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Video Service: La musique d’embarras

Sunday, January 31st, 2010



Hey former teenagers, do you remember when you were totally into music? I do. It feels like my chest is full of hot burning coals of shame when I think back on those days, but I can’t stop the remembering.

Junior high is when people started asking what kind of music I liked. I said I didn’t know, which was the Wrong Answer. The right answer would have been either “rap” or “rock”, a sign of a cultural sore point that had developed in the face of hip-hop’s rise to the forefront of the popular consciousness. What could I say? I liked Weird Al, and all the stuff they played on America’s Top 40. I was twelve, for god’s sake.

That experience might have had something to do with my approach to music later in life, because I grew to hate the question. I hated the way it reduced the world to two broad categories. I hated the fact that it was not a question about taste, but a demand that one produce one’s cultural bona fides. I hated the racial implications of the question, couching it as an irreconcilable opposition.

A year later though, I started getting into a couple of metal bands, and I figured that was as good a genre as any to admit to enjoying. I was feeling beaten down, and I was willing to settle into an easy answer that I could give people. Then came that one magical detention, when the teacher I was stuck with decided to play Yaz’s Upstairs at Eric’s on his shitty little boombox.

Well, that was it. I learned it really is okay to pick and choose, that allegiance to categories is an obstacle to happiness. (Or deep depression – I got into The Smiths, at some point.) Unfortunately I got a bit carried away, enjoying the obscure chiefly for its unpopularity, the esoteric mostly for its inaccessibility.

I’ve gotten over that, thankfully. I’m beyond my irrational fear of the quotidian, which is good, but I’ve also lost much of my passion, which is probably not. I do remain mostly unapologetic about the music I like, a sometimes useful hold-over from the old snobby days.

That said, I’d be quite embarrassed if somebody were ever to get a hold of my iPod. If you clicked on the video at the top of this post, you might have an inkling as to why.

| January 31st, 2010 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Entertainment, Music, Pop Culture | Tags: | Trackback | No Comments »



Don’t watch the Star Wars Christmas special

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

Seriously. You might think that I’m trying to be funny. I’m not. You might think that watching is some sort of right of passage, or maybe you think that some things are so bad that they’re good. Even if that’s true in principle, the Star Wars Holiday special does not fit into that profile.

If you’ve already seen it, you know what I’m talking about. It wasn’t fun, was it? If you’re like me you don’t even want to describe it to others, lest they get the wrong idea and actually attempt to watch it themselves.

If you haven’t seen it, but think that you might want to, may I suggest that you check out Seanbaby’s 7 Most Baffling Moments in the Star Wars Holiday Special.

| December 24th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Humor, Pop Culture | Tags: , | Trackback | No Comments »



For The Fan Who Has Everything

Friday, December 4th, 2009

io9 has published a gift guide for sci-fi fans, and it’s not bad, I suppose. In fact, I guess it could be quite useful. It’s easy to assume that (even non-sci-fi) fans aren’t all that difficult to shop for—hey, at least you know what they’re interested in, right? But it’s not always that simple.

I have a loved-one who is a Twilight fanatic. Knowing that, I might unwisely assume that I could buy any old widget with the title written on it, put a bow on it, and boom–I win Christmas. But no, it’s more complicated than that. For one thing, there’s a lot of useless tat out there that nobody would want as a gift, Twilight branded or not. Also, I’m not entirely sure which masculinity-threatening boy-monster it is that she’s into at the moment, and heaven help me if I were to get her something with the wrong one’s picture on it.

Never mind the fact that everyone she knows is going to be giving her Twi-stuff this year. And, by the way, that’s going to make for an embarrassing Christmas morning: “Oh, a Twilight shirt. And poster. And key-ring. And folders. And calendar. And—holy shit, I do have other interests, you know! Why must you always focus on the most obvious thing about me?”

Anyway, it turns out the thing she really wants is a new computer. (I can’t afford that, though. Looks like it’s a giftcard sort of year. Also, I personally don’t like Twilight and looking at page after page of Twi-junk would give me lethal indigestion, probably.)

Another thing to remember is that fans have wildly different feelings about merchandise. Someone who’s crazy for it probably has a lot of merch already, and you risk adding duplicates to their collections if you plan on giving them something related to their interests. Worse yet, the really unique stuff can get expensive.

Then again, some fans can get a little uncomfortable with the idea of collecting merchandise. I know of a few Doctor Who and Star Trek fans, for example, who would be quite embarrassed to receive a twenty-foot scarf, say, or a t-shirt with a giant picture of Mr. Spock on the front. To some fans, the lack of such physical relics is what separates a healthy interest from sad bastardhood. (Don’t look at me—I’ve got a sonic screwdriver pen and a TARDIS money-box, for god’s sake, and I’m normal….)

The gift issue problem can be compounded if you’re dealing with the sort of person who thinks that gift-giving is a test. How well do you know me? they seem to ask. (I’m not going to get into it here, because you can websearch for the phrase “passive-aggressive” all on your own, and spend from now until the crack of doom reading all the relevant hits.) The trick of course is to give the fan in your life something that’s non-obvious, but greatly appreciated.

Also, could you solve the problem of world hunger and global warming while you’re at it?

| December 4th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Fandom, Money & Commerce, Pop Culture | Tags: , , | Trackback | No Comments »



What’s Keeping You?

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

In a recent episode of his WTF Podcast, Marc Maron talked about his fantasy of moving off the grid. As in, moving into a cabin in the woods or on a mountain somewhere, completely cut off from the outside world. Like most fantasies of this type however, the inevitable problem of boredom and a nagging addiction to modern technology makes it difficult to see how this dream could ever be made real.

But the idea of disconnecting from the rest of the world remains attractive, even if most of us will never see it through. This is chiefly because much of the media that we’re exposed to is bullshit, to put it bluntly. And, even if you were to try to tune it all out, well that just makes it feel all the more inescapable. You may not watch Access Hollywood, or Extra, but that doesn’t stop you from interacting with people in your day to day life who do; and those people sometimes want to talk about it. You also might have to buy food every now and again, and the supermarket checkout line is not willing to back off with that stuff.

Sometimes, you just want to buy some bananas without seeing pictures of Kate Gosselin, you know?

But there’s always something that keeps us from flying off into the wilderness with a bag of oats and a gun. For many of us, we know we’d miss the little things that only a decadent, late-stage capitalist society can provide. Like, I don’t know, Kit Kats. Or Purell.

Of course, thousands of preceding generations didn’t need any of this stuff, which simultaneously enhances and enervates the desire to break away from consumerist society. It shows us that the most important task of consumer culture is to create need, and that’s a realization that frustrates us. But knowing the facts doesn’t take those needs away, nor does it replace the system of artificial demand that keeps the economy going with anything useful. It just kind of pisses us off.

We sometimes hate that our culture and economy have made themselves indispensible to our comfort and wellbeing. You sometimes see this in the bitter acquiescence on the face of people who can’t get through the morning without that first cup of joe. They grimly file up to the counter to get their fix, but there’s no pleasure in the act; a sure sign that they’ve moved on from the recreational, and into the maintenance phase of an addition.

I don’t think that the latest comings and goings of celebrities, or the need for caffeine are what’s keeping most people from dropping out of society, necessarily, nor is it the lust for ultimately pointless high tech toys. It’s people that most of us need—to make our food, to fix our teeth, to generate power for heat and light—to survive. You—all of us—are at the center of a complex web of support that keeps us fed and clothed and comfortable. Some of those people like to spend their off hours playing Xbox, or reading trashy books, or looking at computer porn, or not spending a whole heck of a lot of time considering the consequences of their political beliefs.

The price we pay for that, of course, is the pointless, distracting chaff that fills our awareness of the world. Self-sufficient isolation is possible, but very difficult to achieve for most people. Our reliance on the vast network of human interaction means having to deal with all the interference that is generated to supply the needs (even if it’s the need for gossip and scandal) of others.

You may hate NPR, for example, but your car detailing service customers like it, so it continues to exist. All of the stuff that we want to run away from has a value to someone else out there who, indirectly perhaps, we rely on.

But, so what? The whole point of disconnected self-sufficiency is to get away from all that. If we don’t need other people, then we no longer have to deal with all of that shit that’s constantly being blasted out into the culture for their benefit, either. You can live in your cabin, keep to yourself most of the time, and come back to society for brief visits when you need something like cataract surgery, right?

Well, yeah. If you can afford it. What kind of insurance does a mountain man get, these days?

If your desire for isolation is inflexible, then you may have to accept the fact that you’re not going to live as long as you might have it you stuck it out in the sick culture you’ve abandoned. Lot’s of people might be willing to give up their creature comforts, but it’s something else entirely to gamble your existence on the possibility that you’ll never need serious medical assistance, or any other kind of expert help that you can’t provide yourself.

That, I think is what keeps many of us around. It’s very easy to claim that we’ve all become weak, effete marshmallows, addicted to cheap luxury. But people are remarkably adaptable, and as this economic downturn (and the New York Times) has proven, people can and will go without when it’s important to them.

Rather, what we really need is the help and expertise of others. Even if we’re not taking advantage of that stuff now, our continued participation in society at least makes it an available option, for most of us anyway. (And social progress is really about widening that availability—why should we have all the advantages?)

That’s what keeps us around. We are hedging our bets. 

| November 19th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Philosophy, Pop Culture | Tags: | Trackback | No Comments »



Easy Bleeder

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Stephen Marche wrote a recent Esquire piece, wherein he posits (among other things) that the popularity of vampires in fiction is due to the fact that they are stand-ins for the gay men that young straight women want to have sex with.

After seeing a bunch of links to the piece, I was concerned that it was just one of the many responses to female fannishness that tends crop up every now and again. You know the ones I mean. They fall into two basic categories: The Incredulous (Why do women like this shitty, terrible thing?), and the Superior (Don’t worry, I know why women like this shitty, terrible thing).

But actually, though many find it almost irresistible to drag Marche’s piece to the Pillory of Snark (including myself, apparently), I have to admit it kind of made some points here and there. It’s not at all perfect (first draft?), but maybe there’s some value to be found.

At least near the beginning he was doing okay. Yes, it’s true that vampires in fiction are often metaphors for whatever social or sexual anxieties their authors (and their audiences) were dealing with at the time. And at the end Marche is making the case for hope: In the current explosion of vampire fiction he sees a group, once thought of as freaky monsters, starting to become accepted by a wider culture. Our acceptance of vampires, he claims, is a prelude to, or a parallel of, our acceptance of diverse sexual practices and orientations. And you know, I kind of hope he’s right about that. I just don’t think that he quite makes the case here. It could all just be a coincidence.

I don’t think it was a particularly good idea to include that bit suggesting that teenage girls lust after gay guys because they’re hot, but not risky. For one thing, who knows what teenage girls think? (Why there always seems to be a guy around who thinks he’s got the inside track on the teenage female mentality, I’ll never know.) But, for another thing, I just don’t see how this supports the conclusion Marche reaches in the end.

Are we supposed to feel hopeful about the idea of awkward teenage girls pinning their fantasies on unattainable gay males, as if they are the font from which all tolerance flows? If it means that those girls will eventually take their future boyfriends and husbands to the theater to see vampire movies, and that exposure somehow translates into gay acceptance, then maybe. But, somehow I think that grudging acquiescence, or an obligation to please one’s girlfriend will gain you much. That might sell more books and movie tickets, but it might also lead to quite a few more awkward, contentious moments between actual, real people, with tender, hurtable feelings. Um, yay? (But, perhaps this is where acceptance comes from? I don’t know.)

On the other hand, writing about that stuff was brilliant, because he sure got a lot of links, didn’t he?

| October 15th, 2009 | by BCSilvia | Categories: Books & Literature, Entertainment, Fandom, Gender, Pop Culture, Psychology | Tags: , | Trackback | No Comments »



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