Displaying posts categorized under

the phony & the faux

What Hath YouTube Wrought? The Exciting Conclusion

What Hath YouTube Wrought? The Exciting Conclusion

More troubling, aesthetic hating seems, according to a logic that eludes me, to beget personal hating. Comments on the “Friday” YouTube page resemble a kind of gang violence, which is being perpetrated against a 13-year-old girl: I could just about forgive the mind numbing lyrics, god awfull video and the dull ass music, if she [...]

What Hath YouTube Wrought, Pt. 2

What Hath YouTube Wrought, Pt. 2

[Sorry for the delay: Part 2 today, finishing up on Monday.--KD] In retrospect, I think “Chocolate Rain” marked the start of something: It would be much tougher to say the start of exactly what. But apparently  “Chocolate Rain” was popular because it’s terrible. On or around April 22, 2007, we started watching video, and listening [...]

What Hath YouTube Wrought?

What Hath YouTube Wrought?

Back in May, I published an essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education that I really loved. But it coincided both with end-of-term and with the summer hibernation of fcrp, and so was sort of forgotten on this space. So today and the next two days, I reprint it here for your reading pleasure, and/or vehement [...]

Never Let Me Go, Pt. 2

Never Let Me Go, Pt. 2

So I don’t want to pursue the allegorical reading of the novel this evening, as easy and as tempting that is. I want to look at a related question—the novel’s enactment of various narrative strategies that are meant to suggest, precisely, the power of narrative. Throughout the course of the novel, Ishiguro demonstrates the power [...]

On Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go

On Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go

I had the pleasure on Sunday night to address the incoming Pomona first-year students on the topic of the first-year reading: Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go. I thought I’d post those remarks here, broken down across a few days into easily digestible installments. Two things I should probably say before diving in. First, I don’t [...]

On Reading My Facebook Friends Recommendations, Pt. III (finis)

On Reading My Facebook Friends Recommendations, Pt. III (finis)

Some decisions are just common sense: I don’t friend the kids of friendz, nor the friendz of my own kids. Rule of thumb: as a middle-aged man, never send a friend request to one of your daughter’s girlfriends. Or boyfriends, for that matter. It’s just creepy. And as a teacher, I don’t friend my students. [...]

On Reading My Facebook Friends Recommendations, Pt. II

On Reading My Facebook Friends Recommendations, Pt. II

Last time on this space, I was writing about the somewhat surreal experience of reading through my Facebook Friendz recommendations, carefully. Some things just aren’t meant to be read carefully: Paul Ryan’s Republican budget proposal, for instance; FB Friendz recommendations. That notwithstanding—I did. And, of course, I took a pass on nearly all of them. [...]

On Reading My Facebook Friends Recommendations

On Reading My Facebook Friends Recommendations

Like anyone who has a Facebook account, I get e-mails occasionally telling me that someone or other wants to be “friends.” I’m normally pretty accommodating, I think; though like most thoughtful people, I resist the idea that these shared data streams actually constitute friendships. I could write the rest of this post putting the terms [...]

Journeying to the End of Taste

Journeying to the End of Taste

It’s been so long since I posted, I hardly remember how. If John Lennon were still with us, I think he’d say that blog silence is what happens to you when you’re busy making other plans. But at lunch today with a friend, I told a story that I realized might be of interest to [...]

Lily Gaga v. Lady Bart

Lily Gaga v. Lady Bart

I’m foolish, suppose, for letting it get to me. One Peter Wood had a piece in Wednesday’s Chronicle of Higher Education titled “Lily Bart vs. Lady Gaga.” The title should have been warning enough. For if you were innocently to ask, “Who’s Lily Bart?”, you would thereby have proven Wood’s point for him before he’d [...]