A blue state Blog

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Bloglines - Evaluating smut, by the numbers.

Bloglines user Fredricktoo (gfred@optonline.net) has sent this item to you.


Boing Boing

Evaluating smut, by the numbers.

By noemail@noemail.org (Xeni Jardin)

Xeni Jardin: Violet Blue writes,

WFMU's Beware of the Blog has a post up titled "Christian/Family Values-Oriented Movie Review Database Restores My Faith In Snobbish Film Criticism," which links to this "mathematical" biblical rating system of mainstream films -- wait, I know you're already laughing too hard to see your monitor:


Link.

Read the review of Sin City and most especially revel in the right-hand column detailing of offenses. I laughed so hard I had to choke a bitch.

In the end, the "good Christian" reviewer just gives up:

"Sin City is yet another film that tends to remind me of the paintings in which a gaggle of demons dance and prance about a boiling cauldron, shrieking with glee as they toss soul after soul into the cauldron of Hell, cauterizing any veins of escape.

I am not going to spend any time summarizing the listing in the Findings/Scoring section in this report. The listing speaks volumes about the content of this film. Nor am I going to provide a list of Scriptures which apply to the sins demonstrated in this film. You probably have a Bible."

Link.

Reader comment: Stacia says,

This site is hillarious to go to after you've seen movies because they pick up on things that didn't register (what? inappropriate spanking in The Incredibles?).

I just have a story to relate about a time I emailed the site owner regarding his somewhat arbitrary rating system. If you look closely you'll see that maybe only two films get a perfect score - Mary Poppins being one of them. I wrote under a false email address and told him that I wouldn't show my children this film because obviously Mary Poppins was using witchcraft and unholy powers gained from Satan to carry out her magical acts. He argued that Mary Poppins was a real life angel, getting her divine power from God. How does this differ from Harry Potter? I don't know.

Anyway, he's fun to get into arguments with. Give it a try!


Sunday, October 15, 2006

Bloglines - New Mark Ryden print


New Mark Ryden print

By noemail@noemail.org (Mark Frauenfelder)

Mark Frauenfelder: 200610121253 "Regina Gloriae Naturae,” based on Mark Ryden’s painting 'The Creatrix,' is a limited edition, giclĂ©e print with gold foil stamping, letterpressed title and embossed chop on archival cotton rag paper." It's limited to 60 prints and costs $3,000. Link

Reader comment:

Kevin Kelly says: Whenever you see the claim "giclee print" just substitute the word "inkjet." Same thing, but without the $64 dollar fake french accent. A giclee is a nice inkjet print, but inkjet nonetheless. More at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giclee



Bloglines - It's imperative you keep your ass on the phone line.

Bloglines user Fredricktoo (gfred@optonline.net) has sent this item to you.


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Sunday, October 08, 2006

Bloglines - THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME*

Bloglines user Fredricktoo (gfred@optonline.net) has sent this item to you.


The Elegant Variation
A Literary Weblog. A Guardian Top 10 Literary Blog * A Forbes "Best of the Web" Pick * A Los Angeles Magazine Top Los Angeles Blog "Really brave ... or really stupid" - NPR

THE SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME*

By TEV on Events

Call me TEV.  ObfTo begin, I’d like to thank my hosts at the Online Book Fair for inviting me to participate in this exciting event. I’d also like to thank you, the reader, for stopping by here to take a moment and read what I’ve got to say.

We’ve all heard the dire reports over the last few years that herald the death of reading in general and the novel in particular. And yet every year, there are more new books released than ever before. Yes, it’s true that book review and short fiction column inches remain under perennial assault from other, emerging media. But the internet has stepped in to fill that void, with online-only magazines like Boldtype and Pindeldyboz offering goods for readers of every stripe. Book festivals (the brick and mortar – or tent and table variety) draw bigger audiences than ever as new ones seem to pop up all over the map. And then there’s the explosive growth in literary blogs.

When I started The Elegant Variation three years ago this month, there were a dozen or so literary blogs, four or five of which were firmly established. The literary blogosphere now boasts a glowing firmament of quite literally hundreds of sites, with new voices chiming in every day. Whatever your literary taste, there’s a blog devoted to it, from romance to mysteries to science fiction to experimental fiction to literature in translation. Bloggers have become book reviewers, and book reviewers have become bloggers. There’s even the Litblog Co-op, a consortium of more than twenty literary blogs who make a quarterly book recommendation, and whose new choice is just a few weeks away. (If you’re new to the world of literary blogs, check out the listing to the left of this post. Each of those sites will similarly link to dozens more.) Blogs also allow readers to follow the vagaries of the publishing industry as never before, even inspiring some publishers to set up their own blogs.

Because of the unlimited space on websites, the offerings on most blogs are limited only by the author’s laziness. They can offer detailed interviews, lengthy reviews and analysis of publishing trends. There’s no pressure to review the book of the moment, so bloggers can follow their noses or indulge in their passions, which might include creating a repository of author interview podcasts. But what blogs do best, I think, is create a literary sense of community, something very similar to what the Online Book Fair is attempting. At very little expense and at no real inconvenience to readers, we offer a gathering place where ideas are exchanged. Newspapers and magazines are necessarily static, with dialogue limited to the letters page. But blogs and other online forums can foster a real-time conversation which brings in readers from all over the world weighing in on thoughts that matter to them. Anyone who thinks no one is reading any more hasn’t spent much time online.

If you’ve come here by way of the Online Book Fair, I hope you’ll check out today’s posts beneath this one, and then poke through the archives here and on those sites I link to. You’ll find a universe of thoughtful literary commentary out there. If you’re a regular TEV reader who hasn’t checked out the Online Book Fair yet, stop over there and see what’s on offer: Hourly giveaways, links to author interviews and readings, book excerpts, and a host of interactive offerings that suggest what the future of the book fair looks like. There are no crowds and you don’t have to pay for parking ...

Ogt * Finally, I'm going to offer my own giveaway in honor of the Online Book Fair.  I'm going to give away a copy of Kate Atkinson's new novel One Good Turn.  It's a follow up to Case HIstories which was the first Read This! selection of the Litblog Co-op, and it follows the continuing adventures of ex-detective Jackson Brodie.  To win, just drop a line to me, subject line ONLINE BOOK FAIR and include your full name and mailing address.  The first person to do so wins - and feel free to include your thoughts on why you're excited about the convergence of books and the web.  We'll throw in a bonus title for anyone who can identify this post's headline's allusion.  And make sure you check back both here and the Online Book Fair in the days ahead.

UPDATE: Congratulations to Jon Butters of Chapel Hill, who identified the headline's source as H.G. Wells. (It was also co-opted for a series of 1970s commercials for the ill-fated Triumph TR-7.)  He wins both the Atkinson and a bonus copy of John Hodgman's wildly popular The Areas of My Expertise.


Thursday, October 05, 2006

Bloglines - Peekskill Riots

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Peekskill Riots

By Postroad

Peekskill Riots The Peekskill Riots were anti-communist riots (with anti-black undertones) in the city of Peekskill, New York in 1949. The catalyst for the rioting was an announced concert by black singer Paul Robeson, who was well known for his strong stand on civil rights and his communist sympathies. The concert, organized as a benefit for the Civil Rights Congress, was scheduled to take place on August 27. Before Robeson arrived, a mob of locals attacked concertgoers...many names you might recall were involved in this blot on American history, and Howard Fast, the novelist, recalled his involvement in his book Being Red (1990), Howard Fast's memoir of his life on the left. Additionally, some later writers recalled the involvement of relatives and/or friends.. Pete Seeger, present during the riot, wrote a song about it Later, gathering some of the rocks tossed at the lefty participants of the concert, he used the "ammo" to build a chimney on the cabin where he lived. The Lefty -sympathizing wonderful actress Judy Holliday was summoned before the congressional committe in charge of rooting out communists during the anti-communist days, and gave a lengthy testimony about herself and many others. And though the riots were sparked in part by local newspapers, editoriallizing against the "visitors" to their serene area, they and the good citizens of Peekskill quickly tried to ignore, forget, or bury lthe disgraceful riots. But the memory lives on for some, and this sad event remains memorialized, a reminder perhaps of what hate, aggression, and just plain nastiness can bring about.