Difference between revisions of "Douglas Rushkoff"

From Cyborg Anthropology
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
Rushkoff is known for his documentary The Merchants of Cool<ref>"Media Giants." Frontline: The Merchants of Cool. PBS Online, 2001. Web. 7 Mar. 2001.</ref>, and for the concept that "if something is free, you are the product". Rushkoff is known for examining the ideas of work and play, playground as factory and how people are both empowered and controlled by the digital space.  
+
Rushkoff is known for his role in the documentary The Merchants of Cool<ref>"Media Giants." Frontline: The Merchants of Cool. PBS Online, 2001. Web. 7 Mar. 2001.</ref> a report on how businesses market to American teenagers, and the effect they have together on popular culture. Rushkoff is known for examining the ideas of work and play, playground as factory and how people are both empowered and controlled by the digital space.  
  
Rushkoff's more recent work is the book Program or Be Programmed, in which he urges people to take control of their ability to create rather than to consume. "I'm not asking you to know how your computer works and how to change the power supply or solder," he writes, "I'm asking that you understand the language, the interface, the software that the computer is using. You don't want your kids to be James Joyce, you just want them to learn how to write. If you are not prepared to program then you are being programmed."<ref>Rushkoff, Douglas. Program or be Programmed: Ten Commands for a Digital Age. Published November 1, 2010.</ref>  
+
Rushkoff's more recent work is the book Program or Be Programmed, in which he urges people to take control of their ability to create rather than to consume. "I'm not asking you to know how your computer works and how to change the power supply or solder," he writes, "I'm asking that you understand the language, the interface, the software that the computer is using. You don't want your kids to be James Joyce, you just want them to learn how to write. If you are not prepared to program then you are being programmed."<ref>Rushkoff, Douglas. Program or be Programmed: Ten Commands for a Digital Age. Published November 1, 2010.</ref> He is also known for popularizing the idea that ''if something is free, you are the product.''
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 18:41, 29 October 2011

Rushkoff is known for his role in the documentary The Merchants of Cool[1] a report on how businesses market to American teenagers, and the effect they have together on popular culture. Rushkoff is known for examining the ideas of work and play, playground as factory and how people are both empowered and controlled by the digital space.

Rushkoff's more recent work is the book Program or Be Programmed, in which he urges people to take control of their ability to create rather than to consume. "I'm not asking you to know how your computer works and how to change the power supply or solder," he writes, "I'm asking that you understand the language, the interface, the software that the computer is using. You don't want your kids to be James Joyce, you just want them to learn how to write. If you are not prepared to program then you are being programmed."[2] He is also known for popularizing the idea that if something is free, you are the product.

References

  1. "Media Giants." Frontline: The Merchants of Cool. PBS Online, 2001. Web. 7 Mar. 2001.
  2. Rushkoff, Douglas. Program or be Programmed: Ten Commands for a Digital Age. Published November 1, 2010.