Slop Engagement Factory · v01

Two frames, one machine.

A static record of the process: starting from an LVT reading of Farage, the media, and the Overton window, then turning that analysis into two short vertical video treatments with a bass-and-Shepard-tone tension bed resolving into a major chord.

Watch the videos Read the process
Core thesis

The media are not outside the event. Their reaction is one of the materials from which the event is made.

The project began with a simple interpretive problem. Farage’s move was being treated as baffling by incumbent media voices, but the move itself was straightforward: convert institutional condemnation into a direct public legitimacy test. In LVT terms, the incumbent system emits a control signal intended to mark someone as outside the acceptable set. Farage’s system captures that same signal and reprocesses it as proof that the acceptable set is being policed.

End product

The two cuts

Left-side Overton frame

Crisis of mediated democracy

This version avoids asking the viewer to like Farage. It frames the issue as a breakdown in mediated public decision-making: democratic legitimacy is filtered through elite language first, and the public is becoming aware of the filter.

Download left version
Right-side Overton frame

Collapse of the old attention economy

This version states the conflict more directly. It treats establishment condemnation as boundary-policing and argues that Farage’s strategic reversal is turning the old sanction into campaign material.

Download right version
Build log

How the piece was made

01

LVT reading

The starting analysis treated politics as measurement converted into control-values. The incumbent parties and media measure Farage as deviant, then emit reputational sanctions. Farage treats those sanctions as evidence of elite hostility and converts them into salience, authenticity, and mobilization.

02

Overton-window translation

The Overton window was treated as a control surface rather than a neutral spectrum. Incumbent actors maintain the acceptable set by mutually validating what can be said. Farage’s move exposes the boundary by forcing the boundary-maintainers to react.

03

Two-audience strategy

The same structural claim was translated into two different frames. The left-facing version emphasizes democratic mediation, legitimacy, and the failure of elite framing. The right-facing version emphasizes establishment boundary-policing, media hatred, and the collapse of legacy authority.

04

Text-timeline videos

The first visual form was deliberately minimal: black background, centered text, vertical format, and a simple pacing structure. The purpose was to create an editable scaffold where visuals could later be inserted behind or between the text cards.

05

Audio tension bed

The audio was built from a low filtered bass throb and an abrasive rising Shepard-chord layer. The Shepard tone acts like a sonic barber pole: it gives the impression of endless escalation while cycling internally.

06

Definite resolution

The ending was revised so the resolution begins earlier and lands clearly on the final punchline. The tension ducks, the bass slides into the root, and the final scene resolves into a held E major chord under a large reverb field.

Text explainer

What the videos are saying

The videos document a transition in public decision-making. The old model assumed that media, parties, and credentialed commentators could frame an event, classify the legitimate interpretation, and steer public meaning before the public made its decision. That model depended on trust in the framers. The Farage case shows what happens when the frame itself becomes visible. Once the public starts watching the people who claim to explain the public, every act of condemnation becomes unstable. It may still disqualify the target for one audience, but for another it becomes proof that the target has found the boundary.

The left-facing treatment translates this into democratic language. It asks what happens when public legitimacy is mediated by elite filters before voters are allowed to judge. The right-facing treatment translates the same structure into anti-establishment language. It says the old media system used to make politicians unacceptable by agreeing they were unacceptable, but Farage’s trick is to make that agreement the evidence. Both versions describe the same machine from different sides of the Overton window.

Included files

Project assets

The zip includes both final videos, the silent text-timeline versions, the wet and dry audio beds, the editable timeline text files, and this static website.