Boston Society of Spontaneity's MP3-EXP at Columbus Park
By MEGAN BELL | September 23, 2008
It sounded simple enough to participate in the mysterious MP3 Experience, an absurdist flash-mob event organized by the Boston Society of Spontaneity requiring you to download an audio file to your MP3 player and — having not listened to it beforehand — press PLAY simultaneously with everyone around you. One needed only a solid-color T-shirt, a watch with a second hand, a camera, the MP3, and a sense of adventure. But my digital camera’s battery died en route, and my newly purchased stunner of a gold-plated Rite Aid watch barely worked for an hour. And, to my extreme dismay, technical difficulties left me without the audio file as the clock struck 2 pm, just one hour before start time. After a few minutes of hyperventilating into a paper bag, I raced to Christopher Columbus Park.
Perhaps 25 people were milling around the alabaster Columbus statue, bodies hunched, fidgeting silently. Then came the moment of truth: everyone pressed PLAY, and . . . silence. Then: “I hate the left side of the brain” and “Aw, poor subconscious.” With nothing to go on but overheard comments, I was still very much confused. Things got into gear, however: first cheering and waving, then human statues, then some sort of hyperactive dance contest. The number of participants slowly surged: there were at least 75 persons in the conga line that snaked its way through the park at 3:30, and by the “fashion show” near to 4 pm, more than 150 persons with headphones were cheering on their brethren and encouraging passers-by. Reactions ranged from extreme enthusiasm (a group of five women watched intently from a stone slab shouting encouragement) to apathy (“That’s kinda cool, I guess”) to irritation (two humorless college-age girls sunbathing in the middle of the park shot disgusted looks as people tripped over their feet). By the end of the hour, when the army paraded to the entrance of the Aquarium, there were at least five children gleefully skipping in tow. It turned out that everyone had been following the instructions on the MP3: a narrative by parts of the brain (left, right, subconscious) trying to find your kidnapped inner child and set it free.
Related:
Beat the Tweet, From the Web to the Workplace, Twitheads, More
- Beat the Tweet
Warm weather is supposed to be accessorized by lackaday, by a breezy sensibility best enjoyed with a frosty tall boy in one hand, the sloppy product of a back-yard barbecue in the other. Instead, I find myself struggling to balance my beer between my knees and my overstocked paper plate on my thigh as I furiously poke at my BlackBerry.
- From the Web to the Workplace
Nearly nine percent of the Massachusetts workforce is unemployed this summer, and with local colleges cranking out a glut of degree recipients in a lousy job market, many of them are inevitably lounging around on futons, blogging and posting on Facebook walls in between job applications.
- Twitheads
Is Twitter bad for journalism?
- 10 ‘fun’ things to do in Boston without gas
- Old trickster
On New Year’s Day 1980, telegrams sent from Utah arrived at the New York Times and the Daily News announcing that 50-year-old media hoaxter Alan Abel had suffered a heart attack at a ski resort near Orem, Utah. He left behind a wife, Jeanne, and daughter, Jennifer.
- 2008 Listravaganza Part 2
Everything you wanted to know about the year in music, in tidy lists of 10.
- A brief history of shopping
- Great pretenders
“Self and Others,” the new group show at Brown University’s Bell Gallery, reminds me of a definition I recently read: growing up is learning how to pretend to be normal.
- Ask Dr. Lovemonkey: A little too late
This may seem a little bit picky, as it is merely a matter of etiquette, but I'm curious about what you think.
- Dumb College Edition
Phillipe and Jorge have words of wisdom for Brown University's idiotic, uber-politically correct faculty members who voted to drop Columbus Day and substitute a "Fall Weekend" at the behest of student group called Native Americans at Brown.
- Are you kidding us?
Russell Crowe as the Bud-I?
- Less
Topics:
Live Reviews
, Christopher Columbus, Boston Society of Spontaneity, Boston Society of Spontaneity, More
, Christopher Columbus, Boston Society of Spontaneity, Boston Society of Spontaneity, Boston Society of Spontaneity, social networking, Less