ASTROTURFS OF OFFENSE
Agency of Shifting Uncertain Situations

BETWEEN MAY 9th and JUNE 23rd, 2020—amid the resurgence of demonstrations and uprisings across the United States—a subset of the New Models community held a focused debate around the mechanics and aesthetics of contemporary crowds. What are the truths of crowds both "real" and "fake"? Who and what directs their flows? And what is the cost (and price) for the bodies that show up? Central to this discussion was "astroturfing" (i.e., the manufacturing of "grass roots") and its historical precedents.

As the year comes to a close, we are publishing a condensed, anonymized version of that conversation here, along with the glossary and diagrams produced by the Agency of Shifting Uncertain Situations or S.U.S. in the wake of this discussion. S.U.S. spokespeople Jak Ritger and Clack Auden also recorded a Special Report with New Models, "Uncanny Rally," where they fleshed out their research—and the agency's mission to sow productive ambiguity in the face of consensus.


On the episode, Ritger and Auden remind us that "astroturfing" and related practices are exclusive to neither the Right nor the Left, and that they are deployed for a range of reasons, defying easy binaries. S.U.S. encourages protest leaders and participants to download their materials for distribution wherever crowds emerge.

Download 📄 A S.U.S. Glossary & Diagram of Astroturfing (2020)

NEW MODELS COMMUNITY DEBATES: ASTROTURFING

@NM1   To lay the ground for this discussion around astroturfing, I offer a summary of artist David Levine's 2018 lecture on the theory and practice of fake crowds. His lecture draws on the history of the claque to make sense of the crowds-for-hire (in contrast to grassroots campaigns) phenomenon that entered mainstream American political discourse around the 2016 US election. Levine poses the question: “Why do we [specifically, Americans] find the idea of fake crowds so viscerally offensive?” He caveats this question by positing that:

1) This is a uniquely American problem, in the sense that Americans are the only people freaking out about this, believing that it’s happening to them first (i.e. American exceptionalism).

2) Americans place a premium of faith in the crowd, even though this faith is at odds with 19th and 20th century discourse around crowds, which skewed toward distrust: fear of both the chaos (unruly mobs) and conformism (loss of individualism) that crowds can engender.

Levine argues that the modern fear is no longer one of crowds so much as the presence of people who haven’t yet surrendered their autonomy to a collective—or rather, those who have but to a collective directed by an outside force whose motivations are not publicly transparent (as in astroturfing). Complicating this is the fact that the people who comprise astroturfing efforts often do hold shared beliefs; what's perceived as egregious is that they are funded by veiled outside sources such as nonprofits or individual wealth.

In this economic dynamic, there are credited and debited individuals: those who are credited are ‘paid off immediately,’ whereas those that are debited freely invest their potential labor time in return for potential futures. Credited (astroturfed) crowds are beholden to a type of economic expediency. Though they may share beliefs, they are ultimately serving the interests of those supplying immediate credit. By contrast, debited crowds sacrifice their own time, with no promise of a return on their investment; these individuals are mutually imbricated in their shared struggle and collective indebtedness. Formally: credited crowds are asocial, disinterested, and meaningfully incoherent; debited crowds are social, interested, and meaningfully coherent. Levine recognizes these differences, but posits that aside from disturbing our sensibilities, there is actually little difference in terms of political impact.

Still from Maidan, 2014. Dir. Sergey Loznitsa

@NM3   Vladislav Surkov is an interesting figure to bring into this discussion. He coined the term soft non-linear warfare and is important in understanding the dynamics of political theater. I like the idea of the negative artist from James Dixon's essay "Is Vladislav Surkov and Artist?". It opens up the possibility that not everyone who utilizes art is doing it for egalitarian outcomes. Surkov's strategy is crucial: fund both the opposition and the statist sides of political demonstrations and then reveal that this is what was being done. In turn, no one knows who is "genuine" and who is paid, and thus the default assumption is that everyone is equally corrupted and so no one can be trusted. Adam Curtis outlines this play in the conclusion of his 2016 film HyperNormalisation.

When the liberal media obsessed over Russiagate for three years, taking the relatively small amount of Facebook ads ($500K) that were actually seeded by the Russian psy-op and extrapolating this out to include every single pro-Trump message, they were in effect working the same angle: delegitimizing both the opposition and themselves through a narrative of corruption that effectively 'finished the job' for the Russians.

I really like the bit about Americans being very innocent and scandalized by the proposition of faked crowds. That's something I need to take into consideration when labeling opposing political actions as "astroturfed."

@NM4   Let's add spooky crowds à la Ray Bradbury's “The Crowd" on disaster voyeurism and being drawn to the spectacle of suffering.

@NM1   This feels like a spectacle of disorder, @NM4. The cyclical/consuming quality of the crowd in Bradbury's text connects to the way that discussion around astroturfing almost always falls along ingrained ideological lines. Hopefully this discussion, here, can in part break the cycle.

@NM1   Levine makes an observation in an ep of the Theory of Everything podcast (thanks @NM2) that might help make sense of the media's disproportionate coverage of small-sized demonstrations/protests during the COVID-19 lockdown:

"You’d think that the digital revolution would have made it no longer necessary to have analogue fake people given the proliferation of fake identities and all of the problems that virtual crowds can cause. […] The inconvenience of having a body becomes real testimony to your political commitment. So the more that fake online identities delegitimize participation, the more important actual physical testimony to commitment becomes, and of course then the more important it becomes to be able to fake that too."

The ‘reveal’ factor that you mention, @NM3, seems critical to understanding and accepting political theater in a Survov-style context. Yet there is still such a big difference in awareness/acceptance between Russia and the US. At the same time, America is not innocent. For instance, this US company Crowds on Demand blatantly markets itself as an "American publicity firm that provides clients with hired actors to pose as fans paparazzi, security guards, unpaid protesters and professional paid protesters" and advertises use-cases such as:

I was struck by the section on self-design in Dixon's Surkov essay—particularly these excerpts on the feelings of suspicion and offense towards fake crowds:

"For Groys, self-design makes artworks and authors of us all, creating, in the process, a world of total design and with it total suspicion [...] the ultimate end of postmodernism and presents the perfect stage for the art of Vladislav Surkov."

"As we no longer believe in the purity and sincerity of the Modernist white cube we seek the cracks to satisfy our cynicism, only when we feel we have seen beneath the surface, and glimpsed the ugly truth is our faith restored."

Regarding negative artists: One reference point is Claire Bishop’s Artificial Hells (2012)—chapter 8 in particular, “Delegated Performance: Outsourcing Authenticity.”

@NM5   I’ve ranted on about scope insensitivity elsewhere but it's also relevant here as it's something that the media so often exploits as a way of controlling and direction attention. A protest of 100 people demanding to "re-open America" so they can return to work is suddenly all over the national news and we start to think everyone who isn't "us" must be a specific "them" that is in agreement with these protesters. Scope Insensitivity + Binary Bias + Mass Media = SIMPLE engineering of people's perception / organization of society AT LARGE.

@NM6   What about the political power of the anti-vaxxers? It looks like only 64% of Americans (out of 2000 polled) are a for-sure "yes" for a Covid-19 vaccination. I assumed it would've been higher. Isn't there a danger of anti-vaxxers and libertarians coming together, like the Christian and Evangelical right in the '70s, and being enough to sway an election? In Canada, 28% object to a mandatory Covid-19 vaccination. Where I am, the anti-vaxxers seem to be sincere and rich and not putting on an act—at least not to my knowledge. But thinking of that movement being united by astroturfing, you can imagine it being turned into something with broader, tighter affinities. Through the Surkov lens, what could this do if needed? There could be some strategy of having lots of irons in the fire, and then strategically picking up the ones you need. The anti-vax group seems like a ripe catalyst with serious weight.

@NM1   Makes me think of astroturfs as a model or template (boilerplate) for aligning or combining any ready-made movement. A kind of at-the-ready default form of protest—a defaultism.


@NM3   Regarding @NM1's question about how US and Russian awareness/acceptance of astroturfing differs (Crowds on Demand as an industry secret vs. Surkov revealing that both sides of a wedge issue have been astroturfed): In Russia, the government treats protest movements like chess pieces in a longer meta-game of sowing disillusionment about confronting power. CrowdsOD is more about achieving specific, short-term political goals. The 'reveal factor' in the US is more decentralized and operationalized by each and every political actor—"The Tea-Party is astroturfed" / "Occupy is funded by Soros"—instead of a central figure like Surkov making it known that he has masterminded everything.

This framing might be useful for countering the anti-lockdown protests. It is ineffective to simply say "they are funded by Betsy Devos or landscaping companies." This line of attack is used by both sides all the time, in good and bad faith. But who funds the astroturfing is inconsequential. Also, if someone does agree with the anti-lockdown folks, this will only make them dig in harder as it comes off as dismissive. A better tactic might be to point to @NM5's scale-jumping framing: this is 100 people, they do not speak for the vast numbers of people supportive of lockdown/vaccines.

Still from Medium Cool, 1969. Dir. Haskell Wexler

Thinking about the media's role in all this, I watched the 1969 film Medium Cool, which follows a news cameraman as he goes from emotionless ambulance chaser, to civil rights activist. The film's narrative plays out in front of real activist marches / police attacks. Two moments jumped out:

1) A national guard training scene in which a demonstration is staged and crowd control is rehearsed. It shows every part of the action to be political theater. The state’s response [to civilian dissent] is designed to perform power and authority; it’s not just ‘best practices’ or whatever, but active intimidation to dissuade anti-state activity.

Today the relationship between media and protests is stronger than ever. In turn, astroturfing is less about actual bodies in space and more about staging photo-ops for media, a kind of backfilling with CrowdsOD actors for activism.

Still from Clemens von Wedemeyer, 70.001, 2019

I also came across an interview with Clemens von Wedemeyer, an artist whose work involves simulating crowds and crowd dynamics. "Humans are defined by their relationships." This got me thinking: Abstraction evolves from the fact that large companies and states can get useful information through [anonymized] behavior patterns. There's often no need to examine the individual or individual psychology; only how or with whom the individual is acting. When something doesn't fit into a learned pattern, that's when the alarm system goes off.

Political motives are not considered, only numbers and connections. This prioritizing quantitative over qualitative engagement really makes it seem like the astroturfers will have an upper hand in the future. Maybe there is need to devise a new model for protest that can bring it back to the qualitative?

@NM1   Wedemeyer makes reference to Elias Canetti's 1960 book Crowds and Power (Masse und Macht) as source material for modeling crowds. Will be checking it out.

@NM7   There may be possible overlap here with the figure of the heckler. Writer Huw Lemmey recently published a piece exploring the history of the heckler in English politics in particular, and the way that the perception of the heckler as a democratic/anti-democratic force has changed over time.

@NM8   Somewhere in the family tree of astroturfing are the agent provocateur, the false flag, the outside instigator, the chaos agent, and the crowd-sourced witch hunt.

@NM9   As well as the badjacketer.

@NM3  "Badjacketing" spoke to my initial reaction of the video of the umbrella guy from the Minnesota uprising, which was: yeah he looks very sus, but it's beside the point whether or not he’s actually a cop. Trying to frame riot as the result of one person's actions serves this model protester, and undermines the uprising.

@NM1   Came across a 2002 article by Thomas P. Lyon and John W. Maxwell titled "Astroturf Lobbying." In it, Lyon and Maxwell build off a Simple Model of Lobbying, which presents a formal equilibrium between decision-makers and special interest groups. Their article is also useful for explaining the term bearhug and understanding policy in terms of stringency.

@NM3   News today: Actors playing black panthers, showing up with guns, then linking arms with cops in Atlanta. I highly doubt this is some sort of astroturf. More likely just actors showing up causing a scene, 'doing it for the gram.' Perhaps it’s better to view this as protesting + social media = highly charged visuals with low-res politics—maybe a postester.

Still from Clemens von Wedemeyer, 70.001, 2019

@NM1   Am reading Canetti's Crowds and Power and watched von Wedemeyer's 70.001. Early in the book, Canetti observes that "as soon as [the crowd] exists at all, it wants to consist of more people: the urge to grow is the first and supreme attribute of the crowd." He goes on to write that "the open crowd exists so long as it grows; it disintegrates as soon as it stops growing."

70.001 takes those axioms to logical conclusions. In the video work, the crowd continues to grow in size, listlessly moving through an accelerated time-lapse of day and night, never sleeping or needing of any particular human desire (except for the crowd to grow larger). Scenes are completely frictionless in terms of the interactions among individuals and between the crowd and its surrounding environment. Though at one point there is evidence of what Canetti describes as the "potential destructiveness of the crowd" (an inevitability of massive growth in any given  environment...). In von Wedemeyer's work, the crowd's growth is continuous yet it's integrity/power is compromised at the end of the piece when camera zooms into the mass clearly revealing the repetition and interchangeability of the crowd's computer generated individuals.


Still from Clemens von Wedemeyer, 70.001, 2019

What I find interesting about the piece is the way that it works with crowds at the formal level, extrapolating Canetti's vignettes of the crowd and their topologies of gestures into what Levine might recognize as purely disinterested actors (here the digital, interchangeable sprites/assets/avatars).

@NM3   The idea of a crowd as a sentient being—wishing to constantly grow and starting to disintegrate when it stops growing—makes me think of how capitalism is thought of now, as an entity in and of itself. @NM5 once described global capitalism today as a kind of A.I.: operating off unknowable algorithms making split second trades, human hosts (CEOs) acting as avatars for capital.


Jutta Koether, Massen, 1991 (courtesy: Galerie Buchholz)

This idea of constant growth, simulacra, crowd simulation makes me think of a Paul Bush film I saw a couple years ago called Babledom (2012). It is an experimental narrative about a city that grows so fast that no one alive has ever stepped on the ground or seen the sky. All the images in the film are from research departments simulating human movement and crowd behavior.

In thinking about astroturfing, these studies (meditations on simulated crowds and crowd behavior) feel like an inversion of the relationship to power. Meaning, the IRL astroturfed crowds can be understood as a devirtualization of simulated realities, where capital/corporate interests are a stand in for computer systems.



DOWNLOAD 📄: A S.U.S. Glossary & Diagram of Astroturfing (2020)

FOR MORE
https://clack.life/
 & https://www.punctr.art/

To join the New Models Discord, subscribe at: https://patreon.com/newmodels



NM 🔉 CHANNEL


UNLOCK MEMBER EPISODES...

via Substack $5/mo for 🇺🇸
via Patreon €5/mo (100+ eps) for rest of world
via Channel (coming soon)

LISTEN TO MORE PUBLIC EPISODES ...
Apple
Spotify
Soundcloud


THE NEW MODELS PODCAST

Full-length interviews with artists, scholars, and other experts

2024

NM76: Artist/Writer Calla Henkel on Art, Industry & “Scrap”

NM76: K Allado-McDowell on Neural Media

NM75: Heavy Traffic magazine w/ its editor and publisher Patrick McGraw

2023

NM74: The Girlstack w/ theorist Alex Quicho

NM73: angelicism01’s Film01 w/ Lola Jusidman & Mateo Demarigny

NM72: Natasha Stagg on Artless: Stories 2019-2023


NM71: Silicon Age Mindset w/ Ribbonfarm’s Venkatesh Rao

NM70: Fantasm w/ Dorian Electra & Shumon Basar

NM70 (Bonus Track): Fantasm w/ Dorian Electra & Shumon Basar

NM69: Crude Futures w/ Richard Hames, Beau-Caprice Vetch, Jake Colvin

NM68: Psyberspace w/ artist Trevor Paglen

NM67: Metaverse Pastoral w/ artist Simon Denny

NM66: Cannibal Corp w/ Cory Doctorow

NMXX: Joshua Citarella x Lil Internet re/ physics of social media

NM65: U Wasn’t There w/ artist & filmmaker Ben Solomon on inter-millennial NYC

NMXX: Joshua Citarella x Carly re/ media and the public sphere

NM64: Infinite Drake w/ artists Holly Herndon & Mat Dryhurst

NM63: Loss of Distinction w/ art critic Ben Davis

NM62: How to Blow Up A Pipeline w/ filmmaker Daniel Goldhaber

NM61: Dubai’s Next Top Model w/ futurist Noah Raford & writer Shumon Basar

NM60: Code Couture w/ writer Olivia Kan-Sperling on the programming logic of style

NM59: 4-EVER-DIS w/ DIS’s Lauren Boyle

NM58: Public Access w/ artist Cory Arcangel

NM57: The Redescribers w/ political scientist Kevin Munger 

2022

NM56: The Para-Real w/ Cade Diehm of New Design Congress

NM55: Viral.rip w/ artist Kreayshawn aka Natassia Gail Zolot

NM54: Damn Nation w/ journalist James Pogue

NM53: Notes on Evil w/ artist Steven Warwick

NM52: Mallhammer 40K w/ artist Jon Rafman

NM51: Creator Core w/ artists Joshua Citarella & Rachel Rossin

NM50: Drug Update 2022 w/ drug & nightlife journalist Michelle Lhooq

NM49: GPT-Ditto w/ creative dir. Ben Ditto

NM48: Model Shock w/ art historian Emmelyn Butterfield-Rosen (author of Modern Art & the Remaking of the Human Disposition)

NM47: Mise en TV w/ artist Calla Henkel (author of Other People's Clothes)

NM46: Boomocracy w/ Kevin Munger (author of Generation Gap) on generational power in America

NM45: Shady Miladys w/ @holyyyycow & @davidy

NM44: Depeche Modem w/ Kevin Driscoll (author of The Modem World) on early net culture

NM43: After Dark w/ Shumon Basar & Dean Kissick on HSTRY2

NM42: Atomic User w/ Svitlana Matviyenko (co-author of Cyberwar & Revolution) on nuclear power & int'l security

NM41: Eco-Tomorrow w/ Sam Moore re/ his 2022 book, The Rise of Ecofascism

2021

NM40: Now in 4-D w/ Nora Khan & Joel Kuennen re/ algorithms & deep time

NM39: Paintings by Numbers w/ @jerrygogosian's Hilde Lynn Helphenstein and Matthew Capasso

NM38: Universal Basic Planetary Services w/ Benjamin Bratton

NM37: Game Start w/ Highsnobiety's Thom Bettridge and Civilization's Lucas Mascatello, Richard Turley re/ gaming, fashion & the real

NM36: Happy Medium w/ architectural theorist Keller Easterling re/ her 2021 book Medium Design

NM35: Net Povera w/ artist Joshua Citarella

NM34: Let There Be Light w/ The Cobra Snake

NM33: Imagination Nation w/ Richard Beck on moral panics

2020

NM32: Click, Click, Boom w/ Tim Hwang on attention, advertising

NM31: Power Strip w/ artist Simon Denny

NM30: Harm Reduction w/ Katharine Neill Harris on drug policy

NM29: Sad Frog w/ "Feels Good Man" (Pepe) filmmakers, Arthur Jones & Giorgio Angelini

NM28: Take It, It's Yours w/ Joshua Clover on looting & protest

NM27: Trend Consoloing w/ Thom Bettridge

NM26: Remote Learning w/ Nora Khan

NM25: Life Go Brrr w/ Venkatesh Rao

NM24: It's All Possible w/ TrueAnon's Liz Franczak

NM23: Disease & Metaphor w/ Mariam Ghani & Marisa Mazria Katz

NM22: Real Magick w/ Alex Kazemi

NM21: Elliot Rodger Plays Himself w/ Mike Crumplar

2019

NM20: Guest List w/ Natasha Stagg

NM19: The Flourishing w/ Tom Krell, aka How to Dress Well

NM18: Yung Matrix w/ Trevor McFedries of Brud on AR & marketing

NM17: Nonfood [+Bonus] w/ Lucy Chinen & Sean Raspet on food futures

NM16: E Pluribus Zuck w/ Mat Dryhurst & Kei Kreutler on FB's Libra coin

NM15: Remote Port w/ Benjamin Bratton on Earth's systems

NM14: Shift Alt Right Clique w/ Joshua Citarella on Irony Politics & Gen Z

NM13: Je Refuse w/ Jenny Odell on Attention and Refusal

NM12: Black Socialists w/ Z from Black Socialists of America

NM11: Downstram w/ Liz Pelly on cultural production, platforms, independence

NM10: Loose Climate Change w/ Christine Lariviere

NM9: Stack Attack w/ Cade on digital dark patterns

2018

NM8: Manplay w/ Ed Fornieles

NM7: Authenticity Dungeon w/ Toby Shorin

NM6: Teenage Radicals w/ Joshua Citarella

NM5: Unrealestate w/ Mat Dryhurst, Martti Kalliala, Michelle Lhooq

NM4: Psy-Trans Synth & Baselines w/ Anke Dyes, Steven Warwick, Ziúr

NM Pod 3: Lying Gods of Digital Tribes

NM Pod 2: Incels Modeling Agency

NM Pod 1: Feedcrafting w/ Carly Busta, Daniel Keller, @LILINTERNET


ABOUT


NEW MODELS
 is a media channel and community addressing the emergent effects of networked technology on culture. Est. 2018, Berlin.

NM pods are hosted by Caroline BustaLil Internet, Daniel Keller.

The NM community is a digital local distributed worldwide via Discord with light leaks to the dark side of newmodels.io and maintained by Leïth Benkhedda

In summer 2021, the NM community published the NM Codex Y2K20 and the NM Webdex.

Join via: Patreon or Substack
Join: Channel

Contact: desk(at)newmodels.io
Advertising: ads(at)newmodels.io


Website design: Jon Lucas
Logo: Jon Lucas & Eric Wrenn



SELECTED PRESS / INTVWS / ETC

2021


HIGHArt by highsnobiety, What Does the Internet Smell Like? (w/ Philip Maughan)

Index Magazine, Online Futures: What's Next for the World Wide Web — New Models (Caroline Busta, Lil Internet), Trust (Arthur Röing Baer, Joanna Pope), and Other Internet (Toby Shorin) in conversation with Anna Dorothea Ker

Kaleidoscope, American Memetics (Joshua Citarella, Caroline Busta, Daniel Keller, Lil Internet)

KW's Open Secret, Losing Yourself in the Dark (Caroline Busta)

Document, The Internet Didn't Kill Counterculture—You Just Won't Find it on Instagram (Caroline Busta)
CTM 2021, Possible Futures of Music Valuation — Cherie Hu, Jean-Hugues Kabuiku, Trevor McFedries; mod. New Models (Caroline Busta, Lil Internet)

2020


Kaleidoscope, Influencing the Void: How the Art World Lost the Thread (Caroline Busta)

HIGHTech by highsnobiety, Club Future: A Tour of Posisble Worlds with Berlin's New Models (w/ Philip Maughan)

2019


Shure.24, Interview with New Models

Novembre New Models (feat: photography by Ilya Lipkin, text by Ida Eritsland, design/layout by Betty Wang)

2018


TANK Magazine, "A podcast and anti-algorithm media platform covering contemporary topics at the bleeding edge of art, politics and culture"

FAST Company, New Models is the Intellectual Drudge Report for Critical Theory (Cale Guthrie Weissman)

ART News, Aggregate This!: Caroline Busta and Lil Internet on New Models, Their Art-Tech Answer to the Drudge Report (John Chiaverina)


CHANNEL



WHAT IS CHANNEL?

Channel
is a decentralized media organization and platform that allows creators to use Web 3 tools to work collectively, bundling content while maintaining distinct communities.

For the purposes of New Models, Channel is a membership and distribution meta-layer shared with two creators that we greatly respect and that have been central to our thinking since NM's inception: Joshua Citarella and Interdependence (Mat Dryhurst, Holly Herndon).


WHO IS BUILDING CHANNEL?

Interdependence
 (Mat Dryhurst, Holly Herndon), New Models (Caroline Busta, Daniel Keller, Lil Internet), and Joshua Citarella - working in partnership with Duncan WilsonCullen Miller, and James Geary.


IS THERE MORE INFORMATION?
https://channel.xyz
Twitter: @channel


NM DISPATCH

Reflections on the everyday

2023

NM Dispatch: America Diaries 12/2023 by Lilinternet

NM Communiqué: Notes on War 23.11.2023 by Lil Internet & Carly Busta

NM Dispatch: Dubai Diaries 2023 by Lil Internet & Carly Busta

NM Dispatch: America Diaries AW2023 (mini-bonus ep) by Ian Beckman Reagan

NM Dispatch: America Diaries AW2023 (Pt. 2) by LILINTERNET

NM Dispatch: America Diaries AW2023 (Pt. 1) by Carly Busta

2022

NM Dispatch: America Diaries (Pt. 2 of 2) by Lil Internet

NM Dispatch: America Diaries (Pt. 1 of 2) “Real Engine” by Carly Busta


RADIO PLAYS by LIL INTERNET

Elon Musk: 2040 / 69 (2023)

Ricky Backtrace, Private Trend Consultant - Ep 3 (2022)

Ricky Backtrace, Private Trend Consultant - Ep 2 (2022)

Ricky Backtrace, Private Trend Consultant - Ep 1 (2022)

Baddieverse (2022)

NFT Dreams (2021)

A Meditation on FOMO (2020)


NM SPECIAL REPORTS

On-the-ground, first-person reports re/ current events & focused points of interest

2024

NM Special Report: Ye and the Future of Content w/ Dean Kissick

2023

NM Special Report: Burning Man Blockade w/ Michelle Lhooq

NM Special Report: NYScene Update w/ Madeline Cash, chloé waifmaterial, David Yoakum

NM Special Report: Paradigm Trilogy II w/ Kat Korbjuhn

2022

NM Special Report: Bonn After Hours w/ artists Dena Yago & Joshua Citarella

NM Special Report: Pret-à-Panique w/ Dean Kissick on Balenciagagate

NM Special Report: documenta 15 w/ Paige K. Bradley, @abe1x, Felix Ansmann

NM Special Report: Digital Resilience & War w/ Cade Diehm

NM Special Report: Open Source Intelligence & Ukraine w/ @pdthorn

NM Special Report: Kyiv Update (8. Feb.) w/ Anastasiya Osipova

2021

NM Special Report: NM UX w/ NM's web designer Jon Lucas

NM Special Report: The Wedding Album w/ Carly & Lil Net <3

NM Special Report: Ambient Value w/ James Whipple (M.E.S.H.) re/ art NFTs

NM Special Report: Capitol Hill Insurrection w/ filmmaker Tomi Faison re/ Jan. 6th riots in Washington DC

2020

NM Special Report: Uncanny Rally w/ Jak Ritger, Clack Auden re/ techniques of crowd-staging and opinion manipulation

NM Special Report: George Floyd, Minneapolis Unrest w/ journalist Steve Marsh

Earlier

NM Special Report: Black Socialists launch Dual Power Map w/ Z from Black Socialists of America (2019)

NM Special Report: Revolution in the US Democratic Ranks w/ Mike Pepi (2018)


NM SHORTS

New models detected and unpacked in 30-min or less

NM Short: Lil Internet's VICE Interrupted (2024)

NM Short: Carly & Lil Internet on Jordan Wolfson’s “Body Sculpture” (2024)

NM Short: Out of the MUD by Lil Internet (2023)

NM Short:  Lil Internet’s Notes on Belly (1998, dir. Hype Williams) (2023)

NM Short: Indie Sleaze w/ fashion editor Taylore Scarabelli (2022)

NM Short: Cryptoverse w/ artist Bjarne Melgaard (2022)


NM GREENROOM

Musicians and other creators in the NM sphere discuss their new work.

NM Greenroom: Dances With White Girls aka Frog (2022)

NM Greenroom: ADR aka Aaron David Ross (2021)

NM Greenroom: Paradigm Trilogy w/ Katharina Korbjuhn (2021)

NM Greenroom: Lyra Pramuk (2020)

NM Greenroom: Steven Warwick (2019)


NM RECOMMENDS

Recent books by NM guests:

• Olivia Kan-Sperling, Island Time (2022, Expat Press)
• Emmelyn Butterfield-Rosen, Modern Art and the Remaking of Human Disposition (2021, Chicago)
• Kevin Munger, Generation Gap (2022, Columbia)
• Keving Driscoll, The Modem World (2022, Yale)
• Sam Moore, Alex Roberts, The Rise of Ecofascism (2022, Polity)
Calla Henkel, Other People's Clothes (2021, Sceptre/Doubleday)
S. Basar, D. Coupland, HUO, The Extreme Self (2021, Penguin)


COMMUNITY LEAKS


NM CREATOR NETWORK

INTERDEPENDENCE
JOSHUA CITARELLA
[DNR] DO NOT RESEARCH
TRUST


BULLETIN-BOARD


NM WEBDEX LAUNCH - 09 / 2021


NM CODEX LAUNCH - 07 / 2021


RESIDENCY: NM X HEAVY TRAFFIC

Selections from Heavy Traffic magazine, read aloud by their authors

NM x Heavy Traffic: Keller Easterling, “NON_2”

NM x Heavy Traffic: Seth Price, "Machine Time" (Part 1)

NM x Heavy Traffic: Seth Price, "Machine Time" (Part 2)


NM TV

Kevin Munger on Vilém Flusser's Communicology: Mutations in Human Relations?

Richard Kennedy's Fubu Fukú, Trauma Bar und Kino, Berlin, 2020

What Does the Internet Smell Like? (NM x High Snobiety)


NM LECTURES

NM Lecture: Understanding Predicting Media — Global Art Forum, Dubai, 4 Mar 2023

NM Lecture: Do You Know Where You Live? — "Future of Criticism" Congress, Bundeskunsthalle Bonn, 18 Nov 2022

NM Lecture: Clearnet vs. Dark Forest: Notes on the New Psychogeoraphy of Art — UCLA Design Media Arts, 12 Mar 2021


NM TOPSOIL (2018-2022)

Talk-core with Carly, Lil Internet, and Daniel Keller re/ current events, tech, art, and pop culture. Many eps feature exclusive radio plays by LIL INTERNET and/or special guests.

2022

NM TopSoil 86: URBEXIT

NM TopSoil 85: Meta Daze

NM TopSoil 84: Art Basilisk w/ Alex Scrimgeour

NM TopSoil 83: Radio Active w/ Most Dismal Swamp

NM TopSoil 82: Kayfabe Capital

NM TopSoil 81: Palanpilled

NM TopSoil 80: Public Goods w/ Dan @ eth.denver

NM TopSoil 79: Dapp Rig w/ @chorist

NM TopSoil 78: Lootstrap

NM TopSoil 77: aka Topsoil 76 pt.2

NM TopSoil 76: pt.1 Read All Over w/ Cathal of NEWS/ACC

2021

NM TopSoil 75: Flightmare w/ Jöran Mandik of Radio Spätkauf on BER Airport

NM TopSoil 74: Back to the Land w/ Stephanie Wakefield

NM TopSoil 73: Meta Mindset w/ Hazmat Raheem

NM TopSoil 72: Swift Update

NM TopSoil 71: Keep on TRUC'n

NM TopSoil 70: Fulfilled by Taliban

NM TopSoil 69: Copening Ceremony

NM TopSoil 68: Danifest Destiny

NM TopSoil 67: No Whippits in Paradise

NM TopSoil 66-X: Earth Flatteners

NM TopSoil 66-X: Gram-Boss w/ @moma.ps5

NM TopSoil 65: Super League Prostate Exclusive

NM TopSoil 64: Prime of Life

NM TopSoil 63: Cargo Cult

NM TopSoil 62: Manicherial

NM TopSoil 61: Gate Analysis w/ Andrew Russeth

NM TopSoil 60: Cringe Core w/ Taylore Scarabelli

NM TopSoil 59: Ghost Face Shillah w/ @davidy

NM TopSoil 58: Virtue Signal

NM TopSoil 57: Capital Insurrection

NM TopSoil 56: Miami Based

NM TopSoil 55: Gloria

NM TopSoil 54: Capitol Gains w/ special report by Thomas Faison on Jan. 6th capitol attack

NM TopSoil 53: Stevia Jobs

2020

NM TopSoil 52: Power Broker

NM TopSoil 51: Crashocracy

NM TopSoil 50: Build Back Best

NM TopSoil 49: American Vibes

NM TopSoil 48: A Contest of Swords

NM TopSoil 47: Zapf Dingbats Are Real Life

NM TopSoil 46: Spiritual America

NM TopSoil 45: Mani/Pedo

NM TopSoil 44: Eternal Log

NM TopSoil 43: 3G Towne

NM TopSoil 42: Death by Exposure

NM TopSoil 41: Slide to the Left w/ Michell Lhooq

NM TopSoil 40: Mount Trashmore

NM TopSoil 39: Black Bloc

NM TopSoil 38: The German Dream

NM TopSoil 37: Querty

NM TopSoil 36: Sour Dough

NM TopSoil 35: Doral Futures

NM TopSoil 34: Sabbath Year

NM TopSoil 33: Escape From Moscow w/ Chiara Di Leone, Philip Maughan, Pierce Myers, Bryan Wolff

NM TopSoil 32: Silent Carry (MIAMI/LA/DFW/NYC/METAVERSE) pt. 1 w/ Stephanie Wakefield, Sean Monahan, Jean-Luc Vila, Natasha Stagg, Cade Diehm

NM TopSoil 32: Silent Carry (MIAMI/LA/DFW/NYC/METAVERSE) pt. 2 w/ Stephanie Wakefield, Sean Monahan, Jean-Luc Vila, Natasha Stagg, Cade Diehm

NM TopSoil 31: Corona Sands

NM TopSoil 30: Hole Adjacent w/ Eric Schwartau of Talk Hole & Lilnet's Mom

NM TopSoil 29: Quack is Whack

NM TopSoil 28: Of Froth & Virtue

NM TopSoil 27: Casino World

NM TopSoil 26: Wuhan Swimp Bod

NM TopSoil 25: One Night in Davos

NM TopSoil 24: Roger Stone's Intern

2019

NM TopSoil 23: Left Pill

NM TopSoil 22: Kim Bong-Un

NM TopSoil 21: This Machine Kills Algorithms

NM TopSoil 20: Collective Paranoia w/ Bjarne Melgaard

NM TopSoil 19: Ref Herring

NM TopSoil 18: Voluntourism

NM TopSoil 17: Kokopelli's Girlfriend

NM TopSoil 16: Luckey Strikes w/ Duncan Wilson

NM TopSoil 15: Unhack The Planet

NM TopSoil 14: Anna Got Me Clickin w/ Anna Khachiyan

NM TopSoil 13: Enlightenment Dan

NM TopSoil 12: Doomsday Dan

NM TopSoil 11: Epstein Smile

NM TopSoil 10: Big Face Saddams

NM TopSoil 9: The Real Housewives of Elysium w/ Dean Kissick

NM TopSoil 8: Valley of the Bros

NM TopSoil 7: Centrixxfuge

NM TopSoil 6: The Weirdening

NM TopSoil 5: Eastern Promises w/ Nik Kosmas

NM TopSoil 4: Buried Alive

NM TopSoil 3: Lawful Good

2018

NM TopSoil 2: Confusion

NM TopSoil 1: Internet Primacy Syndrome


NM COLLABS

NM x Society of Scent for Highsnobiety: Internet perfume (2021)
.
NM x Society of Scent - "The Internet" - for Highsnobiety (2021)

Bjarne Melgaard x New Models, Decade Brain, 2020 in Reena Spaulings NYC, "Sewars of Mars," 2020

NM HISTORY


TL;DR

NEW MODELS was founded in Berlin in 2018. It’s initial aim was to create a media space outside of the "physics" of Web 2.0 platforms by hand-aggregating links and seeding a community beyond the feed. In the time since, we have built an international member network and Discord server, staged many IRL and digital/physical events, published swarm-generated content with HighsnobietyKaleidoscope, and Novembre; released an album’s worth of unhinged radio plays by Lil Internet, created an Internet perfume with Society of Scent, and facilitated the creation of an interactive digital glossary (NM Webdex) and a physical book (NMCodex)—both collectively-authored by the NM community—indexing the experience of being online together during the extremely online year of Y2K20.



EXTENDED VERSION

NEW MODELS was founded in Berlin in 2018. Its initial aim was to think outside of Web 2.0 feeds by hand-aggregating a cache of information relevant to the culture sector ...



... particularly the ways in which networked technology was impacting the publishing, art, and music industries. We first used https://newmodels.io, as a kind of alt Drudge Report, with a contuously updated list of links and original commissioned NM content. / Search the NM archive: here.


We also hosted several physical events (many with Berlin's Trauma Bar und Kino, including NM Sim Society on world building and online identity formation and the premier of Richard Kennedy's 2020 opera Fubu Fukú.

NM Sim Society, feat. Joshua Citarella and Cade, Trauma Bar und Kino, Berlin, January 2020



To unpack the themes articulated through the aggregation and editorial, we started an audio stream — the public New Models Podcast, featuring conversations with artists, academics, and other experts. We soon began subscription-gating some of our content via Patreon, introducing the NM TopSoil show for more free-form discussion about current events and radio plays by Lil Internet.




This small barrier (€5 / month) created a subscribing New Models Community... which in turn led to us to start a Discord server. Suddenly, New Models was no longer just a creator-to-audience stream, but a mainframe for processing information free from the extractive properties of Clearnet spaces. We began referring to this ecosystem as a "dark forest." (For more on the interplay of different digital realms, see Caroline Busta's Internet/counterculture text for Document Journal.)


Within the NM Discord, a local language formed — as well as initiatives aimed at "devirtualizing" traces of NM's digital enclave into something physical and therefore less vulnerable to erasure. In 2021, the NM community produced the NM Codex and the NM Webdex.


But throughout the wider sub-Web 2.0 strata, many more online enclaves were emerging. In part this was because the Clearnet space was growing ever more untenable: random account deading, feeds organized by algorithms optmizing for target-margets, wide fluctuations in access and reach. For NM, the problem to solve was no longer exiting legacy media or Web 2 but establishing a new, more resiliant network beyond them.


In late 2020, New Models, in collaboration with Joshua Citarella and Interdpendence Pod (Mat Dryhurst & Holly Herndon), began working with Duncan Wilson, Cullen Miller, and James Geary to develop web3 tools allowing creators to do just that.

Channel, which pre-launched in Jan 2022, is rethinking how content is valued, distributed, and consumed. MVP arriving late 2022.

Jak Ritger, illustration of interconnected dark forest, creator communities spilling into each other, sharing flows of content, 2021.


In equal parts, New Models creates content, community, and the structures that facilitate both. As media evolves, so too will New Models. <3


Channel Season 0 Founder NFT (Team Rolfes)


FOLLLOW / LIKE / SUBSCRIBE:

• NM PATREON
• NM SUBSTACK
CHANNEL 🌌

• YT: @newmodelsTV
• IG: @newmodels_io
• TW: @newmodels_io
• SC: @newmodels


SOME LEGACY LINKS (from prev. site)

LEARN: 📈How big is a BILLION?
LEARN: 📡Time-lapse of the Future. Journey to the End of Time
LEARN: 🌍Time-Lapse History MAP of the WORLD
SURF: 💻Society of Control
SURF: 💻What's on 🇨🇳Weibo ...
SURF: 💻A scatter-plot visualization of every music genre Spotify recognizes
SURF: 💻Art collector 🎨database, http://organic.software


SOME LEGACY SOURCES (from prev. NM site)

032C, Berlin
AAAAARG
AFFIDAVIT
AFRICA IS A COUNTRY
ART AGAINST ART, Berlin
ART in AMERICA
ARTFORUM
ART NEWS
ARTNET
BAFFLER
BIDOUN
BOMB, New York
BRAND-NEW-LIFE, Zürich
BROOKLYN RAIL
CIVILIZATION, New York
CREATIVE INDEPENDENT
COMMUNE
CONTEMPORARY ART DAILY
CONTEMPORARY ART WRITING DAILY
DIS.ART
DOCUMENT
DRUDGE REPORT
ECONOMIST
E-FLUX
DISSENT
FAST COMPANY
FILM COMMENT
FINANCIAL TIMES
FAILED ARCHITECTURE
FLASH ART, Milan
FRIEZE
GALAXIA Y2K
GREY ROOM
HACKER NEWS
INTERVIEW
JACOBITE
KALEIDOSCOPE
LA REVIEW of BOOKS
LIBRARY STACK
LOGIC
LONDON REVIEW of BOOKS
MAY REVUE, Paris
NEO-METABOLISM
N+1
NEW INQUIRY
NEW YORKER
NY REVIEW of BOOKS
NOĒMA
NOVEMBRE
OCTOBER
PARIS REVIEW
PIN-UP
POINT
QUIETUS
REAL LIFE
REDDIT
RHIZOME
RIBBON FARM
SELVA
SMALL PRESS
SPEX, Berlin
SPIKE, Berlin/Vienna
STARSHIP, Berlin
STRELKA MAGAZINE, Moscow
TANK, London
TEXTE ZUR KUNST, Berlin
TOPICAL CREAM, New York
TRIPLE CANOPY, New York
UBU WEB
VESTOJ
VIEWPOINT
X-TRA, Los Angeles


FOLLLOW / LIKE / SUBSCRIBE:

• NM PATREON
• NM SUBSTACK
CHANNEL 🌌

• YT: @newmodelsTV
• IG: @newmodels_io
• TW: @newmodels_io
• SC: @newmodels