If artists depend on angst and unrest to fuel their creative fire, then at least in one sense the 43rd presidency has been a blessing. Eight years is an eternity in the life of a culture, and when we look back on an era, we do it through pinholes: a movie here, a book there. What will stand out, decades from now, as the singular emblems of this moment in history? Newsweek asked its cultural critics to pick the one work in their field that they believe exemplifies what it was like to be alive in the age of George W. Bush.
Battlestar Galactica
American Idol
Jeff Koons’s Hanging Heart
The Corrections
Black Hawk Down
Cohen’s Borat
Green Day’s American Idiot
Far Away
Rick Warren's The Purpose-Driven Life
Battlestar is a decent if limited pick, and Idol a fairly inspired one, though not for the reasons given—but the exclusion of The Wire is simply criminal, not to mention Sopranos and Deadwood, and (yes) 24. For film, it might actually be The Dark Knight, or else There Will Be Blood. (Maybe Children of Men?) For books—surely the hardest category—it's probably The Road, for a few reasons. I'm too illiterate in music to even begin to answer: the best I could manage would be a half-serious suggestion of Gnarls Barkley, or else just name a Springsteen album because that's how I roll.
Via The Chutry Experiment, who points (among other things) to the unforgivable omission of viral video.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
8:55 AM
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Labels: 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, America, American Idol, Battlestar Galactica, books, Bush, Children of Men, Cormac McCarthy, Deadwood, film, Gnarls Barkley, lists, politics, Sopranos, Springsteen, television, The Road, The Wire, zeitgeist
Monday, November 24, 2008
The list of Senators whose terms expire in 2010 shows a strong playing field for Democrats to try and build on their gains in 2006 and 2008. Three in a row?
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:10 AM
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Labels: 2006, 2008, 2010, Democrats, North Carolina, politics, Richard Burr, the Senate
Monday, November 10, 2008
Howard Dean is stepping down as chairman of the DNC in triumph. Steve Benen says perennial gerrycanavan.blogspot.com favorite Claire McCaskill likely to take up the job. Sam Stein:
Regardless of who takes over, the next chair will inherit an organization far different from the one that existed four years ago. Under Dean's tenure, the DNC implemented the hotly-debated 50-state-strategy, a program designed to rebuild the party into a continental force, one in which Democrats drained the resources of Republicans while simultaneously building up younger talent. Obama's incoming chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and others were critical, believing that the policy wasted valuable resources on impossible races and needlessly forfeited otherwise winnable seats during the 2006 congressional elections. Successes in 2008, however, have largely quieted those critiques.
Indeed, four years later, it seems, Dean's vision is poised to become party orthodoxy. Dean told a Democratic operative that he is hoping to extract promises from all potential replacement candidates to preserve the 50-state-strategy. Other insiders, meanwhile, say that the next DNC chair, regardless of who it is, will build upon the model because of its tangible success.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
2:16 PM
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Labels: 2006, 2008, Claire McCaskill, Democrats, Howard Dean, politics
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Two years ago this week SurveyUSA interviewed 30,000 Americans - 600 in each state - asking them who they would vote for in 2008 if the candidates were John McCain and Barack Obama.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
2:52 PM
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Labels: 2006, Barack Obama, general election 2008, John McCain, politics, polls