Jul. 9th, 2011

monk222: (Default)
Recently, in symbolic fashion, spectators of Mexican ancestry in Pasadena's Rose Bowl did not merely cheer on the Mexican national soccer team in a game against the U.S. national team - such nostalgia would be natural and understandable for recent immigrants - but went much further and also jeered American players and, indeed, references to the United States.

Which was the home team?


-- Victor Davis Hanson

Although I am sure the money will stay largely white, American urban life has been becoming something else. Rainbow diversity would be great, but color tends to mean 'poorer' and doesn't really feel quite American.
monk222: (Default)
Recently, in symbolic fashion, spectators of Mexican ancestry in Pasadena's Rose Bowl did not merely cheer on the Mexican national soccer team in a game against the U.S. national team - such nostalgia would be natural and understandable for recent immigrants - but went much further and also jeered American players and, indeed, references to the United States.

Which was the home team?


-- Victor Davis Hanson

Although I am sure the money will stay largely white, American urban life has been becoming something else. Rainbow diversity would be great, but color tends to mean 'poorer' and doesn't really feel quite American.
monk222: (Noir Detective)
As American Psycho’s last line suggests, there is no way out of the 80s for Bret Easton Ellis’s novel. Focused on details like Perry Ellis ties, rayon, and walkmans, which might have provoked ideas of perfection or fashion then, the novel is now more likely to evoke the bargain basement or the school bus. On its 20th anniversary, that leaves us with the question of whether or not we can take this novel in 2011 as a relevant and meaningful cultural critique.

-- ONTD

I don't know about the young people today, those who were just being born in the eighties and those born since, but American Psycho's reliance on eighties pop culture only endears the novel that much more to me. Moreover, the eighties really were the Big Bang of this plutocratic world that we live in today, and therefore merits its literary place in capturing the amoral and excessive vibe of the new era.

The fact that it is a horror novel may have always limited its reach for the shelves of highest literature. I may also be happier with the novel because of its heavy misogynistic energy, a factor which only hurts its prestige that much more, given the cultural ascendancy of feminist values. I know it has a special place in my reading life, and I am glad it is on the menu, which one may take or leave.
monk222: (Noir Detective)
As American Psycho’s last line suggests, there is no way out of the 80s for Bret Easton Ellis’s novel. Focused on details like Perry Ellis ties, rayon, and walkmans, which might have provoked ideas of perfection or fashion then, the novel is now more likely to evoke the bargain basement or the school bus. On its 20th anniversary, that leaves us with the question of whether or not we can take this novel in 2011 as a relevant and meaningful cultural critique.

-- ONTD

I don't know about the young people today, those who were just being born in the eighties and those born since, but American Psycho's reliance on eighties pop culture only endears the novel that much more to me. Moreover, the eighties really were the Big Bang of this plutocratic world that we live in today, and therefore merits its literary place in capturing the amoral and excessive vibe of the new era.

The fact that it is a horror novel may have always limited its reach for the shelves of highest literature. I may also be happier with the novel because of its heavy misogynistic energy, a factor which only hurts its prestige that much more, given the cultural ascendancy of feminist values. I know it has a special place in my reading life, and I am glad it is on the menu, which one may take or leave.

Heavy Rain

Jul. 9th, 2011 09:13 pm
monk222: (Strip)
I have come across some video clips of "Heavy Rain". We have mentioned this game before, and my interest is now only more stoked. The game designers seem to have some of that Monk vibe. Though, I still do not see getting a new game system for it, not even if they were giving us explicit sex in heavy bondage. If I really want to get in a game, I may have to settle for BioShock Infinite, though at something less than sixty dollars.

two videos )

Heavy Rain

Jul. 9th, 2011 09:13 pm
monk222: (Strip)
I have come across some video clips of "Heavy Rain". We have mentioned this game before, and my interest is now only more stoked. The game designers seem to have some of that Monk vibe. Though, I still do not see getting a new game system for it, not even if they were giving us explicit sex in heavy bondage. If I really want to get in a game, I may have to settle for BioShock Infinite, though at something less than sixty dollars.

two videos )

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