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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR Fights the Power

Pop culture articles from the past week for the rebellious mind.

Take it to The Man by reading about:

  • subversive children’s lit
  • unique chart toppers
  • experimental filmmakers
  • an animated 80s fantasy hero! (But not that one)

Send articles to ploughmanplods [at] gmail throughout the next week to be featured in the FAR! Post articles from the past week in the comments for discussion! Have a Happy Friday!


Jason Diamond’s substack The Melt revisits the 1964 children’s book The Pushcart War and sees some relevance in its message of little guys fighting the powers that be:

It might not look like it at first, butย The Pushcart Warย is a near future dystopia for kids. Merrill set it a decade ahead of when it was published, and the New York City of the 1970s she envisioned was a place out of a nightmare Jane Jacobsโ€™ must have had while she was working onย The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Not surprisingly, the two books came out three years apart, and Jacobs was still fighting Robert Moses and his idea to build an expressway that would have gone right through where Washington Square Park sits. The NYC ofย The Pushcart War, meanwhile, feels very much like itโ€™s set in a time and place that saw Moses not only winning the fight to put in a Lower Manhattan Expressway, but a possible future where big business and the government work hand in hand, screwing over the locals and small businesses. Doesnโ€™t that sound absolutely terrifying? Could youย imagineย that sort of thing being regular practice?

Tom Breihan’s The Number Ones column at Stereogum reaches the only (to date) qualifying song by Billie Eilish:

Like โ€œOld Town Road,โ€ โ€œBad Guyโ€ was recorded in a bedroom, on a computer, by two very young people who were raised on YouTube and SoundCloud and who seemed hostile to the very idea of genre. Billie Eilish was even younger than Lil Nas X. Like him, she had a sharp digital marketing strategy in place before she ever signed a major-label deal. Eilish wasnโ€™t an outsider in the same way that Lil Nas X was. She grew up in Los Angeles, and her whole family was deeply involved with the arts; nobody was trying to convince her to go to college when she really just wanted to make music. She played the music-business game, but she and her brother and collaborator Finneas Oโ€™Connell had musical ideas that pushed so hard against conventional wisdom that they inadvertently revealed how unwise that conventional wisdom always was. They played around in the margins so cannily that the margins became the main text.

At ReverseShot, Ryan Swen talks about the latest feature by Yoko Yamanaka, a purveyor of “formal gambits and tonal shifts that one might expect from a significantly more experience filmmaker”:

Yamanaka does not aim for pat, simplistic psychological explanations for her heroineโ€™s choices.ย Desert of Namibiaย thrums with energy, carefully observing Kana and her companions in intimate, handheld medium shots before suddenly bursting forth with a barrage of electronic music, an unexpected character interaction, or a simple expression of motion. Gradually, as Kana and Hayashi’s interactions grow more volatile, usually at her instigation, the viewer’s involvement with her only increases our desire to understand an unknowable person. This is helped in no small part by Kawai’s abundance of diffident charisma, a pleasure to watch in even the most relatively pensive of moments, and the accumulation of time makes it difficult to reject her.

And Polygon‘s Tasha Robinson calls for a revamping of long-forgotten 80s fantasy animated series Blackstar:

While so much of 1980s animation was about the clear line between good and evil, thereโ€™s a sense throughoutย Blackstarย that most of the world of Sagar isnโ€™t aspected in such a black-and-white way. Itโ€™s just a chaotic ruin, where hungry monsters, prim but weary civilizations, and barbaric enclaves all exist side by side, divided by lethal geography. Every scattered outpost and wandering monster is equally dangerous to Blackstar and the Overlord, but ripe for either of them to exploit for an advantage in their ongoing war. There are even hints at a nuanced system for magic, where the mental power of sorcery and the elemental power of nature magic are different things that work in different ways.