5 Reasons The ’00s Were The Best Decade For The X-Men (& 5 It’s The ’10s) – CBR – Comic Book Resources

Those who belong to popular comic book fandoms, such asX-Men, can be rather picky when it comes to their favourite media. Ask any one of them what their favorite era of Marvel's Merry Mutants is and the disparate answers one will get is quite surprising. That's because the X-Men have had so many great times. It helps that they are the best selling Marvel franchise of all time.

RELATED: The 10 Most Powerful Ultimate X-Men, Ranked

The '00s were a time of restructuring for Marvel. They'd bring in new talent and start concentrating on fixing their biggest brands and this included the X-Men. The '10s would see the X-Men go through a lot of changes, not all of them for best, but would include some stellar work by big creators. This list is going to lay out reasons the '00s were the best decade for the X-Men... and reasons why the '10s were.

This might seem like a weird thing to see as a pro that would make one decade better than another, but anyone who has read a Chuck Austen X-Men comic will vouch for it. Many fans believe that the work created under/by Chuck Austen was some of the worst work produced for the X-Men series. None of his stories are remembered fondly and even the ones that aren't completely terribleare still not looked upon fondly.

For some reason, DC and Marvel put Austen on multiple books in the early '00s off the strength of his War Machine mini series. Beyond that series, everything he did was not a big hit with fans. He wrote X-Men books, both Uncanny X-Men and X-Men, for years. No one knows how he was on the books for so long.

In the early '10s, after the Avengers Vs X-Men event, Brian Michael Bendis was given two X-Men books, All-New X-Men and Uncanny X-Men. Both started off pretty well, if a little verbose and tedious, but eventually they became drawn out and disappointing. It felt like he had lost interest eventually.

RELATED: X-Men: 10 Times Storm Earned Her Status As An Omega-Level Mutant

No one looks back on the Bendis era of X-Men fondly. It wasn't terrible, but it went on way too long and fans got tired of it all rather quickly. It's strange since Bendis's style, a lot of soap opera drama and dialogue, should have went well with the X-Men. However, it didn't. Fortunately, there were much better X-Men books at the time anchoring the line.

Schism was an X-Men event that focused on an ideological divide between Wolverine and Cyclops and would change the status quo of the X-Men for years. The two men came to blows over Cyclops ordering a teenager to kill. Wolverine was against this, arguing that children shouldn't be soldiers while Cyclops said that the X-Men had always done this sort of thing and that he had no choice.

This divide would split mutants into two camps- the ones who followed Wolverine and the ones who followed Cyclops. It led to two of the best X-Men comics of the decade, which will be showcased later in this list.

House Of M was a 2005 Marvel event. In it, Scarlet Witch changed reality, creating a world where mutants were the dominant species and all of her heroic friends got their heart's desire. Eventually, the heroes would realize this and try to get the bottom of why she did it, demanding that she change the world back. At the end of whole thing, she would utter some fateful words: "No More Mutants."

RELATED: X-Men: The 5 Deadliest Members Of The Hellfire Club (& The 5 Weakest)

All but 198 mutants would lose their powers and no new mutants would be born for years. This changed the storytelling paradigm that every X-writer after had to follow until it was undone years later and would present mutants an endangered species, opening them up for all kinds of new stories.

As things got worse for the shrunken mutant race, they all went to San Francisco, setting up a new home there. Norman Osborn, at the time head of H.A.M.M.E.R. and the leader of the Dark Avengers, would try and bring the X-Men under his thumb. He'd fail and the X-Men would take over Alcatraz Island, renaming it Utopia and making it into a new homeland for mutants.

Utopia would become basically an autonomous entity, a place for the beleaguered mutant race to gather and lick their wounds. Talents like Matt Fraction and Kieron Gillen would work on the books during the Utopia era and tell some great stories.

In 2005, writer Peter David would relaunch a book he hadn't wrote since the 90s- X-Factor. Focusing on Jamie Madrox and his detective agency, X-Factor Investigations, the book would also star Siryn, M, Strong Guy, Wolfsbane, Rictor, Shatterstar, and Layla Miller, a character introduced during House Of M.

RELATED: The 10 Most Powerful Female X-Men

David would use this team to tell different X-Men stories than were being done in the mainline X-Men books. It had a humorous and irreverent tone, but still had hard hitting stories and even got David nominated for a GLAAD award for his treatment of the same sex relationship between Rictor and Shatterstar.

Jason Aaron, fresh off Schism, would launch Wolverine And The X-Men. The book followed Wolverine and his faction of mutants starting a new school in the ruins of the old one in Westchester, calling it the Jean Grey School. Fan favorites like Beast, Iceman, Kitty Pryde, and Rachel Grey would teach new mutants, and it introduced a whole new Hellfire Club.

Aaron took elements of Morrison's New X-Men run and brought them back to the fore. He played up the school aspect that Morrison had set up so expertly while also throwing in his own touches. In a time when mutants and the X-Men were at lowest, he brought humor and fun back into the franchise.

After Grant Morrison left the X-Men franchise and Marvel for DC in 2004, Marvel had to do some serious retooling of the X-Men line. They did this by starting a whole new flagship book called Astonishing X-Men and got Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy The Vampire Slayer and Firefly, to write it and superstar artist John Cassaday to draw it.

RELATED: X-Men: The 10 Most Powerful Female Villains, Ranked

What followed was twenty-five issues of X-Men greatness. Focusing on Kitty Pryde, Whedon and Cassaday knocked it out of the park. The book had a very Claremont feel and introduced all kinds of new threats for the X-Men to deal with.

X-Force was restarted in the Utopia era as Cyclops's personal hit team. The book would be relaunched in 2010 with writer Rick Remender and artist Jerome Opena. It would star Wolverine, Psylocke, Archangel, Deadpool, and Fantomex as they went after the biggest threats to mutantkind with extreme prejudice.

Remender would tell the best X-Men stories of the decade in this book, pitting the team against Apocalypse and his Final Horsemen, the World, throwing them into the Age Of Apocalypse, battling a betrayal of one of their own, and so much more.

In 200o, superstar writer Grant Morrison left DC and came to Marvel. He worked on two mini series, Marvel Boy and Fantastic Four: 1234, before being given the reins to the X-Men. He would relaunch X-Men as New X-Men, with his frequent collaborator Frank Quitely. He would revolutionize the X-Men.

He would focus on the Xavier Institute, making it actually feel like a school. He would finally make mutants feel like they were the future. He introduced new threat Cassandra Nova to the X-Men and tied his entire run together expertly. Marvel would pretty much throw away everything he did when he left, seemingly out of spite, but it was a golden age for the X-Men, one that hasn't been rivaled until Hickman came along.

NEXT: X-Men: 10 Times Iceman Earned His Status As An Omega-Level Mutant

NextDragon Ball: 10 Amazing Caulifla Cosplay That Look Just Like The Anime

Tags:marvel comics,The X-Men

View original post here:

5 Reasons The '00s Were The Best Decade For The X-Men (& 5 It's The '10s) - CBR - Comic Book Resources

The human cost of recycled cotton – The Week Magazine

Sign Up for

Our free email newsletters

Because it's cheap and easy to manufacture, polyester has become today's dominant textile. But polyester, which is essentially made of oil, causes a host of problems. While the material does provide a use for all those recycled plastic water bottles, washing any synthetic fabric whether it's made of raw petroleum or recycled plastics sloughs off microscopic fibers. Those microfibers end up in water supplies and never biodegrade.

Viscose and other wood-pulp fabrics do biodegrade, but making them has traditionally required a host of toxic chemicals. (This is why, in 2013, the FTC came down on brands claiming their bamboo rayon was eco-friendly. It's not.) Meanwhile, despite its higher costs, cotton has always remained everyone's favorite. For thousands of years, some form of the cotton bush has been cultivated in every tropical region, from Africa to the Far East and Central America. In his treatise, Empire of Cotton, Harvard historian Sven Beckert asserts that more than even sugar, cotton almost single handedly supported and financed Britain's colonialism and America's slavery, and ushered in the world's most brutal era of industrialization.

Today, the agro-industrial complex that has grown up around cotton has been dogged with everything from human rights abuses to its own environmental harms. Just the farming of cotton depletes increasingly scarce water supplies and spreads pesticide residue. The half-dried-up Aral Sea has been a public relations nightmare for the industry. So have child labor and farmer suicides in India. Forced Uighur labor in China is just the latest cotton indignity.

Not surprisingly, fashion brands would rather not deal with cotton's PR problems, or its fluctuating costs; thus, the rise of polyester and rayon. Now comes a company like re:newcell with a more efficient way to recycle cotton clothing. But its process is still dependent on cotton. So everyone's still searching for the innovation that all the fashion brands desperately need: a soft, high-performing, non-polluting material that can truly replace cotton.

Disrupting cotton

Summer vacation in Finland has just started, and the leafy campus of AALTO University, outside of Helsinki, is deserted and quiet. Dr. Marja Rissanen, a textile engineer who looks like the Saturday Night Live comedian Rachel Dratch (but more serious), meets me in the lobby of a research building and walks me into a large white lab, past a glass case with spools of thread and the H&M Global Change Award, then into a smaller lab where a small machine sits humming in the corner.

At first, I can't see anything. When I lean closer, I see a hair-thin filament being pushed out of what looks like a fairy-sized pasta maker. The filament drops down into a small vat of water, runs through a clear plastic tube, emerges out of a burbling fountain, then wraps onto a metal cylinder. Whenever you hear about some unexpected plant being made into a silky fabric bamboo, eucalyptus, wheat chaff, orange peels that's the kind of process I'm watching. Rissanen says this technology, called Ioncell, uses a safe solvent called ionic liquid to chemically melt down paper and textile waste, and extrude it into new, silk-like fiber.

I'm looking at the beginning of a shift toward what industry insiders call "circular fashion," an economy where we collect all kinds of old cotton, paper, and other plant waste; add in some (hopefully) benign chemicals; and transform the mix into a new fiber that is made into new clothes.

With northern European governments plowing research money into this utopia, Ioncell is just one of three fiber-recycling technologies Finland has produced. There's also Spinnova's fiber, which is made out of straw; and Infinited Fiber, a project run out of the same campus as Ioncell by Professor Ali Harlin.

An imposing Viking of a man with a large white beard, Harlin meets me, with Rissanen, in a conference room in the same building, seating himself at the table with a ponderous sigh. He pulls a crafter's plastic organizational box out of his bag; each cube of the box holds a different kind of fiber.

With a flourish, Harlin sets a large roll of thread in front of me. "That is cellulose carbamate," he says. Then he hands me a small, white square of woven cloth with an expectant look. I hold the cloth up to my eye, examining it like a cut diamond. I'm flabbergasted. To me, it looks and feels exactly like cotton. Apparently, that was the reaction he was hoping for. "A genuine fake," Harlin says with a laugh. "It's closer to viscose in terms of performance. It wicks away sweat, but isn't as stiff as cotton."

I ask him how he came up with this fabric. "It's a long story," he says, with another sigh. But it soon becomes clear that he relishes telling it, making full use of his expressive eyebrows and leaning back in his chair to wait for my reaction after each pronouncement.

Harlin begins by explaining that viscose, his material's primary competitor, is created by mixing dissolved pulp with carbon disulfide, a chemical that has been linked to insanity, nerve damage, heart disease, and stroke. "If you work in a factory where you are regularly exposed to [carbon disulfide], your brain will swell," Harlin says. (This is why most viscose is now made in Asian countries with more lax safety and environmental standards.)

Created through a technology called Ioncell, this fiber was used in a dress worn by Finlands First Lady. | (Alden Wicker/Courtesy Craftsmanship Quarterly)

Cellulose carbamate, he says, was invented to provide a safer alternative. It requires only urea, a harmless chemical used in wet wipes. Apparently, one factory in the north of Finland produced cellulose carbamate from 1986 to 1993, and with some upgrades, it could have kept going, but a competitor bought it and shut it down. "Textile companies didn't want to take the risk on a new textile," Harlin says. "Polyester was growing, cotton was available."

Around 2000, Harlin joined an academic research team and decided to take one last look at cellulose carbamate before it was shoved into the back of the scientific closet and forgotten. He brought in a pair of his old jeans, chemically broke down the cotton, and produced a light blue fiber. When he brought a sample to the ITMA textile technology conference in Italy, he came home with a list of 60 interested fashion companies.

So his team took some of the machinery from the old carbamate factory up north, installed it in a small pilot plant in Espoo, and started making samples. When compared with cotton, the resulting fiber has a 20 percent lower production cost; a 30-40 percent more efficient dye uptake than any other fiber; uses only 50 liters of water to manufacture a kilogram versus 20,000 liters (on average) per kilogram of cotton; and is close to carbon neutral. Not surprisingly, H&M is an investor here, too.

Harlin believes that many of the old viscose-rayon factories dotting Finland could easily and cheaply be retrofitted to produce Infinited Fiber. And here's the best part: as its name implies, Infinited's process can use any kind of cellulose an infinite number of times. That means all kinds of castoffs old clothes, bedsheets, used cardboard and paper products, even agricultural waste could now be used, reused, and continually reused to make more clothing. This seems like an enormous win-win-win for fashion companies, for Finland, and for the planet.

There is a not-so-small problem, however. After sustaining cultures in myriad corners of the world for thousands of years, the cotton trade is now woven into the very fiber of our global economy. Today, an estimated 300 million people work in the cotton industry on one level or another, which raises a question that nobody has asked: What will happen to the world's cotton farmers?

For the complete version of this story, please go to Craftsmanship Quarterly.

Craftsmanship Quarterly is published by The Craftsmanship Initiative, which highlights artisans and innovators who are working to create a world built to last. Subscriptions and updates via email are free to anyone who signs up for the magazine's newsletters.

Read more:

The human cost of recycled cotton - The Week Magazine

Doctor Who Theory: Brendan Is The Timeless Child | Screen Rant – Screen Rant

The latest episode ofDoctor Who introduced a mysterious new character named Brendan, and he could be one of the Timeless Children. The greatest mystery ofDoctor Who season 12 is the Timeless Child, a mysterious figure who apparently had a profoundeffecton Gallifreyan history."They lied to us," the Master told the Doctor in the second part of season 12's premiere, "Spyfall, Pt. 2." "Everything we were told was a lie. We are not who we think. You or I. The whole existence of our species - built on the lie of the Timeless Child."

The latest episode ofDoctor Who, "Ascension of the Cybermen," introduced a new character named Brendan. He was introduced in a story that seemed to be set in Ireland, a baby found by two adoring parents. At first Brendan seemed to be just an ordinary human being, until the moment he was shot off the edge of a cliff - and got up inexplicably unharmed. The final Brendan scene in the episode revealed Brendan's friends and family are conducting mysterious experiments upon him.

Related:Doctor Who Hints That Captain Jack Is Transforming Into The Face Of Boe

It's possible Brendan is linked to the Lone Cyberman. And yet, his story has deliberately been left unfinished for the season finale, which bears the title "The Timeless Children." The title alone reframes the narrative, suggesting there's more than just one Timeless Child glimpsed by the Doctor in her mysterious visions. And it raises the possibility Brendan is really a Timeless Child.

At first glance, Brendan's story appears to be set entirely in Ireland. But it's worth noting no actual Earth locations are mentioned; there's no reference to Dublin or Cork, to Waterford or Limerick. The assumption that this is Ireland may be a misdirect and a pretty amusing one at that. Countless humans have incorrectly believed Gallifrey was a place in Ireland. Themistake is an established part ofDoctor Who lore, running all the way back to the Tom Baker eraand repeated several times in the relaunched series as well. So it would be quite appropriate for this to actually be ancient Gallifrey, perhaps before the sun expanded and the world's temperature increased, leading Gallifrey to become more arid.

The mysterious Brendan scenes reveal he appears to be immortal. In one key scene, Brendan pursues a thief to the coast and confronts him on the edge of a cliff. To Brendan's horror, the thief pulls a gun, and soon Brendan is stood on the cliffside pleading for his life. His pleas are in vain, and he's shot; the force of the impact blows Brendan off the side of the cliff. Astonishingly, though, he is completely unharmed, even though there's a bullet-hole in his clothes confirming he should be dead. Functionally, it seems Brendan cannot be killed; he is immortal, or - to use a different word - "timeless." What's more, he was found as a child.

It's true Brendan looks nothing like the Timeless Child seen in the Doctor's visions, but that isn't a problem. As noted, the title of the season 12 finale is "The Timeless Children," confirming there could be any number of these mysterious beings. This theory would sit uncomfortably with the first prophecy of the Timeless Child, of course, uttered by the Remnants inDoctor Who season 11, episode 2."We see... further back," the Remnants whispered. "The Timeless Child ... we see whats hidden, even from yourself. The outcast, abandoned and unknown." But the Remnants were digging deep into the Doctor's race memory, so there's no reason to assume they read everything correctly. Besides, the very title of the season 12 finale suggests the Remnant's words are being discounted to a degree.

Related:Doctor Who: Ruth Origin, Timeline & Future Explained

The final scenes with Brendan are even stranger, showing him on the day he's retiring from the police force. To his surprise, he's confronted by his former boss and the chief of police, who don't appear to have aged at all. They then subject Brendan to an unknown technological process they claim will erase his memories. There's no reason to assume that's the limit of their capabilities, however; it's possible they're also leeching his life energy.

Assuming "Ireland" is actually Gallifrey, this would fit with the Master's words. Time Lords practically live forever, barring accidents, but it's possible their functional immortality comes at a hidden cost: that they are draining the life energy from others. This would be the dark secret at the heart of Time Lord civilization, with the founding fathers of Gallifrey hiding these Timeless Children away and concealing the truth from the rest of their race. The Time Lords would then be able to advance technologically at a tremendous rate because each Gallifreyan would essentially have forever to learn and grow.

The idea hasa rich history in literature and is inspired by the Biblical concept of the scapegoat, where onebeing suffers on behalf of others. Fyodor Dostoevsky developed this idea inThe Brothers Karamazov, and in 1891 philosopher William James took it to its logical next step inThe Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life. There, he imagined a utopia where "millions [were] kept permanently happy on the one simple condition that a certain lost soul on the far-off edge of things should lead a life of lonely torture." Famously, Ursula K. Le Guin further developed this into an actual sci-fi concept inThe Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas. She presented Omelas as a paradise with one hidden atrocity; thecity's constant state of serenity and splendor requires that a single unfortunate child be kept in perpetual filth, darkness, and misery. Residents are made aware of this when they come of age, and most choose to consign themselves to this horrific reality.

Doctor Who's showrunner, Chris Chibnall, is well-known for his love of science fiction, and it would be perfectly fitting for him to adapt an idea that has such an established history in sci-fi. By that reading, the Doctor and the Master are about to learn the horrific truthlying at the heart of Gallifrey: that Gallifrey is Omelas, and the Timeless Children have been the secret source of their countless regenerations. This truth would shake the Doctor to the core and raise fascinating questions aboutDoctor Who's future, given she would refuse to continue preying on the life energy of others.

More:Doctor Who Theory: Season 12's Master Is From The Eleventh Doctor's Era

Star Trek: Picard's Riker Appearance Breaks a Star Trek Actor Record

Tom Bacon is one of Screen Rant's staff writers, and he's frankly amused that his childhood is back - and this time it's cool. Tom's focus tends to be on the various superhero franchises, as well as Star Wars, Doctor Who, and Star Trek; he's also an avid comic book reader. Over the years, Tom has built a strong relationship with aspects of the various fan communities, and is a Moderator on some of Facebook's largest MCU and X-Men groups. Previously, he's written entertainment news and articles for Movie Pilot.A graduate of Edge Hill University in the United Kingdom, Tom is still strongly connected with his alma mater; in fact, in his spare time he's a voluntary chaplain there. He's heavily involved with his local church, and anyone who checks him out on Twitter will quickly learn that he's interested in British politics as well.

Read more:

Doctor Who Theory: Brendan Is The Timeless Child | Screen Rant - Screen Rant

Grinning werewolf: Thoughts on the massacre in Germany – Arutz Sheva

Alexander Maistrovoy The writer is a graduate of Moscow Univ. in Journalism, worked there in his field and made aliyah in 1988. He works at the Russian language newspaper Novosty Nedely, has had articles posted on many internet sites and authored Ways of God about different religious and ethnic groups in the Holy Land, and with Mark Kotliarsky the Russian book Jewish Atlntida.

A century ago, in 1918-20, Europe sunk into the red terror. Inspired by the Russian revolution, people with red armbands, red flags and red stars were determined to celebrate the new bright future. At factories, the power was transferred to factory committees, banks were nationalized, churches were turned into food and military warehouses, monuments were demolished, people were forcibly mobilized into the Red Army.

Extraordinary commissions murdered the enemies of the people and their families and deprived them of land and property. The Bavarian Soviet Republic, Hungarian Soviet Republic, Slovak Soviet Republic, Alsace-Lorraine Soviet Republic, Bremen Soviet Republic, Red Finland - the creators of the great Utopia destroyed everything that was associated with traditional values, ideals and virtues.

Nowadays no one seems to remember it. The Left will not benefit from those memories; the Right dreads accusations of whitewashing Nazism.

The outcome was dramatic. The consequences of the attempted social experiment on a living body of society were brutal - at first spontaneous, then organized: Furious nationalism, revived racial phobias and unrestrained thirst for revenge. Even enlightened intellectuals such as Thomas Mann were caught up in the wave of hatred. Utopia choked on blood in Russia.

In Europe, the nationalists won: Moderate and prudent, like Mannerheim; cruel but predictable, like Admiral Horthy; and monstrous like Hitler.

A lot has changed in the last hundred years. The Soviet empire collapsed, Eastern Europe resurrected and gained solid immunity from universalistic theories; the World Revolution of the Third World failed, a good manyJews directed their unrestrained temperament to create their own state.

Only one thing has remained unchanged: the passionate faith of the Western elite inperverted Utopian In the 21st century, once again the world has entered a vicious cycle of revolution and reaction. The reaction has already begun. Terror of loners, attacks on mosques and synagogues, atrocities in Utya, Christchurch, Galle and now Hanau are its first signs.theories of all sorts and kinds. As result, in the 21st century, once again the world has entered a vicious cycle of revolution and reaction.

The reaction has already begun. Terror of loners, attacks on mosques and synagogues, atrocities in Utya, Christchurch, Galle and now Hanau are its first signs.

It was predictable, explainable and logical. The globalist quasi-Marxist ideology has turned the inhabitants of the Third World and, especially, Muslims into people of the highest sort. They became the 'proletariat' of modern times and in sharp contrast,'white straight males' became the symbol of repression, racism and violence, 'the new world enemy'.

But the people refuse to agree with the destruction of the thousand-year-old foundations, family, faith and traditions. They refuse to be marginal in their own countries. Forcefully implanted alien culture is rejected by the society and in such an atmosphere psychopaths take up arms and kill those they think are the operatives of a new pseudo-religious sect and their allies.

You can turn a blind eye to it, ignore the causal relationships, yell about the racism of the white society, but it does not change the essence.

This is a reaction to violent fanatical implantation of Utopia, regardless of how its labeled: Marxism, Globalism, Progressivism, Multiculturalism, Political Correctness, Intersectionality, Political Identity, Cultural Diversity or Tikkun Olam. They are all the same. It is reaction to Antifa, BLM, Islamic terror, Muslim culture of raping and bullying.

Loner psychosis is a precursor of mass psychosis. Red Plague generates a Brown Plague.

In Germany, a country so prone, alas, to outbursts of psychopathy, the number of neo-Nazis is growing. These are not the moderate nationalists from AfD or Pegida. They are the real Nazis, the direct followers of the Fuhrer. According to BfV, their number over the past two years (i.e., after a wave of refugees) increased by 50%. They are engaged in martial arts. They draw the Werewolf, a symbol of the SS, they wear Adolgf was the best and I [heart] HTLR T-shirts, arrange Kampf der Nibelungen (Battle of Nibelung) and prepare for D-Day.

We see how the ideas of the Third Reich gain power in Western culture again from the USA and Canada to France. They no longer try to conceal it. Their time is approaching, because the soil has already been fertilized for them by the progressives.

Because of the globalists and progressives the Western world is plunging into chaos and hatred. Only a small groupof lucky people will get the next Mannerheim. However, and almost certainly, most of them will get new Fuhrers.

The carriers of New Utopias are by far more guilty for wronging their people and history than their predecessors with red flags in Bavaria and Hungary.

First, Russia with its despotism of Tsars, the Pale of Settlement and the Okhrana (secret police) as well militaristic Prussian Germany were seriously ill. The horrors of the Great War and the cloaca of the Industrial Revolution devastated the soul of the West. But the current progressives have inherited healthy, stable, and prosperous communities. Essentially all the flaws and shortcomings of the past were eliminated or nearly eliminated: discrimination of national and sexual minorities and women, social ulcers, industrial lumpen and mass poverty.

By carrying out the program of ethnic substitution by mass migration from Third (especially, Muslim) world and by destroying cultural and religious values of their people, the globalists dont demolish dying, rotten regimes, instead they bulldoze successful democratic states.So by carrying out the program of ethnic substitution by mass migration from Third (especially, Muslim) world and by destroying cultural and religious values of their people, the globalists dont demolish dying, rotten regimes, instead they bulldoze successful democratic states.

Secondly, Lenin, Trotsky, Bela Kun, Dzerzhinsky were sincere idealists, they had not yet had the sinister experience of the 20th century. They could still indulge themselves in the probable success of their social experiment. But Corbyn, Sanders, Obama, Trudeau, Elizabeth Warren, Mlenchon, Kamala Harris, Juncker or Macron are not idealists. These are hypocritical plutocrats and manipulators of consciousness, craving for power and glory. Thus, by this becoming more ignominious.

And finally, third and most important. Marxism grew out of Utopian communism, rooted in the Judeo-Christian tradition: from Jewish prophets, Essenes and early Christians to Thomas Mntzer and the Anabaptists, the Illuminati of Adam Weishaupt, Thomas More and Tommaso Campanella, Saint-Simon, Charles Fourier and Robert Owen.

Their views (no matter how weevaluate them) were based solely on Western culture itself. They had nothing to do with the archaic, primitive and cruel cults of backward peoples and surely had nothing in common with gloomy dogmatic and aggressive Islam with female circumcision for girls, intimidated women, rituals of stoning unfaithful wives and homosexuals, bloody vendetta, the slave trade and the division of humanity into faithful and infidel. Islam was a symbol of anti-utopia for them. They would have turned in their graves, had they learned that their heirs represented by new Western elite open their gates for crowds of primitive savages.

Man is a part of nature and obeys its laws. According to Newton's Third Law of Motion, For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Transgression of human nature yields violence and monsters - three monsters in our case: Red, Brown and Green ones. Prosperous, stable and tolerant communities have been replaced by Red-Green Hydra, on the one hand, and a Werewolf, on the other.

However, who is Newton to dictate the laws to a progressive-minded person? No more than a Dead White European Male...

Author of Agony of Hercules or a Farewell to Democracy (Notes of a Stranger), Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

See the original post here:

Grinning werewolf: Thoughts on the massacre in Germany - Arutz Sheva

Stream It Or Skip It: Utopia Falls On Hulu, Where Teens From A New Earth Colony Who Discover The Power Of Hip-Hop – Checkersaga

Hulu is billing Utopia Falls as the primary ever sci-fi hip-hop tv collection, and its simple to see why such a factor hasnt been created earlier than. Sci-fi has been a typically white style, and one whichs extra involved with drama than dancing, singing and rapping. That will sound like were being wiseasses, however nothing might be farther from the reality; the concept a sci-fi present might be made out of a youthful, extra various perspective is a welcome change. However is Utopia Falls that present?

Opening Shot: As we see an aerial shot of the clouds over Earth, then we begin panning into Earths barren panorama, we hear a voice over go, They are saying, time is the best thief there may be.

The Gist: As we pan over, we see that a lot of the land is uninhabitable. However then we see, below an environmental bubble, the colony generally known as New Babyl. Its the final working colony on Earth, established lots of of years after the ancestors of apocalyptic survivors went underground to dwell. Its the day when the 25 teenagers from the colonys numerous sectors are chosen to coach for a musical-dance competitors referred to as The Exemplar.

Aliya (Robyn Alomar) is a information within the Progress Sector and is the daughter of Gerald (Jeff Teravainen), a member of the Tribunal, who advise the Chancellor Diara (Alexandra Castillo), the chief of the colony. Her boyfriend Tempo (Robbie Graham-Kuntz) has additionally been chosen. Over in Reform Sector, primarily a nicer model of a jail colony, finest buddies Mags (Robbie Graham-Kuntz) and Bohdi (Akiel Julien) are picked; the primary time two from that sector are going. Sage (Devyn Nekoda), from the Nature sector, is so certain she receivedt go she doesnt even watch the announcement.

After the announcement, Diara and the Tribunal discover out that there was a breach within the colonys protecting bubble, that means that both somebody got here in or somebody left.

Once they college students get to the power the place they practice for The Exemplar, theyre greeted by Mentor Watts (Huse Madhavji), who tells them that their first efficiency is in ten minutes. Throughout that point, Bohdi and Aliya get in a tiff over what Bohdi thinks are her apparent benefits. After the efficiency, Watts takes down the mostly-confident college students by saying the performances have been common, and instantly kicks out the three worst performers to indicate the scholars how severe that is.

A lot of the new college students are invited to a mysterious celebration proper exterior the borders of the colony, which is taken into account to be off-limits; the invite says anybody who attends will get a leg up on the competitors. When Bohdi and Aliya separate from the remainder, they discover a door within the woods. Once they go in, they discover one thing referred to as The Archive (voice of Snoop Dogg) that introduces them to an historic type of music: hip-hop.

Our Take: Theres a number of good issues about Utopia Falls, created by R.T. Thorne, recognized for guiding collection like Discover Me In Paris and Blindspot. Each Alomar and Julien are interesting leads (its fairly obvious that theyre the leads of whats going to be an ensemble), they usually each do good work in a primary episode that roughly appears like Glee set lots of of years sooner or later. The complete ensemble must be multi-talented, both as dancers, singers, musicians, in addition to actors, and it appears like Thorne has discovered actors that may create plausible characters with some depth.

However the story, as with most Sci-fi thats attempting to construct a brand new world out of nothing, can get complicated. As a lot as Thorne tried to present some exposition to start with of the episode, it felt like we dont know practically sufficient about New Babyls numerous sectors, what The Exemplar truly is, how some persons are associated to one another (Sage, as an example, has a Gran Chyra (Diane Johnstone) and Gran Reale, however were undecided in the event that they raised her or are simply two of her grandparents). Additionally, stilted language abounds, like when persons are mentioned to be of their 17th 12 months as a substitute of simply saying theyre 16. The temptation to jargonize on a regular basis speech to make it sound futuristic has at all times been a pitfall of sci-fi, however the very best of the style has its characters talking in up to date talking patterns; when Thorne strays from that, it instantly loses us.

We get that this present is probably going geared in direction of a youthful viewers, however we hope that the concept the colony might seem to be a collective however in actuality comes off as a North Korea-esque totalitarian state will likely be addressed. Everybody vows loyalty to the leaders, and when these leaders name to their costs on large screens, the present feels much less like a teen dancing and singing present and extra like 1984. Maybe because the affect of hip-hop, and far of the styles message to problem authority, permeates with the scholars, that subject will come to the foreground.

Intercourse and Pores and skin: Nothing.

Parting Shot: Surrounded by holographic photos of album covers, music movies and breakdancing, Aliya and Bodhi sit and soak up the historical past of hip-hop.

Sleeper Star: Wed watch each episode solely to listen to Snoop Dogg because the voice of The Archive. If we didnt see his identify within the opening credit, listening to his voice would have been one of the out-of-left area issues weve encountered on TV thus far in 2020.

Most Pilot-y Line: Moore Instances (Dwain Murphy), an influential buddy from the Reform Sector, tries to get Bodhi and Mags to present out black market footwear to the scholars. Bodhi refuses. Hes been like a father to us! Mags says to Bodhi. To start with, you may hold that father speak, Bodhi replies. Whoo boy, plenty of historical past in that sentence.

Our Name: STREAM IT. Were undecided if Utopia Falls goes to get higher than the primary episode, which we discovered hokey at instances. However well hold watching simply to listen to extra Snoop Dogg, and if the present improves, all the higher.

Joel Keller (@joelkeller) writes about meals, leisure, parenting and tech, however he doesnt child himself: hes a TV junkie. His writing has appeared within the New York Instances, Slate, Salon, VanityFair.com, Playboy.com, Quick Firm.com, RollingStone.com, Billboard and elsewhere.

StreamUtopia Falls On Hulu

Excerpt from:

Stream It Or Skip It: Utopia Falls On Hulu, Where Teens From A New Earth Colony Who Discover The Power Of Hip-Hop - Checkersaga

6 of the Best Places to Drink in New Orleans – Big Easy Magazine

There are a lot of bars and restaurants in New Orleans that serve delicious cocktails. Because of the vast number, it can be hard to find the right one youre looking for. To help you with your search for the best spot to sip at, weve come up with a list of the best places to drink in New Orleans. From easy day drinking spots for your brunches with the girls that turn into all-day affairs, to the late-night bars for your friends bachelor party, we want to make sure you know all the best spots. Take a look!

Even if youre not a tourist, this bar is still an enjoyable place to visit and sip at. The bar was built into a moving carousel. If youre worried about getting motion sick, dont worrythe bar spins slowly enough that youll barely notice. You have to try out the bars most famous cocktail, the Vieux Carre.

If you and your friends are beer lovers, then youll definitely want to head to the Bulldog. Its got a great patio and some of the best bar food in the area. Its an awesome spot if you want to get away from the tourists of the French Quarterfor a chill night, this patio is the place to visit. They have around 50 beers on tap, so dont miss out!

On the other hand, if youre more of a wine lover, then Bacchanal is the place to be. Previously a quirky little wine shop, its now evolved into this wine garden utopia where people can spend a night sipping on crisp wine, order wine and cheese, and enjoy live music. The backyard is massive, but if thats not what youre feeling, they also have a cocktail and wine bar upstairs.

Just finished up your walk or bike ride? Make a pit stop at the Wrong Iron to slake your thirst with their wide selection of beers, cocktails, and frozen cocktailsall on tap! They have racks for your bikes, a beer garden if you havent gotten your fill of sunshine, and an atmosphere that youll have a hard time leaving.

The dive bar to end all dive bars, Lafittes Blacksmith Shop is the late-night place to be. Sure, everyone has their own opinion on which is the best dive out of the 582 bars on Bourbon Street, but this one is one of the oldest bars in America. Theyve been serving beer and frozen drinks since the 1700sits a must-visit.

Live music describes New Orleans in a nutshellTipitinas is its institution. Though you could close your eyes and point to find a live music join on Frenchmen Street, this is one of the best places to go for music and drinks in the whole city. Plan to come when a local brass band is playingits an experience youll never forget.

As fun as it is to explore New Orleans and find your favorite new drinking spot, make sure youre doing so responsibly. Never drink and drive, and always understand how alcohol affects your body. Even if youre walking, alcohol affects your mood, so play it safe and know your limits. Happyand safesipping!

Hey guys!

Were so grateful to our friends, our families, our neighbors, and especially our readers for chipping in, sharing, and donating to the cause of local progressive media. Your support has lifted us up so much and will most assuredly not be lost or forgotten.

If you care about local independent progressive media in an era where multi-millionaires such as John Georges are monopolizing our local press, then please donate any amount you can to make our operation a success. We can do this! Do not give up.

What else can you do if youve already donated and cant donate anymore? Share our content on Facebook and tell people about our fundraising operation. Call and email others who may be able to give. We believe in you because you believe in us and together we can ensure Big Easy Magazine becomes a progressive icon for New Orleans and an inspiration for the expansion of progressive media around the world.

Thank you,Scott PloofPublisherBig Easy Magazine

More:

6 of the Best Places to Drink in New Orleans - Big Easy Magazine

Why The Inheritance Imploded On Broadway – Forbes

Atmosphere outside the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on November 17, 2019 (Photo by Bruce ... [+] Glikas/FilmMagic)

The British import that was once touted as the greatest thing since sliced bread quickly turned out to be toast.

After struggling to find an audience on Broadway, The Inheritance will close next month after 138 performances. We are all extremely proud of this production and the 32 actors who bring this ambitious story to life eight times a week and honor the legacy of those weve lost to the AIDS epidemic, stated the lead producers of the play.

Yet, the implosion of The Inheritance on Broadway might seem a little surprising after its significant success overseas.

The $9.1 million play arrived in New York last September as what several publications described as one of the most buzzed-about shows of Broadways fall season. It had received more awards than any other new play opening on the Great White Way, and defeated The Lehman Trilogy to win the Olivier Award for Best New Play in Londons West End.

Here is the play of the year, and last year, and quite possibly next year as well, praised one British critic. It instantly looks like a modern classic, perhaps the most important American play of the century so far, echoed another reviewer, giving it five stars.

Yet, despite the great fanfare in the West End, The Inheritance often earned less than half of its potential revenue each week on Broadway, and sometimes made even less than its $460,000 weekly operating costs. The two-part play, which had sold every single seat during its premiere at Londons Young Vic Theatre, also failed to fill up more than two-thirds of the seats at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre during most weeks.

Its reviews on Broadway did not help.

In contrast to the rave reviews that the show received overseas, one critic on Broadway wrote that The Inheritance isnt a great play or even a very good play, but [playwright Matthew] Lopezs opus is compelling watchable in the way that old so-bad-theyre-good movies are: finger-snapping one-liners and dramatic fireworks explode throughout as logic and character development are abandoned. You will be riveted watching this lurid, weepy, pandering, derivative, and very grand soap opera, the reviewer continued.

Hoping to hit the jackpot on Broadway, the producers had counted too much on it being so well received in London, commented drama critic Michael Portantiere. Because The Inheritance had been showered with awards left and right overseas, many individuals expected that it would continue to receive praise in New York.

But, a smash hit in the West End doesn't necessarily guarantee the same success on Broadway, said marketing executive Maris Smith, who previously helped develop marketing strategies for Broadway shows like Mamma Mia! and Annie.

While receiving rave reviews in New York might have helped the show become a must-see event like Hamilton, Springsteen on Broadway, and American Utopia, Broadway theatergoers have different tastes than British theatergoers, and the divergence appears to be significant for shows set in the United States that are presented in London.

When The Inheritance was performed in the West End, it must have a little bit romantic for London audiences to see New York gays, explained Sam Maher, a Broadway producer and influencer marketing consultant. It was probably so cool for British audiences to see what life is like for homosexual men across the pond, he said, and, for the most part, they are not as critical, because it is not their everyday lives, and they dont have ownership over it, echoed Portantiere.

But, when The Inheritance was performed in front of New York audiences, the characters and their lives seemed a little less enchanting. These are gays who we know, Maher said. Gay men we know are going to Fire Island, and there are older gay men we know who have houses upstate, he said. We know this story, Maher stated.

Its story of love and loss in the aftermath of the AIDS epidemic might have been too familiar and too close to home for some Broadway theatergoers, much like the British play Enron, which received rave reviews in London and then closed after only 16 performances on Broadway in 2010. While British audiences found the story of a financial fraud at a large American corporation to be fascinating, [o]n Broadway, maybe because the Goldman Sachs story was unraveling nightly on television, or maybe because the Enron collapse was a terrible episode best forgotten, whatever it was, the Wall Street crowd didnt come, recalled Matthew Byam Shaw, one of its producers. Many New York theatergoers did not want to spend their free time watching a show about financial misconduct after losing money in the recession, and, likewise, many New York theatergoers might not have wanted to spend their free time watching a show about life as a homosexual man in Manhattan after losing loved ones in the AIDS epidemic.

Also, the fact that a major character is a Trump voter ... might be a little too raw for New Yorkers, surmised Maher. British people can say, it [stinks] for you guys over there with Trump, he said. But, for Americans, this is a reality that we are living with everyday, and this is too raw to make jokes about or to try to analyze on stage, Maher commented.

In addition, the play might have been too long to attract most Broadway theatergoers.

With two parts spanning over six hours like Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, The Inheritance was not a casual walk to the TKTS Booth, and choose your show for the night type of deal, said Smith. It required setting aside either one full day or two blocks of time during the week to watch the full show, as well as purchasing two separate tickets. It is a tough ask monetarily and time-wise, explained Maher, and the schedule of the play might have been inconvenient for tourists with a limited amount of time to see shows in New York.

In addition, once the play opened on Broadway, and the marketing team replaced the flattering remarks from the British press with vague excerpts from the Broadway reviews, some individuals felt that their efforts to attract local theatergoers were misguided. Some of the decisions they made seem so wrong-headed, especially the ridiculous attempt to make the show as a love letter to New York City, Portantiere stated. It doesnt have anything to do with that, he said, highlighting that a lot of the action doesnt even take place in New York City.

It was tremendously misleading, Portantiere complained.

Also, Maher believes that, while The Inheritance was not marketed much, the show relied too much on traditional advertising techniques, such as creating posters with the shows logo and some review excerpts. Key art and pull quotes kind of do nothing these days, he said, arguing that influencer content is much more compelling and engaging, and can convert ticket sales a lot better than bus stop ads with pull quotes.

With limited marketing and no Hollywood actors like Tom Hanks, I have not heard The Inheritance mentioned in the cultural zeitgeist since it opened, Maher realized. In fact, the only time that I am reminded that it is still there is when I sort the [Broadway weekly box office] grosses each week from lowest to highest to see which shows are really struggling, and I see that it has been among the lowest for the past two months, he admitted.

But, even when Broadway theatergoers did learn about the show, and chose to watch it, some individuals in its target audience might have been disappointed.

The gay community in New York has kind of rebelled against the show, Maher observed, adding that so many gay men of color were against it. He noticed that a lot of people of color were asking, where are the people of color in the story? Whereas the Caucasian character supporting President Trump received a lot of time on stage, people of color were very minor characters, and they were not front and center, he said.

The story was about older generations versus newer generations, and not about race, Maher recognized. But, in 2020, it is really hard for a culture of metropolitan queer men to champion something that is so white-centric, he said.

Also, Maher thought that the decision to cast straight actors as the leading homosexual roles in the show might have upset some theatergoers. It made Maher, a homosexual male, not feel represented, he said, and the whole show felt like a rehearsed representation of gay men instead of actually involving those people.

All those things conspired to make someone who is very woke think that this show is not very woke, Maher stated.

See the original post:

Why The Inheritance Imploded On Broadway - Forbes

Presidential Politics in the US is a Bonfire of Borough Billionaires Now – Qrius

In the most recent Democratic presidential primary debate in Nevada, MSNBC journalist Chuck Todd asked candidate Bernie Sanders aprobing question, What did you mean that you dont think they [billionaires] should exist?

Sanders described the effects of an economic system that allows for a grotesque and immoral distribution of wealth and income. Todd then turned to candidate Mike Bloomberg to ask the provocative question: Mayor Bloomberg, should you exist?

Here is todays 3D definition:

Exist:

For any concrete thing, to have the state of being that implies a presence in the world. For everything else, to be present in thought alone in some peoples minds, which implies that such things can as easily not exist as exist.

People exist in the real world. The idea represented by the word billionaire is a description not of an individual person but of a relationship between a being and an idea of worth translated into the terms of monetary value.

Sanders answered Todds question by explaining the meaning of his remark in moral terms. He gave an example, complaining that when one persons wealth is more than that of the bottom 125 million living in the same society, it should be deemed wrong and immoral.

Morality is of course an abstract, culturally-determined concept. The principles that define it for any group of people are variable. Nevertheless, every human society proposes and finds multiple ways of enforcing a widely shared sense of morality. This sense of morality provides guidelines for both spontaneous human interaction and the drafting of laws.

Sanders appeals to this general sense of morality that some people call decency. He pertinently answers Todds question, making it clear that the meaning of billionaires shouldnt exist is very simply that society would function better if it could find ways of limiting excessive wealth. In no way does it suggest that billionaires should be removed from society. But Chuck Todds second question, addressed to Mike Bloomberg, shows that he has no patience with subtle or even obvious distinctions. He asks Bloomberg whether he himself, as a person (and not as a billionaire) should exist. Its as if Todd hasnt been listening to Sanders response but is simply reading his next prepared question.

Bloomberg shows a deeper understanding of Sanders meaning when he answers Todds question with these words: I cant speak for all billionaires. Unlike Todd, he acknowledges that the question is about the morality of being a billionaire rather than about any given billionaires right to exist. He then defends himself by affirming that hes giving it all away to make this country better, which sounds very moral indeed, if slightly hypocritical, because in reality he has been usingmountains of his moneyto buy advertising and the loyalty of local politicians across the nation.

Todd adds to his own confusion when he frames a new question to Bloomberg: Have you earned too much should you have earned that much money? Now he has moved to the moral plane in contrast to his earlier existential questions. Should signifies something that is morally permissible. The appropriate answer to that would involve defining the limits of permissible behavior. But Todd is a journalist, not a philosopher. He asks the question not to explore the moral issue, but to provoke a defensive answer from Bloomberg, perhaps even hoping to goad the billionaire to attack Sanders for presuming to define how much money is permissible.

As is often the case with TV journalists like Chuck Todd, the meaning of the question is skewed by both the verb he chooses, to earn, and the noun, money. He assumes that Bloombergs wealth was earned, whereas all everyone knows is that Bloomberg has accumulated what financial analysts refer to as a massive net worth. There is no reason to assume Bloomberg earned it. In practical terms, its impossible to imagine anyone earning that amount of money, which is precisely what Sanders suggested by calling it grotesque. Thebasic meaningof the verbto earn is to receive money for work that you do. Can anyone do $60 billion worth of work, even over an entire lifetime?

By calling Bloombergs fortune money, Todd takes another liberty with the language and an even greater liberty with the logic of the debate. The net worth of a capitalist is the result of two operating principles. The first is that its the billionaires investments that are doing the work, not the billionaire. And, as Sanders aptly points out, other people had a hand in the process: Mr. Bloomberg, it wasnt you who made all that money. Maybe your workers played some role in that, as well.

Even Bloomberg was careful to avoid claiming he earned hisbillions. He boasted: Im a philanthropist who didnt inherit his money but made his money. Making is not the same thing as earning. The distinction is important, but Chuck Todd again shows little interest in linguistic distinctions.

The concern with concentrated wealth is nothing new in history, even if the media treat it as if it was a problem that has only arisen in the last 10 years. In his famous book, Utopia, 16th-century English humanist Thomas More expressed his astonishment at the spontaneous admiration people could have for the wealthy, not because of their moral qualities, but exclusively because of their wealth. He mentioned the folly of those, who, when they see a rich man, though they owe him nothing, and are not in the least dependent on his bounty, are ready to pay him divine honours because he is rich.

This could be taken for a description of some of todays establishment Democrats, who to a large extent do in fact depend on billionaires bounty. Then there is the case of The New York Times columnist, Thomas Friedman, who tells us that a fundamental reason he supports Bloomberg is because he is rich. In hisrecent pitchfor the former New York mayor, Friedman admired the fact that Bloomberg has the resources to build a machine big enough to take on the Trump machine.

This gives us an idea of Friedmans idea of utopia: It is a political system in which a person with extraordinary means can build a machine that will take over the government and then restore order by establishing the rules of behavior for the entire population. Friedman would undoubtedly counter that the purpose of the machine only concerns winning elections, but observers of modern democracy are well aware of howpolitical machineswork.

Thomas More imagined a society that didnt worship private wealth. In his Utopia, all excess wealth went into a kind of universal insurance fund. He didnt call it Medicare for all because it was about much more than health services. The society he describes didnt see money as something to be desired, but something that was useful for responding to needs: Having no use for money among themselves, but keeping it as a provision against events which seldom happen, and between which are generally long intervals, they value it no farther than it deserves, that is, in proportion to its use.

As English King Henry VIIIs chancellor, Thomas More was well aware of the relationship between money and power. He realized that if one person controls the equivalent of the monetary wealth of a nation, or simply the equivalent of the monetary wealth of a good proportion of the population, the power it confers on that person will lead inevitably to abuse, precisely because people tend to admire wealth.Embed from Getty Images

Students of history know that on July 6, 1535, More himself paid the ultimate price when he was beheaded on the orders of his boss, Henry VIII. Henry used the Protestant Reformation to seize the Catholic Churchs rich holdings and become a royal billionaire. According to Peter Ackroyd,authorof Tudors, The History of England from Henry VIII to Elizabeth I, More objected to Henrys opportunistic exploitation of the revolt against the Catholic Church principally because he saw the Reformation as a threat to the stability of society as a whole.

Moore was prescient in ways that Henry VIII was not. The Reformation inaugurated a series of devastating religious wars across Europe that lasted until the Peace of Westphalia in 1648. But More also may have underestimatedthe significance of a parallel phenomenon taking place in European politics: the emergence of the nation-state. This new form of political and social organization had begun replacing the medieval feudal order. The Reformation provided a powerful impetus toward consolidating power around nation-states.

Today, 500 years after the publication of Utopia, the global political culture built around the notion of the nation-state is under pressure. Two major factors have contributed to that pressure: the trend toward excessive militarization and the disastrous effects a global capitalist economy built around the competition of nation-states has had on the environment.

The resistance to the decline of the nation-state has now taken the form of a trend toward concentrating power in the hands of determined individuals who, by virtue of their authoritarian proclivities or their personal fortunes, can impose their personal views on the democracies that elect them. This is the age of Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Jair Bolsonaro, Narendra Modi, Xi Jinping, Emmanuel Macron and Victor Orban, all of whom understand how money, power, an oligarchic community of wealthy people and a media-friendly personality work together to reinforce their nations identity in competition not only with other nations, but also with other peoples (races, religions) and especially with alternative systems of social organization.

And, in some very real sense, this is all possible because billionaires not only exist but thrive inside the economies of these nation-states, even in the ones that call themselves communist.[

Peter Isackson

This article was originally published in Fair Observer

The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect Qrius editorial policy.

Stay updated with all the insights.Navigate news, 1 email day.Subscribe to Qrius

Go here to read the rest:

Presidential Politics in the US is a Bonfire of Borough Billionaires Now - Qrius

Hulu’s ‘Utopia Falls’ Shows That Big Government Isn’t Your Friend, It’s Your Captor – NewsBusters

I love that dystopian stories are in for young adults right now because, hopefully, theyre taking some of these messages to heart. In Hulus new offering Utopia Falls, the message is clear: the big government that says theyre keeping you safe is actually keeping you in prison or enslaved - you just havent figured it out yet.

The plot of Utopia Falls, which debuted on February 14, centers around a group of 16-year-olds in the city of New Babyl who are competing in a performing arts event known as The Exemplar. It is an honor to compete in this event which honors the city and its founder, Gaia, and the winner will be considered an example for other young people. The beginning of the first episode The World is Yours gives us a glimpse of the propaganda under which citizens live.

Aliyah: Here, in New Babyl, where we all work in harmony. No one wants for food or work or sense of community. Regardless of your ancestry, age, or gender, everyone has a purpose.PA Announcement: For state, for community, for all.Crowd: For state, for community, for all.Aliyah: Some citizens work the land, cultivating and harvesting plant and insect life for medicinal purposesas well as providing nourishment for the entire colony, while others work with those who transgress against the state to help rehabilitate them back into society. But the youth of New Babyl have the most important duty of all. We train our whole lives so we can honor our founders through performance in the citys most prestigious competition: The Exemplar. Our society strives to create a better future while being ever-mindful of the mistakes of the past. We may not remember, but we are all aware of the dangers of technology when used for personal benefit instead of the common good. This was the legacy of our founder, Gaia, who led the last of humanity out of the darkness and into the light. And we all take comfort knowing our leaders, The Tribunal, watch over us while our protectors, The Authority, keep us safe and secure.

When Aliyah (Robyn Alomar) enters the competition, she and select exemplars are invited to attend a party in the forest, beyond where citizens are allowed. There, they discover a secret door with an archive (voiced by Snoop Dogg) that holds relics of the old world. Using this forbidden technology, they have access to something even more forbidden - information. They learn about music, dance, and how people of the past used the arts to change the world. They incorporate some of these moves into their dancing and get increasingly in trouble. The Authority cracks down on any changes to their dress (they like diversity, but not personal expression, the kids are told), people are ghosted by the government (they are taken away and never return), and the exemplars start to realize that New Babyl isnt actually protecting them.

They have always been told they live within a forcefield to keep them safe from environmental harm. In truth, it is to keep them imprisoned. They find out there are actually three cities in this new world, they are not alone as they thought. They are actually something of a prison colony, somewhere undesirables are sent. People are told whether or not they can have children, because some genes are not good for society. No warrants are necessary and anyone deemed suspicious can be detained. Gatherings have to be sanctioned. In fact, a lot of the rules they break are things many take for granted as protected rights under our Constitution.

The end of the show sees some exemplars in prison and others having escaped, trying to get through the forcefield and into freedom in another city. We will have to wait for season two to see how they fare. Then again, maybe it wont get a season two to resolve everything, making it more realistic for the people stuck in oppressive regimes. Lets hope that it gives people pause when thinking about what they value in America. I dont think its a coincidence the show came out in an election year, but I think its entirely possible that the creators didnt understand the message of their own show.

Visit link:

Hulu's 'Utopia Falls' Shows That Big Government Isn't Your Friend, It's Your Captor - NewsBusters

A boom, a backlash, and a reckoning with Big Tech – The Boston Globe

Sing, O Muse, of geeks in garages. Then tell of Big Technologys fall.

Somewhere an epic tale is taking shape, and it goes something like this: Once, we found ourselves in a garden of information. Facts would set the world free. But too late we discovered that rumor, falsehood, and molten hatred could course along the pathways meant for truth. Age-old human impulses proved as adaptable as cockroaches, and have planted their flag in our new digital utopia.

Heightened by misgivings over the 2016 election, the backlash against Big Technology is now in full swing. The coming year promises new efforts to hold it to account, as Congress considers antitrust action and privacy initiatives, and Americans fret over the misuse of their personal data.

Until our great epic arrives, the growing spate of books on the Internets dark side will have to do. In The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power, Shoshana Zuboff lays important groundwork, conceding that her exhaustive study is just an initial mapping of the terrain.

An emerita professor at Harvard Business School, Zuboff began studying the rise of surveillance capitalism (her coinage) in 2006. Today, her alarm is palpable. In her estimation, virtually all of us are now imprisoned in a digital cage. A new, unprecedented form of power has entered the world. Promising greater connection, it concentrates might among a small number of companies. These companies have not naturally advanced the world toward the democratization of knowledge; instead, their formidable power serves commercial ends, through the manipulation of human behavior. Americans caught in this Faustian snare can either be defensive or pretend nothing is happening, but they cannot escape. If Zuboff is right, only a new era of progressive reform can save us.

Like most writers on what Big Tech has wrought, she ponders its prime movers, describing their mind-set as radical indifference. In The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America, Margaret OMara identifies an anti-authoritarian streak among the founders, tracing their mentality to post-Vietnam disillusionment. Her wonderfully accessible history of Big Technology spans 50-plus years, and brings home just how extraordinary the rise of the digital world has been.

As OMara notes, the key players combined disdain for authority with an entrepreneurial fervor. Both fell nicely into the political slipstream of the Reagan years. Yet as she also demonstrates, to a large but underappreciated extent, government aided the rise of Silicon Valley. By opening the Internet to commercial activity in the early 1990s, it provided a crucial foothold. As tech companies grew, politicians hung back from intervening, partly because they did not understand what they were regulating.

Big Tech was tightly controlled by a coterie whose heedless, white male ethos masqueraded as the free market. Nevertheless, OMara tends to give these titans the benefit of the doubt: Geeks caught up in designing cool stuff could not be expected to reckon with bad actors exploiting their creations.

Journalist Noam Cohen suggests, to the contrary, that todays tech billionaires have simply been masters at letting themselves off the hook. If anything unites them, it is their shared belief in their own benevolence. In The Know-it-Alls: The Rise of Silicon Valley as a Political Powerhouse and Social Wrecking Ball, Cohen presents a digital-age rogues gallery.

Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, and others figure in a set of interlinked portraits illustrating how Big Techs disruptive dream darkened, infecting the world with a libertarian outlook that has been great for winners but destructive for almost everyone else. Amid Cohens hard-nosed cast is Netscape founder Marc Andreessen, still evidently resentful toward his upbringing in small-town Wisconsin. Cohen wonders, not altogether facetiously, whether the world is being made to answer for Andreessens years of chopping wood and suffering through gym class.

New Yorker writer Andrew Marantz presents the Big Tech players as, primarily, naive optimists. In Anti-social: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation, he probes the destructive forces unleashed by their creations.

For years, online social networks have been used to promote a white nationalist agenda. Intrigued, Marantz entered the world of right-wing extremists and returned a changed man. While outlets such as Twitter and Facebook have begun to crack down, their overlords still seek cover in a First-Amendment absolutism.

The most disheartening aspect of Marantzs journey may be the fierce animosity toward mainstream news organizations he encountered along the way. Thanks partly to algorithms that tap into high arousal emotions, we seem locked in an inane contest between globalist elites and the real Americans. Marantz has turned into a reluctant institutionalist, defending the role of traditional media in what may be an emerging form of conservatism. In the meantime, he and others are creating a vital chronicle of an unprecedented era.

M.J. Andersen is an author and journalist who writes frequently on the arts.

Continued here:

A boom, a backlash, and a reckoning with Big Tech - The Boston Globe

The 30 Best Texas Books of The Decade, from Amarillo to Utopia – The Texas Observer

The twists and turns of these 30 Texas novels, nonfiction narratives, and other works published between January 2010 and December 2019 reveal undercurrents that run deep through our Lone Star Statea whole decades worth. All of these authors have significant Texas ties: They were born here, raised here, write here now, or had significant parts of their lives shaped by the states traditions and history.

To deliver this inclusive roundup, we sought help from the Lone Star States literati. Our informal survey turned up celebrated gemsand some surprises. Youll find multiple entries from big cities like Houston, Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, and El Paso. But outstanding Texas authors also inhabit little towns like Utopia, tucked deep in the Texas Hill Country, and Groves, in Southeast Texas. Three of the darkest Texas narratives here made other lists of the nations best true crime stories: Bloodlines, Midnight in Mexico, and The Midnight Assassin.

Feel free to use this as your boilerplate request to Santa, or as an investment strategy to support icons of Lone Star State literature.

Heres our list, organized by cities closely tied to authors. Read all 30 and let us know what else youd like to add.

These nominations were compiled and edited for length and clarity by Lise Olsen.

AMARILLO

Lincoln in the Bardoby George Saunders

The life of Abraham Lincoln may seem like an improbable way into exploring the psyche of a grieving father. But through a world of spirits both demonic and benevolent, the debut novel (yes, really) from Amarillo native Saunders gives new depth to the 16th presidentnot as a politician, but as a man trying to keep it together in the face of tragedy.

Nominated by Abby Johnston, executive editor

AUSTIN

Barefoot Dogs: Storiesby Antonio Ruiz-Camacho

These interwoven stories by Ruiz-Camacho, a Dobie Paisano Fellow who lives in Austin, capture what our review called the flawed but fascinating humanity of the extended Arteaga family: five children and seven grandchildren of kidnapped family patriarch Jos Victoriano.

Nominated by Rose Cahalan, managing editor

Bloodlines: The True Story of a Drug Cartel, the FBI, and the Battle for a Horse-Racing Dynastyby Melissa del Bosque

A fascinating and fast-paced tale of how a Texan blew the whistle on a pair of brothers who laundered millions through horse racing. Del Bosques vivid, meticulous book, born from border reporting she did at the Observer, was recently selected by the New York Times as one of Texas best true crime tales.

Nominated by Lise Olsen, senior reporter and editor

Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American Historyby S.C. Gwynne

The deeply researched and compelling epic tale of Quanah Parker, the Comanches last brilliant chief, is intertwined with that of his mother, a pioneer girl who built her life with the tribe after being taken captive and marrying its leader. Gwynne later went on to write about Stonewall Jackson.

Nominated by Lise Olsen

God Save Texas: A Journey into the Soul of the Lone Star Stateby Lawrence Wright

Including a book explaining Texas on a list of the best Texas books of the decade might feel a little meta, but Pulitzer Prize-winning author Wright deserves it. God Save Texas takes on a formidable task: attempting to explain why, despite its flaws, Texas is great. Wright, who now lives in Austin, originally hails from Dallas.

Nominated by Abby Johnston and Lise Olsen

Im Not Missing: A Novelby Carrie Fountain

This YA novel from Fountain, primarily known as a poet, explores a young womans life after the disappearance of her best friend. This captivated me, Observer poetry editor Naomi Shihab Nye wrote. Poets take refuge in novels on long trips and long plane flights. I held this close to my body and read it with voracious interest!

Nominated by Naomi Shihab Nye, poetry editor

See How Smallby Scott Blackwood

A riveting novel about the aftermath of the slayings of three teenage girls, See How Small is written in surreal, incantatory paragraphs. The story is based on the infamous 1991 yogurt shop murders in Austin.

Nominated by Mary Helen Specht, contributing writer and author of Migratory Animals

The Sonby Philipp Meyer

Meyer drank buffalo blood as part of his research for this sweeping Texas epic, which follows one family for six generations. Its recommended for fans of Cormac McCarthy and William Faulkner, as well as anyone looking to get lost in an absorbing, expansive novel. Meyer is an alum of the University of Texas Michener Center and later adapted his book for TV.

Nominated by Rose Cahalan

The Which Way Treeby Elizabeth Crook

Our review called this book a foray into the labyrinths of family and history in Texas and an absorbing coming-of-age adventure set in post-Civil War chaos, a time when not all that many people came to all that much of an age. And, as with Im Not Missing, Naomi Shihab Ney highly recommends it as a great read for long flights.

Nominated by Naomi Shihab Nye

BROWNSVILLE

The Boy Kings of Texas: A Memoirby Domingo Martinez

Martinez left Texas long ago, but his books draw deeply from his painful youth in the barrio in Brownsville, as well as his later struggles as an adult. He was coronated as a literary king when his first memoir was named a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award.

Nominated by Lilly Gonzalez, executive director of the San Antonio Book Festival

DALLAS

Love Me Backby Merritt Tierce

Tierces quirky debut novel has been described alternatively as restaurant fiction and mom fiction. She breaks out of Texas stereotypes while still representing important experiences from our stateand her narrative voice is both edgy and dark. Tierce now works as a writer for Netflix in Los Angeles, but formerly ran a nonprofit in Dallas.

Nominated by Mary Helen Specht

The Midnight Assassin: The Hunt for Americas First Serial Killerby Skip Hollandsworth

A master of truly strange Texas tales, Hollandsworth turns his attention to a 140-year-old unsolved mystery. His book brings back to life the victims of a serial ax murderer dubbed the servant girl annihilator, reopening the whodunnit debate in an extremely cold case. Like others on this list, Hollandsworth claims ties to more than one Texas cityhe spent part of his childhood in Wichita Falls.

Nominated by Lise Olsen

EL PASO

Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universeby Benjamin Alire Senz

Nominator Lilly Gonzalez dubbed this coming-of-age novel set in El Paso a painful triumph. Saenz, born in New Mexico, is both a former priest and a graduate of the University of Texas El Pasos bilingual creative writing program.

Nominated by Lilly Gonzalez

Midnight in Mexico: A Reporters Journey Through a Countrys Descent into Madnessby Alfredo Corchado

Named one of the true best crime books ever by Time, this memoir delves deeply into a particularly violent chapter in Mexico history that Corchado experienced firsthandboth as a Mexican-born U.S. citizen and as a Texas journalist who returned to cover Mexico as a foreign correspondent for the Dallas Morning News. Corchado spent much of his life in El Paso, where his parents run a caf named after him.

Nominated by Lise Olsen

FRIENDSWOOD

Friendswood: A Novelby Rene Steinke

This novel is an illuminating journey inside the lives of the families who inhabit the Houston suburb of Friendswood. Everything seems normal on the surface, but the community is forever haunted and contaminated by a Superfund site. Steinke, who lives in New York but grew up in Friendswood, paints a deeply poetic and disturbing fictional portrait of her hometown.

Nominated by Lise Olsen

GALVESTON

No Apparent Distress: A Doctors Coming-of-Age on the Front Lines of American Medicineby Rachel Pearson

In lyrical prose, Pearson recounts her time working at a charity clinic for poor and uninsured patients in Galveston. Many of the people she cared for were abandoned by a local hospital in the chaos after Hurricane Ike. This searing indictment of the broken health care system is grounded in personal stories.

Nominated by Rose Cahalan

GROVES

Tropic of Squalor: Poemsby Mary Karr

Karr teaches writing at Syracuse University these days, but her roots are deep in East Texas. Her offbeat creative nonfiction is all about alcohol, insanity, and family secrets. But this 2018 poetry collection uses humor, shock, and good old-fashioned honesty to write about the divine! And Karr doesnt judge. Of course, her memoirs are must-reads too.

Nominated by Maggie Galehouse, editor of Pulse Magazine and former book editor at the Houston Chronicle

HOUSTON

Bluebird, Bluebird: A Highway 59 Mystery #1by Attica Locke

The debut of Lockes Highway 59 series, which features an African American detective in East Texas, was hailed by Publishers Weekly as a tale of racism, hatred, and, surprisingly, love. The sequel, Heaven, My Home, released in 2019, unearths even more compelling Texas secrets. Now a screenwriter and producer in Los Angeles, Locke is originally from Houston.

Nominated by Rose Cahalan

The Boy Who Loved Too Much: A True Story of Pathological Friendlinessby Jennifer Latson

A compelling narrative portrait, The Boy Who Loved Too Much follows the life of a mother raising a son with Williams syndrome, a genetic condition that prompts uncontrollable displays of love and emotion. Latson spent years observing this pair and places her readers deeply into their lives and struggles.

Nominated by Lise Olsen

Crazy Rich Asiansby Kevin Kwan

Its a little-known fact that Kwan, whose wildly popular satirical novel is set in Singapore, attended high school in the Clear Lake suburb of Houston. His prose is fresh and delicious, like bubbling champagne overflowing a glass.

Nominated by Maggie Galehouse

Lot: Storiesby Bryan Washington

Lot described parts of Houston I know but have never seen in books, and people Ive seen but never met, wrote Gwendolyn Zepeda, editor of Houston Noir. It was heartbreaking and filled me with hope. Manyagreed: Lot was nominated for this list by four people in our circle of critics.

Nominated by Gwen Zepeda, author and editor, and three others

Oleander Girl: A Novelby Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

Divakaruni spins a complex cross-cultural romance and mystery. This tale plunges the reader into the life of an Indian woman on the verge of an arranged marriage who learns a secret that forces her to detour to America. Originally from India herself, Divakaruni is a professor at the University of Houstons creative writing program and has published more than a dozen novels.

The rest is here:

The 30 Best Texas Books of The Decade, from Amarillo to Utopia - The Texas Observer

The Best Game of 2019 Can Only Be Explained With Incredible Tweets – VICE

The older I get, the more I know what I want out of a video game, and 2019 simply didn't have a lot of it. Every year has its high points and low points, and 2019 was no different in that respect. But this is the first time in a long time that I struggled coming up with 10 new games I played this year, let alone 10 new games that I really loved.

For that reason, I'm commemorating 2019 with a list not just of my favorite games, but the games that defined it for me, for better or worse.

Ghost Recon: Breakpoint

I loved Ghost Recon: Wildlands, and was extremely excited to play this followup. Much like Rob Zacny, I liked it more than most reviewers because it provided a precarious power fantasy. When I was focused and careful, I was an elite soldier sneaking through tech company campuses on a libretarian island state utopia, dispatching dozens of enemies before they even knew I was there. But when I made one wrong move and tripped an alarm, I was suddenly running scared into the bushes, with a dozen autonomous drones taking easy shots at my big red ass. Breakpoint is mostly what I wanted, which is more Wildlands with touches of Silicon Valley revenge fantasy. But in the end, even I was overwhelmed by its deluge of map icons and activities. More importantly, I desperately missed the three AI squad members from Wildlands, which were delightfully overpowered.

The Division 2

I played The Division 2 for 60 hours and here's what I can tell you about it:

It was a fun, a good thing to play when I was in the mood for something like Destiny but didn't want to play Destiny. Ultimately, it was forgettable.

Rebel Galaxy Outlaw

Some people wax nostalgic about X-Wing Vs. TIE Fighter. I didn't get on board until X-Wing Alliance, but I understand the love for the mostly-dead genre, a space sim that's somewhere between Star Citizen and Rogue Squadron in its complexity.

Is Rebel Galaxy Outlaw a worthy successor to those old Star Wars games? No, not quite. But it hits some of the same notes, most notably in its dogfights, and that kept my interest for 40 hours, even though the 40th was exactly like the first.

Gears 5

I'm a sucker for Gears of War. I basically love all of them, even Judgment. Gears 5 is mostly a good Gears game when it does the Gears thing: letting me and the bois violently push through obstacles with teamwork and brute force, exploding heads along the way with a kind of pimple-popping satisfaction. But then, curiously, Gears 5 also tries to be a more open-world game, and when it tries it fails.

Borderlands 3

It is almost bold how much Borderlands 3 players like Borderlands 2, which is fine with me because I liked Borderlands 2. Much like The Division 2, it's a game that I played when I wasn't playing Destiny 2. I put a ridiculous number of hours into it over a weekend, enjoyed the gun treadmill, and then never touched it again because there were new games and new Destiny 2 content to play. Basically, much of 2019 was spent wasting time between new Destiny 2 updates, which provides the kind of rote, repetitive action that my feeble brain craves these days. Which brings me to:

Destiny 2

Destiny 2 is less of a game than it is a bad habit for me now, like smoking. It's the game I turn to in-between other games. It's grown a lot since release, and I think at this point is overall a much better, more complete package that replaces and surpasses the place that Diablo 3 had in my life previously. There's no single thing that I can say is remarkable about it, but it's comfortable, entertaining, and regularly updated with new baubles for me to chase.

Wolfenstein: Youngblood

I love both of the new Wolfenstein games and could not imagine how its kinetic, over-the-top action could ever get old. Youngblood defied my imagination and showed me how: an ill-conceived progression system, copy/paste level design, and some of the spongiest bullet sponges I've ever seen in a video game.

Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order

The pitch for Fallen Order is my favorite game of the year. A Metroid-style game with more accessible Sekiro-style combat, set in the Star Wars universe. In practice, none of it worked for me. There were a few bright moments that pulled me through to the ending, but overall the world was more annoying to traverse than it was interesting, and despite the clever way it handled difficulty, combat was either frustrating or trivial. It is also the most embarrassingly buggy big budget video game I played all year.

Crackdown 3

I never played the original Crackdown, so I was curious to see what the fuss was all about. There's barely a game here, in the big budget video game sensean epic story, innovative new features, or endgame content designed to keep players around after they finish the game. Most of what you do is collect floating orbs, which is more fun than you think but not enough. Basically, this is a game about jumping really damn high. That's not enough, but on the other hand you jump so high. Like over buildings. It's not a good game but you should get in there and jump around a little bit.

The Outer Wilds

I have started playing The Outer Wilds because Austin Walker said I'd like it, and based on the first couple of hours, I probably will. It's just too soon to say for sure. I didn't have a lot of time to play games that required me to use my brain at all this year, but I suspect I will beat myself up for not playing it after this list is published.

Apex Legends

I have played many rounds of Apex Legends trying to understand the hype. I love PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds as well as the Titanfall games, but combining the two didn't work for me. Maybe the gear and characters were too complicated for me. Maybe there's only room for one battle royale game in my heart, and PUBG is it. Either way, not since The Witcher 3 have I been so confused by a game's mass appeal.

5. Void Bastards

I think one reason 2019 felt like a bad year for video games is that in recent years there have been a lot of smaller, unexpected releases that got my attention in-between tentpole releases. Void Bastards is the only game that fits that category for me in 2019. It's a first-person rogue-like with a flat comic visual style, and light immersive sim combat. Those are a lot of buzzwords smashed together but the end result is a rogue-like that I actually finished, which is something I rarely do.

4. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare

The new Modern Warfare is my most problematic fave. Its politics, as I wrote, are truly depressing. But I can't lie: it got its hooks into me in a way that only Call of Duty can. Its single player story is a thrilling, often deplorable rollercoaster ride that I have thought about long after I finished it. And I'm still playing the multiplayer mode regularly, which is more than I can about any other multiplayer game this year. I'm not proud of it, but when Call of Duty works there's nothing else quite like it, and this is the best game in the series in years.

3. Control

One thing I learned that I hate to do in video games is read, probably because my job is to carefully read things all day. In games like Skyrim, for example, I don't read any in-game books or other pieces of writing that expand on the world's fiction. In Control, I not only read every single piece of writing I found in the Oldest House, I actively went searching for internal Federal Bureau of Control memos just to learn more about its mysteries. Control's writing made me laugh, think, and do that annoying thing where I want to tell people who don't even care about video games all about it.

Though it falters in its final moments, it also doesn't hurt that Control is an excellent action game with shades of Max Payne and Half-Life 2's gravity gun.

2. Death Stranding

Hideo Kojima has talked a big game about Death Stranding for years, and he delivered a big game. Remember how Peter Molyneux would give wildly ambitious speeches about games, then reliably fail to deliver? Death Stranding is like one of those wildly ambitious ideas come to life. I don't think it's going to change the industry like Kojima imagines. I don't think it's an entirely new genre of game, like he says. It's a video game-ass video game, and one that I enjoyed playing a lot despite Kojima's famously indulgent and nonsensical cutscenes, which are more indulgent here than ever. But it is special, and boldly original. Out of all the games on this list, it's the one that I'm going to go back to over the break, because Kojima has somehow managed to make package delivery one of the most exciting things I've ever done in a video game.

1. Sekiro

I rest my case:

Continued here:

The Best Game of 2019 Can Only Be Explained With Incredible Tweets - VICE

What did Lexington read this year? Here are the most popular books at Cary Library in 2019 – MetroWest Daily News

We want to hear from you. Which Lexington topics do you think we should report on? Let us know here.

Last year, Lexingtons Cary Memorial Library was one of the largest and most popular in the state, despite the fact the towns population does not rank among the top 50 in Massachusetts. Cary Librarys 208,968 print holdings are the 11th most in the state. Also, it is the sixth busiest library in the state, coming in just behind the libraries of Boston, Newton Cambridge, Brookline, and Worcester, according to data from the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners. The fact Lexingtons library is able to keep pace with those of much larger communities speaks to Carys significant and longstanding importance for residents of Lexington and the surrounding area.

This popularity did not wane in 2019, as visitors to Cary expressed their interest in a wide variety of books. Below is a list of the 10 books, in order, that were most frequently checked out in Lexington this year, according to information provided by library staff.

"Becoming" byMichelle Obama

The former first ladys memoir takes the top spot in 2019. Here, Obama takes readers from her childhood in Chicago through her time at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and beyond. Critics have praised Becoming for the intimacy and candor Obama imbues her writing with.

"Educated: a memoir" byTara Westover

Lexington readers loved memoirs this year. In Educated, Westover details her childhood in Idaho, where she was raised by survivalist parents in near-isolation. After going to school for the first time at age 17, Westovers world opened up. She went on to earn a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge and is now a bestselling author.

"Where the Crawdads Sing" byDelia Owens

When a North Carolina man is found dead in 1969, locals immediately suspect the marsh girl, a mysterious young woman who lives alone in the reeds outside of town. The novel that follows is one part murder mystery, one part bildungsroman, and entirely a hit with local readers.

"Transcription" by Kate Atkinson

This novel dives into and beyond the world of WWII-era espionage, following a woman who is recruited by MI5 to keep keep tabs on fascist sympathizers in England. After a time jump, her past comes to light and she must face the consequences of her actions.

"Unsheltered" by Barbara Kingsolver

Kingsolvers latest tells two simultaneous stories. In one, a husband and wife struggle to make ends meet despite their best efforts. In the other, a science teacher and contemporary of Charles Darwin tries to make his voice heard in a repressive village initially envisioned as a utopia. As the tales grow, Kingsolver deftly intertwines them, creating another bestseller.

"Nine Perfect Strangers" by Liane Moriarty

The author of Big Little Lies sets her sights on a new age, remote health resort and the nine strangers who have decided to attend for a variety of reasons. Eventually, shocking secrets are uncovered about the resorts owner and the nature of their gathering there in the first place.

"The Witch Elm" byTana French

With this stand-alone thriller from the author of the Dublin Murder Squad series, French tells the story of Toby, a cocky young man whose world is upended when he is nearly beaten to death by burglars. While he struggles to recover his memory, a mysterious skull is found in a tree on the family estate and an investigation begins. Through Toby, French explores the nature and origin of upper-class white privilege while also crafting another acclaimed pageturner.

"Past Tense: A Jack Reacher Novel" by Lee Child

The latest in this long-running blockbuster series follows former soldier Jack Reacher as he searches for the truth surrounding his father in an isolated New England town.

"Normal People" by Sally Rooney

In Normal People, Rooney acquaints readers with Connell and Marianne, two childhood friends whose differences continue to draw them together through college and beyond. Critics have praised Rooneys book for its insight into class dynamics and its compelling love story.

"Little Fires Everywhere" by Celeste Ng

This novel details what happens when an enigmatic single mother and her teenage daughter become tenants of Elena Richardson, a buttoned-up woman from a seemingly idyllic Midwestern suburb. Ngs book has been praised for its unflinching look at the force of motherhood and the secrets that can accompany it.

Want the latest Lexington news deliverd to your inbox? Sign up for our newsletter.

More here:

What did Lexington read this year? Here are the most popular books at Cary Library in 2019 - MetroWest Daily News

What’s going on Thursday (Hanukkah Night 5)? – Brooklyn Vegan

Dave East at Rolling Loud NYC 2019 (more by Marcus McDonald)

You can browse our fullNYC show calendarfor all of tonights shows, but here are some highlights

Dave East, Cruch Calhoun, Millyz @ PlayStation TheaterAfter a run of buzz-worthy mixtapes, Harlem rapper Dave East finally dropped his debut album Survival last month, and tonight he plays one of the last-ever Playstation Theater shows.

Yo La Tengo @ Bowery BallroomIts one of the great NYC holiday traditions: Yo La Tengo continue their 2019 Hanukkah run which will include surprise comedian and musical act openers, as well as special guests during the encore. Proceeds go to charity.

David Byrnes American Utopia @ Hudson TheatreDavid Byrne has retooled his acclaimed untethered 2018 for the Broadway stage and while the setlist and arrangements are much like what they were on his tour, songs are now threaded together with new monologues from Byrne, making for a much more theatrical experience.

Sandra Bernhard @ Joes PubSandra Bernhard plays her 10th-annual New Years run at Joes Pub, titled Sandys Holiday Extravaganza A Decade of Madness and Mayhem. Theres both an early and late show tonight, where she plans to lift you up and soothe your frazzled holiday nerves.

You can also find quality entertainment on almost any night of the week at:Barbsbar and performance space in Park Slope,Lunticoin Bed Stuy,Nubluin the East Village,Blue Notejazz club in the West Village,The Stonein multiple locations,Comedy Cellarin the West Village, andQ.E.D.comedy club in Astoria.

For all of tonights shows, and tomorrows, check out ourNYC concert calendar.

What are you doing for New Years Eve? If youre going to be in NYC, check outour NYE Guide.

STAY IN TOUCH

Find BrooklynVegan onFACEBOOKandTWITTERandINSTAGRAMandYOUTUBEandSPOTIFYand SNAPCHAT.

For even more NYC show info, follow@BVNYCshowson Twitter.

Join ourEMAIL LIST.

For even more metal, visitInvisible Orangesand follow them onFacebook&Twitter.

What else?

Read the rest here:

What's going on Thursday (Hanukkah Night 5)? - Brooklyn Vegan

The Field Guide to Tyranny – The New Yorker

Dictatorship has, in one sense, been the default condition of humanity. The basic governmental setup since the dawn of civilization could be summarized, simply, as taking orders from the boss. Big chiefs, almost invariably male, tell their underlings what to do, and they do it, or they are killed. Sometimes this is costumed in communal decision-making, by a band of local bosses or wise men, but even the most collegial department must have a chairman: a capo di tutti capi respects the other capi, as kings in England were made to respect the lords, but the capo is still the capo and the king is still the king. Although the arrangement can be dressed up in impressive clothing and nice setstriumphal Roman arches or the fountains of Versaillesthe basic facts dont alter. Dropped down at random in history, we are all as likely as not to be members of the Soprano crew, waiting outside Satriales Pork Store.

Only in the presence of an alternativethe various movements for shared self-government that descend from the Enlightenmenthas any other arrangement really been imagined. As the counter-reaction to Enlightenment liberalism swept through the early decades of the twentieth century, dictators, properly so called, had to adopt rituals that were different from those of the kings and the emperors who preceded them. The absence of a plausible inherited myth and the need to create monuments and ceremonies that were both popular and intimidating led to new public styles of leadership. All these converged in a single cult style among dictators.

That, more or less, is the thesis of Frank Diktters new book, How to Be a Dictator: The Cult of Personality in the Twentieth Century (Bloomsbury). Diktterwho, given his subject, has a wonderfully suggestive, Nabokovian nameis a Dutch-born professor of history at the University of Hong Kong; he has previously written about the history of China under Mao, debunking, at scholarly length and with a kind of testy impatience, the myth of Mao as an essentially benevolent leader. How to Be a Dictator takes off from a conviction, no doubt born of his Mao studies, that a tragic amnesia about what ideologues in power are like has taken hold of too many minds amid the current crisis of liberalism. And so he attempts a sort of anatomy of authoritarianism, large and small, from Mao to Papa Doc Duvalier.

Each dictators life is offered with neat, mordant compression. Diktters originality is that he counts crimes against civilization alongside crimes against humanity. Stalin is indicted for having more than 1.5 million people interrogated, tortured, and, in many cases, executed. (At the campaigns height in 1937 and 1938 the execution rate was roughly a thousand per day, Diktter writes.) But Stalin is also held responsible for a nightmarish cultural degradation that occurred at the same timethe insistence on replacing art with political instruction, and with the cult of the Leader, whose name was stamped on every possible surface. As one German historian notes, you could praise Stalin during a meeting in the Stalin House of Culture of the Stalin Factory on Stalin Square in the city of Stalinsk. This black comedy of egotism could be found even among neo-Stalinist dictators of far later date. In 1985, Nicolae Ceauescu, Romanias Communist leader, ordered up such television programs as The Nicolae Ceauescu Era and Science During the Nicolae Ceauescu Epoch. By law, his portrait was featured at the beginning of every textbook.

Diktters broader point is that this manner spread to the most improbable corners of the world. His most interesting chapters, in some ways, are on the tin-pot dictatorslike Duvalier, in Haiti, and Mengistu, in Ethiopiawho, ravaging poverty-stricken countries, still conform to the terrible type. The reason his subjects exhibit a single style is in part mutual influence and hybridization (North Korean artists made Mengistu a hundred-and-sixty-foot-tall monument in Ethiopia), and in part common need. All share one ugliness because all bend to one effect: not charm but intimidation, and not persuasion but fear.

The elements come together in almost every case to make one standard biography. Theres the rise, which is usually assisted by self-deluding opportunists who believe that they can restrain the ascendant authoritarian figure; old Bolsheviks like Grigory Zinoviev, countering Trotsky, played just as significant a role in Stalins ascent, largely through abstention, as the respectable conservative Franz von Papen did in Hitlers. (We can control him is the perpetual motto of the soon-to-be-killed collaborator.) Next there is the attainment of power, and the increasingly frantic purging, followed by a cult of personality made all the more ludicrous by the passage of time, because it is capable only of inflation, not variation. Along with that comes some re-identification with figures from the national past. The exploitation of the imaginary Aryan history, bestrode by Valhallan gods, became central to the Hitler cult. In the same way, Diktter shows, Duvalier took up the animism of Haitian vodou and presented himself as the avatar of the cemetery spirit Baron Samedi.

Then comes the isolation of the dictator within his palacefriendless and paranoidand the pruning of his circle to an ever more sycophantic few. The dictator, rather than exulting in his triumph, withdraws into fearful seclusion. Finally, after all the death and brutality imposed, the dictators power, and often his life, ends with remarkable suddenness. You can watch video footage of Ceauescu, in Bucharest, 1989, confidently addressing an assembled audience and realizing in a single moment that the crowd has turned. Comrades! Quiet down! the dictator cries out, while his wife shrilly shouts, Silence! The firing squad was only a few days away. Mussolini was ejected just as abruptly, and Hitler would have been, too, if he hadnt killed himself first. Stalin seemed to make it to a natural end, but, as that terrific movie The Death of Stalin shows, he probably died sooner than he otherwise would have, because his flunkies were too terrified to do anything when they found him unconscious in a pool of his own piss.

Still, Diktters portrait of his dictators perhaps underemphasizes a key point about such men: that, horribly grotesque in most areas, they tend to be good in one, and their skill at the one thing makes their frightened followers overrate their skill at all things, like children of a drunken father who take a small act of Christmas charity as proof of enormous instinctive generosity. Compare Diktters account of Hitlers rise with John Lukacss account, and one recalls how Lukacs, without softening the portrait one bit, recognized that Hitler did some things extremely well. Hitlers occasional moments of shrewdness and even statesmanshipin seeing that Stalin would trust him not to invade Russia, or that France was not prepared to fightmade his followers more convinced than ever of his genius.

The difference between charismatic leadership and the cult of personalitydifferent points in the trajectory of the dictatoris that the charismatic leader must show himself and the object of the cult of personality increasingly cant show himself. The space between the truth and the image becomes too great to sustain. Mao, like God, could be credibly omniscient only by being unpredictably seen. Imposing an element of mystery is essential. And so most of the subjects here rarely made public appearances at the height of their cults. Stalin and Hitler both remained hidden for much of the war; to show themselves was to show less than their audiences wanted.

During the Cultural Revolution, Maos image was everywhere, but, when preparing to greet Richard Nixon, he made much of the imagery disappear. All signs of the Chairman were removed from window displays, Diktter writes. Thousands of statues were dismantled, discreetly sent off for recycling. The king or the emperor has his glory channelled into the national religion or ritual; the dictator, rising with a revolution against the old order, is in some sense an iconoclast, and has to be more enigmatic. Months went by in which nobody saw Mussolini; Stalin refused to take part in his own victory parade after the Second World War, leaving the task to his top general, Georgy Zhukov; Duvalier holed up in his palace, then suddenly appeared shopping in little Port-au-Prince boutiques. Sometimes there, sometimes not, now you see him, now you dontless the hero of a thousand faces than the overseer with a million eyes. You never know when youll see Big Brotheror when hell see you.

The really significant historical question is how the modern authoritarians cult of personality differs from the monarchs or the emperors. Roman emperors, after all, were actually deified. It matters that the twentieth-century cult of political personality rose in the context of the broader twentieth-century cult of celebrity. Monarchs coming to power in the centuries preceding mass media could be mythologized and poeticized because myths and poems were the chief cultural material around. The dictators competed with movies, and with stars. Charlie Chaplin said once, When I first saw Hitler, with that little mustache, I thought he was copying me. Though Chaplin was retrospectively rueful, it was not a crazy notionand he would use it to fantastic comic effect in The Great Dictator, still the best satiric study of dictator style ever created. Fandom and fanaticism made their historical appearance hand in hand. (Even today, Donald Trump likes dictators not only because he likes authoritarians but also because they present themselves, in ways he understands, as kitsch celebrities, with entourages and prepackaged looks.)

Diktter makes a case that there has been a dictator style, stretching across the planet. Is there also a dictator sounda specific way that they use language? The Ogre does what ogres can,/Deeds quite impossible for Man, Auden wrote in 1968, after the Soviet tanks rolled into Prague. But one prize is beyond his reach,/The Ogre cannot master Speech. The idea that language was the last bulwark against lunacy was central, in the middle of the last century, to minds like Camus and Orwell. Lucidity is a test of integrity, as Orwell insisted in Politics and the English Language. Tyrants cant talk sense.

But what if, dreadful idea, the reverse is truewhat if language is exactly what the ogres have mastered, and bad people tend to have a better command of language than good ones, who are often tongue-tied in the face of the worlds complexities? What if the tragedies of tyranny were, in the first instance, tragedies of eloquence misappliedof language used for evil ends, but used well? For centuries, students learned Latin by memorizing the writing of the great Roman tyrant and republic-ending ogre Julius Caesar. They did it exactly because Caesars style was so clear, efficiently sorting out Druids and Picts, always focussed on the main point.

The worst dictators tend to be the most enthusiastic readers and writers. Hitler died with more than sixteen thousand books in his private libraries; Stalin wrote a book that was printed in the tens of millions, and though that is easier to do when you run the publisher, own all the bookstores, and edit all the book reviews (only Jeff Bezos could hope to do that now), still, he did his own writing. Mussolini co-authored three plays while ruling Italy and was the honorary president of the International Mark Twain Society, writing a greeting to the readers of his favorite author while installed as Duce. Lenin and Trotsky, whatever else they may have done, both wrote more vividly and at greater length than did, say, Clement Attlee or Tommy Douglassocial-democratic politicians who did great good in the world and left few catchy slogans behind. Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun and The revolution is not a dinner party, Maos apologias for mass killing, may not be admirable sentiments, but they are memorable aphorismsfar more memorable than the contrasting truth that some political power grows out of the barrels of some guns some of the time, depending on what you mean by power and political, and whom youre pointing the gun at.

This contrarian hypothesis is nicely put in Daniel Kalders The Infernal Library: On Dictators, the Books They Wrote, and Other Catastrophes of Literacy (Henry Holt). In many ways the literary companion to Diktters book, The Infernal Library is the work of a non-academic scholar with a staggering appetite for reading. The same dictators fill both books, but Kalders focus is on their words more than their acts. He has worked through a reading list that would leave most people heading desperately for an exit, and an easier subject. Anyone can read Mein Kampf who has the stomach for the maunderings of a self-pitying, failed Austrian watercolorist. But Kalder has actually made his way through the philosophy of Antnio de Oliveira Salazar, for decades the semi-fascist quasi-dictator of Portugal, and gives his 1939 tome, Doctrine and Action, a fair review. We may have heard that Stalins Foundations of Leninism was printed in the millions, but Kalder has read it, and with a certain kind of devils-due respect: He is clear and succinct, and good at summarizing complex ideas for a middlebrow audience: the Bill Bryson of dialectical materialism, minus the gags.

Kalders point is the disquieting one that the worst tyrants of the past century were hardly the brutal less-than-literates of our imagination. (Hitler, twenty and poor in Vienna, put down writer as his occupation on an official document. He wasnt, but it was what he dreamed of being.) Their power did not grow out of the barrel of a gun. It grew out of their ability to form sentences saying that power grew out of the barrel of a gun, when in fact it was growing out of the pages of a book. Mao was even more effective as an advocate than as a general. The trouble with these tyrants language was what they used it for.

Kalder proposes Lenin as the originator of the modern totalitarian style in prose, adopting Marxs splenetic polemical tone for the purposes of Communist revolution. Kalders Lenin is a useful corrective to the more benign version of Lenin that still crops up from time to timepartly owing, it must be said, to Edmund Wilsons 1940 book, To the Finland Station: A Study in the Writing and Acting of History. Wilsons Lenin may have been insufficiently sensitive to civil liberties, but he was fundamentally humane and philosophical, a first-rate intellect caught in a first-rate crisis. His flaw was a lack of patience with his own deeply felt humanism, self-censoring even his love of Beethoven in pursuit of the public good. (Following Wilson, Tom Stoppard, in his great 1974 comedy Travesties, showed Lenin listening longingly to the Appassionata Sonata.) Vladimir Nabokov, who knew better, regularly tried to disabuse Wilson of this belief. What you now see as a change for the worse (Stalinism) in the regime is really a change for the better in knowledge on your part, he wrote to Wilson in 1948. Any changes that took place between November 1919 and now have been changes in the decor which more or less screens an unchanging black abyss of oppression and terror.

Kalder shares that view. After reading Lenins The State and Revolution, he writes, Its impossible to be surprised that the USSR turned out so badly. Already in 1905, we learn from Kalder, Lenin is dismissive of the very notion of freedom within an exploitative society, writing, The freedom of the bourgeois writer, artist, or actress is simply masked (or hypocritically masked) dependence on the money-bag, on corruption, on prostitution. Its significant that the actress comes in for Lenins disapproval; John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor, in The Subjection of Women, from 1869, had singled out actresses as a cynosure of liberal feminism, since they were the one kind of woman artist whose equality, or superiority, to men was on public display. (Taylors daughter Helen, who also worked on the book, was herself an actress.) Demoralizing actresses as mere prostitutes is therefore an essential part of the Marxist attack on bourgeois feminism.

Stalin, in Kalders account, not only succeeds Lenin as an author but surpasses him. Against the Trotskyite view of Stalin as a Georgian bandit chief, Kalder argues that Stalin was actually a big thinker and a good writer, capable of popularizing Marx in ways Lenin could not. He was a devoted craftsman of prose, too, as his much marked manuscripts attest. Because Stalins primary means of interacting with the physical world was through paper, it is not surprising that he continued to demonstrate a superstitious awe for the power of the written word, Kalder observes. He was still fascinated by books, by novels and plays, and by the arts generally. Some writers even sought out Stalin for literary advice. The amazing thing is that they got it: one prominent playwright, Alexander Afinogenov, started sending his plays directly to Stalin for a first read, and, despite the burdens of ruling a totalitarian empire, Stalin would get back to him with notes. If you want to know what a country with an editor at its head looks like, there it is.

Stalin, Kalder concludes, was a nave romantic, at least insofar as he believed in the transformative power of literature. He recognized that words shape ideas, and ideas shape souls. In 1932, he cheerfully summoned forty of the leading writers of the Soviet Union to come to dinner, exhorting them with language one might expect from a faculty dean making a case for the humanities: Our tanks are worthless if the souls who must steer them are made of clay.... And that is why I raise my glass to you, writers, to the engineers of the human soul. Of the writers who were in that room, Stalin had eleven murdered before the decade was over. Editorial rigor could achieve no more.

After spending time with Stalin, one finds Hitler and Mussolini, taken as authors, almost anticlimactic. Yet Kalder spots something that is hard to articulate but worth brooding on. When Stalin addressed workers who made tractors, he was actually interested in tractors: they were a means toward a more productive Russia. The better lifebased on efficient, electrified, and modernized farmswas visible, however many lives you had to take to get there. By contrast, Hitler and Mussolini were apocalyptic pessimists. Their work expends far more energy on the melodrama of decline and decadence, on visions of Jews giving syphilis to Aryan maidens and on the Roman ruins, than on a positive future. (Part of what drew Hitler to the Wagnerian uvre was the imagery of downfall.) Kalder has read Mussolinis memoir, written after his deposition, and is struck by the Italian dictators self-pitying conviction that the price of power is complete self-enclosure: If I had any friends now would be the time for them to sympathize, literally to suffer with me. But since I have none my misfortunes remain within the closed circle of my own life. It is significant that his bleak estrangement is what he most wants to register. It really is all about him. This taste for despair was part of both mens romanticism, and, in Hitlers case, directly responsible for the horrific last months of a war already lost. He wanted the world to burn. Germany hadnt deserved him.

Kalders analysis suggests another signal difference. The Soviet Union, and left totalitarianism in general, is a culture of the written word; the Third Reich, and right authoritarianism in general, is a culture of the spoken word. Wanting the prestige of authorship but discovering that writing is hard work, Hitler dictated most of Mein Kampf to the eager Rudolf Hess. Hitler was always unhappy with the slowness of reading and writing, compared with the vivid electricity of his rallies. Where the Marxist heritage, being theory-minded and principle-bound, involves the primacy of the text, right-wing despotism, being romantic and charismatic, is buoyed by the shared spell cast between an orator and his mob. One depends on a set of abstract rules; the other on a sequence of mutual bewitchments.

Where does the double tour of dictator style leave us? Diktter, in How to Be a Dictator, seems uncertain whether he is writing an epitaph or a prologue to a new edition. On the one hand, he deprecates the continuities between the twentieth-century cults and the more improvisatory autocrats of our day. Even a modicum of historical perspective indicates that today dictatorship is on the decline, he maintains. But he sees ominous signs in Erdoans rise, in Turkey, and notes that, in China, Xi Jinping has become consistently idolized by a propaganda machine. In 2017, Diktter points out, the party organ gave him seven titles, from Creative Leader, Core of the Party and Servant Pursuing Happiness for the People, to Leader of a Great Country and Architect of Modernisation in the New Era. Meanwhile, he observes, as the regime makes a concerted effort to obliterate a fledgling civil society, lawyers, human rights activists, journalists and religious leaders are confined, exiled and imprisoned in the thousands.

Thousands are better than millions, certainlythough historically thousands have a way of leading to millions. If there is little comfort in numbers, there is even less in words. Audens noble picture, in which the poets fight the mute ogre, cant survive the shock of history. The ogres, it turns out, are part of literary culture and always have beenthey speak and write books and read other peoples books. If by protecting the integrity of language we mean upholding the belief that literary culture, or even just plain truth-telling, is in itself a bulwark, the facts dont bear out the hypothesis. Literary culture is no remedy for totalitarianism. Ogres gonna ogre. Rhetoric is as liquid and useful for the worst as it is for the best. The humanities, unfortunately, belong to humanity.

Perhaps the most depressing reflection sparked by both books is on the supine nature of otherwise intelligent observers in the face of the coarse brutalities of dictatorships. Kalder writes, as many have before, about Maos successful courtship of Western writers and leaders, who kept the Maoist myth alive as his cult descended into barbaric absurdity. He also writes of finding, in a small Scottish town, a contemporary English translation of Stalins Speech at a Conference of Harvester-Combine Operators, delivered in December of 1935, including interpolated parentheticals of audience response: Loud and prolonged cheers and applause. Cries of Long live our beloved Stalin! The marvel is that the pamphlet had been translated into English within days after the speech was given. Then, Kalder observes, berserk cultists spirited it across the waves, and read it, and found value in it, in a society where nobody was being starved to death, shot in the head or interned in a slave labor camp. The capacity for self-delusion on the part of cosseted utopians about the actuality of utopia remains the most incomprehensible element of the story of the twentieth century, and its least welcome gift to the twenty-first.

Original post:

The Field Guide to Tyranny - The New Yorker

Best podcasts of 2019: from true crime to nonfiction and comedy – Polygon

The sheer number of podcasts being made right now, it can be hard figuring out where to start. If you hear about a great podcast people love, you might find it has a daunting number of episodes--which is especially worrisome if the podcast is fiction, meaning you have to start at the beginning and listen in order.

Luckily, 2019 gave us some fantastic new shows to listen to during the end of the year traveling and long commutes ahead. To make things easy, weve chronologically catalogued the best podcast releases of 2019 based on their first episode so you can check out the best of the best based on timeliness.

Premiere date: Jan. 2Genre: Serialized fiction, comedy

Gay Future is a six-part, comedy mini-series based on a recently discovered, unpublished YA novel by Mike Pence, the show purports. In a future where everyone is gay, the storys protagonist comes to a terrifying realization: hes straight, and its up to him to lead the straight rebellion. Gay Future is a fantastic work of satire, using its lightning-speed comedy and over-the-top performances and sound design to hammer in how truly buckwild Pences story is and, by proxy, how so much homophobic rhetoric is, too. Its a hilarious, zany rollercoaster that youll need to listen to repeatedly just to make sure you catch every joke as they zoom by.

Premiere date: Jan. 6Genre: Episodic fiction, musical, slice-of-life

Loveville High is the story of one high school prom from the perspective of different students, all told as a musical. Another mini-series, each of its nine episodes is a self-contained episode of one characters prom night. The podcast looks into the life and story of high schoolers from different backgrounds, and carves out a surprising amount of depth, using gorgeous songs, each within about 10 minutes. The performances are all portrayed by actual musical theatre professionals, which means you know youre going to get some astounding acting and singing.

Premiere date: Jan. 7Genre: Serialized fiction, actual play, comedy

A new show from Atypical Artists, the production collective that gave us The Bright Sessions, Arcs is an actual-play Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition podcast following adventurers Larkin, a young human wizard played by Lauren Shippen; Jackson, a half-giant who is big, round, and not very good at things played by Nathan Stanz; and Barri, a half-orc bard with mischievous gay energy played by Briggon Snow. DM Jordan Adika wrangles the shockingly chaotic party into a series of hijinks thats hilarious, but also masterfully crafted. Full sound design work and original music adds to the dynamic between the hosts, whose timing and performances prove theyre polished podcast professionals.

Premiere date: Jan. 21Genre: Serialized nonfiction, investigative journalism, mini series

The Dropout is the surreal, fascinating story of Elizabeth Holmes, the founder and former CEO of the health-care startup, Theranos. The docu-series is the perfect podcast follow-up to the dual Fyre documentaries, a similar narrative structure leading us through the windy path of a wealth-motivated manipulator who convinces others to, not only trust her, but invest millions of dollars in her half-baked company. The difference here is that Theranos wasnt a party for Instagram influencers, but a medical technology company that real patients relied on for medical procedures. This mini-series interviews people affected by Theranos in different ways, including the employees who came forward about the companys dangerous fraud.

Premiere date: Jan. 24Genre: Serialized fiction, drama, comedy, weird west

Caravan is the story of Samir, a queer Desi man who falls into a canyon while camping with his best friend only to wind up in a surreal, parallel world. Caravan blends genre at every turn: its as intimate and dramatic as it is goofy and hilarious, and the weird Wild West setting is filled with ghosts, demons, banshees, unicorns, and cowboys. The world is meticulously built, and creator Tau Zaman integrates their education in political science throughout. Beyond the adventure and coming-of-age story, the series probes the notion of people who wield power and how that power is used. A product of The Whisperforge, the studio behind audio fiction standouts like The Far Meridian and StarTripper!!, Caravan sounds incredible, offering an immersive audio experience.

Premiere date: Jan. 24thGenre: Serialized nonfiction, personal narrative, mini series

Julie Yip-Williams documented the process of preparing for death in her posthumous novel, The Unwinding of the Miracle, and in this podcast. Diagnosed with terminal colon cancer, Yip-Williams wanted to record all of her preparations for death, including recounting stories from her life, connecting with her young daughters, finding the truth behind secrets, and coming to accept that her life was ending. The podcast is a deeply emotional, moving, heart-wrenching story that reminds listeners that everything is fleeting, and we need to make most of all of our time alive.

Premiere date: Feb. 19thGenre: Serialized fiction, drama, horror, midwestern gothic

Unwell is a Midwestern Gothic story about a bristly, frustrated woman who returns to her small hometown to take care of her mother after an injury. Following the current tonal trend of contemplative, quiet, slow-build horror found in works like Hereditary or The Haunting of Hill House, Unwell finds most of its unsettling moments not through big reveals or noisy jumpscares but uncomfortable quiet and stillness. Theres something ominous happening in the town of Mt. Absalom, and dark history between protagonist Lily and her mother, Dot, but listeners will tread in discomfort before anything is revealed. There are some great jokes about the Midwest in its first episodes, but even they help paint the picture of how truly bizarre everything in the town can be.

Premiere date: Feb. 25Genre: Nonfiction episodic, conversation, culture

All My Relations is a conversation podcast hosted by Matika Wilbur and Dr. Adrienne Keene that focuses on the lives and cultures of Native American peoples. Native American peoples are some of the marginalized voices that rarely get discussed in conversations about race, and All My Relations aims to fill in those gaps with profound ruminations, but also a good amount of jokes. The dynamic between the hosts is contemplative but casual, easily weaving between serious topics, personal anecdotes, laughter, and tears.

Premiere date: March 22Genre: Nonfiction episodic, conversation, arts

Night Vale Presents most recent foray into nonfiction, Start with This, offers conversations between the Welcome to Night Vale creators about a specific aspect of the creative process. Aimed to help aspiring podcasters make their first podcast, the conversations are sure to be beneficial to anyone who wants to work on any creative project. For the first 20 minutes, the hosts discuss something like creative restrictions or the merits of collaboration. Then, they give the listener a related, interesting, and very specific prompt to write on. The listener is then invited to share their progress, work, and responses in a forum of other listeners.

Premiere date: May 30thGenre: Nonfiction episodic, deep dive

[Ed. note: Nice Try! is a project from Polygons sister site Curbed, but comes recommended independently by Wil.]

Hosted by Avery Trufelman of 99% Invisible and spinoff Articles of Interest, Nice Try!: Utopian is a look back at historys attempts at building utopias, ranging from a Third Reich airport to Disney World. Trufelman chronicles each utopian plot, and then the eventual collapse, interviewing experts and weaving together the narratives with elegant structure. Nice Try!: Utopian is a combination of journalism and creative nonfiction at its finest, focusing on both what the utopia says about how humans work and the granular details of what actually made it anything but a utopia. Trufelmans insights are sharp and exciting, connecting points to a greater web of how societies work.

Premiere date: June 17thGenre: Nonfiction episodic, deep dive

Theres something to be said about schadenfreude in 2019, and Spectacular Failures brings a very specific catharsis to the listener by asking, How could something with so much potential go so wrong? Host Lauren Ober examines some of the biggest failures in business, like Moviepass or Toys R Us, with a balance of sardonic humor in delivery and relative neutrality in writing its just that the facts are almost always hilarious. Without Ober at the helm, Spectacular Failures could be a standard deep-dive podcast educating the listener; with the hosts often incredulous tone, its usually as funny as it is informative.

Premiere date: Aug. 23rdGenre: Nonfiction episodic, mini series, history, personal narratives

1619 is the New York Times examination of how slavery shaped America, and still shapes it to this day, 400 years after men and women were first brought from Africa to what were then the English colonies. Hosted by Nikole Hannah-Jones, each of the six episodes reveals how slavery informed the decisions and structures of the early United States, and how those decisions and structures remain today. 1619 doesnt exist to comfort or hold the listeners hand during tough moments: there are frank discussions of Abraham Lincolns explicit racism, the problems and built-in paradoxes with black land ownership, and the black musicians at the heart of essentially every piece of American music. Often, the stories of how slavery has affected the United States ties back to a personal narrative, showing how much the history of American slavery has impacted the country on every level: institutional, political, economic, cultural, and individual.

Premiere date: Sept. 16Genre: Serialized fiction, mystery, drama

From audio-drama veterans Lauren Shippen (The Bright Sessions, ARCS, The AM Archives) and John Dryden (Tumanbay, LifeAfter) and distributed by Radiotopia, Passenger List is a mysterious fiction podcast revolving around the disappearance of a plane on a transatlantic flight. Starring The Last Jedis Kelly Marie Tran as protagonist Kaitlin Le, Passenger List toys with the line between science fiction and conspiracy-theory thriller. But while the plot moves to raise stakes and ask more questions, Kaitlin Les experience as a woman grieving over her missing twin develops as the true focus. Shes arguably motivated to a fault, but definitely complicated, asking the listener to root for her while also questioning her methods and tactics.

Premiere date: Oct. 9thGenre: Serialized fiction, mini-series, realistic fiction, drama

Moonface is the story of Korean-American man, Paul, and his struggles to come out as gay to his mother. The problem isnt just because the act of coming out can be terrifying, especially with traditional parents; its also because he and his mother do not speak the same language, literally. Scored by pop songs, Moonface feels both like the indie coming-of-age movies of the early 2000s and quiet, intimate art films like LadyBird or Moonlight. Worth noting: the series isnt very not safe for work, so be sure to listen when you can comfortably and responsibly engage in something explicitly sexual.

Wil Williams writes, listens, and loves podcasts. She runs the website Wil Williams Writes, co-hosts the podcast Tuned In Dialed up, and has work featured in Discover Pods and Bello Collective. She is afraid of whales and suspicious of dolphins.

Visit link:

Best podcasts of 2019: from true crime to nonfiction and comedy - Polygon

Friday 27 December 2019 – The Monocle Minute – Monocle

In 2010, while I was a design student at the University of Western Australia, I studied Ridley Scotts Blade Runner as part of the first-year architecture curriculum. My tutors spoke effusively about the films representation of class struggle through architecture and encouraged us to examine how technology in the Los Angeles of Scotts imagined future was reflected in our own cityscape.

The film was set in 2019 and some of its ideas talking computers and enormous digital billboards are all but reality even if flying cars have yet to take off. So it now seems appropriate to choose a new movie to challenge and inspire the next generation of city-makers. But does one exist? Im not sure. If I were to write, direct and lets be honest star in a film that was tailor-made for future architects and designers to study, the metropolis depicted would have a decidedly retro feel, using technology to make room for more analogue activities.

Imagine, for instance, a world where mobile-phone data was blacked out in select public areas, forcing people to stop scrolling through social-media feeds and pick up a conveniently placed local newspaper instead. We would marvel at how brakes on scooters would be automatically activated in designated zones, allowing pedestrians to go about their business without fear of colliding with someone on a two-wheeler. In short, hi-tech would be used to create soft-tech spaces, with the resulting streets feeling more friendly and inviting.

So if anyones thinking of funding an urban-utopia film project in the coming year, drop me a note. Because in a world of hi-tech effects, its the low-tech future that would really bring shock and awe to cinema audiences and perhaps improve our cities along the way.

Excerpt from:

Friday 27 December 2019 - The Monocle Minute - Monocle

Top 37 albums of the 2010s countdown on WMNF – WMNF – WMNF

loading...

December 26, 2019 by Sen Kinane and filed under Music, Station Updates.

Heres the list. Im sure youll have your own opinion, so please post them as a comment below.

(A lot of these bands put out more than one good album this decade I limited this list to one per band).

For one week only you can listen to the show on the WMNF.org archives. Part 1 here. Part 2 here. Part 3 here.

number album band year a representative song

37 Trigger Hippy Trigger Hippy 2014 Pocahontas36 Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros 2013 Better Days35 Dos Amigos Una Fiesta Two Man Gentleman Band 2010 Chocolate Milk34 Elephant Stone Elephant Stone 2013 Setting Sun33 American Utopia David Byrne 2018 Everybodys Coming to My House32 Ive Been Meaning to Write Ronny Elliott 2012 A Doctor and a Lawyer31 Sea of Tears Eilen Jewell 2011 Rain Roll In30 Stay Human Vol. II Michael Franti & Spearhead 2019 Little Things29 What We Saw From the Cheap Seats Regina Specktor 2012 Small Town Moon28 Revelator Tedeschi Trucks Band- 2011 Midnight in Harlem27 Masseduction St. Vincent 2017 Masseduction26 Rebellion Rises Ziggy Marley 2018 Rebellion Rises25 They Will Find You Here Sleepy Vikings 2011 These Days24 Boys & Girls Alabama Shakes 2015 Hold On23 Lost On the River: The New Basement Tapes The New Basement Tapes 2014 Kansas City22 Everything Now Arcade Fire 2017 Everything Now21 Young Sick Camellia St. Paul & the Broken Bones 2018 GotItBad20 Trouble Will Find Me The National 2013 Demons19 Thank You For Today Death Cab For Cutie 2018 Northern Lights18 Monolith of Phobos The Claypool Lennon Delerium 2016 Boomerang Baby17 The Ballad of Boogie Christ Joseph Arthur 2013 I Miss The Zoo16 Critical Equation Dr. Dog 2018 Go Out Fighting15 Woodstock Portugal, The Man 2017 Feel It Still14 Mergers & Acquisitions Have Gun, Will Travel 2011 Time Machine13 Genuine Negro Jig Carolina Chocolate Drops 2010 Trouble in Your Mind12 Strangers to Ourselves Modest Mouse 2015 Lampshades on Fire11 Tell Me How You Really Feel Courtney Barnett 2018 City Looks Pretty10 If the River Was Whiskey Spin Doctors 2013 Traction Blues9 God Willin & The Creek Dont Rise Ray LaMontagne 2010 Beg Steal or Borrow8 TraLaLa Rebekah Pulley Hard Times7 Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats 2015 I Need Never Get Old6 Heavy On the Vine Ryan Montbleau Band 2010 Songbird5 Benjamin Booker Benjamin Booker 2014 Violent Shiver4 Blunderbuss Jack White 2012 -Missing Pieces3 The Carpenter The Avett Brothers 2012 Down with the Shine2 AM Arctic Monkeys 2013 Do I Wanna Know1 The Bright Light Social Hour The Bright Light Social Hour 2011 Back and Forth

Tags: Best Of, music

Link:

Top 37 albums of the 2010s countdown on WMNF - WMNF - WMNF

Saluting the undersung British TV shows of 2013 – Den of Geek UK

Remember 2013? Prince Charles editing Countryfile. The debut of the new robot cameras after BBC News moved to Broadcasting House. Doctor Who aired its 50th anniversary episode and a lot more around it. And possibly some stuff happened on other networks too, but hey, our taxes paid for this one so lets stick with it as we look at what else was going on

Continuing our 10-part series revisiting some of the best undersung British and non-US TV shows of the decade, here are a few favourites that arrived in 2013.

Part of the 50th anniversary celebrations, but tucked away on BBC Four, this show was rightly lauded by Doctor Who fandom but somewhat ignored outside it. A one-off feature-length drama about the creation of Doctor Who penned by Mark Gatiss no less - gives a fascinating insight into the creation of one of the worlds most enduring sci-fi franchises. Ideal viewing for TV geeks as well as sci-fi geeks.

Much like its undead progeny, the zombie apocalypse is the genre that keeps on giving. This firmly post-apocalypse take is set several years after a zombie outbreak as normality restores or as close to it as possible. In taking a social commentary angle like Romeros original zombie films, it actually takes the idea back to its roots, and the nine-episode run is satisfyingly binge-able. Here's why we loved it.

Cruelly cut down in its prime, Utopia is smart, modern sci-fi with a blistering high concept, in which a graphic novel The Utopia Experiment ties in, somehow, to a conspiracy that could affect the course of humanity. Unresolved story notwithstanding, its as original a show as UK television has produced in years. Read our spoiler-filled reviews and more here.

The premise of this Sky One sitcom from the makers of Horrible Histories is nothing short of glorious. A 33-year-old suburban mother falls through a portal in her cupboard and arrives in Yonderland. Shes hailed as the chosen one only, it turns out, no-one in Yonderland knows what the chosen one has to do. Its a fantastic all-ages show theres a reason Den of Geek loves it.

Set against the historical backdrop of the English civil war, this TV miniseries was high-budget and high-drama, though its factual accuracy was criticised. Still, ignore that and theres tonnes to enjoy. It was followed by The White Princess in 2017 and then by The Spanish Princess, which aired its first series this year and will conclude in 2020, so if you like its style theres plenty more where that came from.

Comedy sketch group Pappys has never quite manage to translate their brilliantly anarchic live energy to the screen, but their sitcom Badults came closest to capturing the magic. A self-aware take on the classic sitcom format, it was everything sitcom fans claim they miss about comedy. A 2-series run began on BBC3 in 2013, just in time for the channel to be made online-only.

Starring Mad Mens Elizabeth Moss and with guest appearances by the likes of Holly Hunter and Nicole Kidman, Top Of The Lake was a show with star power. In it, Mosss Detective Robin Griffin investigates the murder of a pregnant 12-year-old in New Zealand. Hailed as a masterpiece, its brilliance has not been dulled with time, and would easily appear on best-of-the-decade lists if only more people had noticed it.

Charlie Brookers cultural footprint (possible alternative title?) is huge now thanks to the runaway success of Black Mirror on Netflix, but his Wipe shows are overlooked even by fans of his regular screen wipe column. Unpicking the news as we lived it, Weekly Wipes media savvy satire puts most modern satire to shame, and is sorely missed.

James Cordon doesnt seem like the kind of performer its possible to under-appreciate, but his action-sitcom The Wrong Mans, co-created with Cordons Gavin & Stacy castmate Matthew Baynton, is far better than most people credit it for. A bit The Big Lebowski, a bitWright/Pegg Cornetto Trilogy, if you didn't give it a chance at the time, this one deserves another look.

Fans of stand-up might have missed this small, Stewart Lee-curated comedy show that took 38 weird, idiosyncratic and atypical acts stand-up acts and put them on TV for the world to see. Some have gone on to be huge, while others still work the live circuit safe in the knowledge theyll never get back on TV. With 38 comedians across 25 episodes, its two series are not to be missed.

Read the original:

Saluting the undersung British TV shows of 2013 - Den of Geek UK

‘American Utopia,’ ‘Dragon Lady,’ And More: The Best Of Boston Theater In 2019 – wgbh.org

The years best in theater reveals a line-up of shows that challenged the conventions of the formfrom the sounds of silence in not one, but two shows to finding raw resonance in what could have been dusty classics. And then theres the impossibly talented theater artist whos destined for epic stardomin my humble opinion.

Robert Wade, Courtesy of Intiman Theatre (Seattle, Washington) and the American Repertory Theater

Sara Porkalob. Remember that name. A Seattle theater artist, Porkalob brought the two one-woman shows shes written and performs about her Filipino family to the American Repertory Theater for evenings that moved from the depths of poignancy to the heights of hilarity. Porkalob has a genius, star quality and stage presence that can scarcely be qualified other than to say she is destined to be one of the theater greats.

"Dragon Lady" and "Dragon Mama" ran at the March 20 through April 6, 2019 at the American Repertory Theater.

Mark S. Howard, courtesy of Lyric Stage Company

A moving production that never stopped moving, this exquisitely staged drama (and 2017 Pulitzer Prize finalist) delivered us into a girls indoor soccer team practice. With a superb and highly athletic cast, "The Wolves" scored for its naturalistic look into the secret life of teenagers.

"The Wolves" ran from January 11 through February 3, 2019 at the Lyric Stage Boston.

Jeremy Daniel, courtesy of Williamstown Theatre Festival

Its one of the thrills and magic of theater when a director can take a classic like Lorraine Hansberrys "A Raisin in the Sun" and make you feel like youve never seen it before. Thats precisely what Robert OHara did this summer in a production led by the estimable S. Epatha Merkerson. In a production that belongs on Broadway, OHara brought us into a black 1950s family so earnestly trying to climb the next rung to the American dream, that every creak on the ladder was a lasting sucker punch to the gut. The emotion was real and raw.

"A Raisin in the Sun" ran from June 25 through July 13, 2019 at the Williamstown Theatre Festival.

Matthew Murphy, courtesy of Emerson Colonial Theatre

Its no surprise that David Byrne on stage would be anything other than conceptual, engaging and just brilliantly brilliant. Byrne opened a Broadway-bound theatrical adaptation of his album American Utopia so stripped down that the heady shows focus had to be on the music (a mix of Byrnes solo work and Talking Heads songs), the performance and the ideas (everything from voting to the genesis of music). And it was all garnished with mesmerizing choreography by Annie-B Parson.

"American Utopia" ran from September 11 through September 28, 2019 at the Emerson Colonial Theatre.

T. Charles Erickson, courtesy of the Huntington Theatre Company

Billy Porter knows how to grab our attentioncertainly on-stage, on-screen or on the red carpet. But even when hes not front and center, his presence looms large as we found in "The Purists," a world premiere play he launched at the Huntington Theatre Company. This dramedy about a small group of neighborhood people from all walks and backgrounds meshing and mashing on a stoop in Queens exploded with energy, hilarity and provocative questions about who we all really are.

"The Purists" ran from August 30 through October 6, 2019 at the Huntington Theatre Company.

Judy Sirota Rosenthal, courtesy of ArtsEmerson

A production that defied all the notions and preconceptions of what theater is supposed to be, "The End of TV," by Chicago-based performance collective Manual Cinema, was a jaw-dropping experience unfolding entirely in imagery and song. Through a captivating blend of live-action silhouettes, projected puppetry, and pop culture TV, the show brought us into the Rust Belt and the struggles of two people just trying to get by. With nary a word of dialogue, it was ingenious.

"The End of TV" ran from January 16 through January 27, 2019 at ArtsEmerson.

Nile Scott Studios, courtesy of SpeakEasy Stage Company

Speaking of not speaking, this little gem of a play by Bess Wohl kicked off the year with a knock on New Years resolution wellness as a motley group of people gather at a silent yoga retreat. It could only take a roster of Bostons best actors to keep us spellbound for the better part of two hours with their near-silent performances. Hugely hilarious, it was a wry dissection of the jagged path to our better selves.

"Small Mouth Sounds" ran from January 4 through February 2, 2019 at the SpeakEasy Stage Company.

Nile Scott Studios, courtesy of Central Square Theater

A professor decides hes going to educate a poor, wayward woman how to comport herself to be more lady-like. How would that play in the Me Too era? Really well, as it turns out when the ever-innovative New York theater company Beldam (which has practically made Boston its second home) turned its attention to Eliza Doolittle. The group upped the relevance factor even more by making George Bernard Shaws heroine an immigrant played by Vaishnavi Sharma. As theyre wont to do, Bedlam made this "Pygmalion" strikingly modern.

"Bedlams Pygmalion" ran from January 31 through March 3, 2019 at the Central Square Theatre.

Broadway came to Boston for this one and we were all the better for it. Written by Pulitzer Prize-winner Paula Vogel and directed by Rebecca Taichman, who won a Tony for the play, "Indecent" was a remount of the New York production. It charted the course of Yiddish playwright Sholem Aschs 1907 drama "God of Vengeance," a piece that eventually fell victim to a fevered pitch of anti-Semitism in the United States. Gorgeous in style and form, it was a beautiful rendering of the purity of the human spirit.

"Indecent" ran from April 26 through May 25, 2019 at the Huntington Theatre Company.

Sharman Altshuler, courtesy of Moonbox Productions

The year closed with a striking effort by Moonbox Productions, one of Bostons smaller theater companies with a big vision. This musical about Leo Frank, a Brooklyn-born Jew convicted for the 1913 murder of a 13-year-old girl in Atlanta, when his only real crime may have been that he was simply other in the closed South, was a beautifully conceived production. Director Jason Modica delivered a hit "Parade," balancing lush staging with a dark and deranged tone evoking Atlantas prejudicial society.

"Parade" is running from December 11 through December 28, 2019 at the Calderwood Pavillion at the Boston Center for the Arts.

Read more here:

'American Utopia,' 'Dragon Lady,' And More: The Best Of Boston Theater In 2019 - wgbh.org