Gee, lighten up Apple!
One of the devices pictured above is the Vision Pro, a $3,500 'spatial computer' created by the world's largest tech company. The other is the iHead, a non-existent parody product that predates the Vision Pro and was created for a music video by a special effects artist who worked with Monty Python.
Apple seems to be worried that we won't be able to tell which is which. The Apple Vision Pro release date isn't due until next year, but the tech giant clearly doesn't want anything to upset the launch of what will be its first entirely new product in years – and perhaps its riskiest ever. And that includes people taking the mick . The iHead is the subject of a satirical sketch recorded by Britain's most learned comedian Stephen Fry back in 2019. What could be considered a Vision Pro parody before its time, has now been released as part of the album Super Connected by British singer-songwriter Tim Arnold. And the album has been banned from Apple Music as a result. The offending track is a clearly fake advert with a tongue-in-cheek sales pitch for the iHead, a device created by 81-year-old special effects artist Valerie Charlton. However, Apple says it won't accept the track because it could be mistaken for real advertising. Local Muswell Hill based artist Valerie Charlton and creator of the iHead said this:1/5. “Tim Arnold’s film ‘Superconnected' is a surreal art work - a musical film questioning of one of the most important issues of our time…technology’s intrusion into our lives and minds. pic.twitter.com/HEmTbxqQaqArnold has cited examples of other albums that contain joke ads but faced no such band, including The Who Sell Out. He says the parody is integral to the concept of his album, which is described by Mojo as a"glam rocking, Black Mirror concept". The album criticises how digital services mediate in the way we consume music today – a theme that is explored in the track below and whose video also features the 'iHead' device. Several well-known musicians, including members of the Kaiser Chiefs, Spandau Ballet and Wet Wet Wet have signed an calling on Apple to back down. In the letter, Arnold refers to how Apple's first Mac advert referenced George Orwell's 1984, arguing that the company now seems to be committing the kind of censorship we might expect from a Big Brother regime. "Perhaps the paradox of this parody has unearthed an Apple policy that Apple customers and artists are not aware of?" the letter reads."Whatever it is, this entire debacle signals a potentially corrosive turn in the freedom of independent artists to express their art on digital platforms. "In my role as a mentor to young musicians, I fear younger artists may feel compelled to conform to the objections of streaming companies, inadvertently succumbing to a culture where those companies shape, control, and even censor art." The debacle also appears to prove something that we've always suspected. Apple really doesn't have a sense of humour. Sadly it does, however, produce some of the best tech around for creatives (just see our
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