Displaying posts tagged with

“irony”

Immaterial Girl

Immaterial Girl

Yesterday, I pleaded for two more days to finish talking about Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance” video—but I’m going to finish up here today instead. The second visual plot within the first section of the “Bad Romance” video concerns what I call “Sailor Moon Gaga,” who is wrest from her bathtub by Russian supermodel kidnappers (while [...]

Encore du Gaga

Encore du Gaga

Lady Gaga’s got nothing very new going on right now: a new, eagerly awaited album in the can, of course, but for now, a temporary lull in her frentetic output.  And during that lull, I was asked by a student group on campus to address the question: “What, if anything, is new about Lady Gaga’s presentation of [...]

College Campaign Needs an Up-Grade

College Campaign Needs an Up-Grade

For those fcrp readers who aren’t regular readers of the Chronicle of Higher Education—c’mon, I know you’re out there—I bring you this story from the groves of academe. Pop quiz: Where is Drake University? Why, it’s located “at the northeast edge of Des Moines,” the web page tells us, with no apparent sense of irony [...]

Punning Service Announcement

Punning Service Announcement

On Friday, discussing the public service announcement “Moms With Guns,” I trailed off by talking about the dangers of irony for conveying important political or social content. I’m a big fan of irony, as colleagues and friends know; but it’s a notoriously unreliable weapon—the Saturday-night special of rhetorical devices—and if you come packin’, you’d better [...]

Joe Isuzu: Trust Me!

Joe Isuzu: Trust Me!

Exaggerated claims are often made for ironic advertising being one of the distinctive cultural forms of our times; the “Think Small” Volkswagen ads from the early 1960s are usually adduced as the first sightings of this kind of counterintuitive sales pitch. Researchers need to turn the pages back at least another century, though, to see [...]

Who’s the Cheesiest?

Who’s the Cheesiest?

Thanks to Steve Long, who filled in for me yesterday while I was “having work done,” as we say here in L.A. Today I’m recuperating, and craving comfort food. Truth be told, I always crave comfort food; but I’m now officially “recuperating,” so that folks are actually encouraging me to eat comfort food. Plus, my [...]

South Park Phonies

South Park Phonies

With the spring semester now but a fond memory, I’m finally catching up on some of my homework. I think I’ve mentioned here that I taught a senior seminar called “Irony in the Public Sphere”; we were interested, mainly, in the sometimes spectacular ways that very compelling and intelligent ironic projects can misfire when they [...]

First-Person Shooter

First-Person Shooter

I dropped the story of Ice-T and “Cop Killer” midway on Thursday, in deference to our regular Friday feature, Mystery Science Auditorium; let’s finish up that story now. The song was “greeted” with predictable, and not altogether unreasonable, outrage. Tipper Gore went after Body Count in The Washington Post, comparing Ice-T’s message to “Hitler’s anti-Semitism [...]

Buy Me! I’m Fake!!

In today’s Mystery Science Auditorium, I invite you, Dear Reader, to watch a couple of commercials with me. It’s one of the great paradoxes of advertising: marketers make us trust them by acting utterly trustworthy (babies, American flags, puppies), except when they don’t—when they sell to us by acting completely untrustworthy. Phony. As Jennifer Wicke has argued [...]

Young, Ironic and Black

Young, Ironic and Black

With real regret I bid farewell Tuesday to my senior seminar students in “Irony in the Public Sphere.” They were a great class; the topic as I conceived it is a big, baggy one (which goes some way to explaining why the book is taking me so long to finish), and the students took my [...]