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  1. The LA Flood Project

    The LA Flood Project is a [work in progress] locative media experience made up of three segments:

    1. Oral histories of crises in Los Angeles
    2. A locative narrative about a fictional flood
    3. A flood simulation

    (Source: Project site)

    Scott Rettberg - 20.05.2011 - 12:28

  2. The Love of the Social Writerly Game (Interview with Mark Marino and Rob Wittig)

    Rob Wittig & Mark Marino share a friendship based on destabilizing literary norms with comedy, computers, and collaborations.

    Their ongoing conversations range over decades of their work from anecdotes of Wittig's early writing process experiments that preceded the internet by a decade (IN.S.OMNIA, 1983) to a work they are completing together currently net-improv fiction distributed using hashtags.

    Both these writers have consistently explored radically playful modes of writing that emerge through message boards, emails, and now twitter. Marino offers cogent critique on the underlying notions of connection that exist as a thematic under all Rob's practices; then describes his early comedy magazine Bunk, 'a playground for writers'. Douglas Adams emerges as the lifter of the 'bag of rocks' and both convert into ravens, black wings gouging the page into inky screens.

    Interview 2012-06-23 at ELO Morgantown.

    (Source: David Jhave Johnston, Vimeo)

    Scott Rettberg - 12.02.2013 - 15:40

  3. Air-B-N-Me

    “Welcome to Air-B-N-Me.” In this exchange economy, we share our cars, our homes, and all our stuff. What if we could share our lives? If you ache to be anywhere but here, welcome to Air-B-N-Me, a new experience in lifeswapping. When you feel like checking out of your own life, check into somebody else’s. Why not turn your downtime into a timeshare?

    Davin Heckman - 27.04.2018 - 14:38

  4. #fixurl8tionship

    On the Internet, it’s not how you feel, but how you look that counts. We create perfect lives full of perfect friends hanging out on perfect vaycays (think Fyre festival). At the same time, the internet is full of people ready to give you advice on how to fix what’s broken in your life: your car, your computer, your hair, et cetera.

    In #fixurl8tionship, we imagine a fictional world of influencers who give you superficial advice on how to fix the appearance of your broken relationships.  As with most people giving advice, the person who gives it is generally the person who needs it the most. Still, hypocrisy needs no URL, just a hashtag.  In this netprov, you will join the community to give and get advice on how to fix your relationships [for the camera].

    Yvanne Michéle Louise Kerignard - 29.10.2019 - 15:45