Tag Archives: The Wire

Sunday Scraps 67

1. TELEVISION: Someone took the time to make a Lego-animated recap of The Wire. It’s disconcertinly accurate, down to McNulty’s boozing and Lester’s dollhouses (via The Atlantic Wire).

2. NAMES: File this under things “Things I Worry About A Lot.” NPR investigates what happens when hyphen-girl meets hyphen boy and they try to name their offspring.

3. CRIME: Great, complex New York Times Magazine essay on the fate of Greg Ousley, who killed his parents at age fourteen, was tried as an adult, and is now a “model” prisoner.

4. BOOKS: Do you like books? Do you like the history of books? How about the history of the deckle edge (that rough, uneven way that some printers style book pages)? Then this piece from The Millions is for you.

5. BEAUTY: Just a little reminder that we could all be supermodels if we had the resources, and cheekbones. Or, at bare minimum, supermodels are really just very tall normal people when you take off the make-up.

6. TECH: TimesCast interviews Caterina Fake, co-founder of Flickr, about her new project, Pinwheel.

Related Post: Sunday 66: Library propaganda, Nancy Pelosi, dying languages, etc.

Related Post: Sunday 65: Nicki Minaj, Margaret Atwood on Twitter, lady scientists.

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Filed under Art, Body Image, Books, Hollywood, Media, Really Good Writing by Other People

Sunday Scraps 50

1. LAW: The New Yorker has a fascinating piece on the true story behind the Lawrence vs. Texas case. Who was Lawrence, and who was the other guy, and what was actually going on? Hint: It’s not what you think.

2. TELEVISION: In the midst of 8 gazillion March Madness style tournements, Grantland is running one pitting characters from The Wire against one another. My money’s on Obama’s #1 seed.

3. POLITICS: Alternet has helpfully curated a list of the 11 dumbest things Republicans have said about women (recently).

4. DATING: xkcd tackles pick-up culture and hits the nail on the head. Gentlemen, we know what you’re up to.

5. LANGUAGE: From Buzzfeed, a chart tracking the usage of the word “slut” in recent years.

6. WORLD: Does four years with an American president feel like a long time? The Economist compares the average tenure of our leaders to the rest of the world.

Related Post: Last Sunday, we had a Lena Dunham interview, 1938 dating advice and 6 houses in Chicago.

Related Post: Two Sundays ago, Zilla marches, feminist pornographers, and Jonathan Lethem on copyright.

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Filed under Gender, Hollywood, Media, Politics, Really Good Writing by Other People

Game of Thrones vs. The Wire

I’m halfway through Book 2 of the Game of Thrones series (now on HBO for those allergic to words), and I’m finding myself as addicted to the Seven Kingdoms as I’ve ever been to a fictional world (and that includes Hogwarts). They are sprawling and epic and complicated and emotional and fascinating and… do you see how I just keep adding adjectives?

Arya Stark, Daenerys, Queen Cersei

The thing I like about them the most, of course, is George R.R. Martin’s approach to gender. I’m about to attempt a long-shot of a comparison, so bear with me and I’m hoping it will all make sense in the end. Here it goes:

I love The Wire for a million reasons, but that show was a virtual wasteland for female characters. If you look at HBO’s obscenely long cast list, barely 10% of the characters are women. When writing a show about the Baltimore drug wars, the writers cherry-picked which stories to highlight and those were almost all male-centered.

You might point out that most drug dealers and cops in Baltimore are men, and you’d be right. But, in the fully formed world that The Wire attempts to create, women do exist, and they exist in equal number. They are the mothers, sisters, wives, girlfriends, addicts, teachers, etc. who populate the periphery of the cast. For whatever combination of reasons, the writers did not find their stories to be as compelling as those of the men. A landscape as vast and rich as The Wire‘s could have documented the stories of men and women. Cutty’s teacher ex-girlfriend, Avon’s sister, McNulty’s ex-wife, Nick’s baby mama, and Randy’s foster mother could have added incredible depth to David Simon’s big picture.

Back to Game of Thrones. The women in medieval-esque Seven Kingdoms are predominantly relegated to roles of wife and mother (and occasionally prostitute). Much like The Wire, the action-sequences are male-dominated, by the nature of what constitutes “action” (drug dealing and battles). Structurally speaking, however, Martin spends as much time with the women as he does with the gallivanting knights. Why? Because they’re fascinating.

Despite the confines of their societal roles, the women and girls in Game of Thrones have lives as ethically complex and emotionally difficult as the knights and swordsmen. The roles of wife, mother, sister, daughter are never one-note labels, but mere pieces of very nuanced portraits of human life. Just because these characters are limited by the inequality of their environment doesn’t make their stories any less rewarding.

That narrative balance is what allows Game of Thrones to pack the punch that it does. The world is so deep because Martin has added layers to every character, not just the ones with swords.

Related Post: Highbrow books in a lowbrow world.

Related Post: A three-question interview with Megan McCafferty (author of Sloppy Firsts)

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Filed under Books, Gender, Hollywood, Media, Really Good Writing by Other People

Sunday Scraps 29

1. SPORTS: If, a week ago, you had asked me whether college athletes should be paid, I would have said hell to the no. Then  I read this incredibly long but amazing piece from The Atlantic and did a total 180.

2. CELEB: What would a “burn book” look like if it were written by Suri Cruise? Here’s your answer.

3. FLIGHT: Who doesn’t love an infographic of the evolution of airlines. Split and merge, split and merge.

4. OMAR: Mother Jones interviews my favorite gay gangster, Michael K Williams. By which I mean, my favorite actor who played a gay gangster.

5. GIRLS: Is this what you’d want your daughter coloring in at the pizza parlor?

6. SHORT: Fun essay by Leah Finnegan about the lengths to which vertically challenged people can go to get bigger. If you could control your height, how tall would you be?

Related Post: Jane Lynch, red wine cake, the worst things significant others have ever said.

Related Post: Maurice Sendak, Kardshian venn diagrams, the history of reading.

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Filed under Education, Gender, Hollywood, Media, Really Good Writing by Other People, Sports

Highbrow Books in a Lowbrow World

My first response to this picture from the Random House Facebook account was a giggle.

It’s kind of fun to personify books and imagine what they would think of the neglect and ridicule they often suffer at our hands. Remember that date of mine who thought I was joking when I told him that I’d be the girl at the bar with a beer and book? For people who don’t read, reading is a punchline. Books take all that abuse, and they just sit there contentedly on the shelf being awesome, waiting for us to get around to cracking them open. For people who do read, Jersey Shore is a punchline.

On second thought, what I don’t like about this ad (is it even an ad?), is the insinuation that being a reader and being a consumer of lowbrow pop culture are mutually exclusive.

I’m not a Jersey Shore fan; I watched one episose, wide-eyed, mouth agape in horror, unable to get past the violence, pettiness, and steroid-fueled entitlement complexes. I couldn’t enjoy it. That being said, we all have our trashy loves, be they romance novels, celebrity magazines, America’s Next Top Model, Real Housewives, WWE wrestling, or college football mania. These are all things that don’t matter. They are not raising our collective intellect or opening our eyes to the world in meaningful ways, but we still do them, and enjoy them, and use them later as cultural touchpoints to bond with strangers.

We can like the garbage and still read Virginia Woolf, as that seems to be the leader of the suicide brigade. We can read Perez Hilton and also The New Yorker, watch The Wire and also Project Runway. At least, I know I do.

Related Post: I’m not sure why I think this Ruby ad campaign from 1998 is related, but in my head, it makes sense.

Related Post: Speaking of Tyra Banks…

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Filed under Books, Media

Sunday Scraps 23

1. WORDS: Coolest new Google gadget until the next cool Google gadget comes out. This one lets you track and compare the frequency of certain words in print from the 1800s to now. Addictive, beware.

2. TELEVISION: Vulture has conveniently compiled the reappearance of The Wire actors in new shows. Who wins most alums? The Good Wife! No wonder I’m obsessed.

3. ICK: Slideshow of grossest t-shirts from The Frisky. Having never slept with a teenager, I’m still willing to bet that teenagers are almost all terrible at it.

4. TEENAGERS: Speaking of teens, here’s why YA sex scenes might do more good than harm (Salon).

5. MARTHA: Martha, Martha, Martha! The rise and fall of the queen, and the debate about “seafoam green.” From NYMag.

6. BOOKS: 100 best last lines of books. Ever.

Related Post: Sunday 22 = backpacks, bananas, Colbert, etc.

Related Post: Sunday 21 = Happy gays, geekology, FNL, men in dresses.

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Sunday Scraps Week 5

1. ART/VERTISING: What happens when you strip the words from the most iconic brand symbols? You’re left with some pretty awesme pop-art. How many of the wordless logos can you identify?

2. SPORTS: Funny how Yahoo thinks that the UCONN ladies basketball team is most excited about watching their men’s team… instead of, oh, I don’t know… playing in their own NCAA tournament?

3. POLITICS/BIDEN: The VP voices some much needed support for “No Means No” and makes the excellent point that “No means no, if you’re drunk or sober. No means no if you’re in bed in a dorm, or on the street. No means no even if you said yes at first or changed your mind.” Articulate reminders about the scope and variety of sexual assault are always needed. Remember Kathleen Mayer’s awesome Dartmouth piece?

4. TV: This someecard cracks me up. Man, we Wire devotees must be obnoxious as hell. Apologies! (But seriously, watch it, it’s the shit).

5. HOLLYWOOD: Anna Faris is too cool for school. She calls 1-800 ‘How Am I Driving’ members to praise truckers. More fun facts from NYMag.

6. BOOKS: Who doesn’t fantasize about meeting your soulmate in a bookstore?

Related Post: Sunday Scraps from last week (Boston teens, Adele, FiveThirtyEight, Amy Sedaris calls you a cunt)

Related Post: Sunday Scraps from 2 weeks ago (vintage condoms, Becoming a Man, Chris Brown, who knew Cleveland was so hilarious?)

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Filed under Advertising, Books, Hollywood, Media, Politics, Sex, Sports

Sunday Scraps Week 3

1. TELEVISION: The Wire, reimagined as a Dickensian serialized novel. Kind of trippy, but way fun….if you know anything about The Wire… and Dickens.

2. MEDIA: Letter to Good Morning America about Chris Brown’s antics… and their less-than-adequate response. He broke a window, they wish him the “absolute best.”

3. SEX IN THE OLDEN DAYS: Gallery of vintage condom wrappers, back when they came in classy paper envelopes.

4. YOUTH: WBEZ story about a Chicago organization redefining masculinity for a generation lacking examples.

5. CLEVELAND: On the scene in Cleveland: “I did it with my teacher 25 years ago. I knew how to keep my mouth shut, and I got straight A’s. I hope this jackass gets the failing grades he deserves.”

6. ROSIE: Soap + Rosie = Oh Thank God

Related Post: Sunday Week 2

Related Post: Sunday Week 1

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