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Nina Paley: No One Misses “TV Pollution” in Public Spaces

Posted by dailyheights on Thursday 12 May 2005 at 2:15 pm

TVBGpackage.jpgProspect Heights cartoonist and animator Nina Paley created the artwork and package design for TV-B-Gone, that little keychain device that turns off “virtually any television.” DAILY HEIGHTS got Nina to reflect on National TV Turnoff Week, which just ended (April 25 - May 2).

How did TV Turnoff Week go for you?
Like any other week - I don’t have TV reception at home. I do have a monitor on which I can watch DVDs, but last week I was too busy working on “Sita Sings the Blues.”

How did it come about that you did the artwork for the TV-B-Gone package?
I knew Mitch Altman, the inventor of TV-B-Gone, way back in my hometown of Urbana, Illinois. When Mitch moved to San Francisco, he sublet and then took over my beloved previous apartment, the “pentshack” on a roof in the Castro (the NYT wrote about it and made me nostalgic). Mitch brought up TV-B-Gone at least 10 years ago, and I said I wanted to do art for it if the opportunity ever arose. It finally did.

I read on “The Internet” that you had practically begged Mitch for the opportunity to illustrate the packaging. Why?
Isn’t it obvious? A device that turns off annoying televisions! TV intrudes more and more as time goes on. It’s in restaurants, bars, train stations, buses… I’m especially vulnerable to TV. For some reason, I find it extremely difficult to take my eyes off a flickering screen. And it’s bad enough if the sound is muted, but there’s no way I can shut my ears to it. In public spaces, where people socialize, TV is an overwhelming intrusion. It’s pollution, in fact.

Have you used TV-B-Gone in public? How did it go?
I’ve only used it a few times in public. Once at a bar that had about 15 screens all going at once. I turned off a few that were facing me. No one noticed! Another time, in a health club that had 3 giant screens showing sports. I turned one off, partly to impress a friend of mine who requested it. Again, no one noticed. No one misses TV in public.

How do you respond to critics who say “hey lady, just deal with it, and stop imposing your morality on me”?
No one’s said that to me. Regardless, it has nothing to do with morality. If someone litters, and I pick up their trash, am I “imposing morality”? No, I’m improving my environment, making it more liveable. I don’t give a damn how much TV people watch in their own environments. In a public environment, I want to interact with people, not TV.

TV Turnoff Week is over. Is it too late to kill your television?
It’s never too late. Although if you don’t like television, just don’t get one in the first place. Really, I don’t care how much TV people watch at home. It’s the public intrusion that bugs me. Until we can kill public televisions, we’ll just have to use TV-B-Gone.

Cue the Mister Rogers Theme Music

Posted by dailyheights on Thursday 12 May 2005 at 11:28 am

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Citynoise.org writes in the Daily Heights message boards: “I love how many different sorts of people live in Prospect Heights!” Go check out his photo montage…

Kofi Coming to Prospect Heights?

Posted by dailyheights on Thursday 12 May 2005 at 8:33 am

MEGHAN CLYNE writes today in the New York Sun: The secretary-general, Kofi Annan, is recommending that the United Nations abandon its plans to use a proposed 35-story building, to be constructed over a neighboring city park, as temporary relocation facilities while the world body renovates its Turtle Bay headquarters.

So where are they going to put it now…?

“The only site that would fulfill U.N. requirements for both office space and conference space is “part of a larger development in downtown Brooklyn,” the report said.” Hmm…

“It consists of both office space, some of which could be occupied as is, and space that the developer would build out to accommodate conferences,” the report said.

“Some U.N. observers have speculated that the site is part of developer Bruce Ratner’s Atlantic Yards project, which would bring an arena for the Nets basketball team and office, retail, and housing space to the Brooklyn Navy Yards and adjacent properties.”

Link: Secretary-General Urges United Nations To Abandon ‘Swing Space’ Plan [New York Sun]

Let the Stoop Saling Begin [UPDATED]

Posted by dailyheights on Thursday 12 May 2005 at 8:31 am

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STOOP sale - Saturday, May 14th, 8am – 3pm
618 Pacific st. (btw Flatbush and 6th Ave.) – near Pacific/Atlantic stop.
Lots of ladies clothes, books, kitchen stuff, glassware, furniture, records and very fun miscellany.

Huge, multi-family stoop sale!!
Saturday, May 14, 10:00 am, at 315 St. John’s Pl. (btwn Plaza + Underhill)
Kids’ stuff, furnishings, books, clothing, toys, CDs, videos, housewares and more!

Thanks!

Thanks to Liz and Maura for the listings. Send your stoop sale info to whatsnew@dailyheights.com.

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