Straight Outta College
Part I: The Straight Bio
Kembrew McLeod is an independent documentary filmmaker and a media
studies scholar at the University of Iowa whose work focuses on
both popular music and the cultural impact of intellectual property
law. Associate Professor McLeod has written refereed journal articles
on copyright and music, and has published two books on the subject:
Owning Culture: Authorship, Ownership and Intellectual Property
Law (Lang, 2001) and Freedom of Expression®: Overzealous
Copyright Bozos and Other Enemies of Creativity (Doubleday,
2005), which received the Oboler book award from the American Library
Association. McLeod's documentary, Money For Nothing: Behind
the Business of Pop Music (2000), was programmed at a variety
of film festivals, including the 2002 South By Southwest Film Festival
and the 2002 New England Film and Video Festival, where it received
the Rosa Luxemburg Award for Social Consciousness. He is currently
working on a feature length documentary about digital sampling titled
Copyright Criminals: This is a Sampling Sport, as well
as a second documentary, Freedom of Expression®: Resistance
and Repression in the Age of Intellectual Property, which focuses
on free speech and fair use. He is an occasional music journalist
whose pieces have appeared in Rolling Stone, Mojo,
Spin, The Village Voice and the New Rolling
Stone Album Guide (Fireside, 2005). Additionally, McLeod was
involved in Carrie McLaren's traveling “Illegal Art”
show, which traveled to New York, Chicago, and Washington, D.C.,
and was hosted by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s
Artist Gallery in 2003. His scholarly and creative work can be accessed
at kembrew.com.
Part II: The Indexical Bio
Kembrew is a cultural critic, teacher, student, record fetishist,
sometimes-DJ, vanity publisher, provocateur, child, artist, spazz
dancer, zinester, dreamer, misfit, lover (of music) and not a fighter,
and much much more.
Part III: The Free(style) Association Bio
Who'da thunk that I would become a university professor after I
failed my senior year of high school? Thanks to some inspiring teachers
along the way, I decided to give the profession a try because it
appeared to allow me the most freedom of any career option.
Photo: Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Daily Iowan
After
graduating from, essentially, twenty-second grade and getting my
Ph.D in Communication at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst
(shout out to Western Mass!), I joined the faculty in the Department
of Communication Studies at the University of Iowa.
To use a Grateful Dead-invoking cliche (yecchhh), it's been a long
strange trip, one that includes deconstruction, dancing (doing the
bunny hop while old school hip-hop legend Afrika Bambaataa spun
records for an audience that included only ten people, five of us
professors ... that was awesome), and, memorably, a fellow
grad student catching on fire (true story).
After seven years in Iowa City chasing the children of the corn
through the field of dreams -- and after getting tenure, you punks!
-- I still solemnly swear to put the "ass" back in associate
professor (just as I put the "ass" in assistant professor
for six years).
Lastly, as always, I reserve the right to rock. To poorly paraphrase
Alice Cooper, school's in session 4-eva!
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