Page 7 - IAV Digital Magazine #515
P. 7

iAV - Antelope Valley Digital Magazine
If 2021 Already Seems Like Too Much, There's A Hotline That Urges People To Call In And Scream
By Lauren M. Johnson, CNN
(CNN)Those exhausted by 2021 -- and well, all of 2020 -- can get some relief by calling a hotline and screaming. Yes, really.
Just Scream!, a hotline created by elementary school teacher Chris Gollmar, aims to reduce tension for those needing an outlet. All you have to do is call the hotline and scream for as loud as you want, and for as long as you want -- and then hang up.
"I wanted to find a prompt that peo- ple would respond to and screaming seemed to be a good fit!" Gollmar told CNN of his creative project, which he came up with in September 2020 and launched just before Election Day in November.
Gollmar, who said he's been an artist and coder since he was a kid, spends his free time working on participatory art projects that invite people to call a phone num- ber and leave a voicemail for oth- ers to hear.
This time, he said he "thought it would be funny and unique to cre- ate a phone line just for scream- ing."
After people dial in, their calls are recorded and put on the website Gollmar created.
"Why should I call you?" the
website asks."To scream! You might be unhap- py, terrified, frus- trated, or elated. All of these are perfectly good reasons to call and record your- self screaming."
Personal phone numbers are not stored, and all calls go to an answering machine -- so interacting with a real person isn't required.
According to the website, there is currently a back- log of over 40,000 screams waiting to upload.
"Wow! That's a lot of screaming!" the website states, noting if
people can't hear their own scream that it may still be processing.
Gollmar said he's gotten 70,000 recordings since launching the hot- line.
"Never in my life would I have expected so many people to actually pick up the phone, dial a number and record them- selves for the world to hear," he
said. "But we're all screaming on the inside right now, so I guess I should have fig- ured."
The hotline will stop accepting calls on January 21. After that, Gollmar said he will pick a new project to work on.
"I've always intended it (the hotline) to be a limited-term proj- ect -- a reflection of this point in time when, in addition to all the stress of the pan- demic, we're also experiencing polit- ical turmoil in the United States," he said. "I've started thinking about it like a time cap- sule, in a way."
Don't worry, though: The screams will remain on the project's website. Happy listening.
iAV - Antelope Valley Digital Magazine


































































































   5   6   7   8   9