Strange Transmissions: Channeling the Spirits in the Spectrum

by Kathleen Quillian

Broadcast: 1. to transmit by radio or television 2. to make known over a wide area; 3. to sow (seed) over a wide area, especially by hand.

On the night of October 30, 1938, the United States experienced an alien invasion. A radio broadcaster, cutting short a musical performance, described what appeared to be a meteor which had just fallen from the sky and crashed into the Earth causing a huge crater in the ground near Grover Mill, New Jersey. From this crater emerged a tentacled creature that, over a period of time, killed scores of people with a deadly heatray. This performance, an adaptation of H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds," executed by Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre on the Air, caused a fair amount of panic to a nation who was already shaken by one world war and anxious about the prospect of entering into another one, just looming on the horizon.

Fast forward a decade to the end of WWII and the introduction of the television set as a standard household commodity. By 1950, over 8 million households in America owned a television set and 107 stations were broadcasting around the country. The American entertainment industry, recognizing the significance of this new,

popular medium, rapidly shifted allegiance from Hollywood film to television broadcast, as box office attendance decreased and the amount of television set sales increased. These early years of postwar prosperity mixed with the paranoia of Communist invasion, heightened by the introduction of television into American life, made for a culturally-fertile time in history which we can now see in hindsight fluctuating somewhere between gravely imminent and nearly absurd. Along with regular variety and sit-com shows, Americans, during the early years of television broadcast, were also privy to the bone-chilling images of the first nuclear bomb testings—a series of events which served mostly to increase the anxiety of already-communist-fearing Americans. During this time also, Americans were treated to several years of televised courtroom spectacles, better known as the hearings of the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the Senator McCarthy-led Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. It was a common belief of this jittery government that communists, in their attempt to overtake the U.S. would do so subversively by infiltrating the entertainment industry and broadcasting secret, or not-so-secret messages over the airwaves, straight into the homes of unsuspecting citizens. It was in the country's best interest, they believed, to nip this problem in the bud and attempt to purge the entertainment industry of such menacing figures as Lucille Ball, Artie Shaw, Ayn Rand, Humphrey Bogart, Elia Kazan and a list of other artists and entertainers who had, or were believed to have had a brush with communism in their past.

This angst-ridden and checkered past has supplied popular culture with a steady stream of otherworldly spirits which continue to traverse the universe from far-away places to prey upon model citizens. Along with a myriad of patriotic and wholesome American

films and television shows to emerge from the 1950s are a slew of now-classic sci-fi films in which the US is visited by alien life-forms of all kinds—films such as "The Day the Earth Stood Still" (1951), "Invaders From Mars" (1953), "It Came From Outer Space" (1953) and "Them!" (1954) among many, many others. For a country susceptible to invasion, paranoia-induced visions produced threats ranging from biologically to politically to dogmatically alien—or all of the above, such as in the movie "Red Planet Mars" (1952) which hashed out a narrative pitting Communism against Democracy through a Christian lens, flavored with a sci-fi twist. In this film, a husband and wife scientist team in southern California believes they have made contact with the planet Mars by broadcasting the numeral translation for pi, only to find out later that these broadcasts had been intercepted by a Communist-financed, former Nazi criminal from somewhere in the nether-regions of Russia. Over a period of time the messages received from Mars wreak havoc on the world when it is revealed that Martian life spans are 3 times that of Earthlings and that their civilization has advanced well beyond the need for natural fuel sources. In the tense final moments when "good" confronts "evil" in the laboratory, God does manage to broadcast an unexpected message through the electromagnetic spectrum only to be cut short by the greedy Communist Earthling who announces that he would rather rule the underworld than remain a servant in Heaven. The original episode of the sci-fi television series "The Outer Limits" (1963) portrayed a television broadcast engineer in Los Feliz, CA, as he picks up a three dimensional signal of an electromagnetic creature from "the edge of the constellation Pegasus." This creature gets sucked through the broadcast signal and wreaks havoc on the town by emitting radiation which became way too overbearing for the terrestrial environment and then
eventually vanishes back into the ether from whence it came—but not before giving the townsfolk a short speech about the perils of hate, fear and war. Most people are familiar with recent examples of otherworldly life forms traversing broadcast dimensions, like the spirits that beckon to little Carol Anne in "Poltergeist" (1982), the broadcast experiments that warp cable TV producer Max Renn's mind in "Videodrome" (1983) and the ghost of the young girl who relentlessly reminds the world of her murder in "Ringu" (1998)—as well as the American remake, "The Ring" (2002). Sometimes the alien forms are conjured by big corporations, like in the movie "Halloween III" (1982), which portrayed a corrupt corporation whose interest was for some reason to make children's heads explode when their mask product was activated by a magical Halloween night broadcast. The "Max Headroom" television series in the mid-1980s was kicked off by an episode in which a cutting edge, subversive advertising scheme ("blipverts") developed by a child prodigy for television broadcast station Network 23 was so intense that it overstimulated the latent energy stored up in the bodies of "perpetual viewers" and made them....also explode. These examples, only a few of their kind, demonstrate the grisly fascination people tend to have with technology and alien invasion, but they also serve to remind us of the real powers behind broadcast media.

At the end of the second millennium, two Bay Area media archeologists, writer Erik Davis and filmmaker Craig Baldwin, contributed two seminal works to the sci-fi repository of the cultural canon. In their respective contributions, Davis and Baldwin demonstrate the symbiotic relationship between energy, spirit and communication and how humans shape these, according to their needs, through technology. Davis' ongoing interests in alternative spirituality and technology led him to write the monumental

Techgnosis (1998)—an extremely vibrant and penetrating anthology on the cultural history of technology and communication, from early myth to contemporary data transmissions. Examining the inventory of tools and techniques over the ages, from moon bones to alchemy to Artificial Intelligence, Davis reveals a continual fascination of societies to channel energy into the service of giving shape to the unknown. Putting the Internet in context of this long and colorful history, we find that it is not so new or unique, but rather a new forum through which to conjure and shape messages and meanings—much in the way that early "mediums," from ancient alchemists to 19th century Spiritualists, were able to do through their various methods. In 1999, Craig Baldwin followed this up with the release of his sci-fi montage film "Spectres of the Spectrum" which shapes some of these same ideas into a more poignant commentary on the abuse of power attributed to broadcast communications through the ages. Baldwin reminds us, through appropriated and simulated footage, that progress does not always weigh even on all sides of the cultural equation.

In the interest of cultivating progressive communication, artists, over the years, have devised myriad methods to subvert cultural paradigms and stunt the growth of mega-merger palimpsests. Two of the more time-honored methods are through montage and intervention. In the spirit of ancient wizardry, these methods take on a heightened effect when posited through technological channels. The method of using montage, as Baldwin does in "Spectres of the Spectrum," involves borrowing certain elements of culture from their original source, rearranging them and re-animating them to magnify and critique cultural tropes. Another method for artists engaging in critical discourse is to insert oneself and/or one's work directly into the media landscape in order to dislocate and subvert accepted

habits or beliefs. On Thanksgiving Day 1994 Bay Area performance artists Guillermo Gomez-Peña and Roberto Sifuentes staged "Naftaztec: Pirate Cyber TV for A.D. 2000"— a retro-futuristic, cross-cultural video performance-intervention broadcast nationally on satellite television. Posing as cyber banditos, this video performance was inserted into the media landscape as a pirate intervention, in which the artists confronted viewers with radical views on Mexican, American and cross-cultural identities using a cache of cultural references and resources. Speaking in a mixture of languages and dressed in hybrid Aztec/Mariachi/Chicano costume, Gomez-Peña and Sifuentes took phone calls from viewers, demonstrated a "Chicano Virtual Reality machine", and took live reports via picturephone throughout the fast-paced, MTV-style 90 minute program. The alien invasion this time was in the form of a so-called "illegal alien" invasion which replaced the regularly-scheduled broadcast material with an alternative mythical reality using cultural identity as the language and technology as the critical lens. In a more subtle way, video artist Stan Douglas purchased time in 1992 on late night television in Vancouver, Canada to air his "Monodramas"—a set of short, self-contained dramas in which nothing in particular happens. Directly inspired by the work of the ultimate existential writer Samuel Beckett, these highly calculated, choreographed segments of drama mixed with a certain amount of dry humor were designed to throw out of whack, if only for a moment, what television scholars call the "flow" of standard corporate-model television broadcasting. Each segment, when surreptitiously placed in the same space as commercial advertisements, gave one pause to think—about the kinds of things viewers subject themselves to—or maybe rather what they are missing—on a daily basis, simply by turning on the television set.

It is interesting to note and somewhat of a compelling exercise to frame the concept of broadcasting in terms of its original agricultural context. Philo T. Farnsworth, better known through the annals of history as the inventor of the cathode ray tube and electronic television, came up with the idea in 1921 on a farm in Idaho as he plowed the field back and forth and back again. This continuous action of drawing lines in the dirt across the field inspired the idea in Farnsworth's imagination of what is now known as the "raster scan" in which the electronic beam moves back and forth across the monitor, ultimately creating the images that we see on our television screen. Through an unfortunate twist of fate, it seems we have become estranged from the initial concept of broadcasting as a life-giving form as we succumb to the life-sucking force of commercial television, through which it has mutated over the years. While television viewers become activated over "reality TV" shows—anxiously awaiting to find out who is going to eat how many bugs or who is going to get dumped from the dating pool—commercial advertisers, politicians and the military continue to find new ways of using the tools of broadcast media for their own gainful purposes. Their biggest motive: money. Their most effective tool: fear. What they already know and continue to operate by is the fact that power relies not just on force and intimidation, but perhaps moreso on fear of the unknown. The public, when all they know is what they are told, comes to rely on the steadfast conviction of their leaders—a win-win situation for those in charge.

When the Federal Communications Commission was established as an extension of the United States government in 1934, large parts of the country were still underserved by limited access to information, leaving broadcast technology an essential resource to keep the public informed of news and events. Because of the limited

resources of the electromagnetic spectrum through which information at the time was solely transmitted, the FCC became the gatekeepers of the spectrum, regulating who gets to control how much and making sure that the content of the information was suitable for all listeners. In March 1952 the Code of Practices for Television Broadcasters was enacted by the Television Board of the National Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters to give a certain amount of respectability to the wild and unruly world of early television broadcasting. Modeled after the Hollywood Production Code of 1930, the Television Code was essentially a badge of honor adopted by broadcasters to placate moral guardians, to ward off the threat of federal censorship, and to ensure a happy relationship with sponsors, who are ultimately responsible for financing the industry. With licenses granted by the government to use a public resource and money from corporate sponsors to shape it into some kind of sought after form, television studios are left with a limited palette of material to work with—generally that which is without controversy, in "good taste", for entertainment, or educational purposes—to keep viewers happy and coming back for more, but so as not to offend any party who happens to have a stake in the return profit. With the FCC on the one hand, and multi-billion dollar commercial sponsors on the other, the arena for commercial broadcasting leaves little room for either progressive information or experimental use of the medium. Yet somehow, this commercial model has sustained the system in the US for over half a century. Over the years, however, we have seen a tremendous amount of change in broadcasting technology, from the electromagnetic spectrum, to co-axial cable to fiber optic cable, to satellite TV, wireless communications, "interactive" TV and the Internet— changing the game at every new watershed along the way. Where
once there were only limited resources for the transmission of information, it is now the case that there are too many resources and too much information going through them. It has gotten to the point where the FCC is no longer needed to do the job they were originally created to do and the commercial sector is scrambling to maintain the profitability of their respective plots of turf as more and more competition rears its ugly head.

It seems that the time has come when the commercial broadcasting industry should begin to show signs of crumbling around its fortified foundations. Now that the Internet has emerged as one of the most popular forms of media, producers of broadcast media need to decide whether they will embrace the new medium and all of its turbulent energy, as NBC has done already with Microsoft, or change their approach to the system altogether. Not surprisingly, bad habits are hard to break. For while multimedia communication mergers have left the airwaves a homogenous mass of entertainment, the Internet appears aimed at becoming one endless virtual strip mall—leaving our scope of view on the world— both real and cyber—extremely limited and reducing our interactions to commercial exchange. But in the end, it seems that for all the rampant merging and consumerist tendencies, the match is not so well fit between the monsters of commerce and the multidirectional freewill of the Internet. Thanks to the diehard energy of innovative thinkers and activists, the Internet still manages to retain much of its mystical charm and revolutionary spirit. Along with net and computer artists, activists and independent journalists are finding the Internet an amazingly useful tool for the advancement of communications. The Internet provides not only the power of broadcast to transmit information fast and far, but more importantly the ability to advance democracy through dialogue and participation. For over a decade

Amy Goodman, host of the media broadcast program, Democracy Now! has been on the frontlines of the effort, reminding us that a democracy can only work if every voice is heard and accounted for, or at least has the potential to be; and that public airwaves are a public resource, not a commodity to be divvied up for the exclusive use of a select few. Goodman has spent the last several months touring the US and Europe with her "Unembed the Media" tour, tirelessly speaking out about the unfortunate and dangerous trend of US media journalists partaking in daily operations with the military. This trend, she explains, in effect creates a closed-circuit communication loop, making the media—whose job it is to ask the difficult questions and to hold those in power accountable for their actions—the megaphone for the government. The unofficial fourth branch—the watchdog—collapses into the three other branches of government so as to become nearly indistinguishable from the camouflage of military fatigues—building a totally imbalanced perspective of the world and the people who run it. Joining the ranks in the battle against the US government and their media minions, the independent media network Indymedia and political action group MoveOn.org, since the late 1990s have been daily negotiating the territory between traditional broadcast media and the Internet by forcing their way through the cracks left in the media landscape by FCC regulation in order to re-capture the attention of the public. Relying largely on community support, these independent journalists and activists round up the information where they can, filter out the bias, lay down the facts and mobilize the masses into action—in short, making for a stronger democracy through open access, dialogue and self-determination.

While it would be easy to say that the Internet is the answer to the double-threat of government privatization and media

consolidation, this is not necessarily the case. The economic divide still very much exists in the real world and is magnified when framed in the context of new media. The Internet may be theoretically open to anyone, but not everyone has the equipment, the training or the voice to participate in this so-called Democratic medium. And now that corporate media has sunk its claws into the virtual frontier, the roads are beginning to be locked into a familiar pattern—overshadowed by banner ads, celebrity gossip, and links to online stores or other sponsors within the commercial network. Public broadcast media is the only other viable option for voices unheard in mainstream media. But this resource is constantly under threat as Republicans stand poised to seize ultimate control of the public mind through covertly-placed fundamentalists in positions of power in the public broadcast industry. As funding sources slow to a trickle, public broadcast media will be left to die a slow death while corporate-funded media grows fat and happy, fed on the banquet of global riches. The boogeyman is still hovering in the spectrum, though now it looks suspiciously like an American right-wing radical.

Silence is the most threatening sound—because when there is nothing to gauge your position by, it is difficult to know where anything begins or ends. Noise, and lots of it, is the only thing that will make the ghosts, aliens, and other menacing creatures run howling from the media spectrum and into the spotlight where we can get a good look at their faces —giving at least a fleeting moment of knowing who the real enemies are.

Sources:

Cold War, Cool Medium: Television, McCarthyism, and American Culture, Thomas Doherty. Columbia Univ. Press, New York, NY, 2003.

The Exception to the Rulers: Exposing Oily Politicians, War Profiteers, and the Media That Love Them, Amy Goodman. Hyperion Books, New York, NY, 2004.

Democracy Now!, http://www.democracynow.org

Federal Communications Commission, http://www.fcc.gov

Internet Movie Database, http://www.imdb.com

MoveOn.org, http://www.moveon.org

Museum of Hoaxes, http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/war_worlds.html

Television History - The First 75 Years, http://www.tvhistory.tv

The New World Border, Guillermo Gomez-Peña. City Lights Books, San Francisco, CA 1996.

Spectres of the Spectrum, Craig Baldwin. Other Cinema DVD.2005 (film originally released 1999).

Techgnosis: Myth, Magic and Mysticism in the Age of Information, Erik Davis. Three Rivers Press, New York, NY, 1998.

Television After TV: Essays on a Medium in Transition, Lynn Spigel and Jan Olsson, Eds., Duke Univ. Press, Durham, NC, 2004.

Independent interview with Harry Quillian, former legal advisor for Commissioner Anne Jones at the Federal Communications Commission from 1979-83; Senior Lawyer in the Legal Office of the Federal Communications Commission from 1983-84.