matthewmcvickar + culture   127

Brandon Soderberg: Rappers and Same-Sex Marriage: How Much Do You Really Care? (Spin)
Rappers are presented as violent, vulgar sexists and homophobes, and then they're not only expected to have fully-formed opinions on social issues, but progressive ones. This is an ugly update on the always implicit, often explicit demand that hip-hop, if it is to be lauded and celebrated, must espouse a strong, left-leaning political message.
homosexuality  gay  hiphop  rap  celebrity  writing  music  culture  politics 
12 hours ago by matthewmcvickar
Articles: Mind Is Your Might: Fiona Apple's Oversharing | Features | Pitchfork
…the way that people have written and talked about the searing physical images of her recent performances—her sinewy muscles and berserk movements and haphazardly-scrunchied hair—suggest that she’s providing [an unexpected jolt of humanness in the ever-churning, willfully plastic cultural machine], that she's a savior for those who need one (and, to be sure, not all of us do) from these airbrush’d, cyborg’d, sea-punk’d times. Because the wild physicality of these performances reminds us of our own muscle and bone.
music  writing  culture  musicbusiness 
4 days ago by matthewmcvickar
Nell Boeschenstein: A Song for Aretha (The Morning News)
I wish for my own voice what Aretha’s has had from the beginning: a sense of self so strong that she had to open her mouth and sing to keep from exploding, to keep herself whole.
music  arethafranklin  culture  soul  death  celebrity 
8 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight: Your Chemical Romance (Pitchfork)
People born during a dip in the birth rate grow up consuming a lot of culture that's aimed at someone older than them. People born during a boom do not do cultural apprenticeship, because everything is quickly aimed at them; they watch the things that appeal to their age group bloom and succeed, whether anyone else is interested in it or not. This is why some Americans have spent decades clutching their heads as the Baby Boom generation makes big chunks of our world revolve around itself: Large cohorts have a large gravitational pull.
music  culture  taste  writing 
10 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Allison Benedikt: The mean-girl advice of What To Expect When You’re Expecting. (Slate Magazine)
‘”What To Expect” is, then, finally, a self-fulfilling prophesy, because what to expect as an expectant mother today is to be bombarded with information about how you are doing it wrong—whether it is carrying a baby in your womb, pushing it out, or raising it.’
pregnancy  parenting  writing  culture  children  america  80s 
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Jon Caramanica: Rihanna and Chris Brown Appear on Each Other’s Songs (NYTimes.com)
‘If the songs were dull or disposable, they’d still be important, but they might matter less. But they’re both good, “Birthday Cake” very much so. The quality matters because they’re likely to lodge themselves in the public consciousness and seep onto radio playlists: this mess won’t just melt into the air.’
music  culture  domesticviolence  radio  writing 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Nitsuh Abebe: Embarrassment Rock (Pitchfork)
‘Pity the poor rock fan? Well, no: Rock fans have launched enough snobby, pernicious bits of language at other genres that they could afford to do some penance resurrecting their own.’
rockism  music  writing  culture  boomers  rock  from instapaper
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Lindsay Zoladz: Lana Del Rey: Born to Die (Pitchfork)
‘In terms of its America-sized grandeur and its fixation with the emptiness of dreams, Born to Die attempts to serve as Del Rey's own beautiful, dark, twisted fantasy, but there's no spark and nothing at stake.’
ldr  music  review  criticism  writing  culture  america  sex  gender 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Maura Johnston: How Not to Write About Female Musicians: A Handy Guide (Village Voice)
‘1. Go through your piece and flip the gender of your descriptive phrases' subjects. Are there any that sound ludicrous as a result? 2. Are you essentially making shit up about the artist in order to sexualize her? 3. Are you comparing the artist you're writing about to other female artists only? If so, why? 4. Are you writing about a moment where your subject flirts with you and you respond in kind?’
music  culture  gender  sex  writing  ldr  rihanna  ladygaga  adele  amywinehouse  kesha  mileycyrus  nickiminaj 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
The Human Library
‘Structured to mimic real library browsing, participants would search the card catalog, apply for a library card, and then check out one of the 35 books as they became available. The book titles, chosen by the “books” themselves, included “Custodian,” “Evangelical Christian,” “Fat Woman,” “Feminist,” “Iraq War Veteran,” “LDS Missionaries (Mormon),” “Olympic Athlete,” “Orphanage Boy,” “Psychiatrist,” and “Queer,” among others. Readers and books engaged in one-on-one conversations that lasted 30 minutes.’
culture  library  people 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Dave Moore: The Lana Bottle (Cr4Bdbgs)
Comparing the discussion around Lana Del Rey to those around Paris Hilton's 2006 album.
ldr  music  writing  fame  culture 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Philip Sherburne: Dance Music at the Grammys: What Skrillex, Deadmau5, David Guetta, et al. Mean (or Don't) (SPIN.com)
‘I don't want to come across as rockist, but this matters. And to pretend otherwise, and try to cover it up with dance steps and glow sticks and an uncomfortable, kind-of-almost-but-not-really mash-up between Deadmau5 and Foo Fighters, is to treat dance music as just another fad to be chewed up by Big Entertainment and bottled up like a noxious pot of 5-Hour Energy.’
music  dance  grammys  awards  culture  electronica  from instapaper
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Sasha Frere-Jones: The Grammy Awards: Chris Brown Overload (The New Yorker)
‘Woman-beating rage-broccoli Chris Brown lip-synced his single “Turn Up the Music” (without being threatened by Sir Elton John) and danced roughly as well as a third-rate Chicago footwork dancer. He ended his performance by back-flipping off the stage, though sadly not off the earth.’
music  writing  grammys  awards  television  culture  domesticviolence  from instapaper
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Eric Harvey: Re: strippertweets: when did you stop beating your wife?
‘There was such intense (online) media coverage of Chris Brown’s horrible deed, plus indexical evidence of its effects on Rihanna’s face, that it quickly outpaced his musical identity. Now, he’s just tagged as a violent shithead, and arguably the Grammys’ ignorance of this fact only heightened this feeling.’
culture  music  violence  domesticviolence 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Amy Rebecca Klein: The Last Thing I'll Ever Write About Lana Del Rey
‘Exploring “what a woman should be” is boring and cliche in the 21st century, and perhaps that is why Lana Del Rey seems to many to be so bored and sad on stage. So let’s take Lana Del Rey for what she is—a pop star playing a role, a woman whose real life we know nothing about—and learn from what she’s taught us about our own insufferable addiction to a vapid version of femininity. In the future, I’m hoping we’ll accept more female artists who are interested in mining the depths of who they really are.’
ldr  gender  sex  music  writing  culture  from instapaper
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Eric Harvey: tUnE-yArds, PJ Harvey, and St. Vincent Get Physical (Village Voice)
‘2011 indeed was a remarkable year for the pop body in all of its beautiful, ugly, complex, and grotesque forms.’
body  culture  music  writing  pop 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Eric Harvey: Mark Richardson’s ‘A Proposed New Year's Resolution for Music Critics’ (marathonpacks)
‘Modern societies don’t advance if they don’t create new things. So human beings start asking new questions when they encounter a cultural object or idea: what about this can I identify (i.e. what about it is “old”), and what aspects of it are new (i.e. novel enough to create demand for it)?’

‘The questions arise: What specific aspects of the past are appropriate fodder for new hybridizations, or what methods of hybridization are privileged over others? Most importantly, why is this?’
history  music  modernism  retro  criticism  culture 
january 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Alex Pappademas: Lex Luger Can Write a Hit Rap Song in the Time It Takes to Read This
‘A few years ago, before anyone knew his name, before rap artists from all over the country started hitting him up for music, the rap producer Lex Luger, born Lexus Lewis, now age 20, sat down in his dad’s kitchen in Suffolk, Va., opened a sound-mixing program called Fruity Loops on his laptop and created a new track.’ That was ‘Hard in da Paint’.
hiphop  music  culture 
november 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Warming Glow: R.I.P. Andy Rooney
‘Rooney was an unremarkable, cranky bore whose bitching about simple annoyances struck a nerve with other aging white people who were frightened by or opposed to change.’
deaths  people  culture  america 
november 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Steven Hyden: The monoculture is a myth (Salon.com)
‘If we stop looking to the past, we might realize that we’re living in a golden age of music listening and discussion. The Internet has enabled more people to hear more music than at any point in human history. More people are writing about music than ever — on websites, on personal blogs and Facebook pages.’
music  writing  culture  america 
october 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Nitsuh Abebe: Indie Grown-Ups
‘One good indicator of this norm’s normalness? The main criticism you hear about this kind of record—even outweighing references to Starbucks and/or the bourgeoisie—is that it is just too dull to even bother producing any more complex indictment of it. These acts, intentionally or not, have won; they’ve taken a lower-sales, lower-budget version of the type of trip Sting once took, from a post-punk upstart to an adult staple.’
indie  music  musicbusiness  taste  culture  mainstream 
october 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Vulture: Nitsuh: Watch the Throne: Uneasy Heads Wear Gaudy Crowns
“It’s a portrait of two black men thinking through the idea of success in America; what happens when your view of yourself as a suppressed, striving underdog has to give way to the admission that you’ve succeeded about as much as it’s worth bothering with; and how much your victory can really relate to (or feel like it’s on behalf of) your onetime peers who haven’t got a shred of what you’ve won. It’s not a topic that deserves to be scrubbed up, either; there are things about Kanye’s tiresome self-involvement and moody debauchery — the way he sounds like some sullen hip-hop emperor, stalking around the crumbling gilded palace of his own psyche, muttering angrily and getting aggressive with the help — that belong in any such portrait.”
hihop  kanyewest  jayz  writing  music  culture  america  class  money 
august 2011 by matthewmcvickar
WIRED Magazine: Chain World Videogame Was Supposed to be a Religion—Not a Holy War
The story of Jason Rohrer’s ‘Chain World’, a customized fork of Minecraft of which there is only a single copy available on a USB stick and which is meant to be played only once, following a strict set of commandments, and then passed on to someone else. It’s meant to be a game about religion.
culture  religion  games  videogames 
july 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Repulsive Interactions: Patton Oswalt writes about the demise of nerd culture in Wired...
“Nerds will still be nerds, and trust me, their adolescences will still be awful enough to provide fodder for a lifetime of creativity and humor, if they’re lucky. The thing that everyone seems to forget is that nerddom, in its purest form, is a teenage affliction, something that many, if not most, people grow out of. They figure out how to be passionate about their interests without being smug and humorless about them. They learn to laugh at their past humiliations, and to celebrate this newfound comfort in their own skins, they proudly take on the epithet so long slung in their direction: they call themselves nerds. And that’s it. If done in the true spirit of awareness and goodnatured self-deprecation, the day you call yourself a nerd is the day you become an ex-nerd.”
nerds  culture  society 
july 2011 by matthewmcvickar
NYMag: We Must Be Superstars by Nitsuh Abebe
“And if you want to talk about pop music between 1980 and now, that issue—the question of who’s singing and who’s being sung to—is an important one. The study assumes that hit singles in the eighties and hit singles in the new millennium play the same role in our culture. But over the past 30 years, the weekly charts have seen changes a lot more significant than any surge of ego. It’s not just that pop’s audience has changed; it’s that its whole purpose has.”
nitsuhabebe  music  popculture  popmusic  america  culture  youth 
july 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Village Voice: Music: Tyler, the Creator’s Boy’s Club
“The highest points and most infuriating moments on ‘Goblin’ come from the fact that it’s a vérité depiction of the worst aspects of American boy culture. You know, hating girls because they don’t like you because you’re a weirdo, hating any and all authority figures because they try to tell you how not to be such a weirdo. But most importantly (and scarily), there’s the part that involves lashing out about being viewed as a weirdo, and being summarily rewarded—i.e. seen as normal—for doing so. (It probably goes without saying that girls don’t have the same luxury.) Nobody cares about Tyler the Creator being someone’s role model in 2011. Which in a way, is the scariest thing about ‘Goblin’—too much of his scary fantasizing, for too many boys, is all too normal.”
culture  gender  music  ofwgkta  hiphop  musicwriting 
may 2011 by matthewmcvickar
seedy
This Tumblr posts PDFs of poetry anthologies and books of cultural writing and other classic texts, bits of important historical music-related interviews, old, rare, or otherwise important or interesting records, etc. Would that I had the time to take in everything listed here.
literature  poetry  music  musicwriting  history  culture 
may 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Teenage Art: Henry Rollins Wants to Do Comedy on 'The Paul Reiser Show'
“Criticism is only useful when it helps us see something we are having difficulty seeing on our own; it’s not helpful when it tells us to stop looking.

‘But what if everyone pays attention to the wrong things? We have to guide them to the right things!’ Well, eventually everyone stops paying attention to everything: time is pretty effective that way. With that in mind, we should only worry about pointing the good out, and not worrying about the bad. And in the age of the Internet, this dictum takes on added force. Think of it as the Paris Hilton effect: talking about the bad just encourages the bad. No one has ever cured a celebrity of anorexia by posting photographs of her on the Internet, or has helped Charlie Sheen get off alcohol by getting exasperated at his stupidity. Trashing bad people and bad art does not make you a good person.”
criticism  art  writing  internet  culture  celebrity 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
FarukAt.eş: Translation of General Misogyny to Uncomfortable Truth
“I am too lazy to expand my world view to include the possibility that I may have unconsciously treated women and minorities unfairly my entire life, and it wears me out that you’re trying to get me to understand this.”
feminism  technology  culture  civilrights 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Too Much Joy: Budweiser Bought My Baby
Too Much Joy’s Tim Quirk tells the story of his band’s jingle for Budweiser in the early 90s, and how he feels about bands and advertising then and since. A good companion to Matt LeMay’s ‘Art vs Content’ post from late 2010 (http://www.mbvmusic.com/2010/10/19/living-in-the-age-of-art-vs-content).
music  musicbusiness  advertising  television  culture 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Caterina.net: FOMO and Social Media
FOMO is ‘Fear of Missing Out’ and it’s a major problem on the internet.

“There is a company that sells radar equipment to the police as well as radar detectors to the public. Clorox is one of the world’s worst polluters of water, and also sells Brita filters to get the bad stuff out of the water again. Lawyers create mazes that you have to hire a lawyer to escape. Similarly social software both creates and cures FOMO. If you didn’t know that party was going on, you’d be home contentedly reading your latest New Yorker. But since you do, you hungrily watch each new tweet.”
culture  internet  psychology  socialmedia  technology 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Smarterware: The Case Against Drop-down Identities
Why to make 'Gender' a text box, and why we should struggle against Facebook.
data  usability  socialnetworking  gender  culture 
march 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Vulture: Arcade Fire, and the ‘Never Heard of It’ Grammys by Nitsuh Abebe
”…the tweets offer a funny reminder that one kind of center really does hold: That no matter how dominant and predictable something might be in your world, it is still a weird, marginal thing to most everyone else.”
music  culture  society  twitter  grammys  thearcadefire 
february 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Columbia Journalism Review: ‘Look at Me!’ by Maureen Tkacik
“A writer’s search for journalism in the age of branding.”

In which Maureen Tkacik engages in a number of jobs she wouldn’t otherwise take to explore them journalistically and try to get at the heart of the ‘nothing economy’. This is a great piece, and I think the reactions (in the comments and in my knee, occasionally) questioning her ‘legitimacy’ and hypocrisy illuminate the very problem she’s talking about. I think the idea of injecting a journalist experience into a piece are wonderful, because so-called straight journalism is often a myth and because it can make the writing and reading better.
freelancing  journalism  writing  culture  america  publishing 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
NYMag: What Was the Hipster?
A elegy to hipsters, complete with obnoxious photography, sort of just picks and chooses various elements of youth culture and NYC hipster party culture and starts dividing them into subspecies. I have read this through three times and still don’t get it. That may be my fault or this may just be total bullshit.
anthropology  culture  fashion  hipsters  nyc  history 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Pitchfork: Why We Fight: Why We Fight #10
Nitsuh explores the Black Eyed Peas iPad app, and why so much party pop music — which is so often aspirational — has been sounding “rote and blanched of purpose”.
pop  music  writing  apps  culture  america 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Marco.org: What I expect
In spite of the potential for people being ignorant or abusive with what he writes, Marco writes because ”I’m freely expressing my ideas in public, which helps me clarify my thoughts, enhance and alter my views, and improve my writing over time. I think I’m getting the better end of the deal.”
writing  blogging  wwic  copyright  culture  selfimprovement 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Raptitude.com: A Day in the Future
“We forget that what we have is more than what we need. Obscenely more. I know it may sound perverse, but here in the future people often feel like they need more than they have.”
future  technology  culture  society 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Megan Amram: Cable TV
‘Get ready for these great upcoming new shows on your favorite cable TV channels in 2011!’

‘Face Punch Beach House’
humor  satire  tv  america  culture 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
MC CHRIS IS AT THE GATHERING: A LOVE STORY by mc chris on Myspace
MC Chris tells the story of his show at The Gathering of the Juggaloes and the G.I. Joe film screening that followed.
mcchris  music  juggaloes  society  culture  via:paulford 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
a grammer: internet paradox
Thoughts on the tendency of the internet to empower and break down niches.

“You can be a niche, but you’re a public niche, so you can’t expect to be left alone about it, or understood on your own terms. The internet makes niches possible, but it’s also a massive space in which loads of different people communicate — and spaces like that tend to pull everyone toward the middle, developing conventions and enforcing a cultural center. So far, this hasn’t stopped plenty of corners of the internet from getting extremely insular and specialized, but it’s still a form of cultural policing on this front.”
nitsuhabebe  writing  internet  society  culture  criticism  niche  via:paulford 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Dustinland: The Theory of Hipster Relativity
Dustin Glick with a visual explanation: a hipster is just someone who dresses more obnoxiously than you.
comics  culture  humor  america  hipster 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The Verge Q A: Punk Pioneer Steve Albini on Music Festivals, The Future of Radio and Why He Wants GQ To Fail: The Q: GQ
A strong perspective on music culture, the music business, and the state of things today. "Had Sonic Youth not done what they did I don't know what would have happened—the alternative history game is kind of silly. But I think it cheapened music quite a bit. It made music culture kind of empty and ugly and was generally a kind of bad influence."
culture  musicbusiness  music  america 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Facing Social Pressures, Families Disguise Girls as Boys in Afghanistan
In Afghanistan there is a history of parents dressing their daughters up as boys (until they reach their teens) in order to avoid embarrassment and scrutiny of a culture that values sons and treats women like shit. Fascinating, unfortunate, and like one of the article's interviewees says, just a small part of a huge web of human rights issues plaguing the nation.
afghanistan  gender  psychology  sex  humanrights  law  culture  history 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Wired Magazine: Secret of AA: After 75 Years, We Don’t Know How It Works
The history of AA and some insight on why some of its most important characteristics — no central organization, a focus on group therapy, the replacement of meetings as an obsession — are why it works so well for so many.
psychology  culture  religion  history 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Issendai's Superhero Training Journal: How to keep someone with you forever
"So you want to keep your lover or your employee close. Bound to you, even. You have a few options. You could be the best lover they've ever had, kind, charming, thoughtful, competent, witty, and a tiger in bed. You could be the best workplace they've ever had, with challenging work, rewards for talent, initiative, and professional development, an excellent work/life balance, and good pay. But both of those options demand a lot from you. Besides, your lover (or employee) will stay only as long as she wants to under those systems, and you want to keep her even when she doesn't want to stay. How do you pin her to your side, irrevocably, permanently, and perfectly legally?"
psychology  work  relationships  culture  society  via:paulford 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Fuse.tv: Listen Closely by B Michael Payne: Love the Music, Ignore the Message: How Critics Are Failing Odd Future
"Overall, there seems to be a critical disconnect between the way the predominantly white, male critical establishment writes about violence and misogyny—especially as it’s primarily exhibited in hip-hop, i.e., music made predominantly by black artists. Critics such as these seem uncommonly drawn to violent, misogynistic music simply because it is shocking. This thrill of novelty seems to be nothing more than a fetishization of an alien culture."
music  writing  criticism  misogyny  culture  america  hiphop  rap  lyrics 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Shallow Rewards: Be real, it doesn't matter anyway
A good overview of where music creation and criticism is in late 2010. At least in terms of the sorts of bands who are making music for the sorts of people who are reading these sorts of blog posts (a lot!).
music  writing  criticism  culture 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Chicago Tribune: It's now or never for Smith Westerns
"For every Vampire Weekend or Arcade Fire that goes beyond this point, spinning online buzz into big success, there's an M's, or a Thrills, or a Clap Your Hands Say Yeah — take your pick of any blog-hyped band that once generated copious heat only to cool off considerably, partly victims of a zippy online impatience that, as Matthew Johnson, founder of Fat Possum Records, put it, 'can devour bands whole, and be done with them.'"
smithwesterns  music  blogs  musicindustry  pitchfork  culture 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Squashed: Truth and Patriotism
"If somebody you care about is bleeding profusely, it’s not loving to insist that she’s flawless and has nothing to worry about. The loving thing is to stop the bleeding then get her to a doctor. If a guy is clearly suffering from blood poisoning, ignoring the problem isn’t loving. Instead, say, 'Dude. You need to get that looked at immediately.' Or, better yet, go with him. Do what you can to make things better."
patriotism  america  culture  history  war  writing  criticism 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The Original Hip-Hop Lyrics Archive
"Have you ever started rapping along with some song on the radio and then realized that you don't know the lyrics? Now you don't have to worry about that embarrassing moment when it happens in front of your friends. OHHLA.com is your one stop shop for rap and hip-hop lyrics."
hiphop  rap  music  lyrics  reference  archive  culture  america  database 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The Guardian: The hip-hop heritage society
On the difficulty of preserving and reissuing classical hip-hop records. "The job that falls to those seeking to preserve hip-hop's past remains complex. Those doing the work need to know as much about copyright and contract law as they do about old Pete Rock B-sides, while a grounding in clinical psychology might help in dealing with the artists. It's a combination of specialisms few individuals possess, and it raises the question: just whose responsibility is it to curate the history of a culture?"
hiphop  music  musicbusiness  history  culture 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
MBV: Living in the Age of Art vs Content
"Commercial concerns are both implicit and invisible in the consumption of content."
music  contentculture  musicbusiness  branding  culture  marketing  technology  art  content 
october 2010 by matthewmcvickar
An Open Letter to Cursor by Richard Eoin Nash | TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home
"I’m afraid of what the systematic harnessing of communities will result in." Specifically, he's afraid that it will result in a) fans wasting their time and money and b) the artist being relegated to the sidelines while context and 'engagement' take over. Valid fears if you ask me, and exactly the sort of the thing that Matt LeMay outlines in the MBV post 'Living in the Age of Art vs Content' (http://www.mbvmusic.com/2010/10/19/living-in-the-age-of-art-vs-content/26911).
literature  books  culture  consumerism  contentculture  music 
october 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Caffeinated Alcoholic Drinks’ Dangers Are Cited
"'I do not see any socially redeeming purpose being served by these beverages. At the end of the day, they’re aimed at a young, inexperienced market for the purpose of enabling them to become rapidly intoxicated.'"
alcohol  society  america  drinking  culture  marketing  consumerism 
october 2010 by matthewmcvickar
The Awl: Being a Hipster Is an Excellent and Wonderful Thing!
"People don't hate hipsters, and hipsters don't hate themselves. What people hate so much is the faux-hipsters: they hate poseurs. And because it's such an irritating thing to be having to tell the real from the fake (exactly as in the matter of overpriced European handbags), the easiest way out is simply to deny any involvement in the whole business. That is why nobody, not even someone who fervently embraces hipster culture, wants to call himself a hipster."
hipsters  culture  america  youth  nyc 
october 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Pitchfork: Nitsuh Abebe: Why We Fight#7
Nitsuh, reasonable as always, dissects the clash of rockists, 'true' fans, and people who write about topics outside their wheelhouse and why it bothers us.
music  writing  culture 
october 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Paul Graham: The Acceleration of Addictiveness
The world and the technology by which we take it in is becoming more and more "addictive" and what can we do about it? A concerted effort to stick to basics and saying no, says Paul Graham.
history  internet  culture  health  technology  psychology  evolution  future  addiction 
july 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Salon: Everything you wanted to know about "Inception"
A plot walkthrough and an analysis of what the movie means. Good.
film  inception  culture  movies  storytelling  metaphor 
july 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Tweetage Wasteland: The Web’s Five Most Endangered Words
"Let me think about that." In other words: with a glut of information, we're trying to form opinions and take action on it all just as fast as it's coming in, and we're suffering for it.
society  technology  web  history  culture  media  internet  facebook  twitter  writing  opinion  thought  communication 
july 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Balkinization: Copyright: The Elephant in the Middle of Glee
"The fictional high school chorus at the center of Fox’s Glee has a huge problem — nearly a million dollars in potential legal liability. For a show that regularly tackles thorny issues like teen pregnancy and alcohol abuse, it’s surprising that a million dollars worth of lawbreaking would go unmentioned." This is a very interesting look at the frequency with which this show (that I have never seen) addresses copyright issues without actually addressing copyright issues. And it's dead-on about the potential for a television show or other media of this popularity to effect social change in the realm of copyright perception.
copyright  television  culture  america 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Your Brain on Computers — Attached to Technology and Paying a Price
This guy seems to have some family issues that his addiction to incoming data via screens is severely aggravating. I experience, on a smaller scale, some of the problems outlined in this article, and, though none of this is particularly new to me, it's frightening to see these habits taken down the slippery slope.

Should all of us, and especially people like Kord, make a concerted effort to make screens less a part of our lives, lest we lose our humanity? Or is trying to avoid technology's increasing integration with our every second just being traditionally biased and counter-progressive? I think there is a middle ground where one can be hooked in and focused on doing work while still not ignoring ones' children. Food for thought.
society  technology  brain  computers  internet  culture  multitasking  neuroscience  distraction  focus  family  history 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
WIRED: Nicholas Carr: The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires Brains
Written with the opinion that this is necessarily a Bad Thing. Revisit; this is interesting.
brain  culture  health  internet  neuroscience  productivity  science 
june 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Newsless.org: "The case for context: my opening statement for SXSW"
The always-great Matt Thompson on why episodic news content isn't as helpful as laying a contextual groundwork for a story and then letting readers know about events that happen in that framework.
journalism  news  media  sxsw  information  business  culture 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Gen X Has a Midlife Crisis
They're are distraught and stuck in a pre-maturity funk.
bookreview  criticism  culture  psychology  youth  genx  film 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes: The Moral Life of Babies
An insight on the limited morality of babies and the implications of that for the rest of us societal adults.
society  psychology  culture  babies 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Yahoo! India News: Beatles forgiven by Vatican for 'bigger than Jesus' comment
There's two big lessons here:
1. Fame makes people do and say crazy things, and other famous people tend to give an equally outrageous reaction to it.
2. Christianity is a joke.
christianity  culture  thebeatles  vatican 
april 2010 by matthewmcvickar
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