I have really enjoyed being a part of this Technology and Communication course. One thing I have enjoyed about taking summer classes previously at Shasta College and now at CSU Chico has been that, with the abbreviated timeline, you never get bored. That said, there were definitely some units that I appreciated more than others. My father worked for Pacific Bell when he initially moved to California from Toledo, Ohio and remained with AT&T following the breakup of the Bell system in the 1980's. He remained with AT&T for the remainder of his professional career until he retired. When I spoke to him on Father's Day I told him we had just finished a unit on telephony and he was very interested in the material we had covered. Humorously, I did not have as significant an interest in the telephony unit as he did and we were able to share a laugh about that.
The trend that I was most invested in was the future of the music industry which we covered during week 2. As I'm sure I've shared multiple times in my blogs and in my discussion posts, I am a musician and my goal in returning to school is to be involved in the industry in some fashion now that my performing days are likely behind me. That said, any information pertaining to the future of what that industry will look like as I am trying to find my "in" is of great interest to me both personally and professionally. As music sales trend further and further towards streaming and away from physical and digital sales, I think it's important to understand where revenue is generated and how that revenue is distributed among the people responsible for a record. This includes the writer, publisher, artist, and record label (if any). Also, it will be interesting to see how the Music Modernization Act affects how that revenue is generated and distributed. That is a trend that I look forward to following.
The theoretical approach I enjoyed the most was in our unit discussing photo manipulation. I know that the blog we wrote was supposed to be targeted more towards using altered modeling photos, but I went off in a different direction citing the altered photos used by Fox News of the Capital Hill Autonomous Zone in Seattle. I think this underlies a fundamental problem with news in general. I believe that many people in an older generation will look at news anchors like Walter Cronkite, for example, and say that he was more trustworthy than news anchors today. While I believe that is probably true, I think you have to consider the times we live in when making this generalization. In those days you only had 3 or 4 stations delivering the news for 30 minutes per night at a prime time slot. However, beginning with the launch of CNN in 1980, you now have numerous news channels delivering news 24 hours a day. The reporting has become more sensationalized because the news channels have to attract viewers with interesting content that the anchors in the 1960's and 1970's did not. I think the drive for ratings has diminished the values of truth and facts.
The policy that interested me the most had to be Net Neutrality. I think this concept was the one I was least familiar with even though it had been in the news almost immediately after Trump had been elected. As I posted in our discussion, my understanding is that it protects us, the consumers, from internet service providers limiting our access to content due to conflicting interest with content that may benefit the provider. The most curious thing to me is how this became a partisan issue. I really enjoyed John Oliver's analogy that President Trump wants to press CMD-Z on everything that President Obama did while he was in office. It's unfortunate that it actually appears to be true. I'm also very glad that the state of California has their own Net Neutrality policy in place as I believe it is in the best interest of anyone who uses the internet to have protection against price gouging by unethical ISP's.
The social issue point was one that I was torn about. I was equally invested in two of the social issues we covered in class. The first being how the gaming community treats women and the second being the digital divide. As a gamer myself, the inclusive gaming topic really shocks me because I have not personally observed, nor taken part in any excluding behavior based on gender. That said, I don't play games online so I think I have insulated myself from that environment. I will say that the "women as trophies" trope does become more clear to me now that I am more conscious to it. As a male I don't think I really paid any attention to these things as being bad. I just took them as part of the game. Here is where my music and audio background connects. There is a significant underrepresentation of women in the music industry with only 2% of music producers and 3% of audio engineers being female. That's even fewer than the gaming industry in which 21% of game developers are female. Now that I'm actively pursuing a career in the music industry, I feel I am much more cognizant to this lack of inclusion and it really does bother me. In the recording arts program at CSU Chico, we only had 4 women in a class of 35 during my first semester. In my second semester that number dropped to 2 out of 30.
The second social issue point, the digital divide, I think is very relevant as we see racial tensions in our country right now. The example from class with the Coachella Valley school district I think really illustrates how the digital divide and racial divide are connected. Coachella Valley is a district that is a majority Hispanic. The ideal that everyone has the same opportunities regardless of race or color is disproved simply by looking at that example. You have a poor, rural community with students who either cannot get or cannot afford internet service which affects their ability to study and do classwork. They are being put at a disadvantage immediately through no fault of their own. While it is by no means an absolute solution to racial inequality in our country, I think closing the digital divide will at least maybe bring us a few steps closer to actually living in a place where we have the same opportunities to succeed regardless of race or color.
Thank you for an exciting and informative 4 weeks!!!!




