3.09.2014

Blog posts, features and book reviews


Black History Nation 

“Whether or not you agree with the idea of Black History Month, its purpose as another, parallel window into America is being advanced during months that have nothing to do with February. In important ways, observance of black history as a common American experience has long since slipped the surly bonds of the shortest month of the year. Emancipated. Unchained.”

Philip Seymour Hoffman, synecdoche

“Hoffman was panoramic in his emotional range, but finally, ultimately, he spoke to the pain of his life, and he lived the pain of this life, a covert agent investigating the darker places, the shadows we, all of us, like to think we’re immune to.

“He was that singular that captures and embodies the plural, the one that symbolizes the all. His struggle with chemical demons mirrors our collective struggles with the various demons to be found in the intrinsic toxicity of the modern world. By this fact, there is no cheap postmortem judgment of the man that holds water. He was our synecdoche. His battle with life’s velocity, his demons are, to one degree or another, our very own.”


CBS, NBC and the new late-night eyeball war

“After a long lull, the War for Broadcast Late-Night Eyeballs is about to recommence. With the departure of Jay Leno later this month, Jimmy Fallon is set to take the reins of “The Tonight Show,” moving the legendary late-night staple back to New York as the show’s youngest host since Johnny Carson.”

New year, new changes, new challenges at MSNBC

“The year 2014 starts with new changes afoot at cable television’s most daring petri dish, even as that channel tries to put some of its recent experiments behind it. Way behind.”

The tweet that roared: Justine Sacco's digital object lesson

“If you made it a movie, the sudden saga of Justine Sacco would be the stealth disaster movie on a plane, the one where the heroine can’t see what’s coming because the coming calamity is happening all around her, in real time, and she’s in no position to change what she started, accidentally on purpose.”

Disintegration: The Splintering of Black America


Life by Keith Richards

“ … the profane, sentimental, profligate, visionary rock buccaneer archetype the world knows by first name alone has finally committed his Life to print, a bildungsroman that’s as much a biography of a band’s life as an autobiography of his own.”

The Men Who Would Be King

“To go by The Men Who Would Be King, the process of building a Hollywood studio from scratch is, like the genesis of sausage or a nation’s plan for war, not a pretty thing.”

Easy Rider: Dennis Hopper explains America

“With Easy Rider, Hopper gave us a psychic road map to the nation, with Wyatt and Billy the embodiment of our national contradictions: liberty and accountability; the widest-open cultural possibilities and the ethical culs-de-sac we grapple with today.

“In a fictional scenario that anticipated everything from the Kent State killings to the Branch Davidian siege, the film distills just how deeply freedom and authority are fundamentally antagonists, even in America. Sadly, especially in America.”

Black Los Angeles: American Dreams and Racial Realities

Midnight at the Barrelhouse: The Johnny Otis Story

Last Words

“Part raucous credo, part comic pilgrim’s progress, this is George Carlin’s celebration of his own human condition and how he became not just a comedian, but a conscience.”

Burying Don Imus: Anatomy of a Scapegoat

Giants: The Parallel Lives of Frederick Douglass 
and Abraham Lincoln

Communities of Play: Emergent Cultures in Multiplayer Games and Virtual Worlds

By the Time We Got to Woodstock: The Great Rock & Roll Revolution of 1969

Homemade Hollywood

"Fan filmdom has always had a pantheon of accidental all-stars whose jury-rig tributes to hit movies, TV shows, and comic books are the stuff of their own legend. [The author] has brought them together here, a cast of true-life characters that constitutes the vanguard of a cinematic mirror on the assertive, improvisational aspect of the national character."

Pop Surf Culture: Behind the Bohemian Surf Boom

Savage Barbecue: A History of America's First Food

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10.08.2010

Features and analysis

'Like a Rolling Stone' revisited

“ ... perfectly embodies the heads-is-tails uncertainty of modern life, now and in long-ago 1965. More than just lyrically articulating the rock and roll mindset of liberation and risk, it contains the multitudes, distilling the collective experience of millions of lives caught, then and now, in the crossfire hurricane of modern life.”

The other, unsung 'Mad Men' of Madison Avenue

Music museums grapple with a rough economy

Ready to rock, a historic theater reopens in a south Seattle neighborhood



Tweet the drum: Twitter usage a fixture of black America

Fox's '24,' 9/11 and the certainty of uncertainty

Film festivals survive and thrive in the new austerity

The late night shift: Wanda Sykes and George Lopez punch in

"The addition of Sykes and Lopez is a nod both to the nation's changing demographics and to its latitude for comedy that pushes the envelope."

Michele Obama and what it means to be in Vogue

Jimi Hendrix, 40 years beyond

"His insistence on laying down the tracks in his head and his heart, the way he heard them, led to the recording of one of rock music's defining documents, as sonically adventurous as anything in the halcyon era of the 1960s, and the years since then."


Guise and dolls: the Obama daughters as commodity

Charles Johnson:
The Root interview


Norman Whitfield: An appreciation

Hendrix lives: 'Elecrtic Ladyland' at 40

Comic book relief in the age of Obama

'Slumdog Millionaire' and the new American movie

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