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Culturology 034 - Up Late and Bored Stiff

I, like many Americans (I haven't followed this too closely, as is my promise, as always, to half-ass my interaction with anything as popular as television--though with the upcoming conversion from analogue transmission to digital, I should be losing my reception entirely in a matter of days), tuned in to most of Conan O'Brien's first week of hosting the Tonight Show. Out of curiosity, I suppose, and some loyalty to the years of my life where I was something of a Conan devotee (usual only bursts of devoutness a few months in length, correlated to a combination of TV-having and availability at the time slot in question). More loyalty to Conan the Simpsons writer, though, since the episodes that most obviously bear his mark are some of the greatest Simpsons episodes of all. Which is to say, I tuned in not necessarily hoping that it be all that funny, and mostly to see Conan sell out to old people demographics and not be nearly funny enough.

It's been okay, I guess. I've always thought the dude was a pretty good interviewer, and that seems to still be the case, and likely to hold the show together while the rest of the shit shores itself up. The only particularly disconcerting aspect to me has been Conan's habit of shouting excitingly after the crappy rock bands on his show play their crappy songs. If I was an old person, I'd never want to hear that kind of shouting.

Watching Conan, I also realized that I'd never bothered to watch Jimmy Fallon as his replacement on Late Night, so after Conan's first show I went ahead and "stuck around" to see what that shit was like. Having The Roots as his "house band," gains him some points, but Fallon is remarkably similar in my mind to Carson Daly; that is, I have no empathy with the kind of idiots and jocks or whoever that actually think the guy is funny or an appealing host. But I was watching it, figured I'd stick it out for at least the whole episode. I thought I would anyway, until Fallon got to his desk, said a special "hello" to hold-over viewers from Conan that had never seen the show before, then proceeded to pull out a six-pack of Smirnoff Ice and say that the night's show was sponsored by said beverage, then continued to have a conversation with his announcer about how good the stuff was. I realize that all television is advertising, but that's a bit much, isn't it? Turned the thing off. Disinterest has become boycott.

Really, though, I can't get myself all that worked up about talk shows.

Pete Can't Believe He Hasn't Read This Before! #3: The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, by Haruki Murakami

This book is a couple decades younger than the first couple entries of the Pete Can't Believe! books, having first appeared in English in 1997 (or maybe '96), but qualifies nonetheless because of the splash that it made almost immediately. This is another example of my predisposition away from popular things: just because the book immediately garnered all this acclaim and then more or less stayed around as a known good, that didn't mean that I should read it. Or, no, I'm being to hard on myself, I'd only really barely heard of it (I Can Believe It!), and am happy to finally have read it.

It's a mythic quest starring a hapless 30 year old who starts the book unemployed and steadily becoming estranged from his wife of several years. I'll give this as advice to any book readers out there: finding books accidentally where some piece of the protagonist's life matches yours always makes for better reading. For my own well-not-quite-thirty-really but very much jobless summer, the match was great, since the passages where the narrator reports reading a book, then taking a nap, and going to the store for a small number of groceries after that struck quite close to home.

I have some sense that there were a lot of references, or homage, or outright adaptation of older Japanese tropes and mores involved in the construction of the book, but they don't necessarily distract from the book in English read by a non-expert, since the dreamlike quality of the plot carries a lot of weight on its own (I don't have any particular desire to go into any kind of cross-cultural comparisons here, at all, with do nods to all the post-colonialists out there, but I would go far as to say that I do reckon that I, in reading this, read a different novel than someone more schooled in the roots of its mystical aspects).

The protagonist is also one of those hero types that does very little. He mostly does what other people tell him to do. That's part of his problem, I suppose. What he succeeds at doing best is clubbing a guy (maybe two) with a baseball bat. Which is actually pretty cool in its own right. But since he's kind of carried along in the plot by the various characters that are introduced and help him, it strengthens that bond between reader and action, as any reader (even in Choose Your Own Adventure books) is always carried along by the plot of what they're reading (I reckon this is why so many literary theorist's want to empower readers, since all readers are ultimately powerless to words of the text they're reading).

Or maybe I just think that under the influence of entry #2 of this reading sequence, associating If on a winter night a traveler's reader-protagonist with all other readers and protagonists. Nah... the parallel is there.

For July 6th: Sharp Teeth

For August 3rd: Michael Chabon's Gentlemen of the Road

AudioShocker Podcast #79 - Podcast Crossover! Wolverine! Free Comics!

Our first ever podcast crossover event! AudioShocker vs. Comic Book Pitt! Nick vs. Duke, DanG, and Link! Titans collide and then unite against a common enemy: the villainous Ed Piskor! Live from Phantom of the Attic Comics on Free Comic Book Day 2009... can they stop evil Ed in time?

When it all ends, Neal and Nick talk X-Men Origins: Wolverine. Straight up? Neal hated it. Nick liked it. They argue the pros and cons of the Hugh Jackman solo flick including Will.I.Am, Emma Frost, Gambit, Deadpool, and more. Then Nick delivers his report on the Death Note: L, Change the WorLd one-night-only subtitled presentation. Then pure media mayhem erupts into Nick of Time, Must Love Dogs, Darkstalkers, Free Comic Book Day 2009 comics, Collage, Carlitta Durand, The Clipse, Kanye, KRS-One, Eminem and the Punisher, and tons more.

Culturology 028 - Meta-tele-vision-ality

Well, dear readers, I must admit that I am still in the death throes of my current semester, wrestling the alligator that is the novels of George Eliot (not a dude), hoping to pry its jaws open and pull out a twenty page paper which, more or less, affects a comparison of the narrators of her to major novels (Middlemarch and Daniel Deronda--Middlemarch, incidentally, is a pretty incredible book; I realize that the only thing that generally gets read here on audioshocker is comics, but its not the worst thing ever to read a Victorian novel now and then). That being said, with my culturological obligations in mind, I did manage to just watch a little bit of television here on the internet, in order to generate a criticism thereof. Now, I don't watch a whole hell of a lot of television, so I may be somewhat off in what I think, but, here's what I think of the first episode of Sit Down, Shut Up, which I just finished watching, like, ten minutes ago.

The reason that this would get me out there into the internet in order to watch this is pretty clear--as an Arrested Development enthusiast (it's not my favorite show ever, but I like it a lot, and appreciate the fact that when I make reference to it in conversation, way more people notice the reference then when I--preferably--reference, say, Mr. Show), I was excited to see that Mitchell Hurwitz was doing another show. Pretty standard reaction, I think. Plus some of the usual voice talents that seem worth listening to, with some obvious overlap with AD in Will Arnett, Jason Bateman, and Henry Winkler. The presence of Tom Kenny (of Mr. Show and Spongebob fame) as a voice talent also scores points.

The show itself, though, was pretty much a disappointment. It wasn't a struggle to watch, for its 20 minutes, but there wasn't much about it that struck me as "good." They seem to be working some kind of meta-show element in there, with various characters having "catchphrases," and there being occasional winks to the camera, and breakings of the fourth wall, etcetera, but given the kind of slackerly vibe the whole show gives off, its disconcerting to me that that element may well turn out to be never more than completely half-assed. Which is too bad, since "meta-" shit is super trendy these days, so it just comes off as so much contract-renewal pandering. Which is fine, shit's gotta pander, I realize that, but hear me out: Continue reading 'Culturology 028 - Meta-tele-vision-ality'

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AudioShocker Podcast #31 - Cartoon Comics Canasta

Neal takes the week off as we talk about The Simpsons season 12, Spectacular Spider-Man cartoon, firing squads, ramen, canasta, Leona Lewis, Last Defenders #2, Thunderbolts #120, Secret Invasion Fantastic Four #1, Guardians of the Galaxy #1, X-Men Legacy #211, T'Challa, Black Panther movie, Avatar, and some more stuff.

Free Comic Book Day 2008 - My National, Religious, and Cultural Holiday

Free Comic Book Day 2008 has arrived. Below you will find a list of the books I'm hoping to snag this May 3rd at my local comics shop (Phantom of the Attic Comics in Oakland, Pittsburgh, PA, USA). This FCBD reading list is in order of awesome to totally awesome (i.e. best for last).

Note how there are no selections from DC Comics, seeing as how they intend to provide two books that have already been published. LAME! You can click on the thumbnail image of the comic cover to download free preview pages (if available).

Transformers Animated from IDW Publishing. I'm not a huge Transformers fan, let alone really a fan at all. But this is a nice cover image and interesting concept -- an adaptation of the first episode of the new Transformers TV relaunch. Consider my curiosity piqued.
X-Men from Marvel Comics. I know this should probably be higher on my list, but I always get a bit burned by Marvel's primary FCBD offering -- they rarely deliver. It looks like Marvel is trying something out it did last year in Spider-Man: Swing Shift. This X-Men comic will be the launch point of the new X-Men status quo that hasn't even debuted yet in the regular series. Worth checking out.
Arcana Studio Presents from Arcana Studios. I'm going strictly off the strength of the solicitation here. The book has four different samples in it. Not normally how I like to roll, but they each have an interesting hook to them. I'd like to see more and this is free!
Cartoon-Apalooza from Ape Entertainment. Five original short stories including three first appearances of new creative properties. The cover art looks great and the concepts all sound very fun. What's not to like?
Maintenance from Oni Press. I heard an interview with the Maintenance creators a few months back on Around Comics. Basically, these two guys are the janitors at an evil corporation run by mad scientists (think AIM from Marvel). Like my other picks, this has a strong cover and a strong solicitation.
Bongo Comics Free-For-All! From Bongo Comics. The Simpsons and Futurama comics crammed into a pocket-sized digest. The preview pages look fun and I tend to like to pick up at least a couple things from Bongo Comics a year. Why not make sure that one of those things costs me $0.00?
Marvel Adventures from Marvel Comics. Astute ComicShocker readers already know that I enjoy me some Marvel Adventures comics (particularly Avengers and Hulk). Here we've got Hulk, Spidey, and Iron Man (hey, doesn't he have a HUGE movie out this weekend?) all in one. Last year we got the first appearance of Marvel Adventures Hulk and it was sweet. The free Marvel Adventures Iron Man ashcan from Halloween 2007 was awesome too. Nuff said.
Comics Go Hollywood from TwoMorrows Publishing. Last year's offering from TwoMorrows simply blew my mind. It got me hooked on Write Now! Magazine. It was also jam-packed with content. It took me like three days of riding the bus to-and-from work to read the whole thing. That's what I call FCBD quality!