Her latest venture is 'Hacktivist,' a four-issue graphic novel/comic book whose heroes run a world-beating social media company by day and practice world-beating social activism by night.
February 05, 2014 | Patt Morrison
When you've been working since you were 8, as Alyssa Milano has, it takes a
special kind of role to get you really excited. Using your birthday to raise
money for clean water in Ethiopia, for instance. Or hunkering down with the
beleaguered in Kosovo and Angola, as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador. Or getting
help for African women and children with AIDS. Or her latest — creating "Hacktivist,"
a four-issue graphic novel/comic book whose heroes run a world-beating social
media company by day and practice world-beating social activism by night. The
star of TV's "Charmed" and "Who's the Boss?" has a lot to say, in 140 characters
or more.
How did you become engaged in the "Hacktivist" issues — social media, the
hacker group Anonymous and digital radicals?
During the protests in Iran, I was fascinated that [the news] media were not in
Iran, yet they were reporting what they were learning on Twitter or Facebook. I
found that to be monumental. People were using social media to put things in
motion, and there were coders here cracking codes there, opening up firewalls.
People came together to make things happen.
I thought, "This is revolutionary. This is how things are going to change."
WikiLeaks and Anonymous and these groups exposing what was happening and trying
to create transparency [about] everything going on in the world — it's very much
what journalists did in the '60s and '70s, except now we have total access to
all information.
What do you think of the Edward Snowden saga?
There are certain people who, whether it be through fate or their own tenacity,
change things up. Just as it took a certain type of person to break the color
barrier in baseball, it took this guy, who had to know what the ramifications
were going to be. He would take the risk for what he truly believes is the
betterment of the country, regardless of what his critics believe, to get an
outcome that would potentially change the way we function. If it wasn't Snowden,
it would have been another guy as ballsy and well-positioned.
Is transparency always a good thing? Daniel Ellsberg withheld several volumes
of the Pentagon Papers because they were about peace negotiations still in
progress.
It's hard to be fighting for transparency if you're not going to be totally
transparent. Organizations like Anonymous and WikiLeaks are swinging the
pendulum [against secrecy] so that it balances out in the middle. Do I think
it's helpful that all of the information is out? No, but I feel it's almost a
necessity now. Politically, socially, it's so horrifying — I'm disenchanted by
the entire political process, the entire media process. It's kind of corrupt.
Your comic's two protagonists run a social media company but have the
hacktivist thing going too.
They're two sides of the same coin, and how this technology can be used for good
and bad. The bad part starts to show itself in the second issue.
You have access to TV and filmmakers — why choose comics to tell a story?
Being in television for as long as I have, I didn't want to pitch this and have
them tell me every single reason why it couldn't be done or had to be done in a
certain way. I wanted the idea to be in its purest form and not have any
boundaries, and that just doesn't happen anymore in film and television.
Archaia's [editor], Stephen Christy, got it immediately. I'm not
sure many other [comic] companies would have taken the risk because there's no
guy with superpowers or some crazy suit or a cape. There's no gimmick. It's two
regular guys who are changing the world through their skill, which is hacking,
coding.
We didn't have any of those things that you go up against with a studio or a
network trying to tell you to keep under budget. If we wanted a helicopter chase
scene, it didn't cost us any more money! It was very fulfilling.
Who is your audience?
The comic book fan, the technology fan, and I hope the fans who have grown up
with me, who might not be into graphic novels, would have some interest in this.
I hope it does great things for the comic book industry and women within it. I
really want to make it easier for women in comics
When you were researching the story line, you met with some hackers. One
hacked your phone as you sat across from him.
This is what these guys do. We had some high-up members of Anonymous who helped
in making sure everything I was portraying was at least feasible. I would love
to go to one of these hacking conventions.
You've been clever in using the Internet to make a point, in your tweets or
in posting a mock-sex tape at "Funny or Die" that was a dig at Americans'
interest in world affairs.
I was not making a political statement; I was making a social statement.