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About alexandra_m

Alexandra_m is a media maven living in Brooklyn, NY.

dispatching from greenpoint, brooklyn.

alexandra_m’s website:
http://www.alexmarvar.com


  • Member since: 2008
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On 2009-05-06 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Borborygmi: GOOD’s New Food Column

On 2009-05-06 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Swine Flu: We Went a Little Crazy But We Didn’t Die

On 2008-10-10 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

See It While You Can

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on October 10, 2008 at 8:10 pm

See It While You Can

A Photo Gallery from Hasankeyf, Turkey

The Southeastern Anatolian Project (GAP), Turkey’s ambitious, 12-phase hydropower initiative, has been in the works since the late 1960s. Its completion will, its planners hope, provide Turkey with the energy and irrigation to join the “developed world.” But the Ilisu Dam, a critical component of GAP, will turn the ancient city of Hasankeyf—home to archaeological digs and ethnic minorities—into a lake. See it while you can.

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  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment , Politics
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On 2008-10-06 alexandra_m posted
  • 3

Can Provocative Photos of TB Sufferers Open Washington’s Wallet?

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on October 6, 2008 at 8:30 pm

Can Provocative Photos of TB Sufferers Open Washington’s Wallet?

As we mentioned in Friday’s “This Week in GOOD,” 50 cities across all seven continents debuted James Nachtwey’s photographs depicting the suffering brought on by extreme drug-resistant tuberculosis. We stopped by the New York event where a panel of TB experts and TED curator Chris Anderson outlined the challenges presented by the epidemic, which, according to a recent Time article, affects half a million people, mostly in developing countries. 

Nachtwey (pictured, right, with Paul Simon) then explained his wish…

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  • Filed under: Blog : GOOD Blog
  • Categories: Design , Politics
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On 2008-09-28 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Arrested Development

On 2008-09-25 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

Village of the Dammed

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 25, 2008 at 10:23 pm

Village of the Dammed

Part 6 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam.

Our first glimpse of Hasankeyf was from across the Tigris. Through the dusty air, a colorful town is gouged into the steep topography of the riverbank. The mosque’s minaret towers over a cluster of houses and a few shops, and above that is a cliff face punctured with gaping caves and speckled with the crumbling remains of an ancient…

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  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment , Politics
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On 2008-09-23 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

Dispatch from Batman

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 23, 2008 at 10:05 pm

Dispatch from Batman

Part 5 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam. On the way to Hasankeyf, my companions and I stopped at Hotel Gap (named, actually, for GAP) in the industrial Kurdish city of Batman—a city that will soon be on the fringe of the new Ilisu reservoir... Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment
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On 2008-09-19 alexandra_m posted
  • 0
  • 1

Culture Clash

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 19, 2008 at 6:06 pm

Culture Clash

 Part 4 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam. Before heading to Hasankeyf, the focus of the Ilisu Dam controversy, my traveling companions and I visited the small shiite village of Örtülü, in eastern Turkey, on the southwest side of Mount.. Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Politics
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On 2008-09-19 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Church of England to Darwin: Sorry About that Thing 200 Years Ago

On September 18, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Remembering David Foster Wallace

  • and said:

More outstanding wisdom from DFW: overcoming the excruciating frustration of everyday tribulations like grocery shopping with a little dose of metered empathy and self awareness, and other worthwhile things, at Kenyon College’s commencement in 2005.

1 2 3 ... 17
On 2008-10-10 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

See It While You Can

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on October 10, 2008 at 8:10 pm

See It While You Can

A Photo Gallery from Hasankeyf, Turkey

The Southeastern Anatolian Project (GAP), Turkey’s ambitious, 12-phase hydropower initiative, has been in the works since the late 1960s. Its completion will, its planners hope, provide Turkey with the energy and irrigation to join the “developed world.” But the Ilisu Dam, a critical component of GAP, will turn the ancient city of Hasankeyf—home to archaeological digs and ethnic minorities—into a lake. See it while you can.

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment , Politics
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On 2008-10-06 alexandra_m posted
  • 3

Can Provocative Photos of TB Sufferers Open Washington’s Wallet?

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on October 6, 2008 at 8:30 pm

Can Provocative Photos of TB Sufferers Open Washington’s Wallet?

As we mentioned in Friday’s “This Week in GOOD,” 50 cities across all seven continents debuted James Nachtwey’s photographs depicting the suffering brought on by extreme drug-resistant tuberculosis. We stopped by the New York event where a panel of TB experts and TED curator Chris Anderson outlined the challenges presented by the epidemic, which, according to a recent Time article, affects half a million people, mostly in developing countries. 

Nachtwey (pictured, right, with Paul Simon) then explained his wish…

Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : GOOD Blog
  • Categories: Design , Politics
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On 2008-09-25 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

Village of the Dammed

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 25, 2008 at 10:23 pm

Village of the Dammed

Part 6 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam.

Our first glimpse of Hasankeyf was from across the Tigris. Through the dusty air, a colorful town is gouged into the steep topography of the riverbank. The mosque’s minaret towers over a cluster of houses and a few shops, and above that is a cliff face punctured with gaping caves and speckled with the crumbling remains of an ancient…

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  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment , Politics
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On 2008-09-23 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

Dispatch from Batman

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 23, 2008 at 10:05 pm

Dispatch from Batman

Part 5 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam. On the way to Hasankeyf, my companions and I stopped at Hotel Gap (named, actually, for GAP) in the industrial Kurdish city of Batman—a city that will soon be on the fringe of the new Ilisu reservoir... Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment
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On 2008-09-19 alexandra_m posted
  • 0
  • 1

Culture Clash

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 19, 2008 at 6:06 pm

Culture Clash

 Part 4 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam. Before heading to Hasankeyf, the focus of the Ilisu Dam controversy, my traveling companions and I visited the small shiite village of Örtülü, in eastern Turkey, on the southwest side of Mount.. Read & Discuss
  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Politics
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On 2008-09-18 alexandra_m posted
  • 1

Everything Is Not Consistently Illuminated

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 18, 2008 at 4:38 pm

Everything Is Not Consistently Illuminated

Part 3 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam.

Very suddenly, it’s pitch dark in Doğubeyazit.

Power outages in hotels (and entire towns, for that matter) are a relatively common occurence in Turkey, not for lack of energy, but for lack of infrastructure. This is when the wise old saying “don’t try to run before you can walk” (or something like that) comes to mind, though it sort of…

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  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment
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On 2008-09-16 alexandra_m posted
  • 0

Bridging the GAP

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 16, 2008 at 2:48 pm

Bridging the GAP

Part 2 in “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam.

Self-defined as a “rather ambitious” project, Turkey’s 12-phase energy initiative, called GAP, covers approximately 10% of the total surface area of the country and affects around 10% of the population, or about 6.6 million people. Over much of the surface area affected by GAP, farmland is being submerged and farmers displaced. But, according to the project’s rationale, the resulting decrease…

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  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment , Politics
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On 2008-09-15 alexandra_m posted
  • 2
  • 1

Ilisu: Making Waves

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 15, 2008 at 4:44 pm

Ilisu: Making Waves

Part 1 of “Village of the Dammed,” a blog mini-series from Turkey, on the country’s controversial Ilisu Dam.

Hasankeyf is a millenia-old city, home to almost every powerful civilization in Mesopotamia’s archaeological record from the Western Roman Empire forward. It has been continuously inhabited until just the past two years. Now it sits in purgatory waiting for its own Great Flood.

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  • Filed under: Blog : Village of the Dammed
  • Categories: Environment , Politics
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On 2008-09-01 alexandra_m posted
  • 0
  • 1

Strange Fruit

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 1, 2008 at 5:08 am

Strange Fruit

Last Wednesday was Spain’s over-ripe tomato food-fight festival, Tomatino. Sad, you missed it, but you can still look at photos, which are somewhere between slapstick and cultural phenomemon.

In the meantime, plan ahead, and maybe you can catch a different but equally fascinating and incredibly bizarre festival—for example, El Colacho, the baby-jumping festival, where people (can you guess?) jump over babies. Or Up Helly-Aa, which revolves around annually incinerating a 32-foot Viking longship replica. Or the…

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On 2008-09-01 alexandra_m posted
  • 1

Holden On

  • Posted by: Alexandra Marvar
  • on September 1, 2008 at 4:56 am

Holden On

Anne Trubek, english professor at Oberlin College, fielded questions about Catcher in the Rye on NPR this weekend. She defended her suggestion in the current issue of GOOD to update the country’s standard required reading list and dethrone Catcher from its position as the quintessential adolescent angst and alienation novel.

While it’s a classic, sure, Trubek points out that a novel about an upper-middle class white brat at prep school no longer represents the universal voice of American teens.…

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1 2 3 ... 13
On September 18, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Remembering David Foster Wallace

  • and said:

More outstanding wisdom from DFW: overcoming the excruciating frustration of everyday tribulations like grocery shopping with a little dose of metered empathy and self awareness, and other worthwhile things, at Kenyon College’s commencement in 2005.

On August 28, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Lame McCain The Same

  • and said:

“Does This Look Like Change To You?”…

Pretty excellent billboard going up in Minneapolis, courtesy of the DNC: Too bad this image couldn’t just be the slogan. It says it all.

On August 13, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

The Death Of The American Mall

  • and said:

Aaaaand if this kind of thing really thrills you, you’ll appreciate [url="http://deadmalls.com/"]this web site[/url] dedicated entirely to dead malls.

Thanks JBK, recreational mall scholar

On August 6, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Hamlet, Facebook News Feed Edition

  • and said:

Marvelous. And hilarious. And for more cyber-experimental Shakespeare, see the brilliant Amy Shearn’s “The Most Excellent :) and Lamentable :( Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, Told Entirely in Emoticons.

On July 24, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Overlooked Records Of 2008

  • and said:

AND AND! Bon Iver’s “Skinny Love.” Stephen Thompson from NPR’s Morning Edition said it best at the sxsw showcase—it’s the quintessential heartbreak album, and “even if you’re not breaking up with anyone, it creates a little break-up in your soul for you to mourn.”

On the more upbeat side, Bodies Of Water’s new album.

Currently listening to Spiritualized “Songs in A&E” which just came out. Enjoying it thoroughly…

On July 24, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Overlooked Records Of 2008

  • and said:

I totally agree with the inclusion of Shearwater on this list; that album is fantastic.

On July 16, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

No Lights! No Cameras! Radiohead!

  • and said:

Ha. I feel like they implemented this uber-advanced technology to hearken back to an eerily primitive effect. It’s reminiscent of low-fi video and a linux screen… In a good way.

Re: Worthwhile Radiohead videos, for anyone who missed their MTV collaboration to address child labor, see here:

On July 14, 2008 alexandra_m Discussed

Does The New Yorker Cover Offend You, Yeah?

  • and said:

Important point to keep in mind: this cover is way more about the American people than it is about the candidate or his wife.

Blitt told The Huffington Post, “It seemed to me that depicting the concept would show it as the fear-mongering ridiculousness that it is.” Right. I think it does. I totally get the joke. And I’d like to assume that most subscribers to the New Yorker get it as well. But we have to know that, with the vast majority of non-New Yorker-subscribing America, it’s a crap shoot. And a lot of people will NOT get it.

I’m all for smart satire but I hope it doesn’t do more harm than good.

On 2009-05-06 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Borborygmi: GOOD’s New Food Column

On 2009-05-06 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Swine Flu: We Went a Little Crazy But We Didn’t Die

On 2008-09-28 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Arrested Development

On 2008-09-19 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Church of England to Darwin: Sorry About that Thing 200 Years Ago

On 2008-09-17 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Banditry Is Not Dead

On 2008-08-26 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Choose GOOD Video Spot By Tim And Khushboo

On 2008-08-19 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Wanderlust

On 2008-08-12 alexandra_m GOODmarked

The Death Of The American Mall

On 2008-08-08 alexandra_m GOODmarked

Hamlet, Facebook News Feed Edition

On 2008-08-08 alexandra_m GOODmarked

1 2 3
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