Monthly Archive for June, 2010Page 3 of 4

Culturology #68 - Oh, the Book Club is So On

The first selection for the 2010 Culturology I Know What You Bookclubbed Last Summer Bookclub has been made: China Mieville's The City & The City. So run out to your local independent bookseller and hop on board the CIKWYBLSB train! The City & The City, though I haven't started reading it, is a work of speculative fiction, and a police procedural. Online reviews, just glossed by me, like to compare it to Kafka & Dick (that's Philip K. Dick, who you might recall from 2009's Summer of Booklove Bookclub). Perfect summer reading! I'll look to write it up shortly after the solstice, so let's shoot to have it read by then.

And we (I) hear in Culturology's Miami Bureau (Culturology's only bureau) should also have some other literary treats in store for you later this month as well, so it should prove to be a most not heinous summer.

But what to blog about in the meantime. It's been a lousy spring for culture. I've mostly been wrapped up between work, teaching an undergraduate creative writing class, and plotting out the upcoming (only a month and a half away!) Time Log web comic with Nick (which, by the way, is going to be awesome, if I do say so myself). I think co-writing a comic gives me some decent street cred with my students, though I'm mostly trying to teach them about the wonders of poetry these days. Why? Because you know what many of my students seem to really like? Manga. Back when I was at Carnegie Mellon, I thought it was just a nerd-college thing that people would, like, like manga. But apparently not. Even at a giant public university in South Florida with, by my count, very few nerds, manga reigns supreme.

Which is not to make any judgment on manga one way or the other. As a matter of fact, the only manga I've ever read was the complete Akira (while at CMU, as a matter of fact). And I thought it was great. I also recall, a couple of years ago now, as Nick and I were still in the process of making Time Log happen, Nick mentioning that manga was, like, really popular, and that the easiest way to get TL made would be to make it a manga (which, as you now know, didn't happen). But now my students know that 17th-19th century British poetry is way cooler than comics!

There being some compulsion which I'm missing, to try and make poetry new and vital for my students, and use even vaguely contemporary examples. But my general opinion is that any poem worth its salt makes itself new and vital again and again across time. Of course, explaining this notion to modern students isn't easy, since it seems pretty arbitrary to them why one poem and not another would be chosen. And that's actually a really valid complaint, since who cares what a bunch of old bearded white men decide what makes for good poetry? Except that canonization is an inevitable process--and one could point this out with manga, or comics in general as well. As I've stated plenty of times before, some cultural things become recognized as being good because they are good. Or because they're good for good reasons. And it's a human enterprise; we've got to take someone's word for it. It's just a matter of not taking it for granted when we do partake of canonical pieces of the culture, and be sure to actively engage it and be able to decide for ourselves if it's worth passing on in our own personal canon of recommendations.

And so, yes, I would recommend both Akira and The Prelude. And now I command you to read The City & The City!

Blanka vs. Charlie on Hyper Combo Wallpaper!

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Next week: kicks vs. sticks on Hyper Combo Wallpaper!

Super Haters #49a - What the @#$%?, pt 3

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New to Super Haters? Start with #1 or Visit SuperHaters.com

This installment also has a special variant edition!!! To read "What the @#$%?, pt 4," check out Super Haters #49b on Drunk Duck.

Click here to visit the AudioShocker Store!

A Podcast with Ross and Nick #52 - It Wasn't a Very Good Year

ONE YEAR!!!!!!! Cloudy with a Chance of... Ross being a hater. He didn't like-a da Meatballs. Shadoweyes! Wet Moon! Daybreakers! Sleepwalker! Marrow issue of Weapon X. Nick before and after the Weapon X program. Comics Ross and Nick are reading (or have read). And at the end, Ross reveals that he hates... Jim Rugg!!!

AudioShocker Podcast #134 - Your Burrito's Gonna Suck

A podcast so nice, we recorded it twice! Big Sam's Funky Nation, the new Copacetic Comics, Taco Bell viral video, Justique (saw) did not see Miley's new video, Khan's nipples, the Book of Fernando Chapter 7 Verse 2, Miley Cyrus is sooo gross that..., Neal's new internship, and is Olivia Munn exploiting her fans?

Figment.com Private Beta - Signup Now!

Yallz may or may not know, but for the past several months I have been interning at Figment.com. We are getting ready to launch our private beta soon and I want to invite you all to sign up.

But wait, I haven't told you what Figment is yet! Well Ok, here is the deal: Figment is an online reading and writing community focusing on young-adult literature. Short stories, poetry, novels, maybe even essays and graphic fiction in the future -- the possibilities are endless. More specifically though, we want to engage mobile users and break away from coffee shop laptop curse. Why not read a novel on your phone or write a haiku on the bus home from school? We want you to be able to participate wherever you are and with whatever you have. Figment is about high availability, a wide selection, and user participation. Figment was inspired by Japan's cell-phone novel culture, and an article published in the New Yorker by our co-founder Dana Goodyear.

We see this as a great way to connect teens to each other and their favorite authors. I really hope you will all sign up and write yourselves in.

Project Basement - Superman by Marcel Walker

Annnndddd... we're back! So last week we had an awesome Princess Diana of Themyscira by Shawn Atkins, and this week we have a killer classic Kal-El by M.L.Walker a.k.a. Marcel.

Superman by Marcel Walker

Superman by Marcel Walker

In Marcel's own words:

Completed in 12 minutes and some-odd seconds. I even drew it in a notebook, just to maintain the spirit of this event.

I briefly (BRIEFLY) considered drawing someone other than Superman... but realized that would just be a sham. I also realized while I was drawing my own All-Star-Ultimate Superman that my version is composed of equal parts Curt Swan, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Christopher Reeve, and Fleischer Studios cartoons. (And you know, even a little Frank Quitely, even if just in my mind.)

Now go become a fan of Marcel's M.L.Walker's HERO CORP. on Facebook.

Be back next Sunday for a bangin' Banshee by... me!

Click here to visit the AudioShocker Store!

Back Issue Binge #2 - Superteam Dynamics

We're baaaack...

YOUR HOSTS: Seth Fronzoli, Shawn Atkins, and Nick Marino

1. FIRST COMIC: Shawn waxes nostalgic
2. CONVERSATION, PT 1: Superteam Dynamics
3. OBSCURE CHARACTER OF THE WEEK: Random
4. CONVERSATION, PT 2: More Superteams!
5. CHARACTER RESURGENCE: Bucky

Culturology #67 - The Haplonomicon

So I almost started the I Know What You Bookclubbed Last Summer Bookclub this week, but I think I'm gonna let it slide until it's actually summer, so not for a couple more weeks. Why? Because for a minute there, I thought I had my book picked out: Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon, but then when I went to actually acquire a copy (that is, take my Dad's copy from his house while I was home for Memorial Day weekend) I realized that the paperback is obscenely thick (1168 pages (I didn't actually check the page count while holding the thing; I just looked that up on the Internet)). Does this make me a much shallower reader than I generally claim to be?

The aphorism generally goes "don't judge a book by its cover," but it's not so much the cover that I'm judging it by, but all that there between--and not the actually words, but just their volume. The cover seems fine, and I, like many folks who were fans of the Evil Dead; movies (especially Army of Darkness, I'm a huge fan of the the "nomicon" suffix. In fact, while I'm still a resident of North Miami (affectionately called "NoMi" by some (or at least by the free shuttle bus that the city offers)), I should probably host some kind of convention, so as to call it the "NoMicon." It'll be all about North Miami: our museum of contemporary art, our library, our night life. Pretty simple. Simple enough, maybe, to call it the Haplonomicon, or "Simply North Miami."

Hopefully I won't be so busy planning the convention to not also start up the IKWYBLSB as well. So I'm still taking recommendations for what to read. Otherwise it's gonna be something like Thoreau's Walden, which I've been meaning to read (technically re-read, maybe, insofar as I think I read some of it for English class back in 11th grade (though, if memory serves me correctly, I was so bored by it that I couldn't even get through the Cliff's Notes of it)). But Thoreau's been in the air recently, at least in my (small) social circles. Seems like a thing worth doing. One of my older brother's just re-read it, and he claims that Thoreau often displays a very pleasant wit in his writing, that was certainly lost on my too-bored-for-crib-notes 16-year-old self.

And, all joking aside, I actually do find myself very pro-bookclub, in general. Maybe it comes from having taken so many literature classes, where I've gotten used to reading and discussing literature with a group of people. And bookclubs, at least ones with folks you're interested in dealing with, can take the best parts of those academic discussions and free them from the bullshit that soaks most academic discourse to the point of no longer being particularly pleasurable. I surprise myself sometimes.

Karin vs. Juni on Hyper Combo Wallpaper!

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Next week: Jimmy vs. Chuck on Hyper Combo Wallpaper!