New Yorker magazine alert thread

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But Hegel, I imagined, would have been dismayed by the passivity of erotic contemplation

yes yes I imagine he would have been dismayed.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 June 2011 19:59 (twelve years ago) link

"Nietzsche that dumb fucking idiot..."

scott seward, Thursday, 23 June 2011 19:59 (twelve years ago) link

lol I was 50/50 "I think he's kidding but that is delivered really really convincingly"

chupacabra - a delicious burrito (DJP), Thursday, 23 June 2011 20:00 (twelve years ago) link

"hegel that sick motherfucker..."

scott seward, Thursday, 23 June 2011 20:00 (twelve years ago) link

also hegel might disapprove cause he was very religious but u kno historical context...

Mordy, Thursday, 23 June 2011 20:08 (twelve years ago) link

that wonkette article--jeez! Denby is steady trollin' Coulter style.

President Keyes, Thursday, 23 June 2011 23:37 (twelve years ago) link

the wonkette article about chelsea clinton is pretty shit though

little mushroom person (abanana), Friday, 24 June 2011 03:00 (twelve years ago) link

yeah, nobody comes off good in that arghicle

Don't start the chain you know? (forksclovetofu), Friday, 24 June 2011 04:24 (twelve years ago) link

At the New Yorker, no one assails his listener like a jackhammer.

Unlike at, say, Club.

Let me tell you something about that song. (Eazy), Friday, 24 June 2011 04:51 (twelve years ago) link

"The Internet is always spoken of as a medium of connection, but it is also a medium of isolation that surfs the user and breaks him into separate waves going nowhere. There was the movie hunger, and the lust hunger, and the early stirrings of the money hunger. But where was the core, reconciling and joining the many elements together? In the tomes above the computer? My book about the classics was devoted to Columbia's version of the "core curriculum." That's why the big boys were up there, in the shelves above the monitor. What would they have said? Plato, observing a man staring at shadows in a cave, would not have been in the least surprised. But Hegel, I imagined, would have been dismayed by the passivity of erotic contemplation, just as he was dismayed by the passivity of religious contemplation, and Nietzsche, I was sure, would have been disgusted by the absence of vigorous, joyful activity -fighting, dancing, revelry, lovemaking - even though Nietzsche, poor crazy bastard, was as terrified of women as any man who ever lived."

― scott seward, Thursday, 23 June 2011 20:57 Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

the internet surfs the user!! wow, man, mind...is...blown.

― scott seward, Thursday, 23 June 2011 20:58 Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Sounds like he's using that Soviet Russian Internet.

some greenzo (onimo), Friday, 24 June 2011 07:32 (twelve years ago) link

huh? whats shit about the chelsea clinton post? jim even _explains_ it in the post on denby

☂ (max), Friday, 24 June 2011 11:03 (twelve years ago) link

it requires an explanation
it is snarky without a point
it isn't funny

little mushroom person (abanana), Friday, 24 June 2011 11:06 (twelve years ago) link

look at david denby over here

☂ (max), Friday, 24 June 2011 11:07 (twelve years ago) link

it doesnt require an explanation if you are vaguely familiar with the very famous film "the miracle worker"
its point (as jim explains) is that the original article is shocked that an accomplished, stanford-educated 28-year-old woman is being "allowed" to speak for her mother at campaign events
it makes that point by humorously contrasting chelsea clinton with helen keller

☂ (max), Friday, 24 June 2011 11:09 (twelve years ago) link

Just out of curiosity, what/where is the "original article" that post was responding to?

Don Rickles on the Dime (jaymc), Friday, 24 June 2011 12:36 (twelve years ago) link

sorry I misread jims post there is no one specific "original article"

☂ (max), Friday, 24 June 2011 12:43 (twelve years ago) link

Rick Moody on that John Lurie profile:

http://therumpus.net/2011/06/swinging-modern-sounds-30-what-is-and-is-not-masculine/

Let me tell you something about that song. (Eazy), Saturday, 25 June 2011 19:39 (twelve years ago) link

Also from DD this week:

"In regular movies, representation is obviously more intimately joined to physical reality than, say, books or paintings are."

I guess this one should be put on his editor but still...in movies, books are not as close to reality as representation is...?

Hadrian VIII, Sunday, 26 June 2011 01:44 (twelve years ago) link

hmm. i'm not sure your rearranging of the original sentence is accurate. the original makes sense to me.

Z S, Monday, 27 June 2011 02:35 (twelve years ago) link

no, hadrian's right... to get denby's meaning the sentence should read

"In regular movies, representation is obviously more intimately joined to physical reality than in, say, books or paintings."

or, preferably

"Representation is obviously more intimately joined to physical reality in regular movies, than in, say, books or paintings."

☂ (max), Monday, 27 June 2011 02:45 (twelve years ago) link

without the first comma tho

☂ (max), Monday, 27 June 2011 02:46 (twelve years ago) link

guys, its never gonna make sense

ice cr?m, Monday, 27 June 2011 02:54 (twelve years ago) link

oh wait, yeah, i see it now. it's like a magic eye poster, but way less satisfying!

Z S, Monday, 27 June 2011 03:15 (twelve years ago) link

because the satisfaction of seeing that 3D dolphin is fucking untouchable

Z S, Monday, 27 June 2011 03:15 (twelve years ago) link

Correction, June 28, 2011: The original article erroneously stated that 95% of Italian men had never operated a washing machine.

haha the fact too good to check

caek, Wednesday, 29 June 2011 09:44 (twelve years ago) link

the aleksander henon thing was very sad

caek, Wednesday, 29 June 2011 09:44 (twelve years ago) link

xp max you should post that to reddit/mens rights.

caek, Wednesday, 29 June 2011 09:45 (twelve years ago) link

Love the piece about Rays outfielder Sam Fuld.

mississippi delta law grad (Hurting 2), Friday, 1 July 2011 20:27 (twelve years ago) link

Sam Fuiud

goole+ (dayo), Friday, 1 July 2011 20:45 (twelve years ago) link

Really like Joan Acocella's stuff on dance, the one from 2011/6/27 on Alexei Ratmansky is pretty good (haven't finished it yet):

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/06/27/110627fa_fact_acocella

Matt Groening's Cousin (Leee), Saturday, 2 July 2011 18:21 (twelve years ago) link

xp I'm uneasy about the Lurie profile but Moody's got some serious issues with the New Yorker and a weird idea that profile-writers should only be engaged in promoting their subjects' art and praising their wonderful personalities. I wonder which interviewer or New Yorker writer pissed off Moody years back.

clever and arch in that New Yorker way, clever, condescending, self-satisfied, off-handedly cruel, lazy, elitist, devoid of bona fide literary purpose

a sprinkling of the kinds of details beloved not of artists but of media workers

if you think like a tabloid writer, or like a hack, it’s perhaps possible to understand why this would seem like the meat of the story on John Lurie (ostensible subject of the profile); it’s the meat of the story if you are a meat-and-potatoes guy, a fetishist of parodistic ideas of the masculine, but it has nothing to do with who John Lurie is among family and friends.

Strictly vote-splitting (DL), Saturday, 2 July 2011 19:46 (twelve years ago) link

haha i tried to read that post and i was just like 'this is how you write'

ice cr?m, Saturday, 2 July 2011 19:48 (twelve years ago) link

the nyer lurie article was awesome and salacious imho

ice cr?m, Saturday, 2 July 2011 19:49 (twelve years ago) link

Moody describes it in one para as both "salacious and tawdry" and "exceedingly boring". How can it be both? I like his idea that only interviewing Lurie's friends and admirers and going on at length about his individual recordings would be some kind of thrillride.

Also, get off your fucking high horse.

It’s ugly and dull and perhaps even morally embarrassing, at least if you give a shit about art, music, literature, or the loftier aspirations of man and woman.

Makes me want to go and reread that notorious Dale Peck takedown of Moody, just for lols

Strictly vote-splitting (DL), Saturday, 2 July 2011 19:59 (twelve years ago) link

i gave up early on when he started picking apart "everyone in 'downtown New York,' a.k.a., 'the known universe—basically,'"

gr8080+ (gr8080), Sunday, 3 July 2011 00:13 (twelve years ago) link

this isn't a criticism, but, the larry david piece in the july 4 issue is really helped by how easy it is to summon a manic, conversational, larry-david-voice in your head while reading

devoted to boats (schlump), Sunday, 3 July 2011 17:37 (twelve years ago) link

I like Larry David, but I thought that piece was dire. Jokes based around the Kubler-Ross stages of grief are pretty damn tired at this point.

jaymc, Sunday, 3 July 2011 18:46 (twelve years ago) link

wait, that's a link to page nine -- here's the whole thing: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/07/11/110711fa_fact_auletta?currentPage=all

ⓢⓤⓟⓘⓕⓨⓞⓤ©ⓐⓝⓡⓔⓐⓓⓣⓗⓘⓢ (markers), Monday, 4 July 2011 04:42 (twelve years ago) link

"I like Larry David, but I thought that piece was dire."

that page is where funny often goes to die. i don't blame him. its like the bermuda triangle.

scott seward, Monday, 4 July 2011 05:18 (twelve years ago) link

OTM

mississippi delta law grad (Hurting 2), Monday, 4 July 2011 05:20 (twelve years ago) link

But does that excuse go for Paul Rudnick as well, or is he just unfunny?

mississippi delta law grad (Hurting 2), Monday, 4 July 2011 05:22 (twelve years ago) link

probably my general uniform positivity about the main articles every week isn't going to help gr8080 pare down his pile of unread articles, but paumgarten & the han-han piece in last week's are both p engrossing. feel like the online dating thing probably has gladwell feeling like it shoulda been one of his ..?, in being in that ballpark.

i think the sole redeeming element of my print copy arriving on thursday is when it's a double issue, & the wait doesn't feel so long.

neo-realist shit i ever wrote (schlump), Wednesday, 6 July 2011 10:38 (twelve years ago) link

han han was nice, online dating felt like a slightly more polished times magazine piece

brooklyn's complicated relationship with bacon (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 6 July 2011 14:54 (twelve years ago) link

Love the piece about Rays outfielder Sam Fuld.

Seems like a swell guy, too bad about coming from Stanfurd. Also, companion podcast to the Fuld article, with McGrath and ~*sigh*~ Amy Davidson: http://www.newyorker.com/online/2011/07/04/110704on_audio_mcgrath

Matt Groening's Cousin (Leee), Saturday, 9 July 2011 19:17 (twelve years ago) link

sports. it is not good. for humanity.

President Keyes, Saturday, 9 July 2011 23:49 (twelve years ago) link

does amy davidson write anything longer than the comment on the ny-er blogs?, & in the magazine? she's so consistently good lately, i wondered if she had any longer pieces up in the archives.

Genre Fiction › Men's Adventure (schlump), Wednesday, 13 July 2011 08:53 (twelve years ago) link

george packer making me sad again

Aa Bb Obscure Dull Blue (#000066) (schlump), Monday, 18 July 2011 13:16 (twelve years ago) link

Going all the way back to Eagleman in Texas, trying to see if time slows down for real when a person senses they're in danger. I finally found video of the "ride" he uses to gauge his research subjects' fear factor with:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBJ5e2ihVUg

From Cracked.com, of course.

Pleasant Plains, Monday, 18 July 2011 14:38 (twelve years ago) link

good find!
watching that makes me feel. unwell.

obliquity of the ecliptic (rrrobyn), Monday, 18 July 2011 14:40 (twelve years ago) link


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