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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR asks: Is all lost?

Come find the week's best pop culture writing.

This week, you will get lost in:

  • The arms of an idol
  • A feel-bad classic
  • Righteous anger
  • A kidnapper’s basement
  • A very weird future

The FAR would be lost without 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!

In Empire, Christina Newland writes about the personal loss in Robert Redford’s death:
In 2018, I had the cosmic good luck of meeting him for a brief interview at a Toronto junket for his brilliant crime caper The Old Man & The Gun. It was hard not to feel like my brain was being rewired. The enormity of it was almost too much. He responded to my fluttery nerves with such kindness, asked me about my background and greeted me in Greek, took a photo with me and held me close enough that I have – sorry, this is very gauche – spent years talking to my girlfriends about it. For the first and only time in a career of interviewing famous people, I got in the lift of the hotel afterward and cried.

Jason Diamond examines how Robert Redford captured a dark mood in Ordinary People:
It’s also a film that I believe has been overlooked purely because how last days of the Carter administration it feels. I’m still not sure why there hasn’t been some big, celebrated edition of it on Criterion or its addition to the National Film Registry, not just because of Redford or all the Oscars it won, but because it is about as “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant” a movie as I can think of in the way it portrayed the very American way of trying to wish the bad away, of hiding behind our money, and inside our nice homes, hoping the facade will protect us from the cruelties of the world outside.

For the Guardian, Stevie Chick interviews Ken Casey of the Dropkick Murphys about speaking out and speaking up:
“Regarding our safety … whatever,” he snarls, disdainfully. “I’ll never have a security guard or anything like that. But you gotta keep your head on a swivel a little bit. Back in the day, we always had a Nazi element gunning for us, but you could see them coming. Now you don’t know who’s who. I’m not sure what’s keeping other people quiet, though, especially in punk-rock. Where’d everyone go? They had the balls to speak out against Bush back in the day. But Bush didn’t have an army of trolls that come after you. Speaking out against Bush wasn’t going to cost you half your fanbase, potentially.”

Bryn Greenwood surveys the overwhelming number of kidnapped women as opposed to men in fiction for Crimereads:
I sometimes suspect that this constant focus on women being abducted stems from male readers who have more faith in their ability to escape a kidnapper, and so are less willing to suspend their disbelief for a male kidnapping victim. After all, according to a YouGov survey, 7% of American men think they could best a grizzly bear in unarmed combat.

At his substack, R. Emmet Sweeney talks with trombonist Jacob Garchik about the freedom to make his new jazz-prog-metal sci-fi concept album:
It was like me fusing all the things that I was interested in into one project, even if it was an awkward combination of things. I’m just going to make it work. The joy of being independent and making records now, financing them yourself, is you just get to do what you want. And so there’s no practicality. You can put together a weird band with a weird concept and there’s nothing stopping you.