WORTH REPEATING: How The Big Lie Took

ANDREW SULLIVAN: It seems to me that the last year or so in America’s political culture has represented the triumph of untruth. And the untruth was propagated by a deliberate, simple and systemic campaign to kill Obama’s presidency in its crib. Emergency measures in a near-unprecedented economic collapse – the bank bailout, the auto-bailout, the stimulus – were described by the right as ideological moves of choice, when they were, in fact, pragmatic moves of necessity. The increasingly effective isolation of Iran’s regime – and destruction of its legitimacy from within – was portrayed as a function of Obama’s weakness, […]

NPR FOR THE DEAF: We Hear It Even When You Can’t

FRESH AIR In a 2004 interview on Fresh Air, Reubens explained that he created the character of Pee-wee Herman in 1977, while working with the Groundlings comedy troupe in Los Angeles. But he came up with the character’s name, he says, after looking for ideas at home. “I had a little one-inch-long harmonica that said ‘Pee-wee’ on it, and I knew a kid whose last name was Herman, and Pee-wee Herman sounded like the kind of name you would never make up,” he said. “It sounded like, you know, a totally real name made up by somebody whose parents didn’t […]

EARLY WORD: Tunng And Groove

Far from their folktronic cousins The Books, Tunng employs a much poppier sound. They seamlessly weave together acoustic instruments with synthesizers creating an ethereal folk landscape. Listening to this album in stereo, you begin to appreciate just how much thought Mike Lindsay puts into his music. Most tracks have two or more varying acoustic guitar tracks panned to either side, which mesh so well in mono you could swear it was all one instrument. Under these the synths, samples, drum tracks and general strange and exotic sounds are spliced to create an incredibly unique sound. The album …And Then We […]

CINEMA: The Clientele All

CLIENT 9: THE RISE AND FALL OF ELIOT SPITZER (2010, directed by Alex Gibney, 117 minutes, U.S.) COOL IT! (2010, directed Ondi Timoner, 92 minutes, U.S.) BY DAN BUSKIRK FILM CRITIC The last decade has seen art houses flooded with newsy documentaries, presenting the kind of big issue investigative reporting that used to find a home on ABC’s 20/20 or Dateline NBC. Oscar winner Alex Gibney’s been at the forefront of this cycle, with the theatrical releases Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, his examination of military Torture, Taxi to the Dark Side, and this year’s Casino Jack and […]

CONCERT REVIEW: The Morning Benders

[Photo by Misha Vladimirsky via CULTURE BULLY] BY PELLE GUNTHER Walking into the First Unitarian Church last night, the first trickling breathy vocals from the singer for Twin Sister welcomed us in. To be honest, her distinctive vocals alone would have gotten them a good review. As these beautiful, crooning vocals drifted towards me, my mind was instantly taken to the voice of Joanna Newsom. Though much more raspy and airy than Newsom’s, they still held that same sense of childhood and freedom; instead of beautiful harp music for a backdrop, Twin Sister chose to go the way of an […]

MUST SEE TV: Hologram Pop Star Is Big In Japan

DVICE: If you’re an aspiring musician, stop reading now, this will be painful. Japan’s Crypton Future Media has unleashed upon the world what may be the future of pop music in the amazingly realistic, holographic singing idol Hatsune Miku. Hatsune is a product of Japan’s popular Vocaloid software scene in which fans can create their own songs for fictional characters to sing. The twist here is that Crypton took things to the next level by making the character into a hologram and actually putting their avatar on tour, playing to huge enthusiastic audiences. MORE

ALBUM REVIEW: Ted Hearne’s Katrina Ballads

BY DAVE ALLEN Much to my eternal chagrin, I never visited pre-9/11 New York City. (My excuse now, as it was at the time of my first visit in 2002, is that my upbringing was at first international, in Asia, and then rural and isolated, in Maryland, some four hours from Gotham. Geography was an obstacle.) Not visiting pre-Katrina New Orleans makes more sense, especially in terms of geography, but my sense of regret was perhaps even greater when I visited the city for the first time last month. It’s likely different now in ways I cannot understand, but I […]

SCIENCE: The Insanity Virus?

DISCOVERY: The facts of schizophrenia are so peculiar, in fact, that they have led Torrey and a growing number of other scientists to abandon the traditional explanations of the disease and embrace a startling alternative. Schizophrenia, they say, does not begin as a psychological disease. Schizophrenia begins with an infection. The idea has sparked skepticism, but after decades of hunting, Torrey and his colleagues think they have finally found the infectious agent. You might call it an insanity virus. If Torrey is right, the culprit that triggers a lifetime of hallucinations—that tore apart the lives of writer Jack Kerouac, mathematician […]

LAWSUIT: McFadden’s Is Stone Cold Racist

ABC NEWS: A Philadelphia bar actively discriminates against black patrons and employees, banning drinkers who wear baggy clothes and forcing black workers into behind-the-scenes jobs, according to a lawsuit filed by an attorney who moonlights there as a bartender. In a class action lawsuit against McFadden’s Restaurant and Saloon, lawyers for bartender Michael Bolden said they have obtained e-mails and text messages in which managers discuss ways to limit the number of black patrons. “We don’t want black people we are a white bar,” one manager is alleged to have e-mailed another, according to the lawsuit. The class action suit […]

PAPERBOY: Slow-Jamming The Alt-Weeklies

BY DAVE ALLEN Like time, news waits for no man. Keeping up with the funny papers has always been an all-day job, even in the pre-Internets era. These days, however, it’s a two-man job. That’s right, these days you need someone to do your reading for you, or risk falling hopelessly behind and, as a result, increasing your chances of dying lonely and somewhat bitter. That’s why every week PAPERBOY does your alt-weekly reading for you. We pore over those time-consuming cover stories and give you the takeaway, suss out the cover art, warn you off the ink-wasters and steer […]

ARTSY: Roy Lichtenstein Painting Sells For $42 Million

BBC: A painting by Roy Lichtenstein has sold at auction for $42.6m  – a new record for the US ‘pop artist’. The cartoon-style painting, sold to an anonymous telephone bidder at Christie’s in New York, features a woman on the phone with a speech bubble containing the title. The Lichtenstein sale smashed a previous record for the artist set in 2005, when his work In the Car fetched $16.2m. In a statement, Christie’s said Ohhh…Alright… – painted in 1964 – “characterises Lichtenstein’s captivation and inspiration with techniques of commercial printing and reproduction.” MORE

OBAMA DEBT COMMISSION REPORT: Balance Budget On The Back Of The Poor And The Middle Class; White House Caves On Bush Tax Cuts For The Super-Rich

FROOMKIN: The two deficit-hawk extremists President Obama put in charge of his fiscal commission released their personal suggestions for cutting the federal budget deficit on Wednesday. And while it’s quite possible that not a one of them will make it into the commission’s official recommendations, which require the approval of 14 of the 18 commissioners (not just two), the document will inevitably be welcomed as a “serious” contribution to the debate – at least by Republicans and conservative Democrats. But taken as a whole, the plan authored by Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson would have devastating effects on the government […]