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[Nettime-ro] FW: RHIZOME DIGEST:Tilman Baumgaertel: An Interview With Bill Browne


Tilman Baumgaertel: Surveillance Camera Players--An Interview With
Bill Browne


Date: 7.16.2001
From: Tilman Baumgaertel ([email protected])
Subject: Surveillance Camera Players--An Interview With Bill Browne
Keywords: tactical media, performance, language, theater, public space,
surveillance

Tilman Baumg�rtel: What are the "Surveillance Camera Players" (SCP)
doing?

Bill Browne: The "SCP" perform plays directly in front of surveillance
cameras. What we do is, hold up large, hand-made placards that are held
up to the camera, and do some pantomime. The reason for this is that the
surveillance cameras don't record sound. The group has about six such
plays in its repertoire. Some of them are constructed to be performed in
specific places, for example churches that have surveillance cameras.

?: How do you pick the the plays? Some choices seem to be logical, like
"1984," but why "Waiting for Godot"?

!: We picked "Godot" as a kind of joke on the play itself, because there
is, of course, all words and no action. Surveillance cameras don't pick
up sound, so any performance of "Godot" would have to be silent! We no
longer perform joke-plays such as these. Since November 1998 we perform
plays that we have written and that concern surveillance and privacy
rights.

?: How many people are involved with the "SCP," and what else are these
people? Are there any theatre professionals?

Browne: At any one time, there are about six people in the group, which
is very informal and very loosely organized. In total, about 40 people
have performed ever since our founding in November 1996. There are no
theatre professionals in the group; never have been. Most of the members
are political activists who are involved in a variety of other gruops.
We are all anarchists.

?: What's wrong with surveillance cameras? The are supposed to make
public space safer...

!: The use of surveillance cameras by the police is a flat out violation
of the fourth amendment to the Constitution. The Supreme Court's
confirmed that with a decision in 1967.

?: Yet is has become quite acceptable in the last couple of years, and
at the same time the crime rate in New York has been going down...

!: Crime went down in New York because the Mayor told the police to
arrest huge numbers of poor people. The City and the police want to keep
an eye on political protest. For example in the area around St.
Patrick's Cathderal: there is almost no crime there, but a lot of
demonstrations against the policies of the Catholic Church. That's why
there is a lot very sophisticated digital surveillance cameras.

?: You say, your "target group" is the one person that is sitting in
front of the surveillance monitor. Why all this effort for one person?

!: Our real target group are all the people who see us on the street,
because they happen to wander by. In New York City, that can be a lot of
people; because we perform in very well-populated areas. We were only
joking when we said that we were performing for bored security guards
and cops! "Fuck them!"

?: Yet there is something absurd in performing in front of these
cameras, but I guess that this is intentional...

!: Sure. We think this whole logic of surveillance is absurd: the
cameras make people paranoid in the hope that these paranoid people will
act rationally and won't commit crimes. But paranoid people are not
rational.

?: What effect to you expect from your performances?

!: First of all, we want to disrupt their everyday routine of people.
And we want to show them that there is no need to be terrified by these
cameras. Plus we want to show that not all protests are loud and boring,
and that one can do this with a sense of humor and that individuals and
and small groups can accomplish a lot.

?: This strategy of "disruption" of every day life is these days being
used by others. It has become a strategy in marketing for example, and
whole shopping malls are planned to get people out of their everyday-
trance. Why do you think your strategy works? And do you really feel
that your hand-written posters are being recognized despite the fact
that they have to compete in between perfect advertising design in
public space and "shock" or "guerilla" marketing?

!: Marketing--even "radical" advertising--is designed to keep people in
their trance, rather than wake them up. Advertising is prececisely part
of the daily life-trance, and that's what we wish to disrupt. As for the
contrast between the advertizers and us: we look unprofessional, even
absurd, don't we? Good!

?: How does the audience react?

!: The surveillants often find it funny, until we show a sign that says:
"Mind your own business." The rest of the audience mostly agrees with
us--at least on this point that the cameras must be labeled with
adequate signs. Only a few give us the usual bullshit about fighting
crime.

?: You also do walking tours through New York. What are you doing there?

!: We are teaching other people what we do: spot the cameras, which are
often disguised as streetlamps or ornaments. We are also making sure
that our maps of camera locations are disseminated. This is also an
important of our performances: to get those maps distributed. It's one
thing to have someone tell you about the cameras; it's quite another to
be able to locate yourself, Because then you see just how many there
really are.

?: Is there any influence of situationist theory on your work?

!: Yes, a great deal. What we do is "detourn" the spectacle of the
cameras. We don't destroy them as militant anarchist would do. We don't
write to our congressman as good leftist would do. We turn the cameras
against their original purposes. However, I'm sure the "Situationist
International" (SI) would have been opposed to the degree to which the
SCP appear in the mass media.

!: That was something I was about to ask: if you are so opposed to the
spectacle--as the Situationst called the mass media--why do you
participate in it, for example by giving TV interviews?

!: We feed the spectacle poison, disguised as bird seed.

?: Do you see yourself in the tradition of political street theater from
the Seventies?

!: Yes. We are big fans of the Living Theater.

!: Groups like the Living Theatre don't really exist anymore, and one
reason for that might be that the notion of public sphace has changed.
Maybe the real social discourse and the real public life don't happen on
the street anymore, but in the media. So one could argue that this kind
of street theatre doesn't reach the "public" anymore, or just a tiny
faction of it...

!: But the Living Theatre is still around, and it is still very much
alive! They perform both in traditional theaters, and also in public. As
for your comments about "the media," it may be true for some people--
those with money, power, access to the media. They might feel that the
public sphere is unnecessary or undesirable and scary. But there are
some people for whom the street and public space is literally
everything--the homeless, obviously, but others as well.

?: What role does the internet play in what you are doing?

!: It allows us to make contact with like-minded people all over the
world. It gets us coverage from people who do not speak English as their
first language. We've been written about or profiled in Spanish,
Portugese, French, Dutch and German.

?: By using the internet you reach much more people interested in what
you are doing, that by "just" playing theatre on the street or in the
theatre. That's what makes what you are doing different from traditional
political theatre...

!: That's true. "SCP" is a far more "modern" theatre group than the
Living Theatre, which doesn't really use or fully inhabit the Internet.
We use the Internet as much as we can to maximize our effectiveness.
Though the group would be far less well known without the Internet. But
the "Surveillance Camera Players" could still exist and be effective
even if the Internet were to crash en masse tomorrow.

This is why our Web site is relatively rudimentary and toned down. It is
simply a vehicle to deliver ideas over a very wide area. And it allows
the "SCP" to do without a newsletter or book..

? Could you think of any way that your strategy could be applied to the
mass media or the internet?

!: The strategy of "detournement" can certainly be applied to the mass
media. The situationists themselves detourned comic strips, paintings,
movies and other media. We often perform in front of webcams, which we
define as remote surveillance devices. They are digital cameras, unlike
some "real" surveillance cameras, which mostly are still analog. We want
to call attention to the likely combination of face recognition software
with webcams.

The Internet is a great surveillance device, but this surveillance to an
extent works two ways. Though the US military is spying on me using the
Internet, I can use the Internet to detect and denounce such spying.

http://www.notbored.org/the-scp.html

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