14/03/2020
THE ARTS SCENE POST COVID-19
[In pic: man who would be an Uber Eats rider today]
It happened slowly then all at once and now here we are, in our homes, and for some, unable to bring in an income.
I'm fortunate in that sense. I know I have no financial commitments and am in a household with a steady source of revenue. But some of our friends don't. Our freelancers and gig-ers and artists and people who bring in color into our world (whether it be literal or musical or verbal), in their own individual way. It's not made in a factory or by a conglomerate.
And it is at risk of dying away.
What most people are slowly coming to terms with is the fact that this is only the beginning. Governments are promising 14-day quarantines but let's be real, global problems happen on a global timeline. If this situation isn't handled with the care it deserves, we could be in for a long, painful ride. And for vaccines, forget about em. That's at best a year away, with human trials and the like.
I don't want to have this conversation either, but the decisions we make now will effect our society for years to come.
What will the arts scene look like ten years from now? Dwindled and dry with people too tired keeping food on the table and a roof over their heads to produce anything that makes these new-normal hard times a little bit more bearable? Plastic and mass-produced with a huge corporate backing for everyone to consume?
These difficulties aren't new, but with the shutting down and cancellation of all events and mass gatherings, we're seeing them exacerbated on a massive scale. This is our system's reckoning.
Or will these difficult and stressful times herald a new way of distributing wealth to independents? Will a new combination of the internet, micro-transactions, and personal mobile phones give everyone a way to produce their art and hold their events on their own terms? Will it be the new normal to tip your favourite artist online for a song? Or to earn money by holding online shows and gatherings outside the norm and convention?
I don't know. All I know is I'm sick of late-stage corporate capitalism and that if we don't do anything within this catalyst period, most of the artistic content we consume, ideas we espouse, attitudes we take, and things we agree on will have been manufactured for our consumption in a boardroom.
TLDR: support your independents.