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We Live In Public

  15

Ondi Timoner

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Plot Summary

On the 40th anniversary of the invention of the Internet, WE LIVE IN PUBLIC reveals the effect the web is having on our society, as seen through the eyes of “the greatest Internet pioneer you’ve never heard of,” artist, futurist and visionary Josh Harris. Award-winning director Ondi Timoner (DiG! - which also won the Sundance Grand Jury Prize in 2004 - making Timoner the only director to win that prestigious award twice) documented his tumultuous life for more than a decade to create a riveting, cautionary tale of what to expect as the virtual world inevitably takes control of our lives. Harris, often called the “Warhol of the Web,” founded Pseudo.com, the first Internet television network during the infamous dot-com boom of the 1990s. He also curated and funded the ground breaking project "Quiet" in an underground bunker in NYC where 100 people lived together on camera for 30 days at the turn of the millennium. With Quiet, Harris proved how we willingly trade our privacy for the connection and recognition we all deeply desire, but with every technological advancement such as MySpace, Facebook and Twitter, becomes more elusive. Through his experiments, including a six-month stint living with his girlfriend under 24-hour electronic surveillance which led to his mental collapse, Harris demonstrated the price we pay for living in public.

Credits

Customer Reviews

We Live in Public

This film thinks its saying something about the the internet as a post human phenomenon but it isn't. Instead it's quite a compelling portrait of a most unpleasant weirdo- Josh Harris, who is not an artist, futurist and visionary as the blurb claims, but a highly disturbed guy with major emotional and psychological problems which the film doesn't get close to dealing with in any depth. If you are interested in self destructive, spectacularly phoney narcissists, then buy it and have fun loathing this King of Creeps. But you will be disappointed if you expected, as I did, an intelligent analysis of the social and cultural effects of the internet.

A psychologists wet dream...

As people have mentioned Josh doesn't seem to be the genius people make him out to be, he merely saw an opportunity, took it and exploited it. It then took a dark turn because of his inability to connect with people on an emotional level. For me it was an eye opener and shows just how out of hand people would get if there was no law, we would be absolute animals in a lawless society. Definitely one for the collection.

Not as important as it thinks

Quite an interesting insight into someone who was a forerunner of the internet as a vehicle for self-promotion. Focusses on self-absorbed, emotionally needy 'artists' who seemed desperate for attention while contributing nothing to society of any meaning. Basically Big Brother 20 years ago.

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We Live In Public
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  • £6.99
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Released: 2010

Customer Ratings

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