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Friday, February 17, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:45 PM
Does it hurt? Of course. It feels like a thousand tiny Spartans are stabbing my heart with a thousand tiny spears. Each! Each of the Spartans are holding a thousand tiny spears and stabbing my heart with them. How is that possible? I don't know. That's just how it feels. Write your own goddamn metaphors if you don't like it. *I guess it's silly to give the Amazon link when I just told you you can get it for $5 elsewhere. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:01 PM
Speaking of Slate and kids and TV, here's a Slate review of The Electric Company DVD set. In discussing whether a show like that could/would be made today, the author indicates that today's "Hollywood stars" wouldn't be willing to make the commitment of eight-hour-days of work. This ignores the fact that only two famous-at-the-time actors in The Electric Company were Bill Cosby and Rita Moreno (and, I guess, Spider-man). Morgan Freeman was in the Sidney-Poitier-is-the-only-black-actor-getting-dramatic-work phase of his career. And on the subject of Electric Company, under the category of not understanding the target audience of the DVDs (nostalgic thirty-somethings), Marvel, as an apparent price for allowing the use of Spidey in the DVDs, had an ad insert for their toy line for the toddler set. # | | Tuesday, February 14, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:11 AM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:40 AM
The reason for this work, [Frank] Miller said, was "an explosion from my gut reaction of what's happening now." He can't stand entertainers who lack the moxie of their '40s counterparts who stood up to Hitler. Holy Terror is "a reminder to people who seem to have forgotten who we're up against." The downside is that Frank Miller's Batman work of the last five years has been terrible. The upside is that he actually sounds sincere (other than the title). # | | Friday, February 10, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:19 AM
Hollywood plastic surgeon Garth Fisher of "Extreme Makeover" stands on a golf course next to a giant breast, evoking the oft-parodied chase scene in Woody Allen's "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex."Oft-parodied? The number of parodies of that scene I can think of, including this picture of Doctor Fisher, is exactly one. # | | Thursday, February 09, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:08 AM
# | | Wednesday, February 08, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:07 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:12 AM
And For Better or For Worse's Lynn Johnston sides with the rioters. Can I get a "For Worse"? (Both via Tom Spurgeon.) # | | Tuesday, February 07, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:56 PM
UPDATE: Speaking of cui bono, an article about the guy who's cornered the Gaza market on Danish flags. UPDATE 2: Buy Legos! For Freedom! Not to be confused with Mega Bloks who are relatively indifferent to the whole freedom question. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:51 AM
# | | Friday, February 03, 2006
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:36 AM
Buy Legos! For Freedom! UPDATE: From the LA Times: "We must defend freedom of expression," French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy said. "And if I had to choose, I prefer the excess of caricature over the excess of censure."The French government is now behaving with more backbone on this than ours. UPDATE 2: Volokh notes that the statements of the State Department were more pro-freedom-of-expression than the wire reports made them out to be. Click on the "Show the rest" part to see a reporter do a moral equivalence between the cartoons and the broadcast of a Protocols of the Elders of Zion miniseries on government-controlled television. UPDATE 3: Tim Cavanuagh notes there were three statements made by the State Department, two of which are "siding with the rioters". # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:20 AM
# | | Wednesday, February 01, 2006
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