It’s time for the Labor Day Weekend. But don’t leave just yet. In a minute-by-minute rundown of last night’s ultraslick, ultraridiculous, ultra-important MTV Video Music Awards, Ryan McGee has again demonstrated his encyclopedic knowledge of, and appropriately cynical attitude to, the kulcha of pop. His real-time review, a race “against the clock and Meta Carpal Syndrome,” is a circus feat […]
Archives for August 2003
DREAMING OF JUSTICE
Let it not be said that this column ignored the 40th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic “I have a dream” speech. About 200,000 people assembled at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington to hear King and other civil rights leaders on Aug. 28, 1963. If you have Real Player, you can listen to King’s speech in full on the History Channel Web site. The speech lasted […]
VELVET DREAMS
Now for really serious things: a magazine swimsuit issue starring Albert Einstein, which needs no further comment, and tonight’s broadcast of the 20th MTV Video Music Awards, which has starred so many media-made creatures that the ever-reliable celebrity site MSNBC.com insists on offering them more free publicity. Ryan McGee, a former Harvard man with a beautifully named Weblog, Wading […]
AROUND THE BEND
What are they thinking? It has me flummoxed. Four out of five Americans disapprove of removing the Ten Commandments monument from the rotunda of Alabama’s state judicial building. I know America is populated by weirdos. How else do you explain TV shows like Fox’s “Miss Dog Beauty Pageant“? But have we gone so completely nuts that we […]
REARVIEW MIRROR
Somebody must have turned back the clock. The iconic image of Allen Ginsberg, recalling his “Pentagon Exorcism” days circa 1967 (stars-and-striped stovepipe hat, black-framed eyeglasses, full beard and riveting, innocent eyes), stares at me from corner newstands all over Manhattan. His face is on the cover of Time Out/New York, which dubs him “the spiritual […]
LOOKING HIGH AND LOW
Since this column is about the arts, as well as media and culture, may I recommend three art shows? One, which has the advantage of being online, is “the bauhaus at the busch-reisinger.” It comes to us from Harvard and offers details of Bauhaus design — the thingness of things — in five categories of what […]
CATCHING UP
By Jan Herman The New York Times finally caught up with us and ran its obituary about David Jiranek. The Jiranek family put on an unforgettable memorial service Sunday at Lucas Point Beach in Old Greenwich, Conn., where he grew up. Dubbed “The David Show” by Todd Hoffman, one of his four half-brothers, it was both touching and irreverent — so much so that […]
BIBLICAL ILLUSIONS
Yesterday’s item asking about the design of the granite Ten Commandments monument that was ordered removed from the rotunda of Alabama’s state judicial building brought a response from blogger Mac Diva that may help clear up the mystery. He writes: Jan, it appears the design of the monument was worked out between [Alabama Chief Justice Roy] Moore […]
THE COMMANDMENT FOLLIES
As long as we’re looking at the issue of Alabama’s Ten Commandments, my staff of thousands thought you might find an old Wall Street Journal story relevant. Unfortunately, it’s not online except by subscription. The headline on the story, when it ran in the print edition in April 2001, gives you the gist of it: “When Moses’ Laws Run Afoul of the U.S.’s, Get Me Cecil B. […]
MONUMENTAL ISSUE
Nobody has taken Alabama’s chief justice to task for the design of his two-and-a-half ton, granite monument to the Ten Commandments. In fact, not one of the dozen or so news stories I’ve seen about his refusal to remove the monument from the state judicial building mentions the quality of the design or the identity of the artist […]
MORE SUBVERSION
For all the artistic types who wished they were Leonardo Da Vinci, here’s your chance to express yourself. Now you can Botox “The Mona Lisa.” EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
APPOINTED ROUNDS
Neither rain, nor sleet, nor snow, nor gloom of night shall keep the postman from his appointed rounds? Well, we hope so. But what about choice reading matter? Your piece about The Realist brought me back to the summer of 1963 when I was a 19-year-old college student delivering the U.S. mail in Forest Hills, N.Y. One of […]
IN MEMORIAM
Awful news has arrived: The remarkable originator of Through the Eyes of Children: The Rwanda Project, someone whose good works were beyond admiration, is dead. His close friend, Jenifer Howard, writes, “It is with the heaviest heart that I let you know that a terrible accident claimed the life of our friend, David Jiranek, on Saturday night. While on […]
BAGHDAD-ON-THE-HUDSON
New Yorkers got a taste of what William Sydney Porter meant when he called their town Baghdad-on-the-Hudson. “There’s more poetry in a block of New York,” said Porter, otherwise known as O. Henry, “than in 20 daisied lanes.” Last night during the great Northeastern blackout of ’03, he could have said “than in all the […]
THOU SHALT NOT
It had to happen. Somebody feels put out that this column has dared to invade the sacrosanct precinct of the arts with an alien subject: political opinion. I quote from a message sent yesterday to ArtsJournal editor Douglas McLennan: “Can you explain what exactly Jan Herman [is] writing about? Are you no longer running an […]
PLANET SCHWARZENEGGER
Putting it to Arnold, Slate reminds us of his inflated, risk-averse business reputation. Writer Daniel Gross recalls the bankrupt wreckage of Planet Hollywood and what a “glory hog” our celebrity of the people was as that ’90s restaurant chain went belly up. Arnold never had to put up a dime. (That was lucky, not smart.) All he […]
STRAWS IN THE WIND DEPT.
I don’t know why it took the archeologists to tell us that the Roman emperor Caligula was a maniac. Anyone who’s seen John Hurt’s Caligula in the 1975 British television series “I, Claudius” would have guessed. It was on cable again last week. If you haven’t read the Robert Graves novel that series was based on, or the sequel […]