Introduction: Interrogating and Integrating Access
The video, seen here, draws its humor from the inadequacies of autocaptioning, as they state that“The whole process is automated. The computer listens to the video, and displays what it thinks it hears. So, the results are always off, and usually pretty hilarious.” While automatic captions could greatly increase access for many people with disabilities and others in need of textual or translation services, this video and others in the CAPTION FAIL series demonstrate their failures. Furthermore, the videos themselves are inaccessible; autocaptioning is appropriated for the humor it creates for a hearing audience, while the needs of people who require accessible media are ignored.
Though intended for other purposes, these videos also skewer autocaptioning, and speak to the ways in which digital media technologies have not solved problems of access and inclusion, and may even have exacerbated them by taking< for granted an able-bodied user position, potentially restricting access for users with a variety of disabilities.