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Shallow

That’s not reverb, that’s delay you’re hearing from the mic

karaoke_hipster_ironic.jpgToday’s New York Times Metro section runs a piece about the city’s night spots and the hipster embrace of—get this, kids—karaoke. In “‘Sweet Caroline’ Never Seemed So Good: So Uncool That It’s Hip, Karaoke Enjoys a Comeback”, Times readers commuting via the downtown 1/9 trains had the opportunity to learn about this thriving new subculture amongst the city’s ironic set:

“Clearly, given the demographics, this is not the karaoke of crazy drunken uncles who worship Neil Diamond, nor is it the more studied karaoke first pioneered by Japanese businessmen. Instead, it is more akin to the swing-dancing craze of the 90’s – a form of urban group expression that satisfies a longing for community.”

While an instinctive critique of the paper may be expected to run along the lines of, “Why doesn’t this paper cover these phenomena when they’re more relevant, and hire younger, more plugged-in writers and reporters,” it turns out that a better and more applicable critique may be along the lines of, “What the hell happened to their older staff, those people who actually remember what the paper has published in the past?” To wit, observations from “Noticed; Karaoke: Once More, With Irony” in the paper’s Style section (a mere six years earlier, on July 5, 1998), which noted

“a reawakened interest among New York hipsters in the sing-along pastime imported from Japan. …Just when it seemed the loose-tie recreation of the 1980’s had been safely put to rest in church basements and suburban strip-mall bars, karaoke is being revived by young downtown scene-makers, along with so many other retro relics of the Reagan era. They are frequenting new karaoke clubs, as well as infiltrating traditional ones with a largely Asian clientele.”

Well, be it 1998 or 2004, one thing is certain: it must be cool if the Bush twins are doing it.

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Shallow

Blonde, and bigger than ever before

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Blonde Items:
WHAT hairy havoc have Jennifer Lopez, Beyonce Knowles, et al wreaked upon the world of up-and-coming black and Latina starlets? WHEN did Christina Milian, brunette teen songstress and star of last year’s Love Don’t Cost a Thing, have her handlers reconstruct her image and give her a post-Beyonce blonde re-do? WHY did no one realize that “Dip it Low” is a strong enough pop single on its own merits that its vocalist did not need this egregious white-person-accessibility reinvention? WHEN did we forget about that scene at the beginning of Spike Lee’s Malcolm X where the young leader of the Black Power movement becomes embarrassed by his usage of hair-straightening products? WHY has Angela Davis never fronted a pop group?

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Grave

What are you wearing, honey? A gown by Karl Rove and shoes by Karen Hughes

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Bovs all over your tees! Sigh. Cokie Roberts has indeed been proven to be correct in her weekend prediction that the heretofore invisible Bush daughters would be increasingly whored out as visual props by the incumbent President’s campaign masterminds.
Witness the immaculately staged and perfectly-lit photograph taken by primo fashion shutterbug Patrick Demarchelier, sampled above, and slated to appear in the August issue of Vogue, alongside an additional photo of the twins in more casual attire (see below). Perhaps more significantly, the glossy images are accompanied by what can only be considered a kiss-blowing puff piece/article in the grand tradition of the magazine’s fawning coverage of politically peripheral luminaries such as Kirsten Dunst and Salma Hayek (both of whom, we hear, are wicked supporters of animal rights and the Reform-Party movement).
As the Washington Post states, the profile was written by one Julia Reed, who “describes herself as an ‘acquaintance of the family’ and has spent significant time writing about it.” Presumably, these writing projects on the First Family have nothing to do with Ms. Reed’s hard-hitting pieces on food (“Kebabing Along“, “Giving a Fig“, “Classic From a Can“) for the New York Times’ Magazine Desk.
In fact, she’s probably referring to her article in London’s Sunday Telegraph, dated November 5, 2000, which opens with the lead,

The only time I ever met George W. Bush during his drinking days, I was drunk and stoned myself. I was all of 15 and a guest at the wedding of Donald Ensenat, Bush’s Yale classmate and current adviser.
After we were introduced, I emptied the contents of my glass on to the shoe of the future governor of Texas, prompting my father to throw me into the back of his car and take me home.

Oh, wait, wait, wait…maybe it was this piece in the August 2, 2000 edition of Newsweek, entitled “Suddenly, Republicans are Crazy About Everybody: Likability is the convention’s most potent political attribute”, in which Ms. Reed writes, “‘Likability’ has apparently become a more potent political attribute than, say, having a firm grasp of issues or possessing formidable speaking skills…Republicans apparently find it more appealing to appear brain dead than engaged in the issues that often divide the party.”
Wow, Julia, honey, it’s amazing the First Lady even let you interview her daughters at all! Unless, maybe, you swore off any such opining or commentary…? According to the Washington Post, again, Reed’s current piece in Vogue presents such vital nuggets as:

…the daughters’ post-graduation plans include Jenna’s desire to work for a charter school and Barbara’s interest in working with AIDS-afflicted children in Eastern Europe and Africa. Both girls have surrounded themselves with a group of good friends who say such nice things about them that readers might be led to believe these young women have never burped publicly, let alone had a grumpy day.
The story’s headline promises that the daughters are about to “give the country a glimpse of who they really are by joining their father on the campaign trail.” But those who spend any time on such trails argue that the goal is not to reveal one’s real self but a perfectly polished and eloquently scripted facsimile.

But, of course, such low-key anecdotes aren’t the news, here. The news is these stunning photos! Thankfully, the Post’s Robin Givhan goes into greater detail on the real substantive issues:
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Jenna’s ruby red dress is by Oscar de la Renta, a designer favored by her mother. Barbara is wearing a similar ivory gown by Calvin Klein.
[…]
The second photograph has the twins dressed in more casual attire. Barbara wears an Alberta Ferretti camisole and Max Mara skirt. Jenna is in a Moschino top, Tommy Hilfiger jacket and trousers from Joe’s Jeans. (The twins wear Italian and American labels but no French.) They are walking toward the camera, perfect teeth lighting up their pretty faces. Here they play the roles of chic girls about town. The setting is Schiller’s Liquor Bar, one of those downtown New York restaurants where town cars idle out front and the menu is voyeuristically working class, with a wine list that is cheap, decent and good.
They wear another kind of uniform, one that speaks of youth, hipness and moneyed polish. The clothes tease the viewer, offering the faintest whiff of the twins’ personalities. Is Jenna in jeans and jacket because she is more casual? More urbane? One wishes that the caption said something like: Jeans, model’s own. The restaurant is empty. It was closed for the shoot. There’s none of the liveliness that makes it such an enticing place. No “cheap” or “decent” wine on the tables. It’s just a tidy backdrop for two perfect smiles.

They’ll wear American and Italian, but no French? And come on, gals, Tommy Hilfiger?
Just so you know, ladies, as a bit of closing advice, French Connection U.K. is a British clothier, despite their misleading name, and you can and should feel comfortable supporting our most important ally in the War on Terror. Maybe next time, you darlings can sport one of those endearing “FCUK BUSH” T-shirts?

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Shallow

Father Figure: The Origin of Ron Burgundy

After Will Ferrell’s Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy took in an estimated $28 million and landed in second place at the weekend box office, we took it upon ourselves to help flush out the work of producers for esteemed shows such as ET and Access Hollywood and get to the bottom of things: just who is Ron Burgundy, Anchorman?
After flipping through a copy of the June, 1979 issue of National Lampoon (or, to be honest, the version archived on the Lampoon’s website, since we don’t actually collect old magazines like a goddamned packrat), realization set in that we were gazing upon the Genesis of an Institution, and the Dawn of Buffoonery. The following images are taken from a feature entitled “Emergency Fathering”, written by John Hughes, Tom Corcoran, Gerrald Sussman, and Judy Corcoran.
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Are we looking at illustrated archival documentation of the Ron Burgundy’s baby years, which might in some way explain the character’s later behavior as an adult? But wouldn’t that make Ron a youthful 25 years old today? And, wait, isn’t the film itself set in the 1970s? Oh my god, I totally cannot process all of this. Maybe it’s merely cinematic inspiration?
Only John Hughes knows for sure. I, meanwhile, am off to go watch Wonderland and then Boogie Nights. Or vice versa.

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Grave

John-John battles the pink robots

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This election just got a little more anime-ated!

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Grave

America, we are all little girls now

The three stages of Kerry-Edwards support amongst the Democrat-leaning American populace, as indicated by little Amy Campbell-Oates, age 3, in the red shirt:
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1. Curious…
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2. Wait, wait…totally freaked out.
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3. Resigned to a Bush-Cheney victory in November.

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Grave

Wanted, Dead or Alive…and preferably on the 26th, 27th, or 28th of July

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Time to whip out your summertime advent calendar and take a look at the delicious candy we have in store for us this month (I hope it’s butterscotch!). The New Republic‘s latest issue features a piece about the Bush Administration’s interaction with Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency in their collaborative search for so-called High-Value Targets, i.e. villains in the War on Terror™, excerpted below.
From “July Surprise”, in The New Republic‘s July 19th, 2004 issue:

This spring, the administration significantly increased its pressure on Pakistan to kill or capture Osama bin Laden, his deputy, Ayman Al Zawahiri, or the Taliban’s Mullah Mohammed Omar, all of whom are believed to be hiding in the lawless tribal areas of Pakistan. A succession of high-level American officials–from outgoing CIA Director George Tenet to Secretary of State Colin Powell to Assistant Secretary of State Christina Rocca to State Department counterterrorism chief Cofer Black to a top CIA South Asia official–have visited Pakistan in recent months to urge General Pervez Musharraf’s government to do more in the war on terrorism.
[…]
A third source, an official who works under ISI’s director, Lieutenant General Ehsan ul-Haq, informed tnr that the Pakistanis “have been told at every level that apprehension or killing of HVTs before [the] election is [an] absolute must.” What’s more, this source claims that Bush administration officials have told their Pakistani counterparts they have a date in mind for announcing this achievement: “The last ten days of July deadline has been given repeatedly by visitors to Islamabad and during [ul-Haq’s] meetings in Washington.” Says McCormack: “I’m aware of no such comment.” But according to this ISI official, a White House aide told ul-Haq last spring that “it would be best if the arrest or killing of [any] HVT were announced on twenty-six, twenty-seven, or twenty-eight July”–the first three days of the Democratic National Convention in Boston.

Despicable. Conspiratorial. Unbelievable. The byline says John Judis, Spencer Ackerman and Massoud Ansari, but, seriously…will the influence of Stephen Glass ever wane amongst the purveyors of mistruth at The New Republic?
Late July? They clearly meant late October.

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Grave

Leno-caliber Fun with Screenshots

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Click here for the full-sized enlargement, and here to actually read the article, the latter of which seems mind-numbingly boring after such juvenile screenshot antics, but hey.

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Grave

He’s right! Bermuda and India are doing quite well

From Remarks by the President on the Economy, the White House, July 2, 2004:

“We’ve got an economy which is changing. The nature of the job base is changing. And all that means it’s been a difficult period of time. Yet we’re strong, we’re getting stronger. We’re witnessing steady growth, steady growth. And that’s important.

From Return of consulting lifts Accenture: First growth in consulting operations in 2-1/2 years boosts firm’s profit above Wall Street’s views, CNN/Money, July 7, 2004:

Accenture Ltd., one of the world’s largest consulting firms, said Wednesday its quarterly profit rose sharply thanks to strong demand for outsourcing and the first real increase in consulting revenue in 2-1/2 years.
[…]
For the fiscal third quarter ended May 31, the Bermuda-incorporated company posted earnings of $210.4 million, or 37 cents a share, up from $132.1 million, or 28 cents a share, a year earlier. The figures were in line with preliminary results the company provided last month.

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Shallow Versus

Clearly it’s this pun that’s the tramp

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ON NEWSSTANDS NOW: i-D Magazine‘s July 2004 issue, left, and V Magazine‘s Summer 2004 issue, right