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LoVid's iParade#2

LoVid's iParade#2

Click here to read the Rhizome article about LoVid's iParade#2 app, as featured in their walk for Elastic City, "Unchanged When Exhumed."

Pagan Poetry in Iceland

Spontaneous Society

Six “Spontaneous Society” lines appear in this two-minute sample:

1) “That’s a good parking-spot.” (spoken to a couple stepping out of their parked car)

2) “It’s a good day for a ride.” (spoken to a man biking past)

3) “That looks pretty cozy.” (spoken to a woman pushing a carriage where the kid slept)

4) “That looks like a handy cart.” (spoken to a woman pushing a cart filled with boxes)

5) “That’s a pretty cool toy.” (spoken to a kid holding what looked like a Spiderman figure)

6) “That’s a good-looking dog.” (spoken to a woman walking a dog with silver hairs on its face)

These lines – and the rest making up “Spontaneous Society” – are 99% effective in terms of replacing urban anonymity with something bordering on affection. I’ve tested each line thousands of times over thousands of blocks across multiple cities.

Adults, kids, even non-human animals respond to the lines. Last month, for example, I told a man with a white parakeet on his finger: “That’s a good-looking bird.” The bird smiled then smoothed its feathers. It said “Good evening.”

“Spontaneous Society” has the humble social aim of intensifying pleasure within the flow of daily life. We’re in a tough spot right now – environmentally, economically, you name it. Politicians can’t speak with one another. Uncertainty and fear are pervasive.

One way to address these widespread social problems is by addressing each other with kindness in the mundane world. At least this much is up to us. Sadly the other problems seem out of our hands.

“Spontaneous Society” provides a communication primer: a lesson in humane discourse bridging races, ages, classes; a reminder that the present, barring violence, is to be celebrated before it vanishes into nothingness.

-- Jon Cotner