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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR Sees Double

Pop culture articles from the past week that are twice as good as average.

I’m seeing double! Six Articles!

  • Sinners is a hit… right?
  • Bonnie Raitt still going
  • Shape your life with a narrative
  • Plus – Violent Future Sports!

Thanks twice over to Dave for his contributions this week. Send articles throughout the next week to ploughmanplods [at] gmail, post articles from the past week below for discussion and Have a Happy Friday!


The A.V. Club‘s Craig D. Lindsey raises an eyebrow at the press coverage of Ryan Coogler’s hit Sinners:

Sinners has received across-the-board love from critics and audiences (itโ€™s the first horror flick to get an A from CinemaScore, ever). Fans (which includes actors like Pedro Pascal) rave about it on social media. TikTok features everything from people seeing it again in a different format to Christians who claim that itโ€™s demonic. Much like when Cooglerโ€™s Black Panther became a cultural movement during its theatrical rollout (remember all those African outfits?), [critic Brandon] Collins believes Sinners is causing a wave Warner Bros. wasnโ€™t banking on. โ€œI think they definitely were hoping to break even, you know what I mean, with the movie,โ€ he says. โ€œBut I donโ€™t think they anticipated the cultural moment that itโ€™s having now, right? Because I think for Warner Bros., the issue for them is itโ€™s drawing attention to Ryan Cooglerโ€™s deal.โ€ (Although itโ€™s similar to the deal Tarantino made when he released Hollywood with Sony, Cooglerโ€™s deal, which includes first-dollar gross and ownership of the movie reverting to him in 25 years, is allegedly making studio executives freak the hell out.) Collins believes that the media didnโ€™t expect the Sinners crowd to be so, shall we say, 10 toes down with their support, especially after revealing what Coogler will get if Sinners is a smash.

K. Austin Collins considers a retrospective of L.A. Rebellion films and filmmakers for 4Columns:

Thereโ€™s a version of the LA Rebellion story in which all was lost: the great films that sat unrestored for decades, minimally released in their own time. Penitentiary, said to be the highest-grossing independent film of 1979, is a counterpoint to that narrative. It is an exploitation film hiding out in an art movementโ€”a bridge between South Central and the barely-made-it outskirts of Hollywood proper, too tough to be heartbreaking, yet too strenuously, knowingly masculinist in its depiction of prison violence and the Black macho to be anything but a tragedy. When [Zeinabu irene] Davisโ€™s documentary shows us multiple clips of Snoop Dogg talking about Penitentiary as if it were a sacred text, the effect is extraordinary, a harbinger of the unacknowledged, Black cult figures and deep cuts lingering just beneath the surface of global pop culture.

At Decibel, Justin Norton interviews Alicia Cordisco of Transgressive about the band’s new EP and the state of tolerance in metal:

Q: “Where do you think metal is as a culture in terms of trans acceptance?”
A: “We are 100% better off now than we were 15 years ago. But weโ€™re in a worse place than we were five years ago. I think the backslide is temporary. The reactionary people are pumping their chests, and the right wing is in power in many places. A lot of global progress is going backwards. I do see the seeds of us pushing back. As we do, weโ€™ll go further than we have before.”

For Quietus, Mat Colegate celebrates the last fifty years of movies about violent future sports:

Always quick to chase a trend Corman reckoned that this brand of science fiction might be the next big thing and so set about creating a film to soak up some of the extra money that Rollerball might leave behind. If his project failed it was no matter as his productions did not cost much in the first place, but if Rollerball built a fanbase who wanted more of this type ofโ€ฆ whatever-it-was? Well, that would mean money. And Roger Corman liked having fun with money. And so, as is often the case when a new high concept begins to infiltrate the public consciousness, the Violent Future Sport phenomena that was to move through movies, comics, TV and video games began with an outlier. Rollerball, released on 25 June 1975, despite being the first name most people would think of when asked to name this type of movie, and despite being one of the most aesthetically influential films of the 1970s, is closer in spirit to the brooding and malcontent dramas that had been popular a few years earlier; the brooding and malcontent dramas which would be put decisively to the mat by Rocky, with its stoical and uncomplicated hero, a year later. 

At Dirt, Michelle Lyn King writes about structuring life, tarot and stories with narratives:

I teach creative writing to high school students and college undergraduates and one of their more common questions is โ€œHow do you finish a story?โ€ My students are always starting stories and never finishing them. I encourage them to not even attempt to understand their stories until they have a complete first draft. You donโ€™t even know what it wants to be yet, I tell them. You have an understanding of the story you want to tell in your head, but you have to see for yourself how that story actually functions on the page. Thereโ€™s no way for them to understand their stories until they have something with a beginning, middle and, most importantly, some sort of end. Only from there can they refine through the process of editing. I share with them a quote from the literary theorist Ronald Sukenick, courtesy of Jane Alisonโ€™s book on craft, Meander, Spiral, Explode: โ€œForm is your footprints in the sand when you look back.โ€ They stare back at me. This is not the answer they want.

And at his substack, Carl Wilson remembers the irreplaceable David Thomas:

You certainly could count Thomas among the great bards of the non-neurotypical, but such categorizations are too dull a tool with which to treat this man who was absolutely one of one…. One thing thatโ€™s often lost in the mythos about the Cleveland industrial landscape and musique concrรจte and other critical clichรฉs (all also true) is that Thomas is a deeply romantic writer, though by no means a sentimental one. The frustrated yearnings of estranged lovers are as present in his work as the spooky entanglements hidden beneath the American surface, both natural and cultural. As well as, you know, ducks and dinosaurs and radios and stuff.