From: "Art for a Change" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Dear Friends

I have just written and posted an article to my web log, Art For A Change,
detailing one of the greatest guerilla art/activist pranks of all time!

On Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008, over a million fake copies of the New York
Times were circulated in New York and beyond, with the banner headline -
IRAQ WAR ENDS: Troops to Return Immediately."

The full story can be found at:
www.art-for-a-change.com/blog/2008/11/new-york-times-proclaims-end-to-wars.html

... spread the word

Forward Ever, Backwards Never
Mark Vallen
www.markvallen.com


http://www.art-for-a-change.com/blog/2008/11/new-york-times-proclaims-end-to-wars.html

New York Times Proclaims End to Wars
Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Well. not really. Unidentified merry pranksters have published and
distributed a fake "special edition" of The New York Times with a banner
headline that proclaims; "IRAQ WAR ENDS: Troops to Return Immediately". The
first sentence of an accompanying article reads: "Thousands take to the
streets to celebrate the announced end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan".
On Wednesday morning, Nov. 12, 2008, over one million copies of the forged
edition were circulated for free by volunteers working with the anonymous
publishers.

[ Front page of the fake "special edition" of The New York Times, Nov. 12,
2008. ]

The counterfeit edition also features full articles with titles like;
"Nation Sets Its Sights on Building Sane Economy", "Maximum Wage Law
Succeeds", "USA Patriot Act Repealed", "Nationalized Oil To Fund Climate
Change Efforts", "Gitmo, Other Centers Closed", "Health Insurance Act Clears
House", and "Bush to Face Charges".

It will certainly be argued that the intricate prank qualifies more as
activism than art - but the hoax displays a good deal more inspiration and
relevancy than the greater part of today's conceptual or performance art
practices. The press release for the sophisticated hoax reads as follows:


  "November 12, 2008 - Early this morning, commuters nationwide were
delighted to find out that while they were sleeping, the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan had come to an end. If, that is, they happened to read a
'special edition' of today's New York Times. In an elaborate operation six
months in the planning, 1.2 million papers were printed at six different
presses and driven to prearranged pickup locations, where thousands of
volunteers stood ready to pass them out on the street.

  Articles in the paper announce dozens of new initiatives including the
establishment of national health care, the abolition of corporate lobbying,
a maximum wage for C.E.O.s, and, of course, the end of the war.

  The paper, an exact replica of The New York Times, includes International,
National, New York, and Business sections, as well as editorials,
corrections, and a number of advertisements, including a recall notice for
all cars that run on gasoline. There is also a timeline describing the gains
brought about by eight months of progressive support and pressure,
culminating in President Obama's 'Yes we REALLY can' speech. (The paper is
post-dated July 4, 2009.)

  'It's all about how at this point, we need to push harder than ever,' said
Bertha Suttner, one of the newspaper's writers. 'We've got to make sure
Obama and all the other Democrats do what we elected them to do. After
eight, or maybe twenty-eight years of hell, we need to start imagining
heaven.' Not all readers reacted favorably. 'The thing I disagree with is
how they did it,' said Stuart Carlyle, who received a paper in Grand Central
Station while commuting to his Wall Street brokerage. 'I'm all for freedom
of speech, but they should have started their own paper.'"
The pranksters have also published a phony New York Times website that
mirrors the content of the faux paper. I have had trouble reaching the
website - no doubt due to heavy traffic, and it remains to be seen how long
it will manage to stay online before the real New York Times succeeds in
shutting it down. The website includes clever additions unavailable in the
paper - like videos and animated advertisements.

[ Still from video showing the distribution of the fake New York Times. ]

One video documents the distribution of the fake NYT on the streets of New
York City - and the responses from the citizenry are remarkable. A
fictitious ad for American Apparel apologizes for the company being
"naughty", while pledging, ".but now we are unionizing our employees". The
Fine Print, the editorial statement published on the sham website, fully
explains the intent behind the guerilla art/activist project:


  "This special edition of The New York Times comes from a future in which
we are accomplishing what we know today to be possible. The dozens of
volunteer citizens who produced this paper spent the last eight years
dreaming of a better world for themselves, their friends, and any
descendants they might end up having. Today, that better world, though still
very far away, is finally possible - but only if millions of us demand it,
and finally force our government to do its job.

  It certainly won't be easy. Even now, corporate representatives are
swarming over Washington to get their agendas passed. The energy giants are
demanding 'clean coal,' nuclear power and offshore drilling. Military
contractors are pushing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. H.M.O.s and
insurance companies are promoting bogus 'reforms' so they can forestall
universal health care. And they're not about to take no for an answer.

  But things are different this time. This time, we can hold accountable the
politicians we put into office. And because everyone can now see that the
'free market' has nothing to do with freedom, there is a huge opening to
pass policies that can benefit all Americans, and that can make us truly
free - free to pursue an education without debt, go on vacation every once
in a while, keep healthy, and live without the crushing guilt of knowing
what our tax dollars are doing abroad."

The NYT special edition guerilla art project not only encourages people to
imagine a better world, it urges them to struggle for it. This is nowhere
more clearly illustrated than in an ad featured in both the paper and online
editions. The ad features a smiling Barack Obama, along with the words:
"Epoch-making, Pivotal, Squandered. The more we look at the world the more
we understand that some things really matter. Not only our choice of
President, but how we make sure that he, like all of our elected officials,
does what we elected him to do - its not over yet."

[ UPDATE: Late Wed. afternoon - 11/12/08, I received a Press Release from
the organizers of the spoof, who are claiming that: "Hundreds of independent
writers, artists, and activists" are responsible for the action. Quoting
from the communiqué: "The people behind the project are involved in a
diverse range of groups, including The Yes Men, the Anti-Advertising Agency,
CODEPINK, United for Peace and Justice, Not An Alternative, May First/People
Link, Improv Everywhere, Evil Twin, and Cultures of Resistance".

Steve Lambert, one of the project's organizers and an editor of the paper,
said; "We wanted to experience what it would look like, and feel like, to
read headlines we really want to read. It's about what's possible, if we
think big and act collectively." One of the project's organizers, Beka
Economopoulos, stated that; "This election was a massive referendum on
change. There's a lot of hope in the air, but there's a lot of uncertainty
too. It's up to all of us now to make these headlines come true." Andy
Bichlbaum, another project organizer and editor of the paper, stated; "It
doesn't stop here. We gave Obama a mandate, but he'll need mandate after
mandate after mandate to do what we elected him to do. He'll need a lot of
support, and yes - a lot of pressure." ]
Labels: Artists and the Iraq war

posted by Mark Vallen at 2:05 PM


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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