kate and i watched this movie late saturday night, and i was thinking about how this is such a pre-internet view of adolecence, connection and reaching out with your voice (words).
would mark (hard harry) have been a blogger? would he have run a community? hung around places like mog and last.fm? would the same impact have happened?
sometimes i wonder if a level of creativity, inventiveness, and even adolescent rebellion has been lost in the age of technology.
then there are other times when i think that as an adolescent my self-image and feelings of being a part of something more would have been stronger, clearer and more true if i'd had the option of meeting people from all over the world.
Monday, November 12, 2007
talk hard
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4 comments:
Great movie choice; I haven't seen this movie in far too long. Yes, I cheered for Hard Harry, profanity and all, because he found a manner of expression that suited him well.
As a blogger, MOGger, or whatever, he would likely have impacted the same, or maybe more people. The trade-off is that the impact would have been diffused across the blogosphere, instead of localized. I doubt he'd have taken down the principal.
I just got a mental image of Hard Anna, sitting at her laptop rambling on to her audience about Arctic Monkeys, and I'm smiling ear to ear. Hee
i remember the first time i saw it. i went to the movies alone. i'd skipped a night class in college to see it, because i'd wanted to see it so badly. i loved it, and saw it again a few more times, dragging friends along with me.
i cheered him on, too. i loved that he'd found his voice, and i loved samantha mathis' character in it, too. how she was able to break through his wall, and see beyond his persona.
i agree that no matter where he chose to put his thoughts down he would have developed an audience. that said, i think sometimes being localized does something more, or at least makes a certain level of change in a more tangible way.
but, here comes my duplicitious view on it. i know i can look at my own online experience and know that i have been forever changed by some experiences, or interactions, from people i've never shared breathing space.
i think it is a level of truth that is expressed, and the power that *that* has, you know?
hee! i can so see anna like that, too.
I've not spent nearly as long creating and maintaining relationships on the Internet, but I can certainly feel the stretching the past sixteen months have put me through. I still have to suppress a giggle when someone posts on MOG that they wouldn't have gone to see an artist until I introduced them. And to think that there's a woman in Greece that calls me brother.
Speaking of Hard Anna, we'll need to try to catch her show sometime this weekend. I caught her first show, but given the hour, I've not been able to listen again. I'll remind you as we get closer to the weekend.
I was just talking to someone the other day on how it is imperative that I get a copy of this movie on DVD. I think it was when I was at the Sovereign with Angela and I played "Kick Out the Jams" by MC5, and she remembered there was a version of it in the film. Only that was by the Rollins Band, and of course I had to point that out, since I'm a nerd :)
I do think he would have had an impact on people, and I think it would have been strong. But I think he would have that impact on the individual level, not on a community level, sort of like what Dale was saying. He would have impacted a lot of people, but that impact might be invisible to people who didn't read/listen to him since someone would probably read him, but maybe no one they know in real life did too.
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