Carrie McLaren is a guest blogger at Boing Boing and coauthor of Ad Nauseam: A Survivor’s Guide to American Consumer Culture. She lives in Brooklyn, the former home of her now defunct Stay Free! magazine.
My friend Bill Wasik has a book out now that should appeal to Boing Boing types, And Then There’s This: How Stories Live and Die in Viral Culture. Several years ago, Wasik started the Mob Project, which launched flash mobs as an insanely popular fad in New York, then globally. We interviewed him in Stay Free! about it a while back.
Wasik’s book looks at how ideas spread online through social networks and other media channels. In each chapter, Wasik, who is an editor at Harper’s magazine, conducts some sort of prank to explore the ways single messages can evolve and have massive ripple effects. I especially dug his observations on how the internet and mp3 swapping have affected indie rock (since, as a clueless middle-ager, I haven’t kept up): with bands and their careers now playing a much smaller role than individual songs and musicians.