Josh Begley (born 1984) is an American digital artist known for his data visualizations. He is the creator of Metadata+, an iPhone app that tracked every reported United Statesdrone strike.[1] Begley is the director of two short films, Best of Luck with the Wall (2016) and Concussion Protocol (2018), both produced by Academy Award-winning director Laura Poitras.[2] He is based in Brooklyn, New York.[citation needed]
In July 2012, Begley developed an iPhone application that would send a push notification every time there was a US drone strike in Pakistan, Yemen, or Somalia. Apple rejected the app three times in the months following its release,[7] calling its content "crude and objectionable".[8] Begley then created Dronestream, a Twitter account chronicling every reported US drone strike,[9] for Douglas Rushkoff's Narrative Lab. It gained 15,000 followers in the first week.[10][11]
Begley is the director of Best of Luck with the Wall (2016), a documentary short about the geography of the U.S.-Mexico border.[18] It was made with 200,000 satellite images downloaded from Google Maps.[19] It received Honorary Mention at 2017 Prix Ars Electronica and was nominated for an ICP Infinity Award.[20]
In 2018, Begley released his second short film, Concussion Protocol (2018), produced by Academy Award-winning director Laura Poitras. The New Yorker called it "a chasteningly gorgeous accounting of each concussion reported during the current N.F.L. season."[21]
"Redlining", (2012) an online archive of redlining maps overlaid on California cities.[26][27]
"Kickstriker", (2012) a parody site Begley built with classmates Mehan Jayasuriya and James Borda, purporting to crowdfund military interventions in global conflicts.[28]
"The Listserve", part of a NYU class project built by Begley with Greg Dorsainville, Yoonjo Choi, Alvin Chang and Zena Koo.[29] A listserv-like email list where one randomly selected list member per day can send an email to the entire list.[29]
"Racebox", (2010) a website showing the race section of the United States Census through history, from 1790 to 2010.[30] This project explores historical racial identities in the United States and the relationship between government and race.[19]
^"The Knotted Line". AIM Hatchfund. 2011. Archived from the original on 2018-10-04. Retrieved 2018-10-04. He is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley.