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The Friday Article Roundup

Won’t the FAR please think of the children?

You should be concerned about the week's best pop culture writing.

This week you will be be outraged at:

  • Insidious faux-educational right-wing propaganda
  • Videogame exploitation and gamification
  • Sleazy documentary ethics
  • Acclaimed Croatian novels
  • The general state of things, and trying to deal with them

The opposite of outrage, appreciation, for the contributions of Bridgett Taylor! Send articles throughout the next week to magpiesfar [at] gmail, post articles from the past week in the comments for discussion, and have a Happy Friday!

Kelly Jensen at Well Sourced digs into the bigoted background of the animated reading advocate Lori the Librarian:
Lori the Librarian launched in late July of this year.+ The site claims Lori is “a devoted mom and defender of truth who protects young minds, preserves kids’ innocence, and promotes literature that celebrates life, liberty, and truth,” and she aims to “equip and empower parents to protect our kids.” (There’s that curious “our” again as it relates to children, as if Lori’s creator and sycophants actually care about my child, your child, or children more broadly). …Where the right has made it their mission to kill off actual educational tools like Sesame Street (it’s DEI), it’s not because they don’t want kids to have access to learning materials. It’s because they want to be the creators and purveyors of that material so they can cash in, too.

For New York Magazine, Sam Biddle takes a deep dive into Roblox and doesn’t like what he finds even as he recognizes its appeal to the children who use it:
The megapopular internet platform of my generation turned my peers and even our parents into screen junkies who spend their waking hours scrolling an infinite feed of slop and marketing that gets crappier and less useful by the day. What’s worrisome about Roblox is that the appeal of its universe — where slop and commerce and dopamine rushes are seamlessly blended — is that it’s intuitive. It’s the logical end point of the internet’s enshittification playing out before a younger generation’s eyes.

Matt Singer plumbs the ethical depths of the new Netflix documentary Unknown Number: The High School Catfish at ScreenCrush:
Reenactments are nothing new in documentary films, and while they are typically performed by actors, it’s not unheard of for a doc’s subjects to play themselves on camera. But I am not sure I have ever seen a doc take the additional step that Unknown Number did, which was to have the person who ultimately confessed to the crimes and pled guilty to two counts of stalking a minor — who (again, spoiler alert) turned out to be Kendra Licari, the mother of the female victim — actively participate in the creation of the film, not only as an interview subject but as one of the performers in the reenactments.

Cory Oldweiler Ellen Elias-Bursać’s translation of Croatian author Martina Vidaić’s novel “Bedbugs” for the Los Angeles Review of Books:
The opposition of island and mainland is apparent to [main character] Gorana as well, even professionally. While she and her fellow architects seek to craft urban spaces, islands are almost impregnable to such manipulation: “Though an island can also be shaped, arranged, and devastated, interventions into it are less serious, sometimes even ridiculous, because nothing can truly touch its finality. An island is about forgetting the future.”

And for Typebar Magazine, Matt Wolfbridge interviews Luke O’Neil about his new collection of writing:
O’Neil: So how did I manage? Well I don’t know if I did yet. I’ve mostly been coping by drinking and smoking too much, another theme that isn’t exactly subtle in the book. And not in a funny haha gotta have my drink! way. A way that has become a bit dark. Like, hm, someone ought to look into this. Also by telling myself the lie that maybe the things I write could make some sort of change. A small one, of course, I’m not an asshole, but still something. My readers write to me often to tell me about how this or that piece helped them or made them feel less alone or put something they had been feeling into words that they could not find and if that’s all I ever get out of this then that’s something too.