Invest in Media
- Posted by: kugelgirl
- on April 9, 2008 at 12:03 am
Kugelgirl is a Media & Special Events living in Santa Barbara.
What are they going to do take these kids out to those bears holding scientists hostage? The thing about enforcing regulations against what started as an underground culture, is that they will just get pushed further underground. It’s not like the Emo kids will organize and fight for rights, that is too conventional and mainstream. They’ll rock out at home behind closed doors with eyeliner and dark nails, like my friends and I did back in Catholic school (which was a little like a former Communist regime itself).
I’m not sure how biodegradeable saran wrap or peeps are, but this was funny. You have to draw the line somewhere, and I appreciate that you guys are into doing good without taking youselves too seriously. Maybe the Provications icon guy above should be winking, to note satire. As I commented on The New Yorker issue, I think you need to give a disclaimer before venturing into satire.
Does Chrisette Michele’s record count? She made VH1 artist of the month a while back (that is a best of list) but since then she seems to have fallen off the face of the Earth. I don’t hear any of her songs on the radio, even internet radio. Her album “I Am” is awesome, soulful and inspiring. I hope she has a great long career.
Perhaps you could unravel the tape and trick a guard into lending you a pencil to rewind it? I agree that if you had enough time on your hands you could figure out a way to make a cassette into an intimidating weapon. McGeyvor could probably come up with something right off the bat.
I’m a bigger fan of The Economist than The New Yorker (of course you guys are my favorite though) and I think The New Yorker should have followed their style on this cover. If they wanted to bombard people from the newsstands with all these rascist images in the name of satire, they should have expained the context of the images with a headline of “How Rove Would Paint the Obamas” or something similar.
I am sure the editorial team of the New Yorker only wished to make an elitist statement as opposed to a racist one, all in the name of stirring up controversy and drumming up much interest in their magazine. (Note to GOOD, please don’t ever do this! You can’t, you have to stay “good” remember. If you do anything similar make sure you have a headline explaining the context of your controversial cover image to save your ass.)
What I found even more offensive than the actual cover was the attude taken by The New Yorker that followed, this sense that if you’re offended you don’t get the joke because you’re not as smart as us here at The New Yorker. I am smart and well educated and I have high enough self esteem to admit that I don’t always “get” the vague humor of the cartoons in The New Yorker, but this one I got and simply felt was in terrible taste, with the punch line fumbled.
I would find it hard to believe they could increase revenue or circulation with this event. Sure it gets people talking, and doing satire of Obama is trickier than satire of a white male candidate since you have to be careful with how stereotypical the cartoons look, but who is saying “Yes, this is my kind of magazine” after this issue?
This is a great story about a very inspirational man. At our Casa de la Raza Center we have a long history of standing up for the rights of Latino workers and environmentalism at the same time. We have a “Green Gardener” program, which teaches the techniques of green gardeing and makes the services of the gardeners who take the classes more marketable. Another program my friend started there is a self-sustaining bike repair center at for people who use it as their main source of transportation. That program is really thriving. Our center is in the industrial area of town and the environmental issues there have a big impact on the health of the people who live and work here, so I really appreciate the work of people like Jones, and groups like GOOD who promote what he and the Ella Baker Center are doing. Thanks guy!
I’m curious how much this project stems from genuine curiosity at what we’ll send in, and how much of it is a creative block on the GOOD staff’s behalf. If it’s mostly the latter I applaud you on your positive marketing of project idea outsourcing.
I really see your point, and if Obama does lose I will definately use your line of reasoning to get through the next administration. However I remember thinking similarly about the 2004 election, and since then the Bush administratin has done pretty much everything it could to destroy the Republican Party, icluding hiking up the tax burden and increasing government size, and the presidential race is a dead heat. However, if Obama wins and improvements to our way of life are modest at best, then if he loses in 2012, then in 2016 Democrats can steal from the Republican handbook and take credit for the good times under someone elses administration. Rove had Repupublicans stealing credit for the economic growth of the mid and late 90’s and giving it to Reaganomics. Whatever a president Obama puts in motion during these troubled times can get credited down the line with setting things in motion for an eventual upswing.
What are they going to do take these kids out to those bears holding scientists hostage? The thing about enforcing regulations against what started as an underground culture, is that they will just get pushed further underground. It’s not like the Emo kids will organize and fight for rights, that is too conventional and mainstream. They’ll rock out at home behind closed doors with eyeliner and dark nails, like my friends and I did back in Catholic school (which was a little like a former Communist regime itself).
I’m not sure how biodegradeable saran wrap or peeps are, but this was funny. You have to draw the line somewhere, and I appreciate that you guys are into doing good without taking youselves too seriously. Maybe the Provications icon guy above should be winking, to note satire. As I commented on The New Yorker issue, I think you need to give a disclaimer before venturing into satire.
Does Chrisette Michele’s record count? She made VH1 artist of the month a while back (that is a best of list) but since then she seems to have fallen off the face of the Earth. I don’t hear any of her songs on the radio, even internet radio. Her album “I Am” is awesome, soulful and inspiring. I hope she has a great long career.
Perhaps you could unravel the tape and trick a guard into lending you a pencil to rewind it? I agree that if you had enough time on your hands you could figure out a way to make a cassette into an intimidating weapon. McGeyvor could probably come up with something right off the bat.
I’m a bigger fan of The Economist than The New Yorker (of course you guys are my favorite though) and I think The New Yorker should have followed their style on this cover. If they wanted to bombard people from the newsstands with all these rascist images in the name of satire, they should have expained the context of the images with a headline of “How Rove Would Paint the Obamas” or something similar.
I am sure the editorial team of the New Yorker only wished to make an elitist statement as opposed to a racist one, all in the name of stirring up controversy and drumming up much interest in their magazine. (Note to GOOD, please don’t ever do this! You can’t, you have to stay “good” remember. If you do anything similar make sure you have a headline explaining the context of your controversial cover image to save your ass.)
What I found even more offensive than the actual cover was the attude taken by The New Yorker that followed, this sense that if you’re offended you don’t get the joke because you’re not as smart as us here at The New Yorker. I am smart and well educated and I have high enough self esteem to admit that I don’t always “get” the vague humor of the cartoons in The New Yorker, but this one I got and simply felt was in terrible taste, with the punch line fumbled.
I would find it hard to believe they could increase revenue or circulation with this event. Sure it gets people talking, and doing satire of Obama is trickier than satire of a white male candidate since you have to be careful with how stereotypical the cartoons look, but who is saying “Yes, this is my kind of magazine” after this issue?
This is a great story about a very inspirational man. At our Casa de la Raza Center we have a long history of standing up for the rights of Latino workers and environmentalism at the same time. We have a “Green Gardener” program, which teaches the techniques of green gardeing and makes the services of the gardeners who take the classes more marketable. Another program my friend started there is a self-sustaining bike repair center at for people who use it as their main source of transportation. That program is really thriving. Our center is in the industrial area of town and the environmental issues there have a big impact on the health of the people who live and work here, so I really appreciate the work of people like Jones, and groups like GOOD who promote what he and the Ella Baker Center are doing. Thanks guy!
I’m curious how much this project stems from genuine curiosity at what we’ll send in, and how much of it is a creative block on the GOOD staff’s behalf. If it’s mostly the latter I applaud you on your positive marketing of project idea outsourcing.
I really see your point, and if Obama does lose I will definately use your line of reasoning to get through the next administration. However I remember thinking similarly about the 2004 election, and since then the Bush administratin has done pretty much everything it could to destroy the Republican Party, icluding hiking up the tax burden and increasing government size, and the presidential race is a dead heat. However, if Obama wins and improvements to our way of life are modest at best, then if he loses in 2012, then in 2016 Democrats can steal from the Republican handbook and take credit for the good times under someone elses administration. Rove had Repupublicans stealing credit for the economic growth of the mid and late 90’s and giving it to Reaganomics. Whatever a president Obama puts in motion during these troubled times can get credited down the line with setting things in motion for an eventual upswing.