Close Search Close

 

  • Comics
  • Theatre
  • Site News

The Friday Article Roundup

Stop the presses, it’s the FAR!

An extra edition of the best pop culture writing of the week.

This week, you will get the scoop on:

  • Student newspapers
  • Youth culture
  • Healing art
  • Late styles
  • Trash Popes

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


Scott Tobias recalls the opportunity to learn criticism on the job at a student newspaper for The Reveal:
When you write for a student newspaper, especially one thatโ€™s focused on putting out a print edition every day, you learn things that self-publishing cannot teach you. You learn about the editorial process. You learn how to work for an editor. You learn about writing for a broad readership and thus thinking about the audience for your work. You learn about the hard limits of filling a news hole, when youโ€™re required to hit a specific word count and need to write with economy and punch. (That last one is a problem for writers in the digital age, where space is unlimited and the work can be as borderless as, say, this essay youโ€™re reading.) You learn that youโ€™re not operating on an island but acting as part of a complex organism, with ongoing and ever-shifting relationships within the staff and with readers who are scrutinizing what you do.

At The Line of Best Fit, Joe Muggs argues that culture is not stagnating but thriving off the radar of the mainstream:
These communities are truly radically different in their sophistication, nature of their practice โ€“ and most crucially their globalism โ€“ from previous online music communities; they make MySpace look like paper fanzines. And that globalising is the first of the huge revolutions of the past decade. Szatan actually touches on this in his RA piece, admitting that โ€œhell, everything coming out of Brazilโ€ alone amounts to โ€œincredible, future-facing musicโ€. Like, YES? A nation BIGGER THAN WESTERN EUROPE has mind-blowing, innovative new sounds flowing like tap water, and that is constantly entering the global music bloodstream? That on its own IS new and revolutionary. And thatโ€™s just one country and one sub-section of music โ€“ there is infinitely more besides. Come on, think back to 2016: could you have imagined that the global AAA-list of pop stars would include Korean and Nigerian acts or a Puerto Rican singing almost solely in Spanish? Or that South African takes on house music and Punjabi trap would be established parts of the international sonic vocabulary? Be serious.

For the Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism, Olivia Deng examines an anti-opioid program that prescribes art instead:
โ€œThere isnโ€™t a single path to healing, and part of my responsibility is to help create access points that might resonate with different people,โ€ [Town of Franklin arts director Cory] Shea said. โ€œThatโ€™s where art comes in. Creativity, meditative activities, and hands-on making experiences offer something universalโ€”everyone benefits from having a moment to slow down, connect, and create.โ€

Filipe Furtado muses on Disclosure Day and late Spielberg for MUBI:
At its very best, Disclosure Day has a lot of earnest shots of the cast that are packed with emotion that set it apart from most current American movies, moments of privilege outside the mechanics of Koeppโ€™s script. When it works, the film can balance the fascination and horror of its fantastical images. It is also full of awe-filled reaction shots of minor characters that feel far less successful. Shyamalan movies fully embody this belief in images, and at times Spielberg seems satisfied with only illustrating his. There is an initial set of ideas and emotions that needs to come through above anything that happens on set. Images for Spielberg matter in how they communicate, which isnโ€™t wrong but can feel narrowโ€”they donโ€™t break from this more strict and functional need with the abandon that, for instance, Shyamalan does.

Craig D. Lindsey digs into the jazz soundtracks of Blaxploitation films for The AV Club:
Recorded during his experimental, early โ€™70s โ€œMwandishiโ€ periodโ€”after Herbie Hancock had provided the music for Michelangelo Antonioniโ€™s Blowupโ€”The Spook Who Sat By The Door score sprinkles some aurally audacious moves throughout the mostly funkafied production. (Since the session players were never credited, itโ€™s fair to assume he performed with his โ€œMwandishiโ€ sextet, which included reed player Bennie Maupin, trumpeter Eddie Henderson, and bassist Buster Williams.) Interestingly, these moments happen during a couple of recruit-training sequences: one montage has Hancock playing with synths and backwards loops as CIA recruits show off their skills, while the other has rhythmic blips and sound effects going as Black men train in the field.

And for Rogerebert.com, Marya E. Gates speaks with the dirtiest man in Baltimore and beyond, John Waters, about his experiences with the site’s namesake:
Itโ€™s a little ironic: Iโ€™m doing this interview for the Roger Ebert website because Roger Ebert wrote some of the meanest reviews of my movies ever, but when Iโ€™d see him, heโ€™d say, โ€œHi, John, want to be on my panel?โ€ And I was always so confused. I thought, โ€œWell, Iโ€™m a professional, but am I a masochist?โ€ He did one great thing, โ€œBeyond the Valley of the Dolls,โ€ which has one of the most brilliant soundtracks ever. I will say, he gave me a lot of bad reviews with his film criticism. But what did he leave behind? Thumbs up! Thatโ€™s not enough. And the other one, Gene Siskel, he called me once and said, โ€œJohn, take me to the set of a snuff movie, I know you know where a snuff movie is.โ€ And he was really serious, and I just started laughing.