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"You
really looking forward to Ashcroft's stormtroopers contradicting the
will of our people by knocking over wheelchairs to confiscate a couple
ounces of herb? Bush wants regime change so bad, I got his regime change
right here."
"The
music business is run by lawyers and accountants, and they don't really
care about the integrity of art."
"Word
comes that brother Cat Stevens refuses to lend his support to our virtuous
jihad. May this turncoat's Peace Train be laden with explosives and
rammed into the Mountain of Mohammed, peace be upon him. "
"In
a segment that seems designed to honor yet another one of rock and
roll's seminal yet fallen heroes, MTV just can't help talking about
why it, not Nirvana, mattered so much."
"You
can make nicely crafted things, whether they're poems, sculptures, paintings,
records, CDs, whatever. But they'll just be that -- nice. They won't
be unwieldy as personal expression often can be."
"What
do a toilet bowl and a woman's vagina have in common? They both need
to be cleaned with Lysol."
"I
applaud My Big Fat Greek Wedding for avoiding a sickeningly cute
Meg Ryan/Julia Roberts cipher gumming it up for the camera or a surgically-altered
Pamela Lee/Carmen Electra bimbo slutting it up for the camera."
"That's
an issue I'm dealing with here: what is going to happen with this next
generation of kids? What is their culture but media culture? What hasn't
been sanitized and homogenized?"
"Basically,
it's a done deal. Probably by the end of 2003, Saddam Hussein will either
be out of power or out of the realm of the living. So who's next in
line for the coveted position of dictator -- uh, leader -- of Iraq,
home to the largest supply of crude reserves on Earth? Here's the list
of nominees."
"There's
something in the American psyche, it's almost this kind of right or
privilege to resolve our conflicts with violence. There's an arrogance
to that concept. To actually have to sit down and talk, to listen, to
compromise, that's hard work. To go for the gun, that's the cowardly
act."
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. . And Ten Reasons Why It Really Did
by
Scott Thill
A Beautiful
Mind beats Lord of the Rings for Best Picture
It was hard enough watching Julia Roberts' spaced-out eyes and plastered
grin, and even harder trying to suss out the meaning of her egotistical
statement, "I love my life", right before she handed the Oscar for Best
Actor (for a movie that was one-tenth as interesting as the one he should've
won it for, Malcom X) to Denzel Washington. What's even weaker
is that he lost the chance to win it for The Hurriance because
word on the street at the time was that the film's various biographical
inaccuracies doomed it to the dustbin of also-ran history. But then
A Beautiful Mind -- a film with even more biographical
inaccuracies and a weepy if fallacious love-conquers-all ending -- beats
out a wildly successful and continually relevant (we are at war, dig?)
film that had more pressure on top of it than Tom Arnold before he left
Roseanne. Don't get me wrong, Ron Howard is an amiable, talented guy,
but he made one good two-hour flick that year while Peter Jackson
more or less made three three-hour epics. And let's consider
the source material: did anyone read A Beautiful Mind before
they ran out and caught the cinematic adaptation? Even if they did,
you'd have to probably multiply that readership by a billion to catch
up with the fiercely devoted and relentlessly picky Tolkien readership
that has made his trilogy the second-most read literary work (after
the Bible, which in many parts of the world isn't really considered
a literary work anyway) of the century. Let's get real, Jackson got
robbed. It doesn't take yet another Russell Crowe hissy-fit to realize
that. The lamest move of the year, hands down.
Interview with Viggo Mortensen
He
Tried to Kill My Dad!
There's countless reasons for justifying the destruction of monomaniacs
like Saddam Hussein. His systematic execution of dissenters, pretenders
and innocents is not some Fox News pipe dream -- it really does happen.
Except for one small thing: we practically handed him the weapons to
do it. Donald Rumsfeld, for all his protestations, did shake the dictator's
hand and sign over a kingdom's worth of toxic weapons to suppress fundamentalist
Iran. The Bush family's oil connections, even to the Taliban, aren't
news to anybody. Which makes George W.'s ludicrous, Rambo-like rationalizations
for blowing the shit out of a country even his dad wouldn't touch in
the final analysis the pinnacle of idiocy. The sad thing is that people
bought and even supported the president's laughable yet personal vendetta
-- and they're still buying it. Even TV's version of the president,
Martin Sheen himself, was incredulous, arguing, "I think he'd like to
hand his father Saddam Hussein's head and win his approval for what
happened after the Gulf War". Let's break this down. After being pounded
into horsemeat by a years-old recession and hounded by an Al Qaeda threat
that's far from eradicated, Bush wants young suckers from all over the
country to go to war and die for some familial blood feud -- to the
tune of about three billion a month? Isn't that asking, well, a bit
much? My dad got laid off from a company that screwed its employees
out of their retirement, but you don't see me picking up a nuke over
it. Hey, wait a second . . . An
Assessment
Jacko's
Baby Dangling
I know, I know, people have been asking this question for years now,
but seriously, what in the hell is going on with this guy? By all rights,
it would have been nearly impossible for him to top a spurious lawsuit
against a multinational -- Sony, which dropped $55 million on him (more
than the GNP of most countries south of the equator) for his last album
-- for being racist white devils. But watching his nose fall off during
a court appearance and then his towel-hooded infant dangle a few stories
above a crowd made that loony lawsuit seem almost sane. That, my friends,
is called a hat trick. And did we mention the gay porn director that
he put in charge of his 9/11 concert? If Jackson wanted to reclaim the
Elephant Man's humanity when he tried to purchase the guy's bones some
years back, he's doing an awful job of it. Rather, he's becoming a travelling
grotesquery himself, and is fast -- and sadly -- becoming irrelevant
in an entertainment field he once dominated. Someone get this guy help,
and do it fast before he drops that baby or his face. An
Assessment
Trent
Lott's
Segregation Paradise
Open racist foot, insert into racist mouth. It's not enough that the
Republicans more or less run every important post in the years of Bush,
Part Duh -- now they gotta lament the long lost days of segregation
on top of it. And then defend their linguistic gaffes with an arrogant,
half-assed apologies. Witness the words of Bush mouthpiece Ari Fleischer:
"[He] has apologized for his statement, and the president understands
that that is the final word from Senator Lott." Or, in other words,
thanks for coming out, suckers! Or Lott's second statement on
the matter: "A poor choice of words conveyed to some the impression
that I embraced the discarded policies of the past." So this is what
Reality TV's political landscape has come to? "A poor choice of words?"
Uh, Trent, the words weren't the problem, my man -- the assertion that
endorsing a segregationist Dixiecrat leadership would've cured America's
current -- not past -- ills is. And we didn't get that "impression"
either, you conveyed it. Lott's waffling apology (one of many, by the
way) is by no means surprising (you get this type of straw stuff in
sports all the time), but at a time when the nation is polarized on
all conceivable lines, it's a pure slap in the face. And this isn't
the first time he's either said the same thing (it happened twenty years
earlier at -- what else? -- a Mississippi rally alongside Thurmond)
or been associated with racism, having three years ago addressed a rally
of the white supremacist-friendly Council of Conservative Citizens.
He backtracked then too, arguing that he didn't know the CCC were supremacists,
but it's hard to believe that such a high-profile politician interested
in distancing himself from a record of support for "discarded policies"
wouldn't at least read the mission statement of the groups that pay
him to bark at. Or own up to the legislative history of his own prejudicial
voting record. Forget apologies anyway -- the guy should lose his job.
But what's sad is that there's a distinct possibility that this will
get less airplay than the former President's blow job did, even after
he's history. Only in America! Review,
The Year in Politics
Winona's
Sticky Fingers
You can tell the apocalypse is nigh when a guy like ex-Sportscenter
pundit Keith Olbermann starts defending Zoloft-addled actresses who
grab five-finger discounts at Saks against the legion of scandal-addicted
media shows like Celebrity Justice, Entertainment Tonight,
ad nauseam. I think it was Tom Cruise in Risky Business that
said, "Sometimes you just gotta say what the fuck." Ok, I'm saying it.
What the fuck? I agree that no one should care at all about celebrities,
but Ryder's egotistical move was an insult to ordinary, recession-battered
people who can barely afford to put presents underneath their trees
this holiday. The elfin star is loaded with money, fame and perks
but still has the audacity to shoplift beneath panoptic security systems
in, of all places, Beverly Hills, and then top it off by forwarding
the leaky excuse that she was preparing for a role she refuses to disclose.
And why? Because she can. Sometimes Hollywood can't help but sicken
even the hardiest of digestive tracts. And yeah, Whoopi Goldberg, is
right: this is small-time stuff and the only reason that the Ryder case
exploded was because she's a celeb. But that's the whole freakin' point!
She's high-profile (and did I mention flithy rich?) and should be smart
enough to know that stuff like this is what gets celebs sent to the
dark cellars of the National Enquirer for life. It's a no-brainer,
but that seems to be what Ryder is turning out to be these days. And
to top it off, some sharp capitalist printed up (without a hint of irony,
by the way) a line of shirts bearing the slogan, "Free Winona", which
other stars then had the audacity to wear. You can hardly get those
idiots to take a public stand on something like Trent Lott or the War
in Iraq, but slap Ryder for shoplifting and all of a sudden southern
California is politically galvanized. Now you know why I tell people
I'm from Long Beach, not LA.
"The
Genius of Capitalism"
Most people who were following the Enron, WorldCom, Citigroup, Tyco,
[Insert Corporation Name Here] scandals plaguing the American economic
landscape were doing their hardest to hold down their lunches as the
headlines filled with such euphemisms as "irregular accounting practices"
(try "institutionalized graft and robbery"), "weaked consumer confidence"
(try "swindled investors") or -- my favorite -- Paul O'Neill's infamous
"genius of capitalism" to describe what amounted to, 9/11 or no, the
worst attacks on U.S. soil in history. Even though bin Laden's
lunatics shouldered most of the blame for our pistol-whipped economy,
the real culprits were punks like Enron -- who jacked geogprahies as
disparate as India and California for billions in fake energy costs
-- while dropping all of their dough in tax-free offshore shelters as
they engaged in callous doublespeak about the New Economy and American
labor and pride. When the new millenium's Great Swindle dies down (if
it ever does), our economy will have been robbed of billions of dollars,
maybe trillions, and it will take a long time, no matter what the parrots
on Fox News say, for things to get right again. The worst part of it
all? No one's really gone to jail yet. At some point the government
is going to have to decide that rampant white-collar crime is worse,
or at least equivalent, to conscienceless murder, if only because its
ripples can go on forever. But it won't happen with this administration,
believe that: the Bushes are neck-deep in insider stock trading and
bailouts, Cheney's strong-arm tactics for Enron got him sued by the
GAO and, even though Paul O'Neill and Harvey Pitt eventually got the
gate, both destroyed America's economic integrity to the point that
no one will invest in anything other than Third-Worlders making Coke
bottles for years. Can someone explain to me why, after a full year
of such scandals, we're still talking about Iraq? Like I said elsewhere,
if all of this is capitalism's "genius", then ignorance truly is bliss.
An
Assessment
Eminem's
Homo Issues
This one still blows my mind so let's end this right now. Regardless
of his bullshit pose in 8 Mile, Eminem wrote these lyrics for
"Criminal": "My words are like a dagger with a jagged edge/That'll stab
you in the head/whether you're a fag or lez/Or the homosex, hermaph
or a trans-a-vest/Pants or dress - hate fags? The answer's 'Yes'". He
also wrote these: "I'm ice grillin you, starin you down with a gremlin
grin/I'm Eminem, you're a fag in a women's gym". And these: "While getting
dropped off in the real back street/where somebody black sees/five little
rich white boys lookin like faggots/with the 'N' word painted on the
back of their jackets." So what happens? Moby -- a dude I can't really
stand myself -- dares to speak his mind about Eminem's homophobia and
summarily gets this in "Without Me": "Moby/you can get stomped by Obie,
you 36 year old bald-headed fag/blow me, you don't know me, you're too
old, let go, its over". And we're supposed to stomach the clown that
wrote all this coming to the defense of a homosexual in a movie based
on his life? Can someone tell me what century we're in again? I don't
care who they are (and some of them are people I utterly and endlessly
respect) but people need to stop rationalizing this dude's self-obsessed
vitriol away. So-called personas aside, the guy has a problem with homosexuals.
And as the foundational myth-maker for all the fake Slim Shadys littering
the malls of America like so ma
ny empty Orange
Julius cups, he should know better than try to deflect the criticism
of his prejudice as being unfounded or unfair -- words are words, language
is language, so be a man and admit their meaning rather than engage
in some postmodern separation of subject and object during objectifaction.
Bravado aside, I personally know some homsexuals that could kick his
ass from one end of Detroit to another, and I wish they would. Nothing
better could ever happen to the guy. And don't give me that hater crap
either: everyone knows the guy has skills. But like so many artists,
including the ones that he continually harangues in his songs, he's
wasting them trashing tired targets rather than putting them to use
making challenging music. This is a guy that feuded with a hand puppet,
for chrissakes; are you telling me he has nothing better to do? Wake
me up when he grows up.
Review, 8 Mile
Augusta:
The Man Show
As a Berkeley grad, I'm deriving a considerable amount of pleasure watching
the one-time Stanford -- we have a century-old rivalry, you see -- student,
Tiger Woods, squirm uncomfortably beneath the spotlight as reporter
after reporter bombards him with the same questions about discrimination
and golf, two tastes that in America, Tiger or no, are joined at the
hip like Jacko and tabloids. Truth is, the guy has no excuse, especially
since everyone knows that "private club" is just another euphemism for
"No undesirables allowed". His rationale -- that it's up to Southern
cracker Hootie Johnson and he's well within his rights to prop up an
antiquated policy that could have easily affected the Cablinasian Tiger
(if he were as bad a golfer as, say, Colin Montgomerie) -- is ringing
hollow for people who supported Tiger's demolition of the Masters' tourney
as a blow for the underrepresented a scant half-decade ago. But as the
brilliant Bobbie Fleckman (Fran Drescher) said in This is Spinal
Tap, "Money talks, bullshit walks". Even though he's in jail, Jim
Brown still has a point: with a refusal to play the Master's this year,
Tiger could, like his father once said, have a Gandhi-like impact on
the sociopolitical landscape of not just golf or pro sports, but global
culture itself. The fact that he's passing up that once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity shows you just how loudly Nike -- uh, I mean money -- does
talk. Look, the new head honcho of the SEC just resigned his membership
(although Ari Fleischer admitted he didn't have to) from Augusta in
a move to avoid ruffling feathers -- and he's white. Do the math, Tiger
-- not showing up this year would be enough for you. Like Ossie Davis
told Spike Lee: "Do the right thing." Nike will always be there for
you. If not, about a trillion other endorsement opportunities will.
An Immodest Proposal
Two
Words: Martha Stewart
This one will be short, since it's more or less self-explanatory. But
Stewart's reported ego was once so large that even she couldn't build
a gorgeous woodshed to house it in. So when word dropped that she was
embroiled in an insider trading controversy (hey, who wasn't in 2002?),
gleeful writers and analysts lined up around the block to throw darts
at her. While she had some defenders -- if she still had a TV show,
"I'd be singing Martha Stewart a love song every day," said Rosie O'Donnell
-- most couldn't help but laugh as her reputation went down in flames.
And although the ImClone mess hasn't totally dampened her clout -- her
stuff is still selling well and her show is still getting ratings --
the whole snafu continued to prove that moguls just can't help their
greedy selves when it comes to inflating their portfolios.
Fox
News: "We're not biased!"
"I challenge anybody to show me an example of bias in Fox News Channel",
tabloid mogul Rupert Murdoch told Salon back in March of 2001. Many
writers and reporters took up that challenge but they couldn't get a
word in because loudmouths like the "fair and balanced" Bill O'Reilly,
Sean Hannity, Geraldo Rivera and the Beltway Boys kept interrupting
them. You think I'm joking but I'm not. Although television has -- as
the Ginsu-sharp Mark Crispin Miller wrote in his excellent book, The
Bush Dyslexicon -- become far from relevant when it comes to substantive
political commentary, Fox News is a three-ring circus run by pseudo-journalists
with hard-to-ignore ties to the Republican Party. Let's break this down,
shall we? Fox News president and founder, Roger Ailes? A longtime Republican
strategist that worked for Nixon (!), Reagan and even helped craft George
the Former's infamous Willie Horton campaign. That should be enough,
don't you think? This guy is a right-wing shark, plain and simple --
he even produced Rush Limbaugh's short-lived TV show -- and if he's
running a news network, uh, what was the argument again? But
let's continue. Well-regarded Fox News anchor Tony Snow? Speechwriter
for George Bush. Bill O'Reilly? Registered Republican and contributor
to the conservative WorldNetDaily.com. This guy has his own talk show,
people. Recurring "analyst" William Kristol? Chief of Staff to Dan Quayle.
The list goes on, and this is just the stuff they're telling us. Now
I'm not one for partisan politics -- as a character from the amazing
film, Waking Life, put it, "Do you want the puppet on the left
or the puppet on the right?" -- but any network that incessantly repeats
the mantra, "The only network that America turns to for fair and balanced
journalism" (Really Fox? All of America? The entire country?), is trying
to sell you something. And once you take a look at the buyers, it's
pretty easy to see what's on the menu. Taste this: "If it hadn't been
for Fox, I don't know what I'd have done for the news." Guess who said
that? Trent Lott.
17
December 02
BACK
-- > TEN REASONS WHY AMERICAN CULTURE DIDN'T SUCK IN 2002:
"Watch their offense. See how they're not standing around as some
300-plus pound genetic freak with no game pounds the ball inside? See
how they actually move without the ball in their hands? See how they don't
bitch about not getting enough shots (sorry, Kobe)? It's all part of the
game, a team one, and they know how to play it well.
Scott
Thill is a gainfully employed dotcom editor currently finishing his first
novel, The Dangerous Perhaps.
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