In this faux-recreation of a home-shopping network, Al Gore and George W. Bush offer you a 'super-premium' collectible lamp commemorating the 2000 presidential election. “Ever wonder if politicians aren't just cheap evangelists pimping packaged politics to a bleary-eyed electorate too tired, transfixed or dumb to change the channel? Apparently you're not alone. In the hilarious short Election Collectibles, San Francisco's Bryan Boyce uses his patented "stunt mouth" technique to superimpose infomercial blowholes on Bush and Gore, candidates as "factory-sealed" as the products they endorse.”
Using footage from CNN and ABC news reports, Boyce possesses American news anchors with the spirits of old-time sci-fi who speak the virtues of electronic hypnosis and rule through fear. He superimposes lips on the news anchors and makes them utter classic lines from classic films, amongst others Dracula.
Video remix artist Brian Boyce combines appropriated CNN footage of George W. Bush with clips from The Teletubbies used without permission. This remix was a part of the 2002 Illegal Art Exhibit sponsored by Stay Free! magazine.
Walt Disney's re-imagineering of Martin Scorsese's classic film Taxi Driver follows Mickey Mouse-obsessed Travis Bickle as he looks for love in a rapidly transforming New York City. A 'fair use' parody by Bryan Boyce.
A sequel of sorts to Road Show, image to text to image is a journey through the latent space of an AI diffusion model using 21 photos as stepping stones. Whenever the image is still, it is a real photograph. Whenever there is movement, it is a computationally hallucinated wormhole through the machine memory of five billion images.