I’m not sure if the above link will work. The video has been severely decompressed and has lost a lot of its high quality.
In class, we have discussed “WeFeeFline.org” on multiple occasions. The website is a community in a community. It showcases excerpts of people’s blog entries and divides them into various emotions across age, gender, location. The presentation of the website in itself is art because it is visually stimulating.
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http://www.americasarmy.com/community/
I also came up with the idea of this freeware computer game, America’s Army: Special Forces. This game is used as a mechanism to recruit people into joining the U.S. army. It shows the glitz and glam of working and presents the job as a fun, exciting non-stop adventure. I’m not sure if this example coincides exactly with the chapter in the book, but I can’t help but think that the whole reason for the game’s existence is the idea of a community in itself (aside from the fact that there are community online organizations for those who play the game).
http://www.myhogan.com/comm/oBAMa.exe
After hours of struggling to figure out the MUGEN/Game Maker concept, I caved and decided to work with one of the tutorials offered at YoYoGames.com. Again, it took me a while to understand the concept of sprites, and eventually I came up with a concept to make a statement about the current poilitical election. I decided to call the game o-BAM-a, since the idea is that Hillary Clinton has cloned herself in an attempt to take out Barrak Obama, and Obama must “BAM” Clinton’s Clones out of existence to survive. Cheesey idea, but it’s the only thing I could come up with.
**Obama must climb the dollar bill (the ladder) and jump on the pennies (clouds) to collect stars for votes, all while avoiding Clinton’s Clones
**Editted all in-game graphics
**Slowed down the movement of enemy sprites

Steve Kurtz is a college professor and is mainly known for his work in BioArt— a form of creation in which living matter is used to produce various works of art. When searching for artwork by Kurtz through Google, I could not seem to locate any pictures of his work with living matter. Instead, one of the most commonly generated pictures is the image displayed above. While the exact meaning of the picture is unclear, at first glance, it is obvious that Kurtz is contesting something that could potentially be detrimental to the well-being of others.
In the center of the picture, a young person— either a man or woman, or maybe even Kurtz himself— is seen sitting at a desk with his/her face buried in his/her hands. The artist— which one can assume is his/her profession based on the pictures lying in front of the individual— is clearly distraught and at a loss for words. To the left of the artist is a police officer standing triumphantly in front of the doorway— the artist’s only form of exit. To the right is a man waving a clipboard shamefully at the artist. Either the man has some sort of evidence against the artist or the man is confronting the artist about his/her own beliefs. Perhaps the artist is being convicted of crimes against humanity?
While the cause of the artist’s presence is unclear, it is obvious that the individuals in the room are in the process of an interrogation. One of the main causes for this assumption is the fact that several diagonal lines run across the center of the image, thus suggesting a window. On the outside of the window, two men are seen examining the proceedings.
While the faces of every individual in the photo remains hidden— the artist has his face covered, the officer wears sunglasses, the clipboard man is cut off and the other two men are facing away from the viewer— the tension in the room is notably apparent. Lastly, in the far back of the room is a large bulletin board covered with various news reports. While the reports remain blank in the image, the presence of the bulletins suggests the kinds of notifications one sees posted on various episodes of Law & Order. It is important to consider the fact that the news reports were left blank to prevent the viewer’s eye from getting distracted from the real central focus of the picture— the artist’s dismay.
Earlier, I alluded to the possibility that the artist in the photo could in fact be Steve Kurtz himself. As I did some more research* on this image, I came to learn that Steve Kurtz was arrested for charges of bioterrorism after the passing of his wife. Apparently, in order to excel and fortify the rate of their artistic creations, Kurtz and his wife would work with biological equipment in a small lab in their home. It was originally suspected that his wife had died due to certain chemicals in the lab; however, later court proceedings proved this accusation to be false. Regardless, I believe that as the viewer of this image, it is safe to not only consider but assume that Kurtz is the artist seated at the table.
*http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8278-2004Jun1.html