(in line with the 25hr live streaming event of last Saturday, here is the VOID 
Manifesto, the video streaming studio inside our Institute of Network Cultures 
in Amsterdam /geert)

Illustrated version here: 
https://networkcultures.org/void/2024/02/28/the-void-teletext/

T.V. MANIFESTO

THE VOID <https://networkcultures.org/void> (T.V.) is a research project on 
tactical video and an audiovisual publishing venue for practice-based research 
at the Institute of Network Cultures, part of the Amsterdam University of 
Applied Science.

THE VOID (T.V.)

Making T.V. is mostly about organizing cables: getting a space (either 
borrowed, booked, or squatted), setting up tripods, putting up green screens, 
connecting monitors, lighting up a studio, and welcoming collaborators. In many 
ways, all of these actions end up in physical cable management but can also be 
seen as metaphorical cable management of aesthetic and social feedback loops. 
We don’t want to remain at a metaphorical level, though. The hours of manual 
labor with technical equipment that go into online video streaming overshadow 
those of sitting in front of a screen reading, typing, and clicking. We, at 
T.V., have nonetheless previously framed making T.V. as research 
<https://networkcultures.org/void/2023/02/17/blurring-the-formats-a-report/>. 
As such, it would be hypocritical for us to underestimate the importance of 
theoretical reflection to establish a critical practice. And yet, doing T.V. 
asks for a set of skills that often diverge from how traditional theoretical 
research is conceived. Practice-based research requires you to leave the 
computer monitor aside (although not for very long) and, in our case, spend the 
day with cables in a basement-turned-into-studio.

Researchers and theorists of the past have mostly used text as their favored 
medium probably because they hardly developed a close relationship with the 
tools and logic of technical and media creation. For T.V., making T.V. means to 
develop a practical know-how that is not opposed to theoretical knowledge, but 
rather one that complements it and pushes it forward. Or, more radically, 
making T.V. shows (streams?) that theory is always rooted in collective 
practices. In our case, online audiovisual production.

T.V. practices online video with the hope of doing it differently: it is both a 
practice-based research project on hybrid audiovisual assemblages around a 
streaming studio and a publication venue for audiovisual practice-based 
research. T.V. focuses on the increasing presence of video production in 
research and artistic practices. By providing resources to critically work with 
this mediatic landscape as well as sharing and supporting research practices 
that center a critical engagement with media, T.V. expands the role of digital 
audiovisual production practices as a research methodology.

In the same way that practice-based research creates knowledge through 
alternative modes of production (in our case, from the researcher’s computer 
screen to the green-screen-studio-feedback loop), it also calls for expanding 
publication formats. T.V. aspires to create the means and tools for 
practitioners not represented in the current publishing industries. To put it 
concisely, T.V. expands publishing for practice-based research. For T.V., 
producing, hosting, distributing, and consuming media is not about illustrating 
previously existing research or knowledge, but about doing things: working with 
media is actively doing research.

T.V. is a space and practice of critical media studies. It is inscribed in a 
tradition that expands outlooks on the way we see, read, and talk about online 
media. Yet, we strive to unbound knowledge about media from the position of the 
interpreter or the commentator. This is why we bring the ambitions of tactical 
media <http://www.tacticalmediafiles.net/articles/3160> to the core of critical 
media studies. Knowing about media is also about intervening with media: using 
and creating media on our own terms – not solely communicating about how media 
represent the world, but collectively getting involved in a world constituted 
by distributed online media production.

We see video as an opportunity to come together and figure out how to inhabit 
online spaces with vulnerability and solidarity. For T.V., video is then a 
hybrid event, an occasion to pollute online spaces with offline encounters and, 
vice versa, to rearrange how we physically exist together mainly through the 
tool of the studio. A pop-up studio branching out into the offline (events, 
zines, workshops) and online (a website, repository, publications, live 
stream), producing occasions to share and plot common urgencies, resources, and 
know-how. Using online video not only to show, document, or witness, but also 
as a way to share practices and politically engaged understandings for the 
production, archiving, distribution, and interpretation of online content, we 
underline the inherent hybrid togetherness of the online experience.

We promote intimacy with technology that escapes big tech’s nightmarish 
fantasies of immersion, and intuitive constant communication, but that is also 
not confined to the overly technical hacker imaginaries pushing for universal 
coding literacy.  We are inspired by the culture emerging from platform content 
creation that, while deeply neoliberal, has produced a distributed collective 
of technical users. A dispersed collective that has developed diverse yet 
specific aesthetic sensibilities and a profound understanding that the digital 
has always been a physical (and cultural) gesture. To put it differently, it is 
a collective for whom hours of scrolling, binge-watching, and streaming on 
multiple (horizontal and vertical) screens have made it self-evident that these 
are not merely devices to be operated at will, but a hybrid environment to 
inhabit. A hybrid environment in which distinctions between representation and 
intervention collapse into feedback loops or recursive chains of localized 
operations between software, green screens, microphones, mixers, monitors, 
cameras, data, people, and (most importantly) cables, establishing new ways of 
moving, sensing, communicating. Of being together.

By highlighting tacticality and technical practices, we recall the political 
heritage of communities around early networked communities. From bak.ma 
<https://bak.ma/grid/created> to indymedia <https://www.indymedia.nl/> and 
UKRAiNATV <https://ukrainatv.streamart.studio/>, we bring back practices and 
affordances of independent video making, TV, and radio to produce new ways to 
inhabit a stagnating online media landscape. This heritage is a reminder that 
before any technical system appears as such, it is preceded by an array of 
unstable practices that are then stabilized into commoditized standards. As 
social networks evolve into streaming platforms, we want to latch onto this 
instability to reconsider the possibilities of online media by looking at it as 
a hybrid and precarious assemblage of legacy media tools, protocols, and 
practices. If early online broadcasting initiatives were instances of 
pre-standardization, T.V. seeks opportunities of post-standardization: de- and 
re-stabilizing online video as computational artisanship in a parasitic yet 
conflictual relation with platformized/industrial modes of production.

From video podcasts to live streaming, we don’t work with a clear standard. We 
regard this as a strength: centering experimentation and openness to 
collaboration as the overarching attitudes to approach video work. For T.V., 
online video stops being solely a digital medium, a final outcome towards which 
all activities are directed, but the networks of open-ended relations and 
practices around a precarious (and for that reason, very material) studio we 
inhabit together.

From T.V., we make a call to all practitioners who want to share a green 
screen. To those who inhabit video in its online and offline, virtual and 
material, offshoots, we invite them to collaborate and figure out together new 
ways to exist in hybridity. And, hopefully, create a TV of the commons, a 
StreamArt cooperative, a distributed organized network for audiovisual 
practice, and a politically engaged federation of practitioners to reclaim our 
technological life in common.

T.V. Team


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