Tuesday, October 30, 2018

The Power of Useless Things

In 2015, journalist Simone Giertz posted a video on Youtube entitled "The Toothbrush Machine".  In it, she showed off her makeshift robot, a helmet that supposedly "brushes your teeth".  It's absurd and clearly doesn't work, a piece of engineering that was entirely useless, but the video quickly went viral, and in the years since, Simone has made an entire business around making entirely useless machines.



In her TED talk, Simone talks about how she decided to make useless machines as a way to deal with her performance anxiety. Instead of trying to make things that work, she decided to make things that would intentionally not work—that way, failure was a success. She used her robots and her videos to work on her anxiety and as a way to teach herself about hardware and engineering; in the talk, she says:
So as much as my machines can seem like simple engineering slapstick, I realize that I stumbled on something bigger than that. It's this expression of joy and humility that often gets lost in engineering, and for me it was a way to learn about hardware without having my performance anxiety get in the way. I often get asked if I think I'm ever going to build something useful, and maybe someday I will. But the way I see it, I already have because I've built myself this job and [...] It's something that I could never have planned for. Instead it happened just because I was enthusiastic about what I was doing, and I was sharing that enthusiasm with other people. 
To me that's the true beauty of making useless things, because it's this acknowledgment that you don't always know what the best answer is. And it turns off that voice in your head that tells you that you know exactly how the world works. And maybe a toothbrush helmet isn't the answer, but at least you're asking the question.

Simone is not an engineer.  She never went to school for it, and everything she knows is self-taught, primarily through the robots she makes for her channel.  She describes her process as "creative chaos".  She says that "identifying a problem is the first step in my process of building a useless machine."
But when you’re sitting at home and not doing anything, you might start thinking about different problems you have or practical things you want to improve. That’s what my strategy has become. It’s not glamorous — people think it would be a very creative, sticky-note-intensive kind of process — but it’s basically just me sitting and thinking, "Brushing my teeth is boring, is there a more fun way to do it?"
Another large part of her process is the importance of failure.  "[...] it’s better to build things than not build things," she says. "[...] in some cases, building things is a part of a 'Yes, and' approach. It’s asking, 'Why should we do this?' instead of 'Why shouldn’t we do this?'"  Like what is described in Wired article "Accept Defeat: The Neuroscience of Screwing UpAccept Defeat: The Neuroscience of Screwing Up", failure is not always failure.  Sometimes failures are successes when you're asking the right questions.  And even if failure is just failure, Simone puts it best in saying, "The build process has a purpose in and of itself, especially when you’re trying to innovate and create things."  Sometimes its about the process itself, not the result.



Failure is part of Simone's brand.  In her "I built a hammering machine that destroys everything" video, she attempts to make a robot that moves two hammers up and down.  Throughout the video, she shows her initial failures, seeking help from a friend, and ultimately building a machine that destroys more than it creates.  But in the end, she decides to "embrace its true nature" and just let it destroy things.

She doesn't just build bad robots; Simone builds things that work, too, including her recent Kickstarter for a habit calendar.  But it's in her failures and her useless projects that she makes a great impact, showing off engineering to those who may not have otherwise been exposed to it, providing hilarious entertainment, and building a community that values failure just as much as success.

6 comments:

  1. I think that Simone's videos are great, and she really gets at the heart of creativity! I've seen her TED Talk before and really loved it, and that was my introduction to her silly creations. The reason I like her take on creativity so much is because I think that a lot of times, with the Big-C Creatives we look at in class for example, we get caught up in picking a lofty problem to solve, or wanting ro revolutionize the way we live. But Simone picks 'problems' that aren't really problems at all, and solves them anyways, which makes creativity lighthearted and accessible to all.

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  2. I think that the case of Simone Giertz is an excellent example of the importance of "use" in creativity. When we were thinking of definitions of creativity back in September, many included some sort of use in addition to pure novelty, though here, use is hard to definitively categorize.

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  3. I think this is an excellent example of everything creativity can be when it's freed from the constraints that we unwittingly place on it. Our fear of failure so often gets in the way of us taking risks or trying new things and can really impact our creative output. I think that facing this fear head on like Giertz does lets us explore the possibilities of the creative process much better, and you can really see that effect in how fun and inventive all of Giertz's creations are.

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  4. I love how Giertz has redefined how creators and inventors are meant to look at their products. She lets failure empower her to create more - in fact, failure is the entire point of her experiments and inventions. Her ability to have fun and laugh at her creations is really what kids should be taught about science and their creativity. Furthermore, although she is most known for her ridiculous robots, the fact that she also lets her creativity roam and create beyond what she's used to shows how wide creativity can spread.

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  5. It's nice that she just creates things for the sake of creating them! This seems like a nice way to distress and remind oneself of how life shouldn't be too serious. Her whole process is to do something in a low pressure environment and see what happens. This allows her to be even more creative which is awesome!

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  6. I think this is a good example of intrinsic motivation because Simone literally started making these objects to better herself and her state of mind. I love how her creative process is almost opposite of everyone else's because she encourages failure over full-on success.

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