Thursday March 16, 2006 arts. michigandaily.com artspage@michigandaily.com R TC SlChigan Bailg 5A MP3s=consumerism The latest hit against supposed online music piracy came into effect last week when last year's Family Entertainment and Copyright Act (FECA) was used to indict two guys who leaked Ryan Adams's Jacksonville City Nights on a fansite. Hey - keeping up with the prolific semi-junkie/ momentary Lohan beau's release schedule can get expensive. The duo responsible for the leak now face up to 11 years in prison for an infraction against a section of FECA that prohibits the online distribution of intel- lectual property before the material's official release, even though there's no real evidence that web leaks negative- ly affect record sales if the product is half ALEXA decent. (In a seeming contradiction, the act JON also contains a section exempting devices that automatical- ly censor DVDs for content parents might deem inappropriate. So much for the "intellectual" part.) While bloggers who release copyrighted material are more sus- ceptible to prosecution under FECA than your average pinko file sharer, we commie bastards (in the eyes of the Recording Industry Association of America and Sen. Orrin Hatch, FECA's champion) should know what's happening on the other side of this controversy. You'd think that if RIAA's targeting of students at this and other universities wasn't going to scare us straight, FECA might scare our suppliers enough to derail the whole operation. After all, Joe McCarthy's list of 205 suspected Communists was enough to throw the country into a paranoid frenzy over red infiltra- tion. But this is 2006: Most users of file-sharing programs are young; as RIAA figured out, many of us are naive, insulated college stu- dents wreaking supposed havoc on record sales. We're also armed with laptops with tons of storage space and the cash to pay our high- speed Comcast bill (but not enough, apparently, to shell out for the new Kanye album). But our most powerful weapon is our apathy toward this organiza- tion's self-professed authority. The futility of RIAA's efforts to thwart file sharing through prosecution of both individuals and file-shar- ing networks makes this glaringly obvious. Buying an Audacity membership instead of mooching the service or donating money to the creators of your favorite peer-to-peer client might help them out and give you the warm fuzzies. It seems, how- ever, that the most effective way to confound the RIAA's scheme (and royally piss them off at the same time) is just to download anyway. Despite the cavalier attitude that many students have in common when it comes to file sharing, most people I know will still purchase the albums of quality artists, either via iTunes or the old-fashioned way - you know, the way that involves real, actual pieces of plastic and human contact. At the same time, they'd just as soon burn a CD for a friend as download an album's worth of recommendations; isn't file sharing the same as copied discs, just with a little extra distance and no middle-media? The insatiable need for free; easy-to-access music - not just whatever tripe the Black Eyed Peas or Kelly Clarkson are push- ing this week - is even stronger now that main- stream radio is redefining the phrase "sleazy and pathetic." Unless you live LNDRA RTES within broadcast range of a college radio station (cheers, WCBN!), peer-to-peer clients and MP3 blogs have become the best way to test out new, interesting or hard-to-find music. Downloading music is even more consumer- ist than buying it; we can get all the files our greedy hearts desire. We've just found a better way: File sharing is an endless, free supply that meets our rabid demands. As long as the Internet (or the super-fast, elite Internet2) exists, music fans and tech geeks every- where will always find a way to trade files online. Even if I choose not to download music without buying it afterward (with the excep- tion of material created by art- ists who are dead or undeserving - Michael Jackson shouldn't get a dime because I want to replace my 10-year-old Beatles discs), I still want file sharing to exist. The predicted demise of quality indie labels and acts hasn't happened, probably because their listeners care enough to support them and the online exposure does more good than harm. Think back to when you were a Napster-happy 15-year-old, tying up the phone line all damn day so you could get the Pixies b-sides and unreleased Weezer tracks that you couldn't always afford to buy from your local indie record shop. Fast forward a few years: You eventu- ally paid for Surfer Rosa and all the rest; you giddily bought a ticket to the reunion tour; you coughed up for a hoodie and an on-the-spot live recording at the merch table. There's a way to make file sharing responsible, and it's on our own terms, not the federal government's or the RIAA's. - If you're part of the RIAA and would like to prosecute Jones for her admitted file sharing, e- mail her at almajo@umich.edu. TOMMASO GOMEZ/Daily Models show off designs by Sarah Lurtz and Sarah Lapinski at a fash- ion show earlier this month on Detroit's People Mover. DESIGNER FASHION PURE DETROIT DESIGN LAB BRINGS STYLE AND FLAIR TO THE D By Kimberly Chou Daily Arts Writer It would do well for the Detroit Transportation Corporation to consider combining its $200-million rapid-transit mistake - popularly known as the Peo- ple Mover - with more hand-sewn, urban couture. Derided by bitter commuters and non-native Detroiters, the People Mover found itself in more fashionable light as both tram and catwalk for Pure Detroit Design Lab's March 11 fashion show. The event featured the Fall 2006 collec- tion from Wound, Design Lab director Sarah Lurtz and partner Sarah Lapinski's handmade menswear line. Swathed in reverse-stitch blazers and genie pants, lanky, kohl-eyed models slinked down the Times Square station platform and into the People Mover cars housing VIP buyers and media per- sonnel. Other fashion enthusiasts, photographers and curious onlookers clustered on the platform, cosmic experimental music undercutting the chat- tering voices. Wound's People Mover runway show was a twist on Pure Detroit Design Lab's usual opening festivities. The store-cum-studio features a new artist every two to three weeks and one of their 25 contributing designers about once a month, kick- ing off each respective line with a party. "Whenever the feature designers have a new collection, they get their own rack," Lurtz said. "(Parties) are always on a Friday night ... usually have a DJ and food and drink." Designers also play dress-up with the window showcase. The current display features the West- ern-inspired dresses of Kate Bennett's new ready- to-wear line, accented by pairs of cowboy boots and carefully arranged bales of hay. "Designers can pretty much do whatever they want (with the window display)," Lurtz explained. Part of the growing Pure Detroit mark, the lab functions as both a boutique and a fashion thinktank. Lurtz is most often seen working at the store's centerpiece - a do-it-yourself island with Singer sewing machines - but the variety of designers on tap are encouraged to work in- store as well. Compared to the typical clothing store and its neigh- borhood, the design lab is a self-contained party. "It's the financial district; most of the people down here - it's not their style," Lurtz said."So come in and find us - we're the weird art kids on the block, I guess." While the Pure Detroit label is know for its own line of t-shirts, automotive seatbelt buckle and other 314-friendly products, there are no "Detroit Rock City" or "Cass Corridor" shirts to be found. "We don't have any (Pure Detroit) product and they don't have any of ours," Lurtz said. "Every- thing here is pretty much one-of-a-kind, hand- made by local designers." A little more than a year old, the design lab takes up the corner of Shelby and Congress, down the street from the historic Guardian Building. Its clientele is made of mostly Detroiters, Lurtz said, as well as "destination shoppers" who drive out to browse the colorful racks of recycled vintage clothing, menswear and splashy T-shirts. "We do get some ... international customers as well who just happen to be downtown and come in, so there's definitely pieces floating around in Germany and Japan," Lurtz said. "But when they were filming the movie The Island downtown, when the store first opened, we sold tons of stuff to the people who were cast and crew of The Island, like going back to L.A. and everyone who comes in here is like, " 'Oh, it's so New York!' " Still, Lurtz maintains her shop is something unto itself. Though she says it resembles a mish- mash of stores from around the globe, she has yet to see its defining feature copied elsewhere. "I've traveled a lot and I always find I always scope out the local shops. Internationally, there's a place in Mexico City that reminds me a lot of the design lab - it's like a co-op of local designers," Lurtz said. "(The lab is) kind of a montage, I guess, of shops I've seen and been to. And I don't know of anywhere else that has the sewing machines as well that any (designer) can use. The store's roster of designers include D.S. Bull- ock, Zak Ostrowski and Anastasia Chatzka, a former Betsey Johnson intern with already-impressive P.R. Reconstructed brands like Golden Kitsch and Vin- tage Rescue pepper the racks as well. "(Golden Kitsch) is very representative of Detroit fashion - really kind of pieced togeth- er, random, reworked pieces. Inexpensive. (It's) very do-it-yourself, kind of raw ... a lot of found resources, people finding things and piecing them together all crazy," Lurtz said. "I don't know how to define it." you may be eligible if you: - Are troubled about your lack of sexual desire - Are 18 years or older - Still have regular menstrual cycles - Are in a stable relationship with one man for the past year - Do not suffer from any psychiatric conditions except mild depression - Are otherwise generally healthy J 1:- - ...:a.L. " i A t J Y W\Y t 1 1 r