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Censorship, delays, and more made for a rough 2014
Posted: December 31, 2014 at 2:42 pm
As one does this time of year, we in the arts department of the Charleston City Paper have become somewhat reflective. As the year draws to its inevitable champagne-fueled close, we look back to remember the biggest moments of 2014's arts year and you know what? No offense, Charleston, but most of them were bummers.
Let us hasten to add that this is not to disparage the excellent work our local visual arts galleries, theaters, and other arts groups did this year. To see how busy and impressive they were, all you have to do is flip through the Arts section of any given issue.
That being said, here follows our list of the top developments in 2014 and here's hoping that 2015 turns out to be sunnier.
The Flowertown Players, the College of Charleston, and USC Upstate nearly lose funding due to attempts at censorship
This July, Summerville Town Councilman Terry Jenkins tried to withhold $3,000 of accommodation tax funding from Summerville's Flowertown Players because he thought that RENT was too "raunchy" for a community theater to produce. Although the proposal to remove the funding ultimately failed, Flowertown's artistic director JC Conway was asked to attend a council finance meeting to explain his choice of production.
It was the third attempt at censorship of the arts in South Carolina in just a few months' time. This March, the S.C. state legislature moved to strip USC Upstate and the College of Charleston of funding for presenting a play and a book, respectively, that represent LGBT characters and lifestyles. (The play in question was How to Be a Lesbian in 10 Days or Less, and the book was MacArthur "Genius" award-winning Alison Bechdel's Fun Home.) The measure was eventually defeated, but now we're left with the knowledge that members of our legislature and town and city councils are even more backward than we thought.
The Gaillard Auditorium is delayed beyond Spoleto Festival USA 2015
On Nov. 12, the city announced that the Gaillard, which is in the midst of extensive renovation it's basically being completely rebuilt would not be open for next year's Spoleto Festival, as planned. This resulted in a whole lot of shuffling by festival staff as they scrambled to find new venues for all the shows that they'd planned to host in the shiny new performing arts center. But they handled it with grace. Spoleto's director of marketing and PR, Jennifer Scott, told us the day after the announcement that "Ultimately, we're pleased that the city took the time to stop and say, 'Wait a minute, let's have a look at what's happening.' We're just pleased that they're making the commitment to building the best hall they can."
Let's hope that the auditorium really blows us all away when it does open.
On a similar topic, Spoleto was lackluster
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Censorship, delays, and more made for a rough 2014
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The Great Firewall of China is nearly complete
Posted: at 2:42 pm
HONG KONG (CNNMoney)
Other Google (GOOG) products, including Search, Sites and Picasa, have been similarly targeted by Chinese government agencies that govern Internet and social media content.
With Gmail access now severely restricted, Google's suite of services are largely blacked out in China.
Some Gmail users in China reported on Twitter Tuesday that service had been restored. But Google's own data still shows that fewer than 20% of people in China can access their Gmail.
The outcry over the latest blockage was swift and angry. Business travelers complained they will no longer be able to access email while in China without jumping through hoops. Their Chinese counterparts complained that it will now be more difficult to conduct business internationally.
And Google is hardly alone.
Related: Banned! 8 things you won't find in China
Access to Twitter (TWTR, Tech30), Facebook (FB, Tech30) and YouTube is blocked in China. During recent pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong, the Facebook-owned photo sharing app Instagram was blacked out on the Mainland.
Taken together, the restrictions constitute the world's largest -- and most effective -- state-sponsored censorship program. The effort, officially called "Golden Shield," is more than a decade old.
The program allows Beijing to restrict content it deems sensitive (on democracy, Tibet or the Uighur ethnic group, for example). Thousands of websites are blocked outright, and Chinese citizens that offend authorities can face judicial consequences.
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The Great Firewall of China is nearly complete
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Thailand Internet Censorship: Government Orders Service Providers To Block Criticism, Take Down Content
Posted: at 2:42 pm
Thai officials have ordered Internet service providers to block access to content deemed undesirable to the government or monarchy, as well as report it to authorities. Where ISPs had to seek court approval previously for such actions, they can do so now under Thailand's national security and lse-majest laws.
The policy change was approved Monday at a meeting between telecommunications regulator National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission, the polices Special Branch and major Internet service providers, according to the Bangkok Post. In cases where the ISP is unsure whether content is objectionable, NBTC secretary general Takorn Tantasith said they may consult NBTC staff.
The censorship policy impacts Web pages and social media, including Twitter and Facebook. "We'd like to ask everyone to check carefully before posting or sharing anything on the Internet, said Tantasith, who provided a Gmail address for people to report offensive content.
The move toward harsher censorship is seen as a response by the government toward foreign media companies for failing to comply with Thai requests for content removal, according to the Bangkok Post. Googles transparency report indicated they received two requests from July to December 2013 from Thailand's Ministry of Information and Communication Technology to remove 298 YouTube videos that allegedly insulted the Thai royal family; Google did not comply because the request was for global removals. During that time period, Google received 11 requests for 322 items to be removed, of which 73 percent were related to government criticism.
Thai Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwan announced Saturday that he would use his absolute power to back Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-o-chas bid to shut down media critical of the government and the monarchy. Wongsuwan said Prayuths government wants to build reconciliation, but the media are hindering that process with their critical articles, according to the Bangkok Post.
Thailand has a long history of censorship. Its strict lse majest laws afford direct control over broadcast and print media, and now digital outlets. In the 2014 Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index, Thailand came in 130 out of 180 countries listed. Since deposing the Yingluck Shinawatra government in May, the Prayuth government has filed 93 lse majest charges and shut down 392 websites, according to ZDNet.
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Thailand Internet Censorship: Government Orders Service Providers To Block Criticism, Take Down Content
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BBC's decision to drop Prince Charles documentary is 'sinister censorship' says MP
Posted: at 2:42 pm
Documentary called Reinventing the Royals pulled days before broadcast Critical of Prince Charles' attempt to rebuild reputation after Diana's death His methods left Prince William feeling 'used to father's interests', it claims MPs accuse Royals of 'gross interference' after lawyers intervened BBC criticised for failing to 'stand firm' over controversial documentary Informed sources said the documentary became a 'hatchet job' on Charles
By Martin Robinson for MailOnline
Published: 06:57 EST, 31 December 2014 | Updated: 11:35 EST, 31 December 2014
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The BBC's decision to shelve a documentary about the Royal Family days before it was due to be broadcast is 'sinister censorship', critics said today.
Reinventing The Royals is said to be critical of Prince Charles' attempt to rebuild his reputation and increase public sympathy for Camilla Parker Bowles after the death of Princess Diana.
MPs said today the Royals are guilty of 'gross interference' after lawyers known to represent Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall are said to have complained about the shows.
Critics have also said that the BBC has questions to answer after failing to 'stand firm' under pressure over the documentary.
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BBC's decision to drop Prince Charles documentary is 'sinister censorship' says MP
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Ron Paul- The Man Who WILL Make a Difference and WILL Keep a Promise – Video
Posted: at 2:41 pm
Ron Paul- The Man Who WILL Make a Difference and WILL Keep a Promise
Ron Paul is a truly good man who loves the nation and each and every one of us. He is a brilliant man who knows the issues better than anyone in the race. The power of Liberty and brotherly...
By: Speak For A Difference
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Ron Paul- The Man Who WILL Make a Difference and WILL Keep a Promise - Video
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If you're a politician and your chummy past with neo-Nazis resurfaces, don't worry. Ask Ron Paul
Posted: at 2:41 pm
Steve Scalise was, like, into palling around with neo-Nazis way before any other Republican made it cool. Photograph:
Im not a fan of hot takes, but this time Im putting my foot down. Nazis are bad.
But apparently some kids missed the public service announcements about it. Louisiana Representative Steve Scalise, the House GOP Whip and third-highest ranking member of the House GOP leadership tried to groove on Nazism in 2002, appearing at a convention of the European-American Unity and Rights Organization (EURO), which was founded by Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard and neo-Nazi David Duke.
Thankfully, now that his appearance has been unearthed, the Scalise spin machine is on it: Throughout his career in public service, Mr Scalise has spoken to hundreds of different groups with a broad range of viewpoints, said Scalise spokesperson Moira Bagley. Ahh, yes, and theres the expected out he was there, but he only exhaled.
She went on: In every case, he was building support for his policies, not the other way around.
Ordinarily, this would sound like a weaselly excuse ie The candidate has many speaking appearances on his schedule and, for the most part, thats exactly what Bagley seems to be selling. But she really has no idea what a solid excuse it is this time. Just this once, it doesnt have to be hot air.
After all, its probably not hard to turn a neo-Nazi into a potential Republican voter by telling him that a corporatized, authoritarian, nationalistic, militaristic party is the only thing standing between him and effete, war-losing, left-wing elites who are trying to destroy the homeland via a fifth-column of non-native minorities, college professors, homosexuals and other cultural degenerates.
Hell, Im not even mad about Scalise. Im just disappointed.
First of all, these people didnt even have the decency to be an original source of Nazism. Theyre just neo-Nazis, which is like hipster Eurotrash for racial violence. (Christ, doesnt America make anything anymore?) Sure, the neo-Nazis add a few American and novel elements to original Nazism, but they all sound like extra instruments in a cover song.
David Duke peddled all-new Holocaust denial what with the Holocaust having already happened when he was running for office, unlike in the 1930s when American Nazism was a new scene. Theres the reverence for the constitution in the American strain of neo-Nazism, which youd expect. And they want to abolish the IRS, a position with which Scalise probably agrees irrespective of whether the agency might also be used as an instrument of Jew/United Nations/Trilateral Commission control. But as for the rest of neo-Nazisms ideology, its just stale: the fifth-column thing, the hatred of unions (unless replaced by ones directed by the right sort of people), the love of full employment for male citizens and women working only in the home, the hatred for homosexuals. Maybe that was a new trip 80 years ago, but youd think they could bring something new to the conservatives marketplace of ideas already.
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If you're a politician and your chummy past with neo-Nazis resurfaces, don't worry. Ask Ron Paul
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Are Conspiracy Theories Good for Libertarianism? – Video
Posted: at 2:41 pm
Are Conspiracy Theories Good for Libertarianism?
I used to be a big conspiracy theorist, still am, but I used to be too.
By: Christopher Cantwell
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Are Conspiracy Theories Good for Libertarianism? - Video
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MSW's Top 7 Stories of 2014
Posted: at 2:41 pm
2014 was quite a year for those of us who write about the Catholic Church. Looking back at the most important stories of the year, many of them are tied in with Pope Francis but in this column, I will confine my retrospective to events in the United States. So, here are the top stories of the year, ranked in no particular order.
1) Reactions to Pope Francis continued to fascinate. The pope continued to demonstrate wide appeal to almost all Catholics in the U.S. Whatever their ideological and political particularities, people respond to this man in large part because he is so recognizably human, and not afraid to be seen as such.
What I termed last year Pope Francis Derangement Syndrome largely abated. Yes, John Zmirak denied there is any such thing as a papal magisterium, and some well-heeled Catholics tried to reduce the popes clarion calls for social justice to an appeal for personal charity. A few continued to question the legitimacy of his election. But, by and large, the derangement stopped. Sadly, some commentators and some clerics continue to try and parse the popes words, emptying them of their obvious meaning and replacing them with their own perspectives. Indeed, I think one of the things that will warrant further attention in the year ahead is the plain spoken way this pope communicates. In an age riddled with jargon and faux-expertise, when elites in politics and the academy are so far removed from the daily concerns of most people they talk like aliens or with a politically correct vacuity, the popes ability to speak from his heart in language all can understand may be one of the most counter-cultural things about him.
Which leads to another aspect of the reaction to him: The divide within the left between those most concerned about sexual issues and those most concerned about social justice issues continued to grow. Many in the first camp object to the way the pope speaks about women. I prefer his homey metaphors, even when they sound like clunkers, to any PC-approved speech. He speaks like a 78-year old Argentine because he is a 78-year old Argentine. And, the focus on his metaphors involving gender roles can too easily keep us from listening to what he is trying to say. This is related to a consistent criticism I have of the Catholic Left: They approach the teachings of the Church they dislike only with a desire to change them, rarely with the disposition to discover what God, through the Church, may be trying to tell us. All of us have experienced difficult moments or tasks from which we grew in ways we never would have otherwise, yet this knowledge is quickly forgotten by ideologues of all stripes who approach Church teachings the way a child approaches play-do. I think the left, not just the right, has to do a better job listening to what t he Holy Father has to say about humility.
2) The appointment of +Blase Cupich as the ninth Archbishop of Chicago is an enormous event in the life of the Church in this country. Here is a born leader, unafraid to be bold or to swim against the current, a brilliant mind and a thoroughly competent administrator, elevated to one of the most important dioceses in the country. Ad extra, +Cupich was one of the few bishops to have diocesan and Catholic Charities staff trained as navigators for the Affordable Care Act. Ad intra, he had one of the most robust consultations on family issues in advance of the synod. He is a dynamo. As well, if in New York, the rise of financial titans and media stars has taken some, actually a lot, of the Churchs cultural juice once embodied in the person of the Cardinal-Archbishop of that city, in Chicago, it is still the mayor and the archbishop who dominate the socio-cultural landscape. And, if the local Chicago media is any guide, +Cupich has taken the city by storm.
The appointment is significant in its own right. If the pope had called me and asked who should go to Chicago, I would have put +Cupichs name at the top of my terna. Of course, the pope did not call me, but he did consult widely and whomever he consulted came up with +Cupichs name. The pope surely knew this would probably be the most important appointment he makes in the U.S. Church and he found the right guy. I suspect it also shows the influence of Washingtons Cardinal Donald Wuerl and Bostons Cardinal Sean OMalley, both of whom have been out front of the rest of the brethren in their enthusiasm for Pope Francis and whose advice to the pope was likely taken. The fact that the pope got this right bodes well for other matters, for example, the planning of his trip to the U.S. next September. He will not let his appearances be turned into an opportunity to blast the Obama administration, which is certainly what some would have liked.
+Cupich has extensive experience in the USCCB, holding a variety of positions on different committees over the years. At times in its history, the leadership of the USCCB came almost entirely from the great Midwestern dioceses: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis and St. Paul. They were often a bulwark of collegiality against the more authoritarian cardinalatial sees in the Northeast. Look for +Cupich to reinvigorate the USCCB and help pull it back from the culture war limb it has climbed out on.
3) At the end of last year, Pope Francis removed Cardinals Raymond Burke and Justin Rigali from the Congregation of Bishops, and replaced them with Cardinal Wuerl. For a variety of reasons, most of the attention focused on the removal of Cardinal Burke, but the end of the +Rigali-era may be the most important development in the U.S. Church.
The two cardinals, especially +Rigali, embody the clerical mindset that has crippled the Church, turned it into what Pope Francis calls a self-referential Church, tone deaf at times, unwelcoming, joyless. And, together, these former archbishops of St. Louis have spread their influence far and wide throughout the U.S. Church. Bishop Robert Finn, who should have resigned long ago, is a creation of the two. Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone was a student of +Burkes and a close friend. +Rigali promoted both +Fabian Bruskewitz, who thumbed his nose at the Dallas Charter for a decade, and Bishop Thomas Olmsted, who announced the removal of the designation Catholic from a local hospital in a statement that did not once mention the Lord Jesus nor quote from the Scriptures, although the references to canon law and the USCCB ethical directives were aplenty. Bishop David Malloy was ushered into the Vatican diplomatic corps by +Rigali, as was Cardinal James Harvey. Archbishop John Nienstedt worked with +Rigali in Rome, and Bishop Robert Vasa, who also refused to comply with the Dallas Charter, and Archbishop Leonard Blair, who led the initial investigation of the LCWR, both have Cardinal Burke as their patrons. Some of the men on this list are talented. All, I am sure, are prayerful. But, all of them, along with others, have been complicit in the marginalization of the Church in our culture by adopting a defensive posture and a culture warrior approach that is the antithesis of Pope Francis approach.
4) The rise of immigration as an issue that unites the Church was the most obvious policy-oriented development in 2014. Following the example of Pope Francis visit to Lampedusa, the USCCB Committee on Migration held their spring meeting not in Washington, D.C. but in Tucson, Arizona and they started with a Mass at the border led by Cardinal Sean OMalley. The event garnered extensive and positive media coverage of the kind U.S. bishops have not gotten since before the clergy sex abuse crisis. The searing images of Cardinal Sean and Bishop Gerald Kicanas serving Holy Communion through the slats in the border fence went viral. Then, this summer, when there was a significant uptick in the number of unaccompanied minors coming across the border, the bishops responded with compassion and effectiveness. The compassion contrasted decisively with the angry protesters urging deportation. The effectiveness the Church was able to help re-locate thousands of children away from detention centers and into homes made the point yet again that the opposite of the much-derided organized religion is disorganized religion.
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2015: Stories To Keep Us Busy!
Posted: at 2:41 pm
Yesterday, I looked at what I thought were the top seven stories about the Catholic Church in the United States during 2014. Today, lets look ahead to 2015 and the stories I anticipate will be generating a lot of buzz and getting a lot of attention here at Distinctly Catholic.
1) In September, Pope Francis will be making his first ever trip to the U.S. The itinerary is still not decided, although we know he will be stopping in Philadelphia for the World Family Day celebrations. I have previously noted that the line-up of speakers for the Philly event, which spans several days, is not exactly the list I would have devised. And, the event will occur just a few weeks before the second synod on the family in Rome, so he will be speaking to the whole Church, not just the Church in the U.S. Still, in terms of emphasis, I am hopeful he will keep to his strong suit, the themes of accompaniment and reaching out to those at the margins, the Church as field hospital, and stay away from the kind of moralistic nastiness that will be on display from some of the other speakers.
It is anticipated that he will also make a visit to New York to address the United Nations: the General Assembly meets in September and given the Holy Sees long-standing support for the UN, you can bank on him making that stop. It is also likely he will come to Washington, D.C. Congress has extended him an invitation to address a Joint Session. I am still trying to decide if I think that is a good idea or a bad one: The setting is so obviously political, it might be jarring but, on the other hand, it would be great if he read them the riot act. His predecessors also came to Catholic University when they visited Washington to address Catholic educators and that would certainly, for me, be the highlight of the entire trip as it was for Benedicts trip. The then-President of the university, then-Father, now-Bishop David OConnell, got me a seat on the aisle and directed the pope to my side of that aisle as he left the room. I was able to kiss his ring and thank him for his ministry. It was nice.
It is unclear if the popes visit to the U.S. will be preceded by a visit to Mexico. If so, many of us hope that he will stop at the U.S. border and say a Mass for those who have died trying to cross that border, as he did at Lampedusa in 2013 and as a group of U.S. bishops did at Nogales, Arizona this year. If he were to make the stop, it would undoubtedly yield the emotional highlight of the entire trip and forcefully call attention to one of the most urgent humanitarian problems facing both the U.S. and Latin America. I can also think of no better way to call attention to the economic pressures many families face than to highlight the extreme pressures placed on family life by unjust immigration laws. If he does not go to the border, the bishops should recommend that the Holy Father stop somewhere in the U.S. with a substantial Latino population. That is the future of the Church, indeed, in many dioceses that future is already here. A Mass in Spanish for a largely Latino congregation would be a huge shot in the arm for all those engaged in Hispanic ministry. If the Southwest or Los Angeles is too far, Chicago is now majority-minority too.
When these papal trips are planned, there is a lot of advance consultation. It will be curious to see whom the pope and his advisors in Rome listen to in deciding what he should say and how he should say it. Given everything we know about his generous heart, I doubt he will denounce same-sex marriage as the most pressing threat to marriage today and, as some would have it, to civilization itself. I hope he will confront the spread eagle consumer capitalism of American society in at least one of his speeches, and I suspect he will, and the only question will be how strong his words are. And, if he addresses the U.S. bishops at some point, which is a staple of most such papal trips, it will be interesting to see if he is more encouraging or more censorious: As we saw in his address to the curia, the Holy Father is not shy about calling prelates to account. I would expect a mix of both admonition and encouragement.
2) The preparations for the synod is both a local and an international story. How extensive will individual bishops be in conducting their consultations? We know that Archbishop Cupich in Chicago has already asked his archdiocesan pastoral council, the archdiocesan womens council, and the presbyteral council to work together on a plan for such consultations. Will others follow suit or merely go through the motions? Will the USCCB take a break from issuing its draconian statements against Obama and hire CARA to conduct some serious surveys?
The U.S. bishops are not used to this sort of synod preparation. In Latin America, meetings of CELAM are proceeded by two or three years of consultation with the lay faithful and the clergy. Pope Francis clearly thinks the CELAM approach has worked well and wants to break its methodology to the universal Church. But, some of the brethren are not in the habit of seeking advice outside a small circle of confidants, and most of those confidants already share their opinions. The pope has asked pastors to acquire the smell of the sheep and the preparation for the synod is a specific task that requires them to do it. I hope the nuncio has a riding crop at the ready to prompt the bishops to get with the program.
3) The nomination of new bishops is always newsworthy and, in the coming year, we will find out if the appointment of Archbishop Cupich, in which the pope was personally involved, will become the norm or prove the exception. Archbishop Sheehan in Santa Fe is already past the age of 75. Next year two additional archbishops will turn 75, Archbishop Schwietz of Anchorage and Washingtons Cardinal Donald Wuerl. +Wuerl is in better shape than I am and I suspect he will be asked to stay at his post for a few extra years.
Every diocese is important, but two large dioceses also have ordinaries who will turn 75 in 2015, Rockville Center, New York and Arlington, Virginia. Arlington is a special case because its clergy, dating back to the creation of the diocese in 1974, it has been a hotbed of conservatism. At the time it was broken off from the diocese of Richmond, any priest with more liberal inclinations stuck with Richmond. Bishop Paul Loverde is a lovely man and has, at times, stood up to the more extreme craziness in the diocese. At other times, such as lending his approval to loyalty oaths for Sunday school teachers, he has caved. Given the large number of federal politicians who live in the diocese, it is imperative that +Loverdes replacement not be a bomb thrower.
How will we know if the changes Pope Francis is asking of the higher clergy are being manifested in the selection of new bishops? I would look for two things. First, if there are fewer candidates with time working in Rome on their resume and more time working in parishes, that would indicate things are moving in the right direction. Second, are new bishops being recruited from the ranks of directors of Catholic Charities and other social justice ministries or are miters still going primarily to men who served as secretaries to bishops or as seminary rectors. It is no slur against seminary rectors to point out that they engage the Church at its most self-referential. That goes with the turf. And, let me add, there are some wonderful seminary rectors who would make fine bishops. But, the mold has to be broken.
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2015: Stories To Keep Us Busy!
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Your New Year's Eve Super Sonic Binge: The Top 214 Songs of 2014
Posted: at 2:41 pm
For the people who complain rock is dead, pop is done, and there's been no good music since Nirvana or Woodstock or the death of Marvin Gaye, I present the Top 214 Songs of 2014!!!
(Because not everybody loves Spotify -- thanks Taylor Swift! -- I've embeded links to songs not on the streaming service. Click, listen and enjoy.)
1. Stay With Me, Sam Smith The song matters most. Everything else is artifice. Smith's hit reconfirms this and hits me like Tired of Being Alone, One More Try and Someone Like You. The fact that blunt-but-beautiful songwriting can still succeed in 2014 Stay With Me is up for three Grammys needs to be celebrated. If it isn't, Katy Perry will be what's left of pop.
2. Uptown Funk, Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars Tell me this doesn't equal any chart topper from James Brown's '60s, Chic's '70s or Prince's '80s ? Go on, listen again, I'll wait. See, told you so.
3. Die Pretty, Ruby Rose Fox Oh, Katy, you think that's a roar? Miss Fox howls like an animal (an animal! an animal!) over a half Motown, half Horses sweaty stomp of a song. In a city with talent for days, most nights I think she's the best thing we have: voice, lyrics, looks, style and swagger.
4. Back to the Shack, Weezer Interpreted as cheeky, Back to the Shack strikes me as an honest pledge of allegiance to rock. We belong in the rock world/There is so much left to do/If we die in obscurity, oh well/At least we raised some hell. Sometimes a rock song is just a rock song.
5 & 6. Tie Me Up and Mama Was a Teenage Rocker, Animal Talk Young bands use new wave to get dark (Interpol) or dance-y (La Roux), Animal Talk use it to rock. Like maybe only the Cars before them, the Boston four-piece see new wave (and disco) as flavors of rock. Funky, flashy, so-fun-it-makes-me-giddy Tie Me Up crashes into the freaky, climatic knockout punch of Mama Was a Teenage Rocker. The best seven minutes of the year.
7. Sheezus, Lily Allen Allen skewers the regicide the music industry forces female pop singers to engage in: Second best will never cut it for the divas/Give me that crown (expletive) I wanna be Sheezus. The perfect comeback for a songwriter whose triumphs mock celebrity culture and contain cheeky self-deprecation.
8. Take Me To Church, Hozier See Stay With Me re: the power of the song. Bonus points for worshiping at the same alter Marvin Gaye and Al Green did in '73 (read: the bedroom).
9. Break Free, Ariana Grande My jam! My justification: An obvious Max Martin production with a catchy Zedd hook, Break Free succeeds because Grande doesn't blow the song out with squeaks and squeals Mariah Carey would kill the song with affections; Britney or Katy wouldn't have the chops to elevate the song. (OK, now trash me for like pap pop.)
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Your New Year's Eve Super Sonic Binge: The Top 214 Songs of 2014
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