Techsploitation
By Annalee Newitz
Arnie
online
WE ARE THE sum of the information available about us on the
Web. For the sake of argument, let's assume this is true. Then let's
see how this hypothesis works to explain the Web presence of Arnold
Schwarzenegger, gubernatorial hopeful in California. What can we learn
about Arnold's character based on his online manifestations?
1. Arnold's handlers don't give a crap about building a constituency
online The "official" site for Arnold's campaign, at www.joinarnold.com,
is a paltry little thing. An amateurishly Photoshopped "feathered
edge" image of Arnold and wife Maria Shriver tops a page that announces,
"Full Web Site Coming Soon!" The only functional parts of
the site allow you to volunteer your time to the campaign, donate money,
and click through to Arnold's "entertainment page" at www.schwarzenegger.com.
And what's up with the stupid domain name? The smart Wisconsin geek
named Stephen L. Arnold who has owned www.arnold.com and www.arnold.us
for several years told me via e-mail that he has not yet been approached
by any Arnold campaigners with an offer to buy his domains. What the
hell, people? Get a real domain name, ferchrissake. And pay Stephen
Arnold lots of money for it, too. That's the way all the big guys do
it.
2. Arnold can't tell the difference between entertainment and politics
At the elaborate www.schwarzenegger.com, allegedly an "entertainment"
site, news of Arnold's campaign appearances are snuggled up next to
the latest information about Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.
Like Ronald Reagan, who could never quite figure out if he was president
or just playing one on TV, Arnold will never be able to figure out if
he's a celluloid cyborg or a human, and neither will we.
3. Arnold is proud he smoked pot Arnie once fretted that people
might discover the scene in which he smokes a fatty in the documentary
Pumping Iron, which features him, stoned and cocky, competing
for the Mr. Universe title. But recently he embraced the old movie,
helping release a digitally remastered version and selling tons of Pumping
Iron merchandise in the "Arnold Store" on www.schwarzenegger.com.
He says now that he "did inhale," but that he hasn't done
it since those days. Does that mean pot will be part of his campaign
to make America healthier?
4. Arnold's supporters are morons If you want to plunge deep
inside the mind of an Arnold supporter, look no further than the embarrassingly
bad Arnold campaign blog at arnoldforgovernor.blogspot.com. Not only
is this blogger completely incapable of using the ridiculously simple
software provided by Blogspot, but also his links don't take us to anything
more exotic than instapundit.com. Even worse is the guy at schwarzeneggergovernor.com,
who has posted a big picture of a child grimacing under the words "On
October 7, 2003, for the benefit of the Children of California, Gray
Davis will be terminated." Isn't it kind of creepy to associate
pictures of your cute kid with homicidal ramblings? And his slogan can't
be beat: "T3 in 03." And then there's the so-called grassroots
Web site run by Team Arnold at www.schwarzeneggergovernor.net. Why isn't
somebody sending these guys a takedown order?
5. Arnold's detractors are morons What's truly scary is that
the geek community hasn't provided us with any decent parody sites about
Arnold's candidacy yet. The domains schwarzeneggersucks.com and arnoldschwarzeneggersucks.com
are bought, parked, and empty. Arnoldsucks.com is the property of some
crazed Englishman who is obsessed with smearing the name of Arnold Clark,
a British guy who sells crappy cars and rips people off. You know what
this means, don't you? Somebody is more devoted to disgracing a used-car
salesman than you are to disgracing Arnie. For shame.
6. You can make money by selling political propaganda that includes
trademarked images from Arnold's movies The geniuses at Team Arnold
have built a Web site that's a trademark-violation lawsuit waiting to
happen! Hooray! At www.arnold-2003.com you can buy Arnie campaign T-shirts
that appropriate the iconography and images from Total Recall.
(It's a recall election get it?) The owners of the site, who
list a fake New York address with the Whois registry and request that
orders for T-shirts be faxed to a Seattle location, say they "are
not associated in any way with the Schwarzenegger campaign." They
also believe they "did not need permission to use the ideas from
Total Recall." Oh really? Maybe the Motion Picture Association
of America begs to differ. The site owners say they've had 3,000 T-shirt
orders already. Sounds like they're making a profit on somebody else's
intellectual property, doesn't it?
Annalee Newitz (suckmyarnold@techsploitation.com)
is a surly media nerd who is voting for Georgy Russell, the world's
first female geek politician. Her column also appears in Metro, Silicon
Valley's weekly newspaper.