At the bottom of this page, you will notice, are now advertisements placed by Google on behalf of various companies. And Google’s intuition is such that it predicts, based on the content of my writing, what visitors to this site will be inclined to purchase. Thus, in the unlikely event that I spend a paragraph talking about microwave dinners (of which I just enjoyed a particularly lacklustre example―fettuccine with broccoli florets―in which the florets exhibited a plastic chemical tang and the fettuccine was laced with rubber and the whole dish left an aftertaste somewhere between asphalt and pine-bark, but hey, it was three dollars and according to the label had less than 7 grams fat) the advertising below will reflect this and presumably offer visitors to this site an incentive for assessing said dinners or some such ruse.
The advertisements are an optional service provided by Google, the owner of whoever owns this website. Every time a visitor clicks on the advertisement, one ten-thousandth of the advertisement fee―or some equally miniscule amount―is tallied, set against my name, and after an indeterminate amount of time a cheque arrives in my mailbox. As I have no misconceptions about the amount of traffic this site generates, I expect the cheque to be somewhere between one cent and a dollar. It is a relief, I find, to give over to it―whatever it is―and let the tide of commoditisation wash over those possessions of mine that do not bear some birthmark of their origin. The experiment will occupy some time, anyway, and at the very least I will acquire a talisman―in the form of a cheque that’s quite literally worth less than the paper it’s printed on―of the unbridled capitalism this country is the beating, feverish heart of.
And unbridled it is, the metaphor holds true. The system has bolted and is running at a speed and in a direction I doubt even Marx or Nostradamus predicted. Certainly those who herald-in the new age of electronics and transactional relationships (myself included) did not. Witness last Sunday, at the
Ah, but the view at the top of the building was remarkable. To all horizons stretched towers, houses, schools, parking-lots, ghettos, sports-fields, motorways, freeways, highways, road-signs, lampposts, potholes, sewer-pipes - interrupted only by rivers and the sky, and all of it teeming with organisms that with the benefit of indoctrination are identified as people. To the unbiased eye they seem like parasites on agar or maggots on a cadaver. And as a mass they possess the same beauty as maggots or parasites – a beauty that comes from complete and total consumption, of purely animal instinct, of action caused by internal forces alone (a beauty that can be compared with the voracity that a pack of piranhas are said to take to a bovine, reducing it to a skeleton in under four minutes. Or similarly, when I was a child, the experiment conducted by my grandmother and I in which a dead mouse was wrapped in a net and set in the garden for a week. On returning, the mouse had been reduced to a perfectly-preserved silhouette of bones, a remnant of some prehistoric era).
As you ascend 96 floors to the viewing platform of the
PS – last night, about thirty minutes after I posted this blog, a shooting occurred in the apartment building next door. One man was killed, the other injured. Two Hispanics, so it has been reported, were seen fleeing the building. I was out at the time, en route to a friend’s house, so all I knew of the incident was the yards and yards of discarded Do Not Cross tape lying in the gutter of my street when I came home six hours later. I happened to be listening to some hip-hop as I left the house today, the reports from the news channels (see link below) still resonating. The band was the Wu Tang Clan, and the lyrics were about shootings in
http://www.ny1.com/ny1/content/index.jsp?stid=1&aid=74768

2 comments:
I just got offered an Italian cooking class by your Google ads, but the link was broken! I hope this doesn't mean you forfit the 0.00001 cents, because the effort was worth at least that much...
It is somewhat daunting to think of making comment to these blogs - their deliciousness and surprise are mixed with a slightly unsettling after-taste ... Ben you get under the skin of thoughts like not many other I know. Ma
Post a Comment