Thursday, June 30, 2005
this week's netflix
Angels in America, Part 2: I was still in New York when I watched the first half of this miniseries, and I'm surprised how long it took me to get back to it. The acting and writing are fantastic, but I'm afraid my reluctance to return had to do with two of my own issues: discomfort with scenes of disease and death and a lack of interest in magical realism. However, the film is so much more than that, and it is definitely worth watching.
Remember Me, My Love: This Italian film reminded me of American Beauty at one point in its portrayal of the way a family can be living together in the same house and yet still have completely separate, secret lives. The characters are engaging - at times amusing, at times cringeworthy - and the plot hinges around what happens to a man who loses his chance with Monica Bellucci.
The Aviator: I wasn't initially interested in this film because it featured Leonardo DiCaprio, but he pulled it off. His Howard Hughes was sympathetically neurotic (when he wasn't hiring women to be his "employees"), even if I can't imagine any actress with whom Leo could conjure some chemistry. I was pleased to see Scorcese toning it down a little, and when he did unleash the violence, it was in the form of the most amazing plane crash scene I have ever seen. I realized halfway through that the majority of my knowledge of Howard Hughes had been gleaned from The Simpsons, so I was thankful for the history lesson.
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Tuesday, June 28, 2005
no ice water in hell! fire hot!
- Timothy K. Beal's Roadside Religion: In Search of the Sacred, the Strange, and the Substance of Faith is "a blue highways exploration of roadside religious attractions like Golgotha Fun Park and Holy Land, USA."
- David Fincher will be adapting F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" with Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett. The popularity of this theme of a man aging backwards is growing out of control. See also: Young Lions winner The Confessions of Max Tivoli and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Apt. 3W
- Richard Hell has a new CD and a new book. I saw him in New York not long before I left, and I was able to wrangle him into a conversation about my dissertation. That's what he gets for lecturing on Nathanael West.
- I came across this bizarre ad on Craigslist for an image control expert. Military intelligentsia welcome.
- Donna Tartt has a new story in The Guardian's original fiction issue. If you haven't read The Little Friend, I highly recommend it. (Later: The Tartt story has mysteriously disappeared, but there are many other reasons to check out the issue.)
- Chuck Klosterman is the latest guest on largehearted boy's Book Notes, providing a soundtrack for his recent release, Killing Yourself to Live.
- Doubting Hall offers a guided tour around the works of Evelyn Waugh.
suicidal tendencies circa 1947
For example, on June 27th:
Distraught over her pending separation from fiance Billy Allen, 19-year-old Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton, Pearl L. Reid, 16, drank poison today at her home at 2653 Loosmore Street. She died. When Billy saw what she had done he too quaffed the deadly draught, and lies in serious condition in Long Beach's Naval Hospital. His doctors are optimistic for his survival, at least from the immediate threat.
From May 31st:
The 70-year-old jewelry store worker, despondent over poor health and fading eyesight, entered the mortuary, tapped on the office glass to get Mrs. Dell's attention, then drank from a bottle of poison and collapsed. A note on his body explained Rawles' reasons.
From April 25th:
Police are still trying to make sense of a last night's mysterious car chase in Echo Park. It all started when Motorcycle Office Carl Ericson spotted a taxicab that has been suspiciously repainted blue. He gave chase, and the vehicle turned onto Echo Park Avenue, racing past the lake and south towards Beverly. In front of 512 Echo Park Ave., the cab collided with a car driven by Walter Cliburne, 35, of 1947 Preston Ave. Cliburne's car ended up atop both the cab and a parked car. An ambulence was called, and the attendants directed their attention to the injured, still-unidentified cab driver. Suddenly he brought a vial of poison up to his mouth and made as to swallow. Attempts to wrest it away were fruitless, and the mystery man said, "I am going to die, so let me die."
I assume poison can only be even more effective than it was in 1947, so I wonder why it has fallen so far out of favor.
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Monday, June 27, 2005
who believes in love galore?
(Thanks to swedesplease for the sunshine.)
Later: If you absolutely refuse to give it up for the sunny weather, you can sulk under the clouds with a sad, sad favorite, Dayna Kurtz's "Love, Where Did You Go?" I loved this song so much when I first heard it in March that I rushed out to buy the CD, and it holds the dubious honor of being the only thing (well, inanimate object) that I lost in the move to L.A.
Sunday, June 26, 2005
fearless freaks al fresco

Thanks to a free screening sponsored by the Los Angeles Film Festival, I saw The Fearless Freaks Friday night under the stars. (Sure, it was in the courtyard of a glorified mall, but hey! there was free popcorn, ice cream, and seat cushions.) I've been on a bit of a music documentary kick lately, so it was interesting to compare this portrait of The Flaming Lips, a band I much admire, to other recent offerings: DIG!, Some Kind of Monster, and Malfunkshun. Sadly, The Fearless Freaks suffered in comparison. Even if you have a compelling subject like The Flaming Lips, it does not let you off the hook from having a narrative arc. Even the most dramatic scene of Steven Drozd prepping his heroin rig on-camera came practically out of nowhere. Band members came and went with barely a mention of reasons for their departure, and while Wayne Coyne is lovely to listen to, a documentary for the ages needs more gravitas.
Other reviews: The New York Times, The Village Voice, Seattle PI, PopMatters
Friday, June 24, 2005
it's the kung fu littéraire!
Outside the restaurant, Houellebecq took a break to smoke a small cigar and talk about his literary rivals in France. “People claim to attack each other for ideological reasons, but it’s much more animalistic than that — it’s because they inhabit the same space.” Then he dropped into a martial-arts crouch and looked quickly from side to side. “They come from the left, they come from the right — it’s the kung fu littéraire!” he said, launching himself into a series of surprisingly deft swivels and kicks, dispatching his enemies one after another. But when it came to Bernard-Henri Lévy, the celebrated French philosopher known by his initials, “BHL,” Houellebecq transformed himself into a raptor out of a cheap Japanese horror movie and bit Lévy’s head off. “That was BHL, folks!”
In other follow-up news, I was not able to attend the Los Angeles Conservatory event, "Looking at Los Angeles" (mentioned here), and apparently I missed Julius Shulman telling Ben Stiller his work was crap.
Thursday, June 23, 2005
is this a comment on literary ego?

Giancarlo Neri's sculpture "The Writer" is on display in England. (Notice the little tourist.)
Later: Loneliness. Not ego.
Wednesday, June 22, 2005
popsicle meltdown
The 25-foot-tall, 17½-ton treat of frozen Snapple juice melted faster than expected Tuesday, flooding Union Square in downtown Manhattan with kiwi-strawberry-flavored fluid that sent pedestrians scurrying for higher ground.
Firefighters closed off several streets and used hoses to wash away the sugary goo.
“What was unsettling was that the fluid just kept coming,” Stuart Claxton of the Guinness Book of World Records told the Daily News. “It was quite a lot of fluid. On a hot day like this, you have to move fast.
”

five, seven, five
Tuesday, June 21, 2005
the world could use some good news
children are whores
"Children are whores," he says bluntly. "They are ready to repeat what they see on the TV screen, and it was the same with us." So did he believe it when he was writing it? "I don't know. I don't remember. I remember having been completely confused the morning when I woke up and I said to myself, do I really love the Duce?... So it means that we had doubts."
if kafka had a blog
Today, for instance, I was rude three times, once to a conductor, once to someone introduced to me—so there were only 2, but they pain me like a stomachache. Coming from anyone else it would have been rude; how much more so coming from me...Though now I say to myself: look, the world lets you strike it, the conductor and the man you were introduced to kept calm, the latter even said goodbye as you went off. But that means nothing. You can achieve nothing when you fail yourself, but what else do you miss in your own circle? To this speech I answer only: even I would rather suffer blows inside the circle than strike blows myself outside of it, but where the hell is this circle—for a while, yes, I saw it lying on the earth, as if squirted out with chalk, but now it just hangs like this around me, it doesn’t even hang at all.
heaven or hell?
From his office window in Mauritius' new Cybertower--a sleek blue glass and gray stone tower that is the heart of the country's first high-tech park--Rahim can point out one of five new radio transmission antennas his company has installed in the last month perched beside a Hindu temple on a nearby green mountainside.
Sunday, June 19, 2005
mix post: the loquacity edition
And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead - Mistakes and Regrets
Andrew Bird - A Nervous Tic Motion of the Head to the Left
Beulah - If We Can Land a Man on the Moon, Surely I Can Win Your Heart
The Carter Family - John Hardy Was a Desperate Little Man
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Upon This Tidal Wave of Young Blood
Kelly Jean Caldwell - Reinventing Our First Kiss (And All the Parties That You Missed)
The Most Serene Republic - Content Was Always My Favorite Color
The Nanobot Auxiliary Ballet and Insect Art with the Office of
Of Montreal - Wraith Pinned to the Mist (And Other Games)
Say Hi to Your Mom - The Forest Scares the Hell Out of Me
The Prayers and Tears of Arthur Digby Sellers - Concerning Lessons Learned from the Aliens
Friday, June 17, 2005
a little bit of what you fancy does you good
- If you feel you have too many artists in your country, you can always ramp up the smoking bans. (Via artkrush)
- Please help Coldplay write another song. And God help Katie Holmes. (Via lindsayism)
- What language does your dog bark in? (Also, check out the cruiser and the frog.)
- Your clever little blog could get you fired (if you're not too swift).
- Rock & roll rule #5: The clothes make the man.
- Grammar Cop on the rampage in Coney Island...(via boing boing)
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
sunday @ skylight: john dicker
There are also a number of other great literary events going on this weekend, such as:
Nick Hornby @ Vroman's, Pasadena (Friday, 7:00 PM)
Joy Nicholson @ Dutton's (Friday, 7:00 PM)
The Cocaine Chronicles @ Skylight (Friday, 7:30 PM)
Looking at Los Angeles w/David Ulin @ Arclight (Saturday, 10:30 AM)
Nick Hornby (again) @ Book Soup (Saturday, 2:00 PM)
Umberto Eco @ Central Library (Saturday, 3:00 PM)
Umberto Eco (again) @ Dutton's (Saturday, 7:00 PM)
Salvador Plascencia @ Skylight (Saturday, 7:30 PM)
(But don't get booked-out before Sunday!)
Later: Here's something of a preview...
Tuesday, June 14, 2005
cleaning out the bookmark file
- Flickr has a photo game for us: Guess Where L.A.
- DaFONT has the top 100 font downloads for free. Choose from Mulder Handwriting, Cocaine Sans, Deejay Supreme, Barcode Font, and Dumpster Diver, among others.
- If you were living in Los Angeles a hundred years ago, you could get fifty dollars in gold for having a baby in Venice.
- NPR has John Doe talking about John Fante and The White Stripes talking about Get Behind Me Satan.
- There are some great Geraldine Fibbers and solo downloads at Carla Bozulich's site.
- My old work 'hood is getting Manhattan's first 7-11.
- Via A Fool in the Forest, The National Archives highlight their collection The Art of War, including my favorite propaganda piece below.
Monday, June 13, 2005
experience the experience
Saturday, June 11, 2005
mix post: the intergalactic edition
Alina Simone - Love and Rockets
The Apes - Beyond Beyond
Ballboy - Leave the Earth and Take a Walk into the Sunshine
Big Star - Take Care
Casio Casanova - Cosmos
Gorillaz - Every Planet We Reach Is Dead
Madagascar - All That Spring You Could See Halley's Comet
The Memory Band - This Is How We Walk on the Moon
The National - Looking for Astronauts
The Planet The - You Absorb My Vision
Yellow #5 - Moon Man
"And where are the scientists, Southern California's most precious crop, who have shaped its rocket-propelled postwar economy? In fact, the fate of science in Los Angeles exemplifies the role reversal between practical reason and what the Disneyites call 'imagineering.' Where one might have expected the presence of the world's largest scientific and engineering community to cultivate a regional enlightenment, science has consorted instead with pulp fiction, vulgar psychology, and even satanism to create yet another layer of California cultdom."
- Mike Davis, City of Quartz
space
Friday, June 10, 2005
culture war shrapnel
While culture warriors will continue to fight for the right not to party, the PTC has too much whipped cream on its hands to let this slide...If you’re going to prance about on your moral high horse, know that it’s bad form to grind yourself off in the saddle.
Thursday, June 09, 2005
grapes or jello cubes? the eternal question
Keith Chen is a 29-year-old Yale economist who is teaching capuchin monkeys to use money. Why? Well, to see what they spend it on, and how their spending might relate to human spending... A capuchin monkey must decide how to spend his budget of twelve coins...Two human research assistants are present (one wearing blue and one wearing red), and both hold a piece of food in an orange dish for the monkey to see. The red research assistant "sells" grapes and the blue research assistant "sells" Jell-o cubes, with each piece of food costing a coin from the monkey's budget. The capuchin must make a decision analogous to a grocery store shopper's: how much of their budget to spend on grapes and how much to spend on Jell-o.
Anyone who knows me knows that if I were a capuchin monkey, it would be all grapes all the time.
maybe the capuchin monkeys will buy it
but if you tell, it won't be a secret anymore
Wednesday, June 08, 2005
praying for a publicity stunt - part 2
Last night on the news, I saw this story of a team of filmmakers who have disappeared in Namibia. They were working on a documentary about witchcraft, when they were cursed by a witch, began to experience various mechanical problems, and eventually were abandoned in the desert due to a miscommunication. When I tried to look into the story further, I couldn't find any more information, and Google kept posting link after link to the Blair Witch Project.
Los Angeles publicist Sherri Spillane identified the missing as Los Angeles pilot Christopher Banninger; British-born businessman Mike Edson; Russian actor Oleg Taktarov; South African athlete K.J. Lodge; and a sex therapist and radio host who goes by the name of Natasha Terry. The five were brought by helicopter to a camping area on Friday and were supposed to be picked up the following day, said Spillane, ex-wife of crime writer Mickey Spillane.
Due to a "mis-communication," the helicopter pilot did not arrive until Sunday, she said.
When the pilot did show up, he "found a note in a bag saying (the campers) were headed west toward the coast," presumably on foot, Spillane said.
The pilot described the region as "the hottest area they could possibly go to," she said.
Later: See also AllAfrica.com (where a Namibian police representative claims to have not heard of the case) and Interfax, but for the most part, there is still very little web coverage of this case a week later.
better late than never: the follow-up
Q: What sparked 'We Need To Talk About Kevin'?
A: An intersection of the public and the private. I was in my early forties, and contending with the fact that my tentative decision to forgo children was soon to be writ in stone. What was I so afraid of? Meanwhile, stories kept pouring in from the U.S. about kids shooting up their high schools. I thought: that (among a host of other things) is what I’m afraid of.
this week's netflix
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou: I'm a fan of Wes Anderson and, I think like most of his fans, I was disappointed by this film. It seemed to go in too many directions at once without going in any one direction far enough. Is it a comedy? Is it surrealism? Is it a family tragedy? What is it? When Owen Wilson's character met his end, I didn't know if I was supposed to laugh, cry, smoke a cigarette, slap Willem Dafoe...
Finding Neverland: A few of my female friends had called and said, "OMG, you have to see this movie," so I figured Johnny Depp was looking scrubbed and yummy. Johnny, unlike Wes, did not disappoint. The film itself was perfectly charming, but that perfection made it slightly dull. I also found it a bit hard to believe JM Barrie and Sylvia Davies never kissed once. Not once. Not even on her deathbed. Not once.
Kinsey: I had been looking forward to this film since its release. Liam Neeson, Laura Linney, and Peter Sarsgaard all gave powerful performances, and the story itself is titillating and historically significant. I did wish we had learned more about the actual surveys, their results, and their impact on society, but I guess that's what the book is for. Or maybe I'll just read TC Boyle...The very next day after seeing this film, I caught about five minutes of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? and the contestant's question was what species Kinsey was studying before humans (wasps, if you haven't seen it). The contestant called his phone-a-friend, and the phone-a-friend said he was pretty sure it was rats. Isn't your phone-a-friend supposed to be sitting there with his finger on the Internet trigger? Rats.
Tarnation: The hype around this documentary was pretty outrageous, and for once, I'd say the hype was completely deserved. This film comes as close to a cinematic representation of madness as anything I've ever seen. It's painful, not pretty, and very moving.
Reconstruction: This movie was silly. It didn't come close to reaching the impressive metaphysical heights to which it aspired, but it did present a thoroughly enjoyable tour of beautiful downtown Copenhagen. I think I know where I want to go on my next oversøisk rejse.
Tuesday, June 07, 2005
let me know, bubele
dennis cooper's list fetish
Tempting me to make lists is dangerous. I have a lifelong top ten list fetish -- making them and reading them. I don't know why. I think maybe it's because, as an anarchist, hierarchies are wrong, scary things to me, and I'm drawn to making them in the same way that I'm drawn as a writer to scary subjects that are almost impossible to write about objectively.
William Gibson's blog seems only to have one entry: a dead link to MIA's "Galang" on March 11th.
Later: The 92nd Street Y also launches a blog. (Via Maud Newton)
Monday, June 06, 2005
avoid any reference to "the little man"
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Sunday, June 05, 2005
I made this half-pony, half-monkey monster to please you
Well, it just so happens, I am all of the above. (It also turns out that Jonathan Coulton is the musical director for the Little Gray Book Lecture Series, another one of the things I miss about New York.) You can link to the full lyrics above, but this has got to be my favorite verse ever:
I made this half-pony, half-monkey monster to please you
But I get the feeling that you don't like it
What's with all the screaming?
You like monkeys
You like ponies
Maybe you don't like monsters so much
Maybe I used too many monkeys
Isn't it enough to know that I ruined a pony
Making a gift for you?
Prepare to be taken hostage.
Saturday, June 04, 2005
literary cartography
Some mysteries remain -- the apartment of J. D. Salinger's nomadic Glass family, who seem to move from East to West Side; the address of the Xenophon, where William Dean Howells's March family found a sublet in ''A Hazard of New Fortunes.'' Nor could we confidently pin down the office of Bartleby the Scrivener, despite many good suggestions from readers, including Ann Sullivan-Cross's. Having had a job at 14 Wall Street -- ''like working in a dead letter office, at the depths of a dark world governed by dark laws'' -- she felt sure she recognized the spot; she pointed out, moreover, that Melville's brother Allan had a law office at that address.
resistance is futile
What the hell. It's the weekend.
lunar park
For his fifth and most enjoyable novel, Ellis has found the perfect anti-hero: himself..."Every word is true," declares Bret—but then again, a writer's life is "a maelstrom of lying."
you are the queen of rock
Thursday, June 02, 2005
praying for a publicity stunt...
Later: OK, I've sufficiently recovered to say 1) he married the woman seen here and 2) you can stream the album in full again here.
Even later: The stream is muddy.
Even later than that: Welcome back, Scenestars.
what will happen to my coney island baby?
At the end of the summer, thanks to some shortsighted city planners and no-sighted developers, everything you love about gritty old Coney Island is going to be swept away. A few token landmarks may be spared for the sake of postcard sales—the Cyclone, the Wonder Wheel—but you can say goodbye to the souvenir shops that rent beach chairs, the fried clam stands, the Boardwalk Nathan's and—god help us all—Ruby's Bar. And with them the characters who made Coney what it is—namely, one of the last bastions of rabid individuality left in New York.
According to the city, those decaying eyesores need to go in order to make room for the spa, the indoor swimming pool, the hotel, the shopping mall and the fancy cafes.
Nauseating. I can only imagine Shoot the Freak won't make the cut. For a compelling history of Coney Island, don't miss Rem Koolhaas's Delirious New York: A Retroactive Manifesto for Manhattan.
Later: More on Coney Island's Future: Flashy, Pink, Anodyne!
but do the child brides look like superheroes?
Or if you prefer a more secular subject, you can also now get your Harlequin romance in manga form.
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
friends and lovers
Baby I'ma Want You - Call & Response
It Don't Matter to Me - Josh Rouse
Guitar Man - Cake (just a crumb really)

it's work to confess
The secret sharers here aren't mindless flashers but practiced strippers. They don't want to get rid of their secrets. They love them. They arrange them. They tend them. They turn them into fetishes. And that's the secret of PostSecret. It isn't really a true confessional after all. It is a piece of collaborative art.
She never goes so far as to say the card-senders are lying, but that seems to be what she is implying. Call me a sucker, but some of the secrets are just too painful to not be true.
better late than never
mix post: the impatience edition
All Right Already - Kathy Cashel
Hesitating - Dao Strom
Hope and Wait - Bella
I Can't Wait - Shearwater
I'll Wait - Ruth Gerson
I'm New Here - Smog
Miracle Wait - A Taste of Ra
On and On - Missy Elliott
Slowly Slowly - Magnapop
The Wait - Shelby