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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR is feeling mighty bushed

Make like a tree and leaf through the best pop culture writing of the week.

This week, you will branch out with:

  • A Super Bowl extra
  • A protest bagpiper
  • An actor’s efforts
  • A videogame’s repatriation
  • A critic’s lament

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


For NBC News, Angela Yang talks to one of Bad Bunny’s bushes:
Josรฉ Villanueva said that when he first met the rest of the field cast, they all began speculating about what exactly they were going to be. โ€œMy theory was that we were gonna be sharks. The rest of the cast was like, โ€˜No, weโ€™re gonna be frogs,โ€™โ€ he said. โ€œAnd then we just see this bush moving, and weโ€™re like, โ€˜What?โ€™ And they go, โ€˜Nah, you guys are gonna be trees.โ€™โ€

Julianne Le profiles a protest bagpiper for LA Taco:
โ€œI thought, โ€˜I have [bagpipes], I might as well take them to the protest and try and use it to fire people up,โ€ Duffy tells L.A. TACO. Duffy utilizes a skillful musicality to not just empower demonstrators, playing marches like the 11-minute-long, 600-plus-years-old โ€œBlack Donaldโ€™s March,โ€ but Duffy also communicates his sentiments towards the police and federal agents directly to their faces. โ€œI always play it whenever the police retreat because it’s like, โ€˜You fucking ran while we stayed,โ€™โ€ he says.

At his substack, Brian Grubb writes about what it means to see Michael J. Fox acting with Parkinson’s on Shrinking:
Thatโ€™s what I mean about this whole thing being cool, though. The layers to it. The thing where the general public gets to see Michael J. Fox fighting hard and keeping his sense of humor about it and the thing where other people going through a bunch of physical and/or neurological bullshit โ€” Parkinsonโ€™s, spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis, pick any card you like here โ€” get to feel represented by someone who knows what that struggle is like and is able to put it into words accurately. The world of TV and film has not always been very good at this. Progress is nice.

For Kotaku, Ash Parrish describes the justice of Relooted, a platformer where a crack team heists real African artifacts from museums:
Thanks to characters like Indiana Jones, Lara Croft, Nathan Drake, and more, pop culture has sanitized the image of the grave robber into that of the historically conscious treasure hunter and has abstracted and flattened the things they stole, robbing them of their significance. Relooted restores that significance, providing intricate detail on the pieces youโ€™re liberating, and sometimes reestablishes context for items not widely acknowledged as looted artifacts. As a lover of British royal history, I can vividly picture The Sovereignโ€™s Scepter but Iโ€™ve never thought about where the big-ass diamond featured in it came from. The gameโ€™s final heist has Nomali stealing it along with the rest of the British crown jewels because they were made from diamonds looted from Great Zimbabwe.

And Annie Zaleski considers what’s being lost as outlets cut back on criticism:
Whatโ€™s also concerning to me is the dwindling opportunities to document music history. Decades ago, we had print magazines and newspapers committing some version of music history in physical form. Today, fragile internet sites mean thereโ€™s a big chunk of music history thatโ€™s vaporizing. People are already writing about the disappearing hip-hop blogs or the music lost when MySpace went under. Physical media might be scarce, but a digital file can disappear into the digital ether.