Author: zpicker

How Did They Make That: The Archive of St. Louis Punk

The Archive of St. Louis Punk was created by Greg Kessler and active participant in the STL Punk scene since the 1980s. The niche that the project is trying to fill is showing how the punk scene exists outside the east and west coast. As much of American punk is colored by the DIY California punk or the NYC more goth punk scene. This collection is for researchers and fellow fans alike to relive the glory days or see how St. Louis a historically musical city has changed its tune. St. Louis has base in Blues music which later led to the birth of rock, which led to punk, and then punk split off a bunch of directions being the grandfather of alternative music. The definition of punk is so varied by the scene and person, so instead of narrowing what kind of donations were excepted Kessler allowed the collectors decide what is punk to them. 

Collecting pieces that may be important relics for a person is difficult which is why the online preservation works. Some pieces of the collection are being housed together but Kessler states that he is aware of the connection collectors have to their items and he is just as happy to scan items and return them to owners. Though the spirit of punk is being accessible to all people despite their socioeconomic situation as it centers on DIY, cheap shows, and leftist ideals the site can be seen as inaccessible. It is online so you would have to have a device to access, either of your own or from a punk rock resource like a public library.

The collections on the site are named after the people who collected them which may be nice for people to recognize the names from their scene but makes it hard to determine what it will include; the archive collects promotional material like posters for gigs, recordings, pictures, band merch like buttons and shirts, and clippings from publications inside and outside the scene. If one were to go through the items they have tags to help find other pieces from that category. This website also links to another project which focuses on making high quality scans of gig flyers from the St. Louis music scene focusing on rock, punk, and goth. The Saint Louis Flyer Project can be a helpful addition to research that can be done with this collection and see the bands of the scene.

In the new age of subculture many subcultures run online which can kill a scene quick. The older I get the more I see St. Louis skipped over by bands maybe it’s because our scene is dying, now if I want to see a larger artist I have to travel to Chicago or KC. Is it the danger of the city warding off both music enjoyers and bands or is punk dead? Is holding on to pieces of a community that was never into being brought to the surface going to preserve the scene? The thing I hear from elder punks is that the scene was supposed to leave no trace and that the archiving can be antithetical to the scene’s purpose. Is the death of the scene just as important as it’s life? I will leave you with a Fall Out Boy title Get Busy Living or Get Busy Dying (Do Your Part to Save the Scene and Stop Going to Shows).”

AI Fiction Review: Rossum’s Universal Robots and Metropolis

Both if these pieces of media changed the course of science fiction entirely and both have similar themes.

In the world of Metropolis we a city built in layers with a defined working and leisure class, Maria our savior preaches to the workers that The Hands (the working class that builds the dream of The Head) will be delivered The Heart (the mediator between The Head and The Hands) which will bring them into a new age of equality and prosperity with The Head (the leisure class with the dream/vision of the world). It is a biblically story about class relations with references to the 7 deadly sins, and the tower of Babel, and Eden. The AI in Metropolis though originally designed to mimic a woman who had died is transformed to look like Maria the savior to sow the seeds of discord among the working class that end up destroying themselves and the city. In the end technology fails and the city must be rebuilt this time with closer relations between the working and the dreaming classes. This movie is rather interesting as it’s a movie about destroying the class system, and greed will ultimately lead to consequences previously unimaginable. The AI represents excess and recklessness, AI Maria is the mother of all sin and gets burnt for it in the end. I do like the message of that when so far separated people who were taught the same language no longer understand each other and that difference causes unrest.

Rossum’s Universal Robots is a story of human hubris using the Robots to automate the humans into not having work to do. The Robots are not given the same rights as humans because they were created without feelings or desires. Humans are the master of Robots, Robots are all the same they have a brotherhood because of that. As the robots advance they go to war with humans (humans don’t want to be automated out) until there isn’t enough humans to fight the endless amounts of robots. Thus without work or will to overcome the robots humans stop reproducing. Dr. Gall the scientist created a few robots with higher intelligence and placed them amongst the other robots, and thus they develop desire to be the master of all humans (and kill the ones who won’t obey). The robots end up killing all but one of the humans as they try to reproduce the formula for more Robots lest the world is uninhabited and the war was all for nothing. This story has biblical themes they even mention a tower of babel like event, no more universal robots but creating nations of robots so they will hate each other and lessen their collective power.

The RUR robots are made in the image of humans but the world doesn’t see them as such. Even though this a lot about the fear of the future it also reflects back on the time. We don’t treat all humans like they matter, do you consider the person on the bus the same as the one that represents us in the government. I think we should remember fiction can’t see the future they can only try to forecast what will come of themselves.

Here are the things that this media brought forward for me

  • Those that own the technology will use if to benefit them the most. In Metro to stop the workers from coming into power and in RUR to make them the most money. Current AI seems to be a tool of the common people and the use of the AI funds our leisure class. These AIs could also be used to sow discord depending on what it’s trained on. Both in the fictional AI and those in our world aren’t truly sentient they are a reflection of those that make them.
  • The idea that humans do not want to be automated out of jobs mostly because the system we are under no job means we can’t afford to live. Even though RUR suggests that all things will be free in the future and man could use all their time to benefit themselves that was not happening as one would think. Humans don’t take well to change and unless we are born with time we don’t know what to do with it.
  • the insular nature of the ruling technological class disconnected from the consequences but doomed to fall due to their decisions. Will we see our ruling class fall as we continue forward with our AI development because we already feel the consequences of AI.
  • Eden exist in both RUR and Metro one is for the new age of robots that are indistinguishable from humans, and the other for the new and more connected age of humans. Will we see the destruction and will be survive to become more connected or will we leave the world entirely.