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The Friday Article Roundup

Reports of the FAR’s death have been greatly exaggerated

Return to the land of the living and its best pop culture writing of the week.

This week, you will stay upright with:

  • Bad reporting techniques
  • Unsavory business practices
  • Sad club shutdowns
  • Degenerate reading advocacy
  • Surprising work connections

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


Dave Holmes writes for Esquire about how MTV shut down last week — except it didn’t:
At the time of that MTV UK/Australia announcement, the reporting on this story was mostly pretty accurate. But the headlines had โ€œMTVโ€ and โ€œGOING OFF THE AIRโ€ and โ€œNEW YEARโ€™S EVEโ€ in them, and the less explosive facts were buried much deeper into the body of the articles than anyone bothers to read anymoreโ€”which is to say, in the first paragraph. So the story became โ€œMTV GOING OFF THE AIR NEW YEARโ€™S EVE.โ€ TikTok and Instagram news-aggregator sites ran with it, and all of a sudden adult human beings started to believe MTV was going off the air because they saw it on, like, @PopBarf420. And people posted tributes. Lots of them. Even people who should have known better.

At Vulture, Will Tavlin examines how Mubi’s efforts to expand undermined its authority:
In recent years, Mubi has hired top executives from Netflix and Discovery. This year, it acquired its first new television shows: Mussolini: Son of a Century, Joe Wrightโ€™s dramatization of the rise of Il Duce, which turns the history of fascism into titillating pop, and Hal & Harper, directed by Cooper Raiff, a pseudo-mumblecore family drama starring himself and Lili Reinhart as 20-something siblings. The company is building theaters in Los Angeles and Mexico City and spoke to the Lower East Sideโ€™s Metrograph about a possible sale. The point of all of this is expansion: The Sequoia investment is supposed to help Mubi prepare for an IPO, which (CEO Efe) Cakarel hopes to launch in something like ten to 12 years.

Emma Silvers at Coyote reports on longtime Bay Area rock club Bottom of the Hill preparing to shut down:
Yes, there are weighty operating costs (insurance alone is now about $34,000 annually). But massive shifts in San Franciscoโ€™s demographics โ€” like ever-fewer working-class folks and people in the service industry โ€” have also played a role. Then thereโ€™s the increasing corporatization of the live music ecosystem, which has made it harder to stay competitive when booking talent. Meanwhile, societal changes that arrived with the pandemic (people staying home more often, and relying on streaming services for entertainment) mean itโ€™s tough to do business the way they used to. Keeping ticket prices low has become a challenge.

At The Atlantic, Adam Kirsch makes the case for reading as indulgent pleasure instead of noble calling:
It would be better to describe reading not as a public duty but as a private pleasure, sometimes even a vice. This would be a more effective way to attract young people, and it also happens to be true. When literature was considered transgressive, moralists couldnโ€™t get people to stop buying and reading dangerous books. Now that books are considered virtuous and edifying, moralists canโ€™t persuade anyone to pick one up.

And after being laid off, Vadim Rizov looks back at a decade-plus at Filmmaker Magazine, and the intersections of work and film and life:
I wanted an interview with Frank Beauvais about his Just Donโ€™t Think Iโ€™ll Scream, and I thought an all-archival essay-film with a literary bent would be of interest to archival producer/documentarian Sierra Pettengill. As we all settled into pandemic torpor, Sierra conducted an email interview, in which she correctly guessed that Annie Ernauxโ€™s The Years was an influence on the narration. I didnโ€™t know Ernauxโ€™s work, made a note of it and the next year finally got around to The Years. I immediately realized I needed to buy and read everything sheโ€™s ever had translated; the following year, I was ready to to be one of three journalists in a room for an interview about her film made with her son, The Super 8 Years, and later that year she won the Nobel. Pretty good!