Friday, December 26, 2008
eartha kitt (1927 - 2008)
Eartha Kitt, who purred and pounced her way across Broadway stages, recording studios and movie and television screens in a show-business career that lasted more than six decades, died on Thursday. She was 81 and lived in Connecticut.
Thursday, December 25, 2008
harold pinter (1930 - 2008)
Harold Pinter, the British playwright whose gifts for finding the ominous in the everyday and the noise within silence made him the most influential and imitated dramatist of his generation, died on Wednesday. He was 78 and lived in London.
Monday, December 22, 2008
superlatives monday
New York Times: The Buzzwords of 2008 (Very proud of WeBFF Jim Groom and edupunk!)
Medialoper: Musical Moments to Die For
Independent Weekly (Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill): 40 Best Songs of 2008 (with mp3s)
The Morning News: 2008 by The Writers
The A.V. Club: The Worst Films of 2008
Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies: Top 100 Tools for Learning 2008
Wuthering Expectations: Best Books of the Year (Nineteenth Century Edition)
LA Times: Top 10 Movies of 2008
Jezebel: Elisabeth Hasselbeck's 25 Most Annoying Moments of 2008
Time Out New York: Books - The Best (and Worst) of 2008
Regret the Error: Crunks 2008 - The Year in Media Errors and Corrections
Amazon: Top 100 Books of 2008
Seed: Seed Picks 2008
Grammar Girl: Top Five Pet Peeves of 2008
Frisky: The Best Male Bloggers of 2008
The Smoking Gun: 2008 Mugshots of the Year
The New Yorker: 2008 - The Year in Fiction
Sunday, December 21, 2008
sunday short stack

"Needing someone is like needing a parachute. If he isn't there the first time you need him, chances are you won't be needing him again." - Scott Adams
- The American Novel database at PBS could keep you busy for hours.
- Make your own custom cookbook.
- Zombie gingerbread house = awesome!
- While we're on the subject of geek boy fetishes, here are some robot statistics.
- Follow Google searches in real time.
- Sock & Awe: The presidential shoe-throwing game
- Visuwords is an online graphical dictionary and thesaurus.
- Obama: The College Years
- Take a quiz on literary anecdotes.
- Elizabeth Alexander has been chosen as the inaugural poet.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
reveries of a bachelor
on wrestling, '80s hair metal, and robocop
AVC: So, more pop psychology for you: Why do people want to watch wrestling and violence, but not deal with a film that has to do with death?
Friday, December 19, 2008
dancing jelly beans and chinese dragons

The Bob Baker Marionette Theater is a place that is both magical and earth-bound. Operating from the corner of 1st Street and Glendale Boulevard just west of downtown Los Angeles for 49 years, it is a vestige of childhoods lived, where vegetables dance to old vaudeville tunes and musical instruments dance and jump across a black box theater festooned with crystal chandeliers...But it's also been struggling for years, trying to eke out an existence on $15-a-head admission, amid the fickle nature of children's passions. Last week, reports began circulating that the theater was in trouble. A manager sent out an e-mail saying that Baker had been the victim of "an elaborate mortgage fraud operation bent on stealing his theater and home" and asked fans of the theater help pay nearly $30,000 in past due mortgage payments on the two buildings. If the funds weren't raised, the manager said, the buildings would be sold "and Bob and his thousands of puppets will be homeless."
About a week after that, the New York Times followed suit, suggesting a bailout for the puppet show.
There are many ways to measure California’s tanking economy: an 8.2 percent unemployment rate; a multibillion-dollar state budget gap; threatened endowments of the city’s museums, causing some cultural institutions to nearly default on mortgages; and the continued weakening of the Hollywood studio system. But the meltdown of the marionettes may say it all.
In this Nutcracker season of sugarplum dreams, maybe Santa will find some cash in his sack for the Marionette Theater.
Thursday, December 18, 2008
perky canada
Since then, wave after wave of excitement and innovation—punk, post-punk, indie, hip-hop, house, techno, grunge—has surged back and forth between America and Britain. Generations of Canadian hipsters have gazed enviously at those two countries, and groaned in embarrassment as their compatriots instead embraced progressive rock and its geeky offshoots. Asked to name a globally successful and recognisably Canadian band, until recently most non-Canadians might have cited Rush, the stupendously overblown pomp-rockers. Bryan Adams, Celine Dion, Alanis Morissette, Shania Twain, Avril Lavigne and Nickelback have conducted their blockbusting careers as undercover Americans.
But just as it did for British pop in the early 1960s, all that outward scrutiny, that eager consumption by ambitious, dissatisfied youngsters of the fresh and thrilling from abroad rather than the second-rate and derivative at home, is paying dividends. There is no particular Canadian sound. Even as media ubiquity shrinks our world, the sheer geographical vastness of Canada makes such a thing improbable. What we are seeing—and hearing—is a new-found confidence. Canadian acts at last have the wherewithal to make music without a sense of obligation or apology; and without the ingrained assumption that a Canadian artist must either pander to the United States or settle for being at best a local hero. Pound for pound, no other country’s music scene is punching harder.
here is a strange and bitter crop
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
no reference to crop circles during the show
Left unchecked, comedy snobbery can squeeze the joy out of the enterprise. You end up thinking of comedy as Hemingway thought of narrative: structured like an iceberg, with all the greater satisfactions fathoms under water, while the surface pleasure of the joke is somehow the least of it. In my father, this tendency was especially pronounced. He objected to joke merchants. He was wary of the revue-style bonhomie of the popular TV double act Morecambe and Wise, and disapproved of the cheery bawdiness of their rivals, the Two Ronnies. He was allergic to racial and sexual humor, to a far greater degree than any of the actual black people or women in his immediate family. Harvey’s idea of a good time was the BBC sitcom “Steptoe and Son,” the grim tale of two mutually antagonistic “rag-and-bone men” who pass their days in a Beckettian pile of rubbish, tearing psychological strips off each other. Each episode ends with the son (a philosopher manqué, who considers himself trapped in the filthy family business) submitting to a funk of existential despair. The sadder and more desolate the comedy, the better Harvey liked it.
fancy talk
The names George W. Bush and Osama bin Laden don't appear once in Jonathan Franzen's novel "The Corrections." And yet the book, which was published on Sept. 1, 2001, anticipates almost eerily the major concerns of the next seven years. Franzen conjures up a nation kept awake at night by nameless dread. The second sentence of the book: "You could feel it: something terrible was going to happen." Something did, of course—but anyone who revisits "The Corrections" now will be reminded how many of the preoccupations we've labeled as "post-9/11," or "Bush era," in fact predate both. In his story of the Lamberts, a Midwestern family with three adult children who resist their mother's hysterical insistence that they make it home for one last Christmas, Franzen lays out many of the themes that would come to dominate the millennium's first decade: global warming, economic recession, HMOs, psychopharmaceuticals, viral marketing, Eastern European instability, even the organic-food movement. (Just one trivial, but spot-on, example: Denise, the daughter, who is a chef, investigates "the Smith Street culinary scene in Brooklyn." Fast-forward seven years, to July 9, 2008, and you'll find an article in The New York Times about "the culinary flowering of Brooklyn," centered on Smith Street.)
Monday, December 15, 2008
superlatives monday
Sasha Frere-Jones: The Best Recordings of 2008
Edward Champion: Top Ten Books of 2008
New York Magazine: The Year in Culture
Merriam-Webster: Words of the Year 2008
Salon: Salon Book Awards 2008
New York Post: The Best Films of 2008
Sunday, December 14, 2008
sunday short stack

"Chance is always powerful. Let your hook be always cast. In the pool where you least expect it, will be a fish." - Ovid
- Between the UCLA digital photo archive, Google's Life archive, and NYPL's digital gallery, the past has never been so accessible.
- Do you have a seasonal reading pattern? (My only pattern is shorter and shorter books as I try to make it to 52.)
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez is working on a new novel.
- David Foster Wallace's undergraduate honors thesis in philosophy is dissected.
- Swink is back.
- What is the worst band in the world, according to Google?
- The Indie Music Alphabet (via @largeheartedboy)
- The Guardian considers the fine art of literary rejection letters.
- LAist has two visit-worthy features: a guide to independent music stores and a history of Griffith Park.
- Stream new 50 Foot Wave.
- Jon Stewart rocks.
- Forbes tracks the number of layoffs since November 1 at America's 500 largest public companies. Current total = 176,331.
- Just in time perhaps, The New York Times profiles Dharma Punx.
- And while we're at it, let Obama smoke in the White House.
- Which Obama commemorative gift came from the DNC?
- Fun with literary feuds: Darin Strauss vs. the bloggers, Jonathan Safran Foer vs. the multitudes
- Jim Groom asks: "Why is an 'empowering feminist doctrine' always accompanied by a 'dark and violent side' in popular culture?"
Friday, December 12, 2008
bettie page (1923-2008)

But in 1957, at the height of her fame, she disappeared, and for three decades her private life — two failed marriages, a fight against poverty and mental illness, resurrection as a born-again Christian, years of seclusion in Southern California — was a mystery to all but a few close friends.
Read more from The New York Times...
Decades later, those images inspired biographies, comic books, fan clubs, websites, commercial products -- Bettie Page playing cards, dress-up magnet sets, action figures, Zippo lighters, shot glasses -- and, in 2005, a film about her life and times, "The Notorious Bettie Page."
Read more from The LA Times...
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
dark days
Monday, December 08, 2008
superlatives monday
The Washington Post: 10 Best Books of the Year
The Los Angeles Times: Favorite Books 2008
The New York Times: The 10 Best Books of 2008
I may be biased but the LA Times picks are so much more interesting than the others.
Largehearted Boy: Favorite Albums of 2008
Susie Bright: Favorite Dozen Movies in 2008
Computerworld: Top 10 Best-Written Blogs
Yahoo!: Top Searches of 2008
Lifehacker: Most Popular Top 10s of 2008
The Hype Machine: Submit Your Top 10 Albums
Den of Geek!: Top 5 Writer's Block Movies
the bible is not made of sugar
[Susan Sontag] took Patti Smith as seriously as Henry James, which you do not. Do you fear that in cutting yourself off from contemporary culture you handicap yourself in any way?
I would say, rather, that contemporary culture has cut itself off from the wellspring of culture in general, and in particular from literature, and in particular from history. It’s contemporary culture that has, by and large, done this. I say “by and large” because you can’t make generalizations of this kind; I can recite names of deeply literary young writers who are not cut off. I was boggled by one review of The Din in the Head, for instance, which faulted me for failing to write about hip-hop and various other types of popular music. But if you’re writing about literary figures you’re clearly not writing about music, whether it’s Mozart or any other kind of music. I find it a flabbergasting charge. The charge should be on the other foot: why aren’t writers on hip-hop writing about Lionel Trilling? (laughs)
I’m not asking you to write a hip-hop song. But I have not seen anything in your work that attempts to engage directly with the culture of your time.
I can hardly agree with that. If I go to the supermarket I’m engaging with the culture of my time. If I have a conversation, including this very one with you as interlocutor, I’m engaging with my time. When I spend hours at the computer absorbing news and opinion I’m engaging with the culture of my time. I think what you are saying is that I have a kind of history-consciousness. True, and it seems to me that you’re not engaging directly with the culture of your time if you are deaf and blind or even merely indifferent to that culture’s deep heritage. Not long ago I published in the New Republic a review of an abandoned novel by Lionel Trilling, newly unearthed in the Columbia University archives. And I discovered that nowadays people don’t even know Trilling’s name, not to mention this culture-shaping critic’s work. The same with Edmund Wilson, Alfred Kazin, Irving Howe. O lost, and by the wind grieved, ghost…
Sunday, December 07, 2008
wrong wrong wrong

It grieves me to inform my faithful "Watusi Rodeo" listeners that Indie 103.1 has cancelled my show, effective immediately. My third anniversary broadcast, which would have aired this coming Sunday, Dec. 7, will not take place. A sneak attack, and it isn't even Pearl Harbor Day yet! When Max Tolkoff, the program director at Indie, called me yesterday morning to inform me that my show was being dropped, he told me it was in the interest of making the sound of the station more "consistent." So far, the Rodeo -- the only roots/Americana show on L.A. commercial radio -- is the only victim of this drive for consistency. Max magnanimously offered me a midnight slot during the week FOR ZERO COMPENSATION; this offer was declined, since I did college radio for free 40 years ago, and I don't want to revisit my penniless youth as I near retirement age.
Morris says Scion (maker of the escapegrace hotrod) has offered him a spot on their online station. Indie's loss, Scion's gain.
sunday short stack

"To care only for well-being seems to me positively ill-bred. Whether it's good or bad, it is sometimes very pleasant, too, to smash things." - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
- RIP Forrest J. Ackerman, although I hope my friend is correct: you will rise from the dead as a zombie or have some mad scientist put your brain in another body, so we'll be seeing you soon.
- A BeTaMaXMaS
- Preview Who We Were: A Snapshot History of America!
- The blog Daily Routines collects the obsessive compulsive behavior of "writers, artists, and other interesting people" (via Maud Newton).
- Improve your brain.
- The gethuman database reveals how to bypass the robots and speak to an actual human customer service rep.
- The Readerville Journal has an excellent recurring feature of Most Coveted Covers and The Book Design Review has Favorite Covers of 2008 (via Condalmo), while The Designer's Review of Books focuses on design between the covers.
- Where is your username registered?
- From the Random department: The baby from Nirvana's Nevermind is now Shepherd Fairy's intern.
- EveryBlock is a newsfeed for your block. Really.
- The New Yorker will publish new Mark Twain this month.
- Moving to New City To Solve All of Area Man's Problems
- From the WTF department: Cruise and Beckham families merge in bizarre wedding ceremony.
- If you're in New York, here is a handy guide for your indie bookstore holiday shopping.
Saturday, December 06, 2008
I *do* think about tables and chairs all the time
1. Put your iTunes (or any other media player you may have) on shuffle.
2. For each question, press the next button to get your answer.
3. YOU MUST WRITE THAT SONG NAME DOWN NO MATTER HOW SILLY IT SOUNDS!
Go! (Via @titoperez)
IF SOMEONE SAYS “IS THIS OKAY” YOU SAY?
Lived in Bars (Cat Power)
WHAT WOULD BEST DESCRIBE YOUR PERSONALITY?
I'll Begin Again (Dropkick Murphys)
WHAT DO YOU LIKE IN A GUY/GIRL?
Radiate Nothing (Money Mark)
WHAT IS YOUR LIFE’S PURPOSE?
True (The Frames)
WHAT IS YOUR MOTTO?
The Con (Tegan & Sara)
WHAT DO YOUR FRIENDS THINK OF YOU?
Polly Come Home (Plant & Krauss)
WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT VERY OFTEN?
Tables and Chairs (Andrew Bird)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR BEST FRIEND?
Mary (Langhorne Slim)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE PERSON YOU LIKE?
Naked If I Want To (Cat Power)
WHAT IS YOUR LIFE STORY?
I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free (Nina Simone)
WHAT DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU GROW UP?
A Little Better (M Ward)
WHAT DO YOU THINK WHEN YOU SEE THE PERSON YOU LIKE?
Thirteen (Big Star)
WHAT DO YOUR PARENTS THINK OF YOU?
Kiss of Fire (Geraldine Fibbers)
WHAT WILL YOU DANCE TO AT YOUR WEDDING?
Tell Me on a Sunday (Mountain Goats)
WHAT WILL THEY PLAY AT YOUR FUNERAL?
Blink (Scott Walker)
WHAT IS YOUR HOBBY/INTEREST?
Effect & Cause (White Stripes)
WHAT IS YOUR BIGGEST SECRET?
Wayfaring Stranger (Neko Case)
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF YOUR FRIENDS?
You Think You're Hot Stuff (Jean Knight)
WHAT’S THE WORST THING THAT COULD HAPPEN?
Weary Blues (Madeline Peyroux)
HOW WILL YOU DIE?
Crying (Roy Orbison)
WHAT IS THE ONE THING YOU REGRET?
Friend Is a Four Letter Word (Cake)
WHAT MAKES YOU LAUGH?
Breakfast in Hell (Slaid Cleaves)
WHAT MAKES YOU CRY?
The Bleeding Heart Show (New Pornographers)
WILL YOU EVER GET MARRIED?
Get Down on Your Knees (The Sunshine)
WHAT SCARES YOU THE MOST?
Hanging on Too Long (Duffy)
DOES ANYONE LIKE YOU?
Sick, Sick, Sick (Freakwater)
IF YOU COULD GO BACK IN TIME, WHAT WOULD YOU CHANGE?
You Were Right (Built to Spill)
WHAT HURTS RIGHT NOW?
Moonage Daydream (David Bowie via Of Montreal)
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
santa baby

Signed First Hardcover Edition of Cloud Atlas @ Alibris $150

Chuck Taylor All-Star Sparkle (Champagne) @ Converse $64.99

Bat Segundo 3 DVD Set @ edrants.com $50

Prairie Underground Long Cloak Hoodie @ doe $222

The Kansas City Star Bundle @ Dzanc Books $40


USB Key Skull Ring @ Geek Stuff 4 U $199.02

Punk Rock Xmas @ lala $8.56
Bling Hammer @ Glamourpuss $34.95

Cultural Package @ Chiang Mai Luxury Resort, Northern Thailand $3,885.27

Fuiji Instax Camera @ Urban Outfitters $130

The Slanket @ SkyMall $44.99

Faster Pussycat Kill! Kill! Lunchbox @ The BUST Boobtique $17.95

Into-the-Woods Dress @ Anthropologie $149.95

Electric MINI E @ Los Angeles Auto Show $TBD

Franco Sarto Era @ Piperlime $49.99

Tenure Track Job @ First Choice University - Priceless
Monday, December 01, 2008
what do you call the internet people?

Someone you would identify as a friend: WeBFF
I was so sad when Buffy moved away, but between Facebook, Twitter, Gmail Chat, and Goodreads, now I feel like we're WeBFFs.
Someone you would identify as a friendly acquaintance: Interpal
Can you believe my interpal was in a flame war with Billy Joel?*
Someone you would identify as an enemy: Netesis
I always knew I didn't like her, but when she tagged me in that ugly photo, she officially became my netesis.
Sunday, November 30, 2008
sunday short stack

- Get in on the First Annual Secret Santa Gift Exchange to support independent literature.
- As the comment says, it's "porn for freaky cat-loving literature fiends."
- In my Thanksgiving cleaning spree, I've given a lot of thought to my overflowing bookshelves. Laura Miller collects others' thoughts on the subject (their bookshelves, not mine).
- Meh will now be in the Collins English Dictionary.
- I am not among the Best Women Bloggers of 2008.
- Maybe because GenderAnalyzer originally thought I was a guy (but now, a week later, is 99% sure I'm a woman).
- "Some oxygen molecules help fires burn while others help make water, so sometimes it's brother against brother" and more quotes collected from the science exams of elementary school students.
- Albert Einstein had a messy desk, but he was not involved in any of The Biggest Pranks in Geek History.
- Take a time out today to read The 7 Greatest Stories in the History of Esquire.
- Next stop on the Douchebag Express...
- ...people freaking out about the Motrin Moms commercial.
- Mitt Romney thinks we should let Detroit go bankrupt.
- Sleater-Kinney's Carrie Brownstein tries out Wii Music.
- Also at Slate earlier this month, New York Times headlines that read like Zen koans.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
I am surrounded by ayn rand

bucks and bucks and diamonds and diamonds
Christmas is a sad season. The phrase came to Charlie an instant after the alarm clock had waked him, and named for him an amorphous depression that had troubled him all the previous evening. The sky outside his window was black. He sat up in bed and pulled the light chain that hung in front of his nose. Christmas is a very sad day of the year, he thought. Of all the millions of people in New York, I am practically the only one who has to get up in the cold black of 6 a.m. on Christmas Day in the morning; I am practically the only one...
also home to all the best of lists you could ever need
Literary Rock Band Names
I don't know how long this will be going on, but Amazon has its top 50 mp3 albums on sale for $5.
The University of Texas has a new litblog: ShelfLife@Texas
Friday, November 28, 2008
her voice is full of money

can you pass those croutons?
See also in the Times: 100 Notable Books of 2008
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
I've gotta eat my words with special sauce all over them
The choicest material -- the staff writers' ideas -- had been pitched this morning, and the writers were sorting through the chaff, the jokes sent in each week by part-time contributors, known in local editorial parlance as "the [expletive] list." The writers fidgeted and slumped in their chairs, visibly oppressed by the haze of failed hilarity thickening in the room.
Fallen cannon fodder included: "Face Of God Seen On Bus Ad For God"; "California Courts To See What Else They Can Marry"; "Meter Attendant Accidentally Tries To Collect Change From Vending Machine"; and the following op-ed: "You're Breaking The Human Half Of My Cyborg Heart," which caused senior writer Dan Guterman to groan and offer a counter-headline, " 'I Suck,' By A Joke."
queridas amigas, queridos amigos
obama = cicero?
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
I gots some politico-aesthetic coding to do
The litbloggers’ practice of linking also emphasizes the intertextuality of their form. In literary theory, intertextuality “denotes ways in which works of art – especially of literature – are produced in response not to social reality but to previous works of art and the codes and other conventions governing them” (Sebeok 1985: 657). Intertextuality is not confined to art but is also evident “across writing genres and related to more epistemologically explicit issues” such as global politics (Shapiro 1989:11). Rather than creating a new class of literary work or genre, litbloggers engage in a process of intertextuality that responds to previous aesthetic codes but also political codes that are embedded in our literary political economy. In this sense, rather than producing a new, alternative book culture, litbloggers instead may be solidifying the dominant codes and conventions that are already in place. Litbloggers may, and some do, avoid being accomplices to the reification of dominant discourses by not only providing links but also challenging the source of the links. This is where their power of critique lies and perhaps where they may exercise more freedom than print media whose codes and conventions have concretized since the development of print over fifteen hundred years ago.
thanksgiving post mania
David Gutowski (largehearted boy) lists the 10 Best Literature Blogs - I had never heard of Literary Kicks.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
52 books in 52 weeks
Reading this collection of essays is like spending time with a smart, charming writer friend whose obsessive tastes don't quite align with mine, but listening to him hold court is a fine way to spend an afternoon.

I still think about this book often after reviewing it for the LA Times earlier this month, so I stand behind my positive remarks.
In lieu of a traditional composition reader, I decided to trust my students to know what to take from these essays to improve their academic writing and what to leave. I started reading the collection in preparation for the class on September 3. On September 12, when I was about halfway through guest editor David Foster Wallace's introduction, he took his own life. It was at least a week or two before I was able to return to the collection, feeling spooked and sad to realize this was probably one of the last things he had written. Once I began again, every word choice and candid declaration was full of portent and significance; the reading proceeded painfully. Reviewing the essays Harper's posted after Wallace's death, I came across "Tense Present: Democracy, English, and the Wars Over Usage" and realized that - in combination with the introduction "Deciderization 2007: A Special Report" - I would be completely justified in devoting the first week of class to Wallace and introducing him to a gaggle of teenagers. Fortunately, I teach at a school where the students are intellectually advanced, and they unwittingly helped me grieve for this man whom I did not know but mourn nonetheless.
I'm not sure why this Pultizer Prize winning novel didn't rock my world, because I believe it was supposed to. There were elements I admired and moments I was touched, but I did not rush back to it when I was away. My only guess is that I did not connect with the female characters, and that failure colored my enjoyment. This may be as much my fault as Diaz's.
This non-novel took me by complete surprise. The entire book is a collection of facts about and quotes from artists and writers throughout history, but at the same time, it's the tale of a man approaching the end of creativity. I carried it around with me for days, reading selections aloud to anyone who would listen.
sunday short stack suspended
Saturday, November 22, 2008
achtung LA peeps
The Art of War: American Posters from WWI and WWII is up at The Norton Simon Museum through January, so I may still have a shot, but I will definitely have to miss today's event at the Barnsdall Gallery Theatre: "Dashiell Hammett ... in L.A.?”
Sunday, November 16, 2008
sunday short stack

"You can always count on a murderer for a fancy prose style." - Vladimir Nabokov
- Nabokov reads from Lolita.
- Listen to the voice of Zora Neale Hurston (via Tayari Jones).
- I can't mention ZNH without whipping out the ol' publication history essay.
- The National Book Foundation's 5 Under 35 for 2008 will be honored on Monday, damn them.
- Penultimater: Help write "the greatest mobile novel ever attempted."
- 22 Websites That Are Driving Daggers Into The Heart Of The RIAA
- I am obsessed with this Weezer song.
- This Michael Franti & Spearhead song ain't shabby neither.
- Strange Parallel is a short documentary about Elliott Smith available on YouTube.
- Don't miss Obama's first Saturday morning address - also on YouTube.
- The 9 most disturbingly misogynistic old print ads are truly disturbing.
- David Lynch thinks watching a film on an iPhone is shite.
- Wikimapia wants to describe the whole world.
- It's official: Bush's most memorable verbal gaffe
- Man submits drawing of spider instead of payment for overdue account.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Monday, November 10, 2008
Sunday, November 09, 2008
sunday short stack

"Even on the most exalted throne in the world we are only sitting on our own bottom." - Michel de Montaigne
- Oh yeah...this is an awesome time to look for a teaching job.
- But...but...but I want to be a "traditional tweed-coated, pipe-smoking, comfortable-job-for-life full-time professor."
- Good magazine has a new books blog: Signatures.
- A high-tech theater production of Virginia Woolf's novel The Waves might actually work.
- The Northern Lights have been recreated in 3D for the first time.
- RIP John Leonard
- Blogging's not just for kids anymore.
- From the department of Too Much Time on Hands: Cursebird is a realtime feed of people swearing on Twitter.
- How macha are you?
- Simon Pegg argues for a return to traditional zombie values.
- Find all your randy neighbors.
- I need to wean myself off the Obamamania with Change.gov the website, ChangeDotGov the YouTube channel, Super Obama World, and lingering goosebumps.
- Beware white people: Obama's going to make you wear some kind of special moustache.
Friday, November 07, 2008
a man of his words
This AP article, which quotes Toni Morrison and Rick Moody among other writers, ponders the possibility of a cultural trickle-down effect. Jonathan Safran Foer, for one, is feeling it:
"Until now, my identity as a writer has never overlapped with my identity as an American — in the past eight years, my writing has often felt like an antidote or correction to my Americanism," says "Everything Is Illuminated" novelist Jonathan Safran Foer.
"But finally having a writer-president — and I don't mean a published author, but someone who knows the full value of the carefully chosen word — I suddenly feel, for the first time, not only like a writer who happens to be American, but an American writer."
philip pullman wants me to be patient
You've started a long journey. Congratulations on your resolution and ambition! And the first thing you need to remember is that a long journey can't be treated like a sprint. Take your time.
The second thing you need to remember is that if you want to finish this journey you've begun, you have to keep going. One of the hardest things to do with a novel is to stop writing it for a while, do something else, fulfill this engagement or that commitment or whatever, and pick it up exactly where you left it and carry on as if nothing had happened. You will have changed; the story will have drifted off course, like a sh ip when the engines stop and there's no anchor to keep it in place; when you get back on board, you have to warm the engines up, start the great bulk of the ship moving through the water again, work out your position, check the compass bearing, steer carefully to bring it back on track ... all that energy wasted on doing something that wouldn't have been necessary at all if you'd just kept going!
He also thinks page 70 is the toughest:
You know which page of a novel is the most difficult to write? It's page 70. The first page is easy: it's exciting, it's new, a whole world lies in front of you. The last page is easy: you've got there at last, you know what's going to happen, all you have to do is find a resonant closing sentence. But page 70 is where the misery strikes. All the initial excitement has drained away; you've begun to see all the hideous problems you've set yourself; you are horribly aware of the minute size of your own talent compared to the colossal proportions of the task you've undertaken. That's when you'll want to give up. When I hit page 70 with my very first novel, I thought: I'm never going to finish this. I'll never make it. But then stubbornness set in, and I thought: well, if I reach page 100, that'll be something. If I get there, I reckon I can make it to the end, wherever that is. And 100 is only 30 pages away, and if I write 3 pages every day, I can get there in ten days ... why don't I just try to do that? So I did. It was a terrible novel, but I finished it.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
god bless america
Monday, November 03, 2008
Sunday, November 02, 2008
smogtown
sunday short stack special election edition

"There are not red states or blue states. There is the United States of America." - Barack Obama
- Sarah Palin got punk'd by a faux Sarkozy.
- The Obama Bot
- David Sedaris reflects on undecided voters: "To put them in perspective, I think of being on an airplane. The flight attendant comes down the aisle with her food cart and, eventually, parks it beside my seat. 'Can I interest you in the chicken?' she asks. 'Or would you prefer the platter of shit with bits of broken glass in it?' To be undecided in this election is to pause for a moment and then ask how the chicken is cooked."
- Make history.
- Find out which initiatives on the California ballot are pet projects of the very wealthy.
- Boing Boing on the recent Esquire article: White Supremacists for Obama, Black Separatists for McCain, Janis Ian For The End of The World
- Charles meets Barack.
- Damon meets Biden.
- What will the rhetoricians talk about after Tuesday?
- Los Angeles loves to carve Barack O'Lanterns.
- Even The Wire and Ronald Reagan want you to vote for Obama.
sunday short stack

"And you realize you couldn't get lost here if you tried. And you've tried. The middle of nowhere is always somewhere for somebody." - Daniel Orozco
- That's what you get for hanging curtains naked.
- How do you pronounce floccipaucinihilipilification?
- The U.S. Army is afraid Twitter will be used by terrorists.
- Flavorpill has launced a new blog: Flavorwire
- Sit or squat?
- "Free the Werewolves" and other Stuff That People Write on Money
- Bruce Springsteen is...the Jersey Devil.
- The 100 Most Funny and Unusual 404 Error Pages
Friday, October 31, 2008
studs terkel (1912 - 2008)
"I'll give you to 99," said the doctor.
"That's too long," said Terkel. "I think I want a nice round figure, like 95."
Studs Terkel died today at 96.
everything I do's gotta be ingenious, blah, blah, blah, blah
He was six-feet-two, and on a good day he weighed 200 pounds. He wore granny glasses with a head scarf, points knotted at the back, a look that was both pirate-like and housewife-ish. He always wore his hair long. He had dark eyes, soft voice, caveman chin, a lovely, peak-lipped mouth that was his best feature. He walked with an ex-athlete's saunter, a roll from the heels, as if anything physical was a pleasure. David Foster Wallace worked surprising turns on nearly everything: novels, journalism, vacation. His life was an information hunt, collecting hows and whys. "I received 500,000 discrete bits of information today," he once said, "of which maybe 25 are important. My job is to make some sense of it." He wanted to write "stuff about what it feels like to live. Instead of being a relief from what it feels like to live." Readers curled up in the nooks and clearings of his style: his comedy, his brilliance, his humaneness.