the underside of things than what she is suggesting.

a lot of pinky show viewers send us e-mails, asking us why in our videos we usually don't offer some kind of resolution, provide a solution, or leave them with some feeling of hope. instead, they see our work as just a big pile of negative hopelessness. sometimes i feel like responding "well maybe that's your job, to figure out what you can do next. and emotionally, go feel any way you want, what does it have to do with me how you feel after you watch one of our videos?" i guess that sounds not-very-nice, but i think it's very weird how people who want a better world are often so unwilling to linger in discomfort. they want hope!

what is it about so many social change people, that when you speak of loss and maybe even the absence of hope in some situations, they quickly try to steer you back towards hope? as if we shouldn't dare be without hope for even a moment; it is too dark and we will be eaten alive! really? are we sure this is a good way to look at things?

to me, it's important to remember that lots of people are engaged in personal or political struggles that they know for sure they are going to lose. what is the role of hope then? can someone continue on, knowing full well that their side has been persevering, fighting, resisting but also mostly losing for the past 500 or 4000 years? are these people’s souls just heavy and dark with loss? does strength or justice always come with hope?

which i guess raises another question: is the pinky show for hopeless losers?

i say: "hmmm!!!" i realize hope is powerful and sustaining, but it is also only half of something. in many circumstances loss (and its many manifestations) just is what it is. personally i can't think of any good reason to avoid them. i just want to focus on fulfilling my obligations and if loss is a big part of that, that’s fine. loss is a very good teacher.

please take care,
pinky

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Posted by Bunny: I like the drawing but this is one of your worst entries. I don’t know what you’re saying.