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The Friday Article Roundup

The FAR will become a bat

A cowardly and superstitious lot? No, the best pop culture writing of the week.

This week, you will go batty over:

  • A Dark Knight’s origins
  • A Ronette’s history
  • A low-budget film’s ferocity
  • A drama’s intensity
  • A band’s bookkeeping
  • A hit film’s Asian culture (video bonus!)

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


Rhi Daneel Olivaw examines The Dark Knight Returns through the lens of television and the televised Batman for Shelf Dust:
This is an achingly metatextual text. This is not just an issue about almost-but-not-quite Adam West Batman finding that 1986 is too much to bear โ€“ it is, as the title suggests, โ€˜the Dark Knightโ€™ returning, about not-Adam West Batman โ€˜rediscoveringโ€™ a long-forgotten ultraviolent mojo. [Frank] Miller plays all those lurid flashbacks precisely because he knows that the age of the brooding morbid Batman was forty years ago (at the time of publication). Heโ€™s not just throwing dirt in the face of the camp and kooky, heโ€™s grabbing that dirt off the burial site of a kind of Batman he was absolutely too young to remember.

At POW Mag, DJ Short marks the passing of Nedra Talley and how her harmonizing helped define the Ronettes:
Nedraโ€™s debut solo album, 1978โ€™s Full Circle, is actually quite good. Her lifelong dedication to the three-part harmony is present to the extent that, if you tune out the overt religiosity, it conjures an idea of what a Ronettes record might have sounded like had the group survived to explore the world of โ€˜70s funk and pop-soul. The album is produced entirely by her husband, which further negates the notion that the brilliance of any of the Ronettes was due entirely to any Spector not named Ronnie.

Natalia Keogan reviews the hand-biting Gangsterism at Screen Slate
โ€œI felt so rich of world when I had no budget,โ€ says Clem (Marc Bacolol), the on-screen avatar for Gangsterism (2025) filmmaker Isiah Medina….Gangsterism, as a title, is both a description of the charactersโ€™ criminal activity and a prospective moniker for a newfound ideology. Medina paradoxically posits that a filmmaker who receives ample funding has less artistic integrity than one who creates in spite of their struggle. โ€œAs my filmmaking gets better, my vision will get worse,โ€ Clem chants.

At 4 Columns, Rhoda Feng takes in a new production of Joe Turner’s Come And Gone:
The other residents gather as a shifting ensemble. Jeremy Furlow (Tripp Taylor) drifts in and out with his guitar, his sense of purpose only faintly detectable, like a teenage moustache. Mattie Campbell (Nimene Sierra Wureh), one of the women he woos, more out of propinquity than passion, arrives searchingโ€”for her husband, for stabilityโ€”and finds herself suspended between hope and resignation. Her foil, the wily Molly Cunningham (Maya Boyd), has sharper angles: dressed like a wedding cake (Paul Tazewell designed the costumes), she sets her own terms and refuses to be carried along by anyone elseโ€™s plans. And then there is Bynum Walker (a magnetic Ruben Santiago-Hudson), the roots worker whom others describe fussing in the yard with pigeons, marking circles, speaking in tongues, and engaging in other superstitious practices. He speaks often of having found a song that allows him to โ€œbindโ€ people together. This claim hangs over the house like a plucked string, its vibration lingering longer than anyone can quite account for.

And the members of Los Campesinos! break down the dollars and cents (or more accurately, pounds and pence) of their latest tour:
The purpose of this piece is not to explain the situation for all touring bands, though doubtless a lot of the sums involved will be relevant to others. Itโ€™s certainly not intended to elicit any sympathy. Itโ€™s only to give an honest and accurate outline of the exact situation for Los Campesinos!. We publish this in our continued spirit of attempting to be transparent and honest about the music industry, and perhaps to outline to our own fans why we are unable to tour more frequently and widely. But I do hope that our continued forthrightness on these issues encourages other bands to speak more openly too.