Anti-consumerist capitalism: culture jammers, sneaker peddlers.READERS of Adbusters got a shock when they picked up the September/October issue of the anti-corporate, anti-consumer culture set's flagship magazine Flagship Magazine is an independent magazine for gamers [1]. Published in the UK, it started in 1983 for PBM players [2]. Since its hundredth issue in 2002, it has extended its coverage to include boardgames, role-playing games, web games and massively . The back cover sported riot one of the publication's famous ad spoofs but a genuine advertisement for the soon-to-be-produced Blackspot sneaker. The shoe, explains Adbusters founder Kalle Lasn, is being sold as an anti-Nike brand, a way of "kicking Phil Knight's ass." Blackspot sneakers sneakers Noun, pl US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl will be made in a South Korean factory that was abandoned by Nike when it unionized. Lasn hopes you'll be able to pick up the shoe in independent stores, or order it from Blackspot sneaker.org, within six to nine months. "It depends how well our marketing campaign works," says Lasn. "Of course, if we're lucky and get some investors, it could take off very rapidly." Some of Lasn's fellow activists are less than sanguine sanguine /san·guine/ (sang´gwin) 1. plethoric. 2. ardent or hopeful. san·guine adj. 1. Of a healthy, reddish color; ruddy. 2. about the shift from a strategy of opposing corporations to one of beating them at their own game. Among the skeptics is Naomi Klein Naomi Klein is a Canadian journalist, author and activist well known for her political analyses of corporate globalization. Klein was born in Montreal, Quebec. Her family has a history of activism, as does her husband's family. , author of the anti-corporate bible No Logo. "Writers and publications who analyze the commercialization and privatization privatization: see nationalization. privatization Transfer of government services or assets to the private sector. State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or statutory restrictions on competition between privately and publicly owned of our lives have a responsibility to work to protect spaces where we aren't constantly being pitched to," Klein told Canada's Globe and Mail. "This can be undermined if they are seen as simply shilling SHILLING, Eng. law. The name of an English coin, of the value of one twentieth part of a pound. In the United States, while they were colonies, there were coins of this denomination, but they greatly varied in their value. for a different, 'anti-corporate' brand." Lasn has little patience for this attitude. "Old leftists like Naomi Klein hang on to an old, 'pure' activism that hasn't had any success for 20 or 30 years," he says. "There's a lot of people now who want to jump over the dead body of the old left. We've decided to stop whining about Nike; why not make $10 million and use it to run a media literacy Media literacy is the process of accessing, analyzing, evaluating and creating messages in a wide variety of media modes, genres and forms. It uses an inquiry-based instructional model that encourages people to ask questions about what they watch, see and read. campaign instead? I'm really sick of the whiners." Blackspot represents a departure from the traditional tactic of logo-demystifying detournement exemplified by Adbusters' spoofs. Instead of exploding the symbolic power of brand imagery, Lasn hopes to substitute the "nuclear glow" of his own anti-logo, but this "glow," he avers Avers is a municipality in the district of Hinterrhein in the Swiss canton of Graubünden. , will be rooted in sincerely held beliefs and values rather than the "cynical mindfucks" of corporate marketers. Ironically, Blackspot may demonstrate the virtues of markets to activists on the left. "There's a certain undeniable power that capitalism and even free markets have," says Lasn. "My problem is with top-down corporate consumer culture. this way of activism is one way for people to take back their culture." |
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