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The Friday Article Roundup

Take off those headphones and listen to the FAR!

Open your ears to the best pop culture writing of the week.

This week, you will hear about:

  • Rejected algorithmic sound
  • Tired cinematic formula
  • Frustrated concert experiences
  • Insipid album textures
  • Rankings!

Now hear this: send articles throughout the next week to magpiesmedia [at] gmail, post articles from the past week below for discussion and Have a Happy Friday!


Tim Donnelly argues for taking those damn speakers out of your ears at New York Groove:
Other people are annoying, but having algorithmically dictated music in my ears all the time is decidedly more so. City life is supposed to be a little annoying, and a little messy. Sure, it’s fun to put your tunes on and lock into main character syndrome when you’re moving through the city. But, you have to remember, you’re not the main character: the story of New York is a classic 8-million hander of a tale. You’re going to miss some plot points if you don’t pay attention.

Matt Schmikowitz tempers praise for Hoppers with some not-so-faint damns at The AV Club:
Firmly in its sequel era, Pixar has been alternating between follow-ups and originals for more than a decade. After years of inconsistency that worsened during COVID, CEO Bob Iger confirmed the strategy in 2024, saying that the studio would be โ€œleaning on sequelsโ€ to balance out originals that were not performing as well as established IP. But somewhere along the way, the balance has begun to tip. Recycled ideas, jokes, and character types have become part of the routine, as if Pixar had fed all those Pixar Formula blog posts into an AI and simply hallucinated its later films.

For the Oakland Review of Books, Aaron Bady wrestles with what Chris Thile can and can’t and won’t provide at a concert:
Itโ€™s also really not his fault that practicing the craft heโ€™s spent a lifetime becoming the glory of God of feels so obscene, to me, at this particular moment of our being an absolute wet-pants-shit of a country. Itโ€™s not his fault that Trump and Netanyahu, neck and neck for the worst people in the world, decided to murder a school full of Iranian children the night I saw his concert…. But even so. I donโ€™t know what to do with my anger, and it spills out, and that thing where we let music refresh us from the shame of what it says on our passportsโ€“or glorify the God that allows such things to happenโ€“it just didnโ€™t do it for me.

At Stereogum, Chris DeVille is merciless about what Harry Styles can and can’t and won’t provide on his latest album:
Kiss All The Time is 42 minutes of rhythms, textures, and vibes in search of a single compelling song. It is the sound of the nebulous concept of good taste being hollowed out into an empty vessel โ€” a reverse โ€œEmperorโ€™s New Clothesโ€ situation where the clothes are the only thing there. And clothing really does seem to be Kiss All The Timeโ€™s highest calling. Credit where itโ€™s due, this stuff is going to sound incredible when youโ€™re trying on expensive pants.

And for Inside Hook, Mark Asch and Jesse Hassenger rank the movies of Ethan and Joel Coen, with glimpses into what makes them stand out from their peers:
Because this was, again, the 1990s, a period of panic over the slacker impieties of an infinitely jesting Generation X, the case against the Coens was that they were glib, condescending, immoral, playing God by creating characters who were their inferiors and making jokes out of their misfortunes. The Accordion King poster is a joke at Scottyโ€™s expense โ€” itโ€™s hilariously inappropriate in the moment, kitschy and corny and gives us a laugh at his expense in his extremity of pain. But Scottyโ€™s dad, and the universe, are making a joke at his expense, too. The moment is cruel and unfair, but we recognize that cruelty and unfairness and feel guilty for partaking in it and compounding it. Scotty in that moment is so vulnerable and the Coens are no more unkind to him than the world is.