hal tweets ·7:42 AM

A short piece I wrote for AOLnews about why Peep culture trumps privacy online. http://bit.ly/bQECsC

Michael Died For Our Sins

Posted by: Hal
Tags: blogging, surveillance, exposure, news, personal

We found this amazing poster on a side street behind the Fox Reality building.

Michaelsins.jpg

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Pod People

Posted by: Hal
Tags: blogging, surveillance, exposure, news, personal, peep-the-game, peep-radio, hals-life, peep-the-documentary

Okay, I’m on the last leg of my flight back to Los Angeles. I’ll fill you in on all that’s been happening so far, at least the highlights.

Got into LA Tuesday. Actually pretty hilarious arrival since director Sally and shoot assistant Melanie (aka “the Hotness”) managed to miss the connecting flight due to a sudden thirst for Jamba Juice. No damage done, they got the next flight and were only a few hours behind us and now I get to make fun of them constantly — “hey, anyone thirsty for some juice?”

Wed. morning we were off to an interview with David Lyle, the head of FoxReality. He’s an acerbic straight talking Australian — very very funny. I showed him the 2 minute casting tape I made, and he absolutely cracked us up critiquing what are apparently my many many flaws. We’ve got to get my casting video up online, that’s on my to do list today.

We had a great discussion with David about Reality TV. When we got around to talking about some of the negative consequences of Reality Tv – ie. distorting the shape of people’s lives for the sake of entertainment — things got particularly interesting. David maintains that while there is some distortion, you can’t turn, as he puts it, “a princess into a witch.” In other words, while certain events may be distorted, a person’s essential nature is at the core of the narrative, and that ultimately can’t be made up or manipulated. As for the ethical question of what a reality tv show creator’s responsibility is to the people they have on the show, well, David, again, asserted the hardly surprising idea that people sign up for this stuff and they know what they are getting into. And if they don’t, well, it’s nobody’s fault but their own.

Later on, we headed over to the set of Solitary, a Fox Reality show that was in production. Solitary is this show where they put contestants into solitary confinement pods and then subject them to various mental and physical trials — they call them “treatments”. Whoever lasts longest in their pod wins the 50k prize. It was fascinating to watch the producers of the show put the contestants through their paces. The control room was truly like a scene from The Truman Show. I got to chat with the producers who were pretty cool about having us invade their set. Sally thought I got a little too hung up on the whole torture aspect, but she wasn’t the one who ended up sitting on a torture chair made up of hundreds of blunt screws, while wearing a giant metal crown with more blunt screws pressing down into her frontal lobe. For the record, that was me. The producers compared the show to a sporting event and argued that it’s more like being part of a rigorous athletic challenge than being subjected to torture. They talked about the “triumph of the human spirit.”

Finally I got to go into one of the pods and experience Solitary. My sole companion was the computerized voice known as Val. I’m planning on doing a vlog at some point today on what I felt and learned from my time in the pod. Stay tuned.

After that, I took the red eye to Washington DC. I did two interviews there and a talk Thursday evening. Next morning, this morning, the 7am flight back to LA, which brings you up to date on my activities and whereabouts. I’m a bit groggy from the constant activity punctuated by lengthy plane rides. But I’m excited about the material we got at FoxReality — to their credit, they were totally cool about letting us film on the set and asking whatever questions we wanted. I was also really pleased about the reception the Peep event in DC got. Checked in with W. who reported an incident involving 3 year-olds and fecal matter (enough said) but otherwise seemed in good spirits. We’re both really looking forward to our upcoming holiday, about a week away. Normally the thought of going on a vacation annoys me — vacation from what exactly? is my usual line — but this time around, I’m ready for some serious chill out and family time. I’m sitting next to a little 4 year-old and her dad, so naturally I’m thinking of E. I wonder what she’ll make of this whole project in ten years. She’ll be a teenager and probably wish they’d left me locked in the pod.

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I’m Not Here to Make Friends on the Set of Solitary

Posted by: Hal
Tags: relationships, television, documentary, blogging, cewebrity, exposure, culture, reality tv

While waiting around on the set of Solitary I came across Bryan and Allison who run the Reality TV fan podcast and website I’m Not Here to Make Friends. They kindly agreed to a brief interview about their infatuation with reality tv, and what made them decide to go public with their reality obsessions. So check it out.

 

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LA via Denver

Posted by: Hal
Tags: blogging, surveillance, exposure, news, personal, privacy, peep-the-game, peep-radio, hals-life, peep-the-documentary

I’m on the plane to Los Angeles via Denver. Yesterday was a crazy day, trying to tie up loose ends, film my “reality tv casting tape” with director Sally, and find some time to work on/figure out the peep themed monologue I’m going to deliver Thursday night in Washington DC.

Didn’t get to bed till 1am and was up at 5:30, but other than that, I feel like I’m in decent shape going into this final stretch. In terms of filming, I’ve been feeling more at ease in front of the camera, probably because I’ve been in front of cameras 8 hours a day for the last week or so. I’m excited about tomorrow’s shoot on the set of the crazy Fox Reality show Solitary, which basically involves putting people in different kinds of solitary confinement and seeing how long they last. The winner gets a cash prize. The show mixes self inflicted sensory deprivation torture with classic reality tv peep: we get to know the people, peep into their regular lives to get a sense of their motivations, and are treated to constant juxtapositions of their everyday life and the extremity of their current situation. Also we’re going to sit down with David Lyle, the head of Fox Reality and the man behind such classic peep reality shows as The Swan. He’s also very funny and loquacious, so I’m sure we’ll have a great talk about all aspects of reality tv.

As much as possible, I’ll be continuing to broadcast live via peepcast. As soon as we get to LA we’re going to head over to Best Buy and grab a mobile internet stick that should let me pretty much lifecast from anywhere. But it might be difficult for me to lifecast and check the chat in some circumstances, so don’t get mad, I’m not ignoring you, I’ve just got my hands full. Anyway, subject to the agree-ability of the people we’re spending time with, you should be able to get a pretty good look at the action as it proceeds. Lifecasting while filming and being on the road will be, I think, very different from doing it home. For one thing, I’ll be able to be on more, fewer blackout periods when W. and the kid are around. For another, there will, arguably, be more action, less time watching me sitting in front of my computer. This phase of the lifecast will probably provide more of a sense of how the documentary is coming together, as opposed to a sense of how my life comes together (or comes apart, as the case may be). I’m relieved, actually, to take the show on the road. I’ve been getting frustrated with certain aspects of the lifecasting at home. That’s something I want to address, but I’m going to wait to do it on camera as a vlog.

So anyway, check the lifecast, my tweets (@halpen), and this space for ongoing updates. Here’s a schedule of what I’ll be up to. As much as possible I’ll be peepcasting!

Today: getting equipment, setting up. Wed.: Fox Reality on the set of Solitary. Wed. eve: fly to Washington DC. Thursday: two interviews, practice my talk that night, perform at 7:30 est (plus your opportunity to meet my mom!) Friday: 6am flight back to LA. Shooting various Hal-in-Hollywood footage! Saturday and Sunday: we spend the day with a casting director, attend a reality tv try-out, get a critique of my reality tv casting tape. Monday: homeward bound! 

 

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Clips from the Weekend Lifecast Test

Posted by: Hal
Tags: hal, blogging, exposure, diary, personal, privacy, lifestreaming, justin.tv, lifecasting, moblog

These are probably unwatchable but they represent the longest yet test of the mobile lifecasting system. one hour and twenty minutes of me and E. wandering around. plus we kill and capture some ants. (we are cruel cruel kids…)

 


Watch live video from thepeepdiaries on Justin.tv


Watch live video from thepeepdiaries on Justin.tv

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The Bloggist

Hey, I’m Hal Niedzviecki. I’m a writer/thinker who lives in Toronto, Ontario, Canada with my wife and daughter. Up till now I’ve always considered myself a private person. But at the same time I’m fascinated by people who effortlessly open themselves up to the whole world. So I’ve… more...

 

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A short piece I wrote for AOLnews about why Peep culture trumps privacy online. http://bit.ly/bQECsC

Hal Niedzviecki :: ·7:42AM

New content on the Broken Pencil website! Short fiction: Shack the Clam Girl + How to Make Your Own Game Cabinet http://bit.ly/b6CHLP

Hal Niedzviecki :: ·15:55PM

 

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