Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
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In an article in the Columbia Spectator, Columbia History Professor David Eisenbach talks about his new book "Gay Power." Eisenbach is straight. Really and truly straight. So why would a straight man write a book called "Gay Power?" He's already a step ahead of you:

When I began writing it, I tried explaining to everyone that historians had neglected gay history and my book would be a significant contribution to the field of United States history in general. But even the most open-minded people were baffled. I could see them thinking, “why would a truly straight guy be interested in gay history?”
A knee-jerk reaction lives in all of us when we hear something like this. We all, gay and straight, think he must be one of those old-fashioned gays who can't face reality. We instinctively feel bad for him and better about ourselves. But Eisenbach has an answer that should make us sit up and take notice: "Why would a straight guy care about gay history? My answer became the central argument of my book: the gay rights movement liberated and transformed straights as well as gays."

He is saying that we gays are part of something larger. He outlines the fight for gay rights the same way another historian would frame the fights for other civil rights:
For decades comedians, politicians, and journalists reinforced negative gay stereotypes of the homosexual as either the silly fop or creepy pervert. But in the early 1970s, gay activists pushed the media to present positive images of gays. Almost every sitcom suddenly aired a “special episode” featuring a likeable gay character who revealed his homosexuality but, in the end, was embraced by the entire cast. Millions of Americans heard the message: “If the cast of Alice can accept a homosexual, so should you!” . . . For better or for worse, the gay rights movement was an American Revolution that transformed our political and social landscape. And so my fellow straight Americans, if you want to understand the country you live in today ... read your gay history.
So many of us have been calling for our leaders to see that we are as important as everyone else, that we matter as much. We're part of all that's going on even when we are told we're not, and our standing up for each other matters. We should thank Eisenbach for reminding us.

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Maybe William Shatner will be invited to George Takei's first anniversary?

Chicago is on the ball. Homeless shelters to get gay training. Between this and the gay high school, Obama's home state shows us how it's done.

The illusion of movement in these colored circles is just an illusion. No, really. They aren't moving.

You missed you some Maddow today? Don't worry because we have your Rachel Maddow in GQ!

Patti Labelle at Splash last night

Obama on SNL?

The Road, starring Viggo Mortenson and based on the brilliant book by Cormac McCarthy, has been moved to 2009.

People growing up watching black and white television dream in black and white. I don't know if I buy this or not, but if it's true, I'm looking forward to 3D TV even more.

Pink interview: "I wanted being a performer to change my life, but I didn’t want to let it change who I was."



I'm not an expert, but I don't think this is how this game is played.

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Maureen "Marcia Brady" McCormick is back! As part of her worldwide tour to promote her new book, "Here's The Story," Maureen has moved from the morning show confines of The Today Show to the free and nasty Howard Stern Show. Check out the clip the Language NSFW clip above. And then tell me you aren't going to rush out and buy her book.

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Wake Up With These:

NYT Front Page 10/20 (4:45)
Summary of the Front Page

NYT Book Review (15:00)
Cartoonist Jules Feiffer recalls his Village Voice years; Motoko Rich calls in from the Frankfurt Book Fair; James McPherson discusses President Lincoln’s war powers; and Dwight Garner has best-seller news.

Meet the Press (44:00)
Colin Powell Endorses Obama

This American Life (55:00)
How to Win Friends and Influence People. Stories of people climbing to be number one, including a reading by David Sedaris. How do they do it? What is the fundamental difference between us and them?

Foreign Affairs (35:00)
Managing Editor Gideon Rose discusses the September/October 2008 issue with CFR.org Executive Editor Michael Moran.

Audio player after the jump. Or click here to launch the player in a new window so you can browse while you listen. Or, head over to The Media Bar and listen there.


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I am introducing a new feature this week-- The Weekly Short. These weekly shorts will be short short stories. Short enough to be inhaled in a gulp, a breath, a glance. Short like a youtube clip. Short like a CNN.com update. Short like a commercial. It's all about getting what you need -- quick. 500 words or so by really great writers. Not necessarily the great kind of writers who we were forced to read in school (although some of them might be), for school. No, these will be not be stuffy, dry, or lifeless stories. These will not be pretentious. These will not be necessarily instructional. These will be stories life begs to inhabit, and then does, cozily.

The first story, the one to launch this new feature, is "Incarnations of Burned Children" by David Foster Wallace. Wallace was a brilliant man, probably one of the smartest in the past fifty years. But his genius was not an end to itself, although it could have been. But I think he believed that the reason really does exist to serve the emotions. He used his mind as an instrument, a tool, to take him, and then us with him, to another place. And, in doing so, he subtly resculpted fiction and its possibilities. He pushed the upper and lower boundaries of his art form, and, in that way, inspired the format of this blog.

The first lines of "Incarnations of Burned Children:"

The Daddy was around the side of the house hanging a door for the tenant when he heard the child's screams and the Mommy's voice gone high between them. He could move fast, and the back porch gave onto the kitchen, and before the screen door had banged shut behind him the Daddy had taken the scene in whole, the overturned pot on the floortile before the stove and the burner's blue jet and the floor's pool of water still steaming as its many arms extended, the toddler in his baggy diaper standing rigid with steam coming off his hair and his chest and shoulders scarlet and his eyes rolled up and mouth open very wide and seeming somehow separate from the sounds that issued

The full short after the jump. Also available at Esquire.com



The Daddy was around the side of the house hanging a door for the tenant when he heard the child's screams and the Mommy's voice gone high between them. He could move fast, and the back porch gave onto the kitchen, and before the screen door had banged shut behind him the Daddy had taken the scene in whole, the overturned pot on the floortile before the stove and the burner's blue jet and the floor's pool of water still steaming as its many arms extended, the toddler in his baggy diaper standing rigid with steam coming off his hair and his chest and shoulders scarlet and his eyes rolled up and mouth open very wide and seeming somehow separate from the sounds that issued, the Mommy down on one knee with the dishrag dabbing pointlessly at him and matching the screams with cries of her own, hysterical so she was almost frozen. Her one knee and the bare little soft feet were still in the steaming pool, and the Daddy's first act was to take the child under the arms and lift him away from it and take him to the sink, where he threw out plates and struck the tap to let cold wellwater run over the boy's feet while with his cupped hand he gathered and poured or flung more cold water over his head and shoulders and chest, wanting first to see the steam stop coming off him, the Mommy over his shoulder invoking God until he sent her for towels and gauze if they had it, the Daddy moving quickly and well and his man's mind empty of everything but purpose, not yet aware of how smoothly he moved or that he'd ceased to hear the high screams because to hear them would freeze him and make impossible what had to be done to help his child, whose screams were regular as breath and went on so long they'd become already a thing in the kitchen, something else to move quickly around. The tenant side's door outside hung half off its top hinge and moved slightly in the wind, and a bird in the oak across the driveway appeared to observe the door with a cocked head as the cries still came from inside. The worst scalds seemed to be the right arm and shoulder, the chest and stomach's red was fading to pink under the cold water and his feet's soft soles weren't blistered that the Daddy could see, but the toddler still made little fists and screamed except now merely on reflex from fear the Daddy would know he thought possible later, small face distended and thready veins standing out at the temples and the Daddy kept saying he was here he was here, adrenaline ebbing and an anger at the Mommy for allowing this thing to happen just starting to gather in wisps at his mind's extreme rear still hours from expression. When the Mommy returned he wasn't sure whether to wrap the child in a towel or not but he wet the towel down and did, swaddled him tight and lifted his baby out of the sink and set him on the kitchen table's edge to soothe him while the Mommy tried to check the feet's soles with one hand waving around in the area of her mouth and uttering objectless words while the Daddy bent in and was face to face with the child on the table's checkered edge repeating the fact that he was here and trying to calm the toddler's cries but still the child breathlessly screamed, a high pure shining sound that could stop his heart and his bitty lips and gums now tinged with the light blue of a low flame the Daddy thought, screaming as if almost still under the tilted pot in pain. A minute, two like this that seemed much longer, with the Mommy at the Daddy's side talking sing-song at the child's face and the lark on the limb with its head to the side and the hinge going white in a line from the weight of the canted door until the first wisp of steam came lazy from under the wrapped towel's hem and the parents' eyes met and widened--the diaper, which when they opened the towel and leaned their little boy back on the checkered cloth and unfastened the softened tabs and tried to remove it resisted slightly with new high cries and was hot, their baby's diaper burned their hand and they saw where the real water'd fallen and pooled and been burning their baby all this time while he screamed for them to help him and they hadn't, hadn't thought and when they got it off and saw the state of what was there the Mommy said their God's first name and grabbed the table to keep her feet while the father turned away and threw a haymaker at the air of the kitchen and cursed both himself and the world for not the last time while his child might now have been sleeping if not for the rate of his breathing and the tiny stricken motions of his hands in the air above where he lay, hands the size of a grown man's thumb that had clutched the Daddy's thumb in the crib while he'd watched the Daddy's mouth move in song, his head cocked and seeming to see way past him into something his eyes made the Daddy lonesome for in a strange vague way. If you've never wept and want to, have a child. Break your heart inside and something will a child is the twangy song the Daddy hears again as if the lady was almost there with him looking down at what they've done, though hours later what the Daddy won't most forgive is how badly he wanted a cigarette right then as they diapered the child as best they could in gauze and two crossed handtowels and the Daddy lifted him like a newborn with his skull in one palm and ran him out to the hot truck and burned custom rubber all the way to town and the clinic's ER with the tenant's door hanging open like that all day until the hinge gave but by then it was too late, when it wouldn't stop and they couldn't make it the child had learned to leave himself and watch the whole rest unfold from a point overhead, and whatever was lost never thenceforth mattered, and the child's body expanded and walked about and drew pay and lived its life untenanted, a thing among things, its self's soul so much vapor aloft, falling as rain and then rising, the sun up and down like a yoyo.


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Marcia was a druggie. And a prostitute. And bulimic. And then fat. And she's written a book all about it. I don't know why that's all so funny to me. No, no. I do, I do. It was her interview yesterday on The Today Show where she talked about how hard her life was when she was on The Brady Bunch.


In her book:
"McCormick unflinchingly reveals it all: Her romance with Barry Williams, the behind the scenes conflicts and jealousies, the heartbreaking death of her onscreen father and friend Robert Reed, her own dysfunctional family, her early dating (including Michael Jackson and Steve Martin), her years of substance abuse, the cocaine binges and drug-fueled parties at the Playboy mansion and the home of Sammy Davis, Jr. with Hollywood's elite, her unwanted pregnancy, her sex-for-drugs one-night-stands, and ultimately how she found the love, support, and faith that helped her triumph over such extreme adversity.">
Is The Brady Bunch still running fresh episodes? Because it sounds like all of this happened to her last season instead of 50 years ago. And did she know she was acting when she was portraying little Marcia Brady? Maybe she just didn't know, and she really did believe she was the perfect little girl. And, I mean, there is no way she can remember any of what happened to her when she was living it up with "Hollywood's elite." Even if she DID trade sex for drugs. Wait, Steve Martin?

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The Soup on Miley's Inappropriate Birthday Offer, via I Am A TV Junkie

"My Own Worst Enemy" getting even worse ratings

Anne Hathaway's ex had good intentions

Gale Harold, of Desperate Housewives and formerly Queer as Folk, is in stable condition after a motorcycle accident yesterday

Aravinda Adiga wins the Man Booker prize for his debut novel about the dark side of the new India

The Leather Festival was in the West Village? When?


The NYT's David Pogue discovers the almost perfect charger

Tennis columnist Jon Wertheim's weekly Ad-in/Ad-out

It is perhaps the last great Antarctic expedition - to find an explanation for why there is a great mountain range buried under the White Continent.

Gay schools the answer?

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Listen while you work.

New York Times, Tuesday October 14, 2008
Front Page, Summarized (5:03)
Science Tuesday (18:58)

NPR
Tell Me More:
1) Wilma Mankiller Reflects on Columbus Day 2) 'Last Lynching' Shows Racial Inequity, Advancement 3) Respecting Latino Culture At Work 4) Race for White House Takes a Nasty Turn

Fresh Air:1) Josh Brolin: Playing The President 2) Curtis Sittenfeld: Fictionalizing A First Lady

Click below to jump to the players or click here to open the players in a new window so you can listen while you browse.




<
Podcasts
Tell Me More




1) Wilma Mankiller Reflects on Columbus Day 2) 'Last Lynching' Shows Racial Inequity, Advancement 3) Respecting Latino Culture At Work 4) Race for White House Takes a Nasty Turn





1) Josh Brolin: Playing The President 2) Curtis Sittenfeld: Fictionalizing A First Lady

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The Media Bar is open! Click below to jump to the full-size video. Better yet, just hang out next door at The Media Bar.



Daily Song



Television
Rachel Maddow on Leno (8:18 skip the first pixellated 10 seconds)


Movies
Blindness (2:29)

Based on the brilliant book by Jose Saramago

Politics
Sean Hannity goes off on guest (5:14, fast forward to 2:30)
From last month -- Hannity defends Bush's healthy economy.


Music Video
Britney Spears "Womanizer" (3:50)




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Tell Me More Stories
Several member of the House talk about why they changed their vote and if they feel they sacrificed too much in the process.

The Supreme Court is back in session today. Kathryn Kolbert, of People For The American Way, is joined by Allyson Ho, a former Supreme Court clerk, to offer a preview of the upcoming court docket.

To national audience, Michelle Obama is well-known because of her husband's presidential candidacy. But the attorney and businesswoman has an impressive and distinguished career of her own. Liza Mundy, author of Michelle, a new biography of Michelle Obama, writes about the Chicago native's professional aspirations and how they coincided with her Sen. Barack Obama's political journey.

A new film, Allah Made Me Funny, follows three Muslim men as they perform at comedy clubs around the U.S. Comedians Azhar Usman, Mo Amer and Preacher Moss discuss what informs their humor.
(47:17)

Fresh Air Stories
Katharine Jefferts Schori, the first female bishop to preside over the Episcopal Church, has faced a number of crises since she accepted the post in 2006.

Books We Like: Radical bombers battle strikebreaking capitalists while Clarence Darrow squares off against the "American Sherlock Holmes" in this very popular history of a trial that mixed murder, politics and celebrity in 1910 Los Angeles.
(45:40)

Click below to jump to the players or click here to open up the players in a new window.


Tell Me More





Fresh Air