Nov 1, 2008

You're Fired

Dear Holly,
There was a time there for a while where we were very close. You lolled around the Playboy mansion in your great socks, stoned and drunk on diet coke and vodka, and I was right there with you. I knew, maybe even before you did, that the time would come when you would realize that grandpa was never going to marry you or knock you up and you would move on to bigger and better things. Well, that time has come and you have disappointed me greatly. I understand that Criss Angel MIND FREAK! is probably bangin' you something proper and you need that, you really do, but you could do so much better. I'll be waiting for you on the other side of this rebound brain fart, just please silence the deafening tick of your biological clock and don't have any of his freakishly-coiffed babies. 
Your Friend,
Pillow

The Revengers (more music)

I recall an interview with Amy Winehouse that I read in late 2006 (when she was just about to release a knockout sophomore album, consternating critics with the occasional incoherent rant about her addiction to weed [?]). Amy said that while writing "Back to Black," after breaking up with current husband, Blake Fielder Civil, she was listening to "One Kiss Can Lead to Another," the much beloved Girl Group box set, almost exclusively. Heartbroken, she could not abide the kind of "post-relationship" anthems released by present day pop idols, the ones about how "you don't need that scum anyway," how "you have more money and power," about how "you're unaffected, unharmed, heartless, tough." She could relate to the songs of the sixties about, and these are her words, "laying down on the floor and wanting to die." I was so struck by the observation. Where had melancholy gone? Why (apart from the Women's Movement--as this shift has occured with male singers as well) had we become these armored revengers, unfeeling (excuse the phrase) gangsters of love. Here are two to weigh, two wildly different songs about loss: The Chantels' "He's Gone" and Beyonce's "Irreplaceable" (both quite good).



The Queen B has prevented folks from embedding her videos, so here is the link.

Facing History and Ourselves: L.O.V.E.

The Japanese karaoke subs were the happiest accident since my own franzia-fueled conception. One last good youtube post before I get back to prose:

Oct 31, 2008

She's a Ponytail Freak!

This year's Halloween episode of Degrassi is truly next level. Rick's spirit comes back, possesses Holly J., and starts getting bitches back for picking on him. In true user-and-abuser fashion, Rick pretty much only tortures the Lakehurst kids who weren't even around when he went to Degrassi. He does send Spinner some sexy text messages, though. See parts 2 and 3 below:



HAPPY BIRTHDAY, VANILLA ICE!!!!

Picking Lint for the Crimea

Happy Halloween: Bring on the Darkness

"Fox-Fire"
Nancy Bruff

I will show you a phosphorescence
Glowing where there is no light
A secret brilliance flickering near
The ripened evil in a soul
I will show you fox-fire gleaming
In a dark and feral wood.

Folk Art for Friday

The dancers in this "Memphis Buckin" video are supreme and ghostly. Happy Halloween.

Verses

James Brown
Hot Pants, Part 1* (1971)

One-two One-Two-Three-uh!

Hot pants--hey hot pants, uh! smokin?
Hot pants--smokin? That-hot pants

That's where it's at a-that's where it's at
Take your fine self home
It looks much better than time
My fever keeps growin?
Girl you're blowin' my mind

Thinkin' of losin' that funky feelin? don't uh!
Cause you got to use just what you got
To get just what you want--a
Hey huh!
Hot pants! hey! hot pants smokin?!
Hot pants make ya sure of yourself--good Lord
You walk like you got the only lovin' left hey
So brother--if you're thinkin' of losin' that feelin'
Then don't--ha
Cause a woman got to use what she got
To get just what she wants hey!
Hey hotpants
A-look-a-hot pants won't make ya dance
But as slick as you are-ah! YOU make the pants
Uh! hey brother--do ya like it?
The girl over there with the funky pants on ha!
She can ah! do the chicken all night long
The girl over there with the hot pants on uh!
She can do the Funky Broadway all night long

The girl over there with the hot pants on
Filthy MacNasty all night long
Get down huh! the one over there
With the mini dress ha!
I ain't got time--I still dig that mess
Get down! but I like the hot pants
Hey! I like a hot pants

(Short Instrumental)

Ooooh! Bring it home!
One more! Hit me! Aaay!
Bring it home! Bring it home!
Oh uh! Bring it on home
Bring it on home..

*some puctuation changed

Oh, just touch the hem of his garment.

Inappropriate Halloween Costumes, Take 4


I found this one in the "occupational" category but I'm pretty sure it's overstock that got sent over from Thailand. The vinyl is a nice touch but ultimately does little to correct the fact that some child is running around there ringing on doorbells and looking like Pvt. Dancer.

Look, when I was 6 years old my mom dressed me up as a Crayola crayon and the year after that I wore some of my sister's Jane Fonda workout gear. Every year after that I wore an ensemble of shaving cream, eggs, and toilet paper. Classy, no, but at least you couldn't see the outline of my vagina. Just sayin', America.

Inappropriate Halloween Costumes, Take 3


This one is wrong on many fronts, but primarily because if you're 15 years old you shouldn't have to go to the Halloween Blowout Factory Depot Warehouse to work the Lolita look. So points off for being an idiot, and points off for looking like a fucking bruise.

Inappropriate Halloween Costumes, Take 2

If you're going in this direction you may as well just throw on a baby bump. Or did Mary not get fat? I was never clear on that detail.

If I was this child's parent or legal guardian I would take it further and hide ANOTHER child dressed as Jesus under that robe. And then she could ring the doorbell and be all like "Trick or...." and he could pop out and scream "RESURRECTIONNNNN AHHHHHHH"

Inappropriate Halloween Costumes, Take 1


File this one under "Things my 11 year old shouldn't wear until she's at least tried anal sex."

Don't Smoke in Bed

Some advice in song from the most wonderful woman alive right now and, consequently, my Halloween costume tonight.

I blame vegans

Coca-cola has discontinued Tab Energy. This is old news; I had guessed it when I no longer saw it stocked in gas stations, supermarkets, Target (though the brilliant, hainted Smart Mart holds out--thanks Smart Mart). And this morning I got really hungry, and I wanted a Tab Energy, like, really badly. The can is beautiful(ish); it tastes like watermelon jolly ranchers; it is a genius appetite suppressant. Evidently, they've just launched the stuff in Spain (where I'm sure it is well loved). What gives? People drink that Red Bull all the time, and it smells like rotted ho-hos. I think there's just a growing distaste for nutra-sweet inflected products. People are all cleansing and eating raw! live! stuffs, and that's cool, but don't take it out on me (Gwyneth).

Happy Halloween!

Oct 30, 2008

For Able

You gave me "what is juice", so I give you this. One love.

Eugene O'Neill

A Song For You

This one is TRANSCENDENTAL!

Photographic Catalogue for Thursday

I was warmed to find out that the Whitney was mounting an Eggleston retrospective this fall. We two are from Memphis, a small town of a city. Though Bill is mostly a drunk and creepy specimen, his presence (the presence of his pictures) feels like home. He is due for a definitive show and catalogue, as each day, it seems, he becomes more influential. I have received an advance copy of the book, and I am not impressed by the title and cover. This is among my least favorite of his images (though it graced an Alex Chilton album), and the title feels like a butchering of the earlier Democratic Forest (1989), a beautiful monograph with text by Eudora Welty. What, pray tell, is a Democratic Camera? Somebody summon Susan Sontag!

LADY IN A CAGE!!

It was July of 1996, and broadcasts of the Atlanta Olympics were peppered with commercials for "Days of Our Lives," which was taking a special summer acid trip. You see, Stefano, famed villain, had kidnapped Dr. "Doc" Marlena from her fictional bedroom community and locked her in a golden cage deep in the catacombs of Paris . . .


Bathroom Ham Party

I like for BHP's to speak for themselves, but this one is just too bizarre and beautiful to leave alone. This song makes me want to give everyone a hug and a fresh baked cookie. The marriage of my two favorite TV shows is a true blessing, and one I thought only happened in my sweetest dreams. I do have to take issue with the Spike/J.T. connection. I love Spike and my hatred of J.T. is so strong that if I tried to explain it I think the internet would explode. However, the Angel-Spike-Drusilla/Craig-J.T.-Manny association is totally on point. Oh, and Faith is so NOT the Hazel. 

I'm OK. You're OK.

Love in this Club


Robert "Topper" Mortimer: pedigreed, disinterested, drunk. Also husband to my arch-nemesis, Tinsley. Don't worry Topper, I'll be coming for you soon.

Gwen--we really support your life choices.



What Did Rocky Top Ever Do to You, Ashley?

I cry. The crayon weeps.



This is only a portion of Barack Obama's beautifully managed and moving half-hour primetime spot. Here, with the telling of this couple's story, is where I began to weep, which I continued to do steadily for the rest of the program (after which I called my mother). I am a known hysteric, but more than my usual brand of emotionality was afoot. In the past few weeks something extraordinary has happened; when I see and hear Senator Obama (alone and with his family), I think of my family. I think of my father, who was also forty-seven when he took a new job (of a challenging sort he had never had before) and moved our family to another city. Incidentally, my sister and I were the same ages then as the Obama girls are now. I think of my mother who has wanted nothing more than to love and educate us well, and who now faces the tumults of a drifting economy everyday. I think of how much I hope that my parents know my children, as Senator Obama's mother was unable to. I have never felt this personally connected to a stranger before, let alone a politician. It took me most of this race to get it, but now I do--Barack Obama is a figure of hope, of a revolutionary substance not seen very often.

Thank you, actress


















This week's Goop "I am painfully unaware of how irritating and unwanted my advice is" Newsletter (in case you've missed it, this weekly email is part of Paltrow's new lifestyle-website-venture) features informative essays by several of Gwyn's holistic healers. One advises us to: "Police your thoughts and deal with your feelings constructively. Most of the background chatter in our mind is worrying, judging, criticizing, defending and complaining. Catch yourself and create a distraction by redirecting your thoughts toward the things that you are grateful for and optimistic about." Okay, sure.

Every morning when she ate breakfast by herself she sighed and wished for company.




I'll avoid calling Edith the Lonely Doll (of the Lonely Doll books penned by subversive genius, Dare Wright) a Founding Father, because she isn't so much a strong, distinct forebear as a precursor to Suri Cruise, a baby Betty Friedan (pre-awakening, ever-infantilized). Regardless, the gingham motifs that seemed to follow her like bird-song and her love of mirrors, make-up, and friends will always resound.

Verses (and some notes from Helen Vendler)

This review of a new translation of a German poet, relatively unknown to English-speakers, has some remarkable stanzas.

I See Your Black Irish and Raise You Two E's

I do believe an all-inclusive F.U.R.B. tour of Drama Island is in order. White eyeliner not included.



And before you ask, yes, people do line up to get into clubs on Staten Island. For hours.

Color(ed) Kids




Follow-up to Pillow's post as per the comments; The good stuff starts at 1:36. Otherwise you have to listen to some Aspy Aussie talk about her brother-lovers or something.


Oct 29, 2008

High Times, Hard Times--the year 2003

Last Friday, heading back to Brooklyn, I was standing next to a young couple. Evidently, she had pulled him onto the local train at the last minute, and he was chiding her for not waiting for the express, as he had wished, "This is gonna take fuh-evah. you're re-tahded. you're so dumb. you're fuckin' re-tahded. . . ." Every time he called her retarded she smiled and kissed him. It was absolutely adorable. It made me think of this song, a song that I listened to in an endless parade of smokey, luxury autos and denim emporiums, a song for the shame desert that was '03, the year of the invasion of Iraq and the return of the ruffled mini.


Our thanks go out to Great Uncle Phill Able of Sedona, Arizona.













Why isn't this video promoting Senator (and pleasepleaseplease 44th President of these United Sates--oy, knock on wood) Obama as a fantastic diplomat who is "kosher for Israel" playing over and over on a jumbo-tron in Times Square? Maybe it would put an end to such fuckery (seriously, you ought to look at this blog written by a disgusting, self-absorbed, mysoginistic, racist frat boy--because, who doesn't love to hate these sorts of Dov Charney's in top-siders and Audis).

Love in this Club

Jack Pullman, kindred spirit. The 19-year-old son of actor Bill Pullman faces charges of assaulting a government official and possession of moonshine, among other things, after being arrested last night in Asheville, NC.

I'll have the fried Jewess

Fact of the day: Shari Lewis ordered the lambchop as frequently as possible when dining at restaurants.

Founding Fathers: Rainbow Brite, Roy G. Biv Enthusiast


She rescued the Color Kids, defeated the Dark One, and brought color to the Colorless World - All while quietly doing wonders for the gay rights movement alongside her bff, Twink, and sassy steed, Starlite.

as alpha say, blame jeremy piven?


Here's a curiousity sent this morning by papa able. . .

Men (are the new bitches)



Former hockey player and former model get divorced--so I read in the Post, over the shoulder of the guy next to me on the train this morning. But, holy moly, THIS is what the ex-husband in question had to say. For shame!!

Some News

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Founding Fathers: Honor Blackman and The Sneaker Pimps

First off, I don't think there's anything sexier than a woman in her twilight reflecting on everything she's seen and done in life and smiling about the whole bloody mess. Nor do I think there's anything more mysterious than a lone woman sitting in a dark movie theatre watching bizarre body modification/plastic surgery/torture(?) films. And I don't think there's anything much more poignant than this Sneaker Pimps song. That said, yes, that really is Honor Blackman accessorizing in a way our generation will never be able to pull off if we tried, and lip-syncing to Chris Corner's painfully revealing anthem to celebrity. "Loretta Young Silks" by The Sneaker Pimps:

Oct 28, 2008

can we talk about his luggage?



1848! What a THRILL!

overload ('92)

Tuesday Afternoon Elegy

I'm feeling a little cracked today; so, to spare you all from my sleep-deprived, Dr. Phil-induced rants, I'm just going to continue speaking through other people. And what better mouthpiece could a girl ask for than Project Pat?

Last Summer, in the gloaming of a doomy relationship with an all-time-low of a boyfriend, I came across this real gem, a food column by Mark Bittman, the Times' heaven-sent Minimalist, a list of 101 easy meals, each described in a sentence or two, no useless measurements or directives. The meals were meant for summer, but I say they are scrumptious all the live long day, and handy in this here nouveau-Great Depression, as we try to muster the courage to not go out to eat every night. At the time that the article was published, I spent several days copying it down into a wee grey handmade (my hands!) notebook that I called my 'cook journal'—remember friends, my love life was in shambles; I was also spending a great deal of time weeping and watching "Cops." I needed to keep busy and fill my head with lovelier thoughts of moules preparations and curried lamb chops.

Dungeon Pop


Never Forget (the article that appeared in Rolling Stone last February about our dearest Britney in her darkest hour. I read it in the Atlanta airport en route to Key West for Pillow's birthday/hotel bar vomit festivities. I was breathless, holding on to every word, listening to "Toxic" and finally understanding the libretto. If you've never read it, please do. If you already have, revisit.)

Bathroom Ham Party: Hold Onto Your Heads

Call the Police!!!


Hold the phone y'all---teenaged banshee, Taylor Momsen, she of the hackneyed haircut, invisible skirt, and moldy eye-makeup, she whose recent PageSix mentions bring out the ogre in all of us, she who is FIFTEEN YEARS OLD, appeared sans shirt (at the two minute mark--sorry it's incomplete and buried in a Nate hearts Jenny compilation) in last night's "Gossip Girl" alongside little Caitlin Cooper, and I, for one, was shocked. BOO Josh Schwartz. You, young sir, are part of the problem, not the solutuion

Love in this Club


















I hate actors, but I love the British naval officers of the Napoleonic Wars (and the Frogs and the mercenary Spanish, oooh!). This afternoon's "Love in this Club" is young, brave Horatio Hornblower, not some spotty actor-fellow (though I am partial to the Horatio of the A&E miniseries based on the novels/this particular [Welsh] spotty actor-fellow).

Sculpture for Tuesday

I like to make jokes about Donald Judd being a fascist with all of his hard lines, precision, limitations, display-making, and Marfa compound building. But really, with the glitzy ones in particular, like this, Untitled (1965), he's just one of us, an utter American, a lover of the design object, Las Vegas, office towers, nice cars, mirrors, commercials, mysteries, movies, jewels, Shaker furniture, Plymouth rock, and Westward-ho. This piece deserves a critic who has a lot to say about objecthood and thingness. Theoretically dim, I am not that critic, but I do love downright handsomeness, sheen, a sense of order (and glamour?) on a dismal Tuesday, in a fast-crumbling (isn't it always?) world. Thanks Don.

Grumpy Old Men

Oct 27, 2008

I'm OK. You're OK.

Love in this Club

Pete Campbell, a fictional "Love in this Club," hails from AMC's deliciously jazzy and moralistic "Mad Men." Season dos came to a close last night, and we'll be missing Pete, our favorite tragic WASP-boy, all through the bitter winter.

High Times, Hard Times--the year 2003

Verses

"America"
Tony Hoagland, from What Narcissism Means to Me (2003)

Then one of the students with blue hair and a tongue stud
Says that America is for him a maximum-security prison

Whose walls are made of RadioShacks and Burger Kings, and MTV
Episodes where you can't tell the show from the commercials,

And as I consider how to express how full of shit I think he is,
He says that even when he's driving to the mall in his Isuzu

Trooper with a gang of his friends, letting rap music pour over them
Like a boiling Jacuzzi full of ballpeen hammers, even then he feels

Buried alive, captured and suffocated in the folds
Of the thick satin quilt of America

And I wonder if this is a legitimate category of pain,
or whether he is just spin doctoring a better grade,

And then I remember that when I stabbed my father in the dream
last night, it was not blood but money

That gushed out of him, bright green hundred-dollar bills
Spilling from his wounds, and--this is the wierd part--,

He gasped, "Thank god--those Ben Franklins were
Clogging up my heart--

And so I perish happily,
Freed from that which kept me from my liberty"--

Which is when I knew it was a dream, since my dad
Would never speak in rhymed couplets,

And I look at the student with his acne and cell phone and phony ghetto
clothes
And I think, "I am asleep in America too,

And I don't know how to wake myself either,"
And I remember what Marx said near the end of his life:

"I was listening to the cries of the past,
When I should have been listening to the cries of the future."

But how could he have imagined 100 channels of 24-hour cable
Or what kind of nightmare it might be

When each day you watch rivers of bright merchandise run past you
And you are floating in your pleasure boat upon this river

Even while others are drowning underneath you
And you see their faces twisting in the surface of the waters

And yet it seems to be your own hand
Which turns the volume higher?

Froggy Went A-Courtin', But He Won't Ride Until the Wedding Night



I spent the better part of last night watching the new TLC gem "17 Kids and Counting." The program follows the Duggars, a couple from Arkansas who made the decision to "let go and let God," where their reproductive life is concerned. They have 17 children, and wife Michelle is knocked up with number 18.

Last night's shitshow centered around eldest son Josh's, 21, decision to "court" his ladyfriend Anna, 20. At first, this all seemed relatively normal. Josh called Anna's father to ask for her hand in marriage, planned a cute surprise proposal, etc. Soon it became obvious that something a little, uh, different was going on. I thought that Josh was just being a weirdo when he kept talking about "courting" his future wife, but apparently it's a thing that these kids have chosen to do. They don't have sex (not shocking), they can't be alone together, and they basically have no physical contact aside from hand-holding. "Of course the first kiss should be for the wedding day," Josh said (so matter-of-factly that he had me believing it for a minute). Naturally, I scoffed at the whole deal. For me, sex and physical contact play an extremely important role in the formation of a romantic relationship. Plus, my mother always warned me about saving yourself for marriage. You run the risk of being stuck with a man who's bad in bed, and that's just not a risk that anyone can afford to take.

I'm usually most intrigued by things that have to do with bangin' (or not bangin' in this instance), but the most compelling aspect of this whole courtship thing is that, when you court, you don't date. You are to look at every potential partner in terms of marriage and children, and once it's decided that you want to marry them, you can get engaged, and that's pretty much when you start dating. This sounds totally insane and immediately offends my modern-womanness. But when the Duggars started explaining that courtship is basically designed to eliminate the pesky problem of emotional baggage, I kind of wanted to get on the bus. Isn't this just a less orthodox (as far as our current cultural climate is concerned) form of self-protection? The idea of not having all of the issues, complexes, and anxieties that I've been collecting since the age of 15 is almost enough to make me slap on an ankle length skirt and a chastity belt. But what are these kids sacrificing? Independence? Valuable life experience? Emotional growth? Sexual gratification? Sure, but they seem pretty damn happy.

Founding Fathers: Catra, Force-Captain of Hordak's Evil Horde

"Catra displays minor sorcery abilities. She possesses a magical mask, which when slid over her face gives the ability to transform into a purple panther. She has also shown telepathic control over all cats."

A Song For You

in lighter news...

BOOMKaT. New album out now. One L.O.V.E....

The one in the next stall is dying...




















She crawled (and I mean crawled) into the bathroom, slammed the door, and somehow managed to pull herself up for a minute to lock it. She was about to die, wearing an unflattering mid-calf skirt and foam-core platform sandals (which they still make?) in a seedy coke-bar-and-restaurant. "What was she thinking?," I wondered as I discussed with friends ideas about Culture Industry and the even more intriguing Black Embassy, both bizarre Factory-ish projects. This woman in the bathroom, however, was about to die, and seemed to have nothing to carry on her name, her beliefs, her terrible choice of footwear. . .

Maybe we had more than we realized. First of all, we had friends. Certainly no one would allow us to drop into a crawl position in public. Nor would they allow us to spend 10, 15, 20, 30 minutes alone in a bathroom, doing G-d knows what and praying to G-d knows who. Were we in the same position, certainly someone would save us, break open the door, call an ambulance, visit us at the hospital, all Demi Moore in St. Elmo's Fire with tubes and dramatic lighting, laughing, because now we knew that we could start over.

We didn't save her. We didn't know her. We joked about it (I mean, fuck, the foam-core platforms). That moment we cackled and strangers turned to us and joined in, because *it wasn't us*. Because someone who loved her was certainly about to save her....

I wonder what she thought, before the lights went out and it was all over. Perhaps she had a realization that it had come to naught, that life was a joke she didn't understand, that it was an agreement between her body and her soul, that she had surrounded herself with the wrong people, and that maybe these lessons would follow her into reincarnation. This next round, she could become something amazing. Maybe there were visions of a strong person taking a chance and loving her, a Kennedy Compound wedding, her daughter's first birthday, growing old and wondering how she'd pay for her medicine...

Eventually, someone showed up. We didn't worry about who she was, or concern ourselves with how shitty she was for leaving this chick she knew alone for 45 minutes to die and come back, die and come back. . . her arrival, no matter what, meant that everything was going to be okay. She had saved her, even kept track of the platform sandals as our heroine stumbled her way to the car, still clearly blacking out, unaware of the spectacle she had created...

Oct 26, 2008

Love in this Club

Christopher "Big Black" Boykin, star of the (tragically dunzo) reality series "Rob and Big," first citizen of Wiggins, Mississippi, former bodyguard, proponent of "murdered-out" things, doing work and Kashi cereal, all-around tub of goodness--

How I learned to stop worrying and (kind of) love the bomb


Yesterday, I went to see "Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton," the poorly titled retrospective of said painter at the dismal, cheaply outfitted New Museum. I was dreading it a little bit. I've had a (probably unfounded) low opinion of Peyton for a while, made all the worse by the announcement of this show, and a starry-eyed interview I heard in which she really seemed to be playing dumb (a not uncommon and pretty dreadful tendency of some female artists).

So, the canvases (as well as a few really lovely works on paper) are expert, lush, quintessential jewels, the brighter the better. Peyton handles paint with aplomb; the images are quiet and easy. The majority of the works are hilariously similar portarits of androgynous boys (and recently a few girls), all romantic death-pallor, floppy hair, and ruby lips. Some, particularly from the late nineties (punchy and a little rave-y), are downright stylish. Each time I was drawn to a piece, I felt an intense desire to see it in its natural habitat, the brightspot of a fine room.

I'd discovered that I liked her paintings, and the more I let go of my resentments, the better I felt. I had also discovered that the root of my distaste for Peyton was in her words, the words of her critics and admirers, the curators of the show. I do not read her the same way. For me, the work is banal, redundant, dull-making, and this is the very thing I like about it. She is no great intellectual, a poor historian and cultural anthropologist. Painting Kurt Cobain was boring and obvious in 1995, and it is boring and obvious now—not the revealing, incisive choice it might have been. She does not crown and valorize her subjects, make them "Live Forever" (whatever the hell that means); she makes them all part of a long run of small, nearly identical pictures, a sweet game of aesthetics for a Saturday afternoon.

bathroom ham party

where you at whodi??

The fact that people born in the 90's can buy cigarettes and having an ex-boyfriend, who we'll probably see on "To Catch a Predator" one day (if he ever learns to use the internet) are just two of the many things that make me feel old. But perhaps the thing that makes me most painfully aware of my advancing age is the cultural phenomenon of established musicians being dubbed as "new artists," just because there are a bunch of teenaged twits out there that someone can fool into believing this crap. I understand the allure of "discovering" a new band or artist—it makes you feel good to know about something that no one else knows about. So I guess fooling kids into thinking what's old is new is just another marketing scheme. Pretty genius, actually.

I recently saw a MySpace ad touting some kind of contest for "best rookie rapper." The first rapper that I recognized was The Game; okay sure, he's been around for a while, but never really hit (so I can rationalize that choice?). Next, I saw T.I.—Really? REALLY???? T.I. released his first album in 2001 and had his first huge commercial hit in 2003. He's been steady on the scene since then, so we can't even call this new album a comeback. After I got over the shock of T.I., I was assaulted even further when I saw Lil' Wayne was also a nominee. Lil' Wayne is even more ridiculous, as he's been around FOREVER, with his first commercial success coming in 1999 with the Hot Boys #1 album "Guerilla Warfare" and his solo debut "The Block is Hot." It wouldn't be presumputious to say that Lil' Wayne had a huge part in defining rap in the late 90's, but I guess kids who think he's a new artist probably weren't even allowed to listen to music at that point, so I can't really fault them for not knowing.

Just to drive the point home even further. . . remember a few years ago when Liz Phair came out with that new album and got nominated for "best new artist" at some crackpot MTV/VH1 awards show? Yeah. And last season on "The Hills," Audrina invited L.C. and Lo to come "check out a new band." When they walked in on Alkaline Trio recording their 6th studio album (not even counting 3 compilations, 8 EP's, and countless exclusive releases), I threw up a little bit in my mouth. But truthfully, I can only feel sorry for these babies who'll never know what it REALLY means to drop it like it's hot.

Founding Fathers: Christina Ricci as Wednesday Addams, sullen camper

Psychedelia's first bloom?—the transgressive 50's deserve another look, PART I

Psychedelia's first bloom?—the transgressive 50's deserve another look, PART II

Ode on a Grecian Urn, PART I

Ode on a Grecian Urn, PART II


Verses

"For Grace, After a Party"
Frank O'Hara, 1954


You do not always know what I am feeling
Last night in the warm spring air while I was
blazing my tirade against someone who doesn't
interest

me, it was love for you that set me

afire,

and isn't it odd? for in rooms full of
strangers my most tender feelings
writhe and
bear the fruit of screaming. Put out your hand,
isn't there

an ashtray, suddenly, there? beside
the bed? And someone you love enters the room
and says wouldn't

you like eggs a little

different today?

And when they arrive they are
just plain scrambled eggs and the warm weather
is holding.

pitbulls in lipstick



Twee on me



An oft repeated Apple commercial is enough to make a song that I really like icky and cloying (Feist's "1234," por ejemplo). In the case of this new ad for the fourth generation ipod nano, featuring a snippet of the song "Bruises" by Brooklyn outfit, Chairlift, I am driven to despair, sometimes blind rage. The song or partial song is rash-inducing and post-apocalyptically twee. It's danceable and that melodic line sung toward the end and the singer's voice are rather fine, but the lyrics . . . "I tried to do handstands for you. Every time I fell on you. Yeah, every time I fell for you."—these are the pathetic, tinny, retrograde spasms of the tired old slag that is the marketable hipster of 2008.

This girl sentimentally recalls the time that she tried to impress a lost love with her less than stellar gymnastics skills, no doubt while wearing a pastel striped leotard, because what could possibly be more attractive to a bitter, fey, nervous, self-loathing hipster dude than a woman who acts like she's seven? I know that the word "hipster" has become meaningless. The hipster is nothing new; Liberally defined, he might be John Keats, one of the flashy, slang-dropping kids of the 1920s, certainly any of a line of youth-culture saveurs after the Beats. "Hipster" has only become a dirty word as the market has taken a sick hold over it (obviously not for the first time), and since callow youths seem only to care for sneakers, haircuts, and a sick compulsion to behave like elementary schoolers (kickball tournaments?!). This must pass. It's dull and unsexy and driven by clueless Middle American transplants to the Big City who seem to think David Byrne and the color lavender are fresh. Recession times call for dark, sharp, strong archetypes, an actual stab at Avant-garde maybe?

Sorry if I offended, dear readers (as I said, blind rage).

Thug of the Week: Ashley Todd

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I first saw this story break Friday night in a bar full of loud and proud queens, who were glued to it like it was a director's cut of "Noah's Arc", so I (quite naively, as it seems) assumed everyone knew the story... Ashley Todd, 20 years young and so full of daddy issues that Lindsay Lohan has started making frequent visits to mediums to commune with Sylvia Plath and figure out what the fuck's up, filed a police report with a shiner and a "B" carved into her face, claiming the local black man mugged her, beat her up, and taught her a lesson about being a McCain supporter.

She made the whole thing up, we now know, and apparently punched herself in the eye and scratched a backwards "B" into her face just to prove how disgusting Obama supporters are (as black people and democrats alike never learned their letters because they didn't have a strong stay-at-home-hockey-mom to teach them their alphabet during moose huntin' excursions)... My only hope is that Jesus came to her in a twinkie-induced moment of rapture and told her it was the right thing to do.

God bless you, Ashley Todd. Not only did you make self-mutilation and "not insignificant" mental problems sexy again, you also reminded the world of Kelly Osbourne, as we all initially wondered what the fuck she was doing on CNN. Let's make babies some day. A&P's very first Thug of the Week goes to Ashley "Excuse My Beauty and Ruthless Determination" Todd...