Emphasis Added


February 2003
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28  
Jan   Mar


 

TOPICS WE DISCUSS HERE:

 

 

 

EA'S GREATEST RANTS
Art, Spectacle and Terrorism
Car Porn
Freedom is not a Handout
Livy It Up
Guard Rails and Guard Towers
The Proud Tower
Who Needs Democracy?
The Axis of Ignorance
Shadow of a Dowd
Fox on the Run
Just Another Word for Nothing Left to Lose
Tit for Tat (Rob vs. WSJ)
What Price Victory?
The First Casualty
The Guns of Baghdad
New Europe/Old Europe
Is it Even Worth Asking Bush for Reasons?
War and Peace
Amiri Baraka: Righteous Dope
My Country Right or ?
Liberal Media - Myth & Reality
Matters of Life and Death
Dockworker’s Strike
Who’s “Out of Touch,” WSJ?
Post-Election Analysis
Failures of Direct Democracy
Prison Guard Unions a Problem for Dems

 

 

 

 

Book Reviews

Plateforme by Michel Huellebecq
Guarding Hanna by Miha Mazinni
Unholy Wars by John Cooley
The Inquisition of the Middle Ages by Henry Lea
H.P. Lovecraft: An Appreciation
The Filth by Grant Morrison
I Was Seven in '75 by Ellen Forney
Supernatural Law by Batton Lash
Lies  by Al Franken
 
 
Who is Brian Duffy?

(and why is he saying these terrible things on this site?)

 

Monday, February 03, 2003

Pattern Recognition

"The sky above the port was the color of television tuned to a dead channel." With this great line began the literary career of William Gibson, a prophet 10 minutes ahead of his time and one of the most important authors of the last years of the 20th century. In person, the Great Man resembles Icabod Crane, and he reads with the enthusiasm of William Burroughs after a big night out with the Wild Boys. The author's own oddly-compelling anti-charisma notwithstanding, his new novel Pattern Recognition seems to find him in fine form (I'll report back in about a week with the complete lowdown).  It is a departure for Gibson in several ways - most notably because it is set in the here-and-now, since the shape of our technology and society appears to have now completely filled the ugly mold that cyberpunk dug for it in the 1980s. It also features a linear narrative from a single character's point of view, a welcome innovation in my opinion since Gibson's trademark multi-camera storytelling techniques had grown a bit stale in his last several outings.

Gibson read to a packed house (90% male) at the University of Washington's Kane Hall auditorium, where he plowed laconically through the first several pages of his latest book and delphically orated in response - more or less - to questions from the audience. The organizers of the event then had the supreme bad judgment to allow someone to interview Gibson as he was signing for the (very long) line of people who had plunked down their $24 for the hot-off-the-presses new hardcover. As a result, most people were cheated out of that brief but personal moment of interaction with the author, who becomes basically a piece of equipment programmed to replicate his signature. (Sorry - in my blog, I get to vent).


9:35:42 PM    Emphasize This! []

“We were somewhere on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold…”

In honor of the always-welcome appearance of Hunter S. Thompson in Salon this morning, today’s theme honors the self-styled doctor of Gonzo Journalism.

 

Even Paranoids Have Real Enemies

Most people who are paranoid about the American political system aim high: conspiracies of money and power, crooked officials, bent judges (or Justices), voters intimidated by fraud, lies or violence. But what if the fundamental apparatus of democracy were itself corrupt – that is, the voting machines? Read this and see if you sleep better tonight.

 

When the Going Gets Weird, the Weird Turn Pro

Going to see grizzled ex-cyberpunk William Gibson read from his hot-off-the-presses new book Pattern Recognition tonight. Interesting how Gibson and his cohorts are credited with accurately predicting the shape that technology (particularly the Internet) would take, but receive few kudos for just as accurately describing the economic, social and political dislocations that would result from it.

 

Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail

Former Colorado Senator and HST buddy (which may be his most compelling qualification) Gary Hart continues to act like someone who wants to be President. If he can somehow manage to put the baggage of 15 years ago behind him, he offers one of the more compelling combinations of brains, political skill, and sensible positions on both foreign and domestic issues of anyone in the Democratic picture. At the very least, his re-emergence as a visible public figure is a welcome addition to the debate.

 

Send Lawyers, Guns and Money

One musical figure I always associated with HST is the singer-songwriter Warren Zevon, both because of his work and the sensibility behind it. Zevon was recently the recipient of a very bad diagnosis and probably won’t be with us much longer, but he seems determined to get the most out of whatever time he’s got left.

 

Generation of Swine

According to this piece from the Times of London, British swineherds are now required to provide their pigs with toys for “environmental enrichment.” The story, which reads like a bad Monty Python routine, is apparently on the level – farmers who fail to provide recreation for their pigs will face fines up to £1000.


9:16:15 AM    Emphasize This! []

Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2004 Rob Salkowitz.
Last update: 9/27/2004; 5:21:15 PM.
Emphasis Added Theme designed by Andrew Lueck and Rob Salkowitz.

 

GUILT BY ASSOCIATION
Rayne Today
Secular Blasphemy
Different Strings
Pesky the Rat
Why Your Wife Won't Have Sex
How to Save the World
Fried Green Al Qaedas
Rich Pure and Simple (Minded)
Patriotically Incorrect
Filtchyboy
Miss Feva
Catnmus
Dave Cullen
Dick Jones Patteran Pages
FIONA
Reflections
The Barbaric Yawp
Real Live Preacher
Andrew Bayer
Blog Baby
Ken Dow
Paulapalooza
No Code
Radio Free Blogistan
Daihatsu Graceland
World O'Crap
Dr. Omed
Al Hedstrom
Paul Andrews
 
 
METABLOG:
Virtual Occuquan
 

POLITICS

Buzzflash
Josh Marshall
Ruy Teixeira
Daily Kos
Atrios
CalPundit
Mark Kleinman
Steve Gilliard
Billmon
Liberal Oasis
The Left Coaster
Oliver Willis
Ernie the Attorney
South Knox Bubba
Ken Layne
Sadly, No
Nathan Newman
Interesting Times
USS Clueless
Juan Cole
Matt Yglesias
Taegan Goddard
Happy Carpenter
 
MEDIAWATCH
Eric Alterman
Daily Howler
Mediawhores
Busy Busy Busy
Cursor
 
IDEAS
Christopher Hitchens
Paul Krugman
Arts and Letters Daily
Orcinus
New Republic
 
NEWS 'n VIEWS
The Economist
New York Times
Slate
The Nation
Reason
Washington Monthly
WSJ Opinion Journal
National Review
AlterNet
IndyMedia
Guardian UK
Seattle P-I
Seattle Times
Stateline
The Hill
The Agonist
 
FICTION
Neil Gaiman
William Gibson
Scala House Press
Harlan Ellison
Warren Ellis
Arkham House
Peter David
Grant Morrison
 
 

 

OBSESSIONS
Min's Dragnet Records
USS Mariner
Baseball Prospectus
ComiCon.com
TalkLeft
FilmThreat
The Stranger
 
 
 

 

Ads 'n Ends


 



Site Meter

Blogroll Me!


Proud to be a member of BlogSnob!

Rate Me on BlogHop.com!
the best pretty good okay pretty bad the worst help?


Is my Blog HOT or NOT?

Click here to visit Blogster.Net - Top Blogs!

< £ Salon Bloggers & >




Subscribe to "Emphasis Added" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.