|
PIRACY MAY BE GOOD…
[1]
By Lloyd Kaufman and Jamie Greco
After having traveled to Russia to direct a music video, I had a Joycean
Epiphany: Not only do I still believe 100% in what I have said in my
previous Napster essays [2] , but I’ve also come to the conclusion
that piracy may be a good thing. Piracy can help break the plutocratic
web in which a small number of media conglomerates such as AOL Time Warner,
News Corps, Sony, Viacom and Disney have ensnared the world of art. Piracy
may help us, as consumers, to receive more, and arguably better, art.
Unfortunately, the few black widow media corporations and their New
York Times pimps that weave this wicked web have publicly brainwashed
our leaders in Washington concerning the notion that piracy may posses
even an iota of goodness. This is manifested in the unnecessary punishment,
oftentimes severe, of innocent people who aren’t pillaging and raping,
but merely downloading their favorite flicks and tunes off the Internet
or buying a bootleg video.
| In October 2002, the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) and several other bully entertainment
groups sent letters to more than 2,000 colleges and universities advising
them to “impose effective remedies against violators” of copyright
law. The U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis behaved as if these letters
were from Sadaam Hussein threatening to gut from the nostrils any
American who would dare to download an MP3. About 100 U.S. Naval
Academy midshipmen had their computers seized by academy authorities
who claimed the trainees had pirated music and movies on their hard
drives. God forbid students training to die for their country should
listen to some soothing jazz music or download a hot and heavy Shannon
Tweed sex scene for masturbatorial purposes to momentarily get
their minds off of an impending World War III. These trainees are
brave enough to risk getting killed or turned into vegetable stir-fry
in war’s wok. Pretty soon, they might lose their hearing thanks to
a bomb or lose genital sensation thanks to a bullet in their groin.
Then soothing jazz music and hot and heavy Shannon Tweed sex scenes
would mean diddly squat. These midshipmen are not merely being scolded.
They will most likely be taken to trial and could be expelled from
Annapolis. |
|
The major studios claim that they’re protecting
the public by advocating such harsh measures. If that were really the
case, why haven’t they written another letter to the U.S. Naval Academy
to suggest that the midshipmen not be further distracted and persecuted
and do what they volunteered to do – fight for their country?!
The answer is simple and sad – Most mainstream entertainment companies
don’t give a shit about the people who are fighting to protect their ungrateful
asses. Instead, they’re crossing their eight legs, hoping their threats
will scare us little insects away from MP3.com and into Blockbuster (owned
by Viacom). After all, more people renting and purchasing overpriced
rubbish means more money. With more money, the members of the Media Cartel
are rest assured knowing that they’ll have the means to pay for tonight’s
hooker, tomorrow’s narcotics, this week’s yacht and next month’s Rolls
Royce. After having directed a music video at a nightclub in Russia, I
realized that most people who engage in acts of piracy are not twisted
criminals who should walk the plank into shark infested waters
[3] , but honest citizens who are determined to acquire art
that they cannot receive any other way. Due to the Media Cartel, the
only U.S. films available in Russia were those controlled by the giant
studios like Disney, etc. sold at huge prices. Troma films were were
never distributed in Russia.
 |
In order to fill up the Moscow nightclub in which we
were filming with free extras for the music video, the young producers
from Bad Taste Records planned a “Troma Party.” They even plastered
this poster around town with Toxie and Kabukiman to publicize the
event. But what would Troma matter to people in a country where Troma
movies weren’t distributed, I wondered. Was I surprised! Not only
was the club packed, but there were many Troma fans asking to me sign
Troma video cassette boxes with crappy black and white covers! They
were bootlegs! Thanks to piracy, our movies were, in fact, being
watched and more and more Russians have learned to love Troma movies.
As a result, Carmen Films saw an opportunity to distribute Troma movies
in Russia. Carmen Films understands that most Russian Troma fans
that bask in bootleg entertainment will indeed spend their money on
Troma films that have good masters, box art, etc. Now we have distribution
in Russia! And distribution means money. And money means we come
closer to making another damn movie! And that movie will go to bootleg.
And that bootleg will hopefully pique the interest of another land
with an evil cartel that doesn’t distribute Troma movies. Then that
land will distribute Troma movies. |
| Don’t be fooled: The rich and greedy co(c)k(e)heads
at Sony and their sinister sisters (AO-Hell Slime Warner, etc.) will
claim that they are protecting the public by punishing bootleggers
and those of us who use Napster and other free file-trading services
such as Kazaa, Gnutella and Morpheus.
[4] JLo tells us in her latest hit not to be fooled by
the rocks that she’s got, because she’s still (she’s still) Jenny
from the block. The truth is that major entertainment groups don’t
want us to download an MP3 of a song or listen to public domain bootlegs
because they’re protecting the rocks that they got. After
all…They’re still (they’re still) the devil-worshiping international
media conglomerates from the block. Neil Turkewitz, the Executive
vice president international of the RIAA, dissents. “The public
sees icons like Mickey Mouse and thinks that the companies must by
now have made their money,” he claims. The Toxic Avenger doesn’t
live nearly as glamorous and financially lucrative a life as Mickey
(the devil’s spawn of Disney), but he doesn’t mind that people all
over the world are seeing his movies for free. At Troma, a million
fans means a lot more than a million bucks. As we will chant this
week in Park City, Utah, at the TromaDance Film Festival (www.tromadance.com):
“GIVE ART BACK TO THE PEOPLE!” |
|
|