Author Archives: Emdashes

Steve Coll to Lead New America Foundation

From the Times:

Steve Coll, whose résumé as a journalist includes two Pulitzer Prizes, a stint as managing editor of The Washington Post and a job as a staff writer at The New Yorker, is now ready to try his hand at something else: a Washington public policy institute.
Mr. Coll plans to take over a nonpartisan public policy institute, the New America Foundation, in September…. After winning a Pulitzer Prize in 2005 for “Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and bin Laden, From the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001,” he left the paper to write for The New Yorker, which he will continue to do. This new position, he said, will permit him to “preserve a little bit of my own life as author” and to collaborate with a group of “smart engaged people who are part of a conversation that I want to be a part of.”

Are We Doomed, David Denby?

It’s been agitating me, this essay by David Denby about why modern romantic comedies are so depressing. Part of the reason is that he’s right: Movies like Knocked Up, even those made by smart, sensitive guys like Judd Apatow (whose Freaks and Geeks may be the best television I’ve ever seen), are no His Girl Friday, and the stoned, sarcastic, slovenly “back-of-the-classroom guys” (clinging tightly to their “hopeless pals”) who must sorta fight for the hearts of ambitious, beautiful, straightlaced ladies (“Apart from getting on with it…she doesn’t have an idea in her head, and she’s not the one who makes the jokes”) are no Tracy and Hepburn.

Of course, nothing is; no one can be. But it’s a different galaxy we’ve drifted to, and while Denby is noble to bring up the subject and correct on many points, he seems to have missed some key ones, as well as the generational sensibilities behind them. I admire and echo his yearning for the witty, sly, majestically amorous effort of the “heroic” and “soulful” guys, and the “daffy or tough or high-spirited or even spiritual” gals—as he notes, true equals—he tracks through decades of great movies. Nevertheless, and it’s probably a credit to him, he doesn’t seem to have faced what’s happened to dating, even though he notes, properly bemused, that he’s seen Knocked Up “with audiences in their twenties and thirties, and the excitement in the theatres is palpable–the audience is with the movie all the way, and, afterward, many of the young men (though not always the young women) say that it’s not only funny but true. They feel that way, I think, because the picture is unruly and surprising; it’s filled with the messes and rages of life in 2007.”

I wished Nancy Franklin had written this piece, or Molly Haskell. Or maybe even someone in the demographic at which the current Boring Beauty and the Bonehead Slacker movies are aimed, whose ideas about sex and love were informed in great part by John Hughes, David Lynch, Kevin Smith, Cameron Crowe, Nicole Holofcener, Amy Heckerling, Todd Solondz, Woody Allen (the movies and the man), Martha Coolidge, Nora Ephron, Steven Soderbergh, and Quentin Tarantino—now there’s a ripe and unstable blend.

Throw in comics, MTV, Sex and the City, reality shows, Neil Strauss, Seinfeld, porn, online dating, and social networking sites, and you’ve got part of a picture of how fucking romantic (to quote Stephin Merritt) the world seems to be. I’m not saying no one ever had a sleazy thought before or failed to come through for their sweetheart. What I’m saying is that just as screwball comedies were shiny fairy tales for the eras of disappointing early marriages, stock-market crashes, and limited opportunity for personal expression, There’s Something About Mary is a shiny fairy tale for ours. At the same time, I might respectfully propose that the sight of the baby’s head crowning in Knocked Up, which made the audience I saw it with give a startled, impressed, grossed-out, longing gasp, might have been a kind of champagne toast in itself, a bold move for a date movie, and the movie’s truest moment. I’ve been writing a response in my head for a few days, but instead, here’s an email conversation a (female) film-minded friend, whom I’ll call P, and I had recently, slightly edited for this family newspaper.
P: Man, did that Denby piece on “what’s wrong with romantic comedies today” get me steamed, and not because I find his conclusions about the “today” part completely wrong-headed. What’s wrong-headed was that it was suffused with a kind of nostalgia for the way we never were. No one loves a screwball more than I do, and I’ve been thinking and raving and sobbing a little about Manhattan, or maybe myself, ever since [her guy] and I saw the new print at Film Forum last weekend–can you believe I used to find that the height of cynicism? through my adult skin they seem to be pinching each other gently on the arm, compared to the kind of blows to the head people are actually capable of in real romantic life–but though the women used to get better clothes and better lines and have less demanding standards of physical fitness they have always had to work harder, be smarter, and generally outwit, outlast, and just plain endure in order to triumph in rom-com.

Just because the men have gotten less attractive, less ambitious, dumber, fatter, and generally gone to pot in every department except, perhaps, the humor one, depending on your feelings about farts, beeramids and Vince Vaughn, doesn’t mean the women have really changed. If they feel more uptight to Denby, I think it’s because he’s now a middle-aged man who identifies more with the concerns of the women–home, family, making a living, planning a future, etc.–than with the adolescent boys of comedy, and he’s unsettled by the feminine, i.e. adult, subject position.

But really, were Henry Fonda and his snakes such a great bet? What guarantee did Irene Dunne have that Cary Grant wasn’t going to be the same lousy husband she just divorced? None. They had faith, which is the intangible that all romance relies on. He’s right to point out that faith reached a kind of nadir in those Woody Allen-Diane Keaton pairings, but wrong to think it’s not in this new crop of romantic comedies. In fact, what bugs me is that I feel like these women often have too much faith, but in that they are completely in line with what is inherently a conservative position, which gives men all the time and space in the world for self-improvement but posits that a woman, to be worthwhile, must be pretty much perfect from the jump (or at least the sitcom ideal of impossibly good-looking, accomplished, polished female with ugly schlub: see Raymond etc.).

Me: This is what my post is going to say: David, I love you for thinking there’s a world of charming innocence for these filmmakers to draw on if they have any brains, heart, and courage, and I’m sorry to be the bearer of such bad news, which is that for the majority of the people seeing these movies, the reality is far worse. Spend a few hours reading Craigslist Casual Encounters, Nerve Personals, the multiple choices on social networking sites (what’s the difference between “random play” and “whatever I can get,” by the way?), Maxim, Gawker, ad nauseam, and suddenly Knocked Up is going to look real, real romantic to you.

P: He totally leaves out the Nora Ephron romantic comedies, interesting to consider as counterpoint: are they not in the tradition because she’s a woman? It’s like he just skips the 90’s, when I think these movies with their boys and gross-out stuff are very much a reaction against the endless tension and talk and gentility (read: stereotypically feminine tone) of those. Also, if a woman had made Knocked Up, it would have been called Abort It, and it would have been a very short film.

Me: Ha! So true. Especially with Seth Rogen, who is no one’s idea of a catch. I laughed often during Knocked Up, but that’s a premise I couldn’t get over no matter how hard I tried. And Denby’s right about this kind of female character–whatshername has almost no snappy dialogue, and no self-respecting screwball heroine would ever have taken the part.

I was surprised Denby skipped the seminal Say Anything. Also, re: Apatow, Freaks and Geeks had wonderful, funny, clever, complicated female characters (young and old), so what the hell?

P: Really, all the movies by Cameron Crowe, who seems to be a bit of a cool older brother to Apatow, have that same romantic idea Denby sees as the zeitgeist now: Almost Famous (in which the perfect girl is also–oh no!–a groupie, but the hero is still a teenage boy, albeit one with ambition), Singles (variations on the theme–women want boyfriends/commitment, men want, well, look at the title), Say Anything (Cusack as prototype for slacker guy with speech about not buying, selling, etc.), even the Stacy-Rat story in Fast Times. Again, all the women are gorgeous, go-getters, lusting or falling for or Xing blah guys who happen to cross their paths–it’s like a friggin Greek myth.

Me: Then there’s the chick-flick tradition of the guy being absurdly goopy and refined–Bed of Roses, that movie with Amanda Peet/Ashton K., etc.–the guy’s a landscape gardener who knows sign language, performs heart surgery, and rescues kittens for his brother’s kid, to whom he is adorably close. Hilarious fantasy, but I don’t think anyone over 20 needs to be condescended to this way, and it’s not doing little girls any favors. As we know, though, trouble is men and women don’t usually see each other’s movies. Knocked Up is, I guess, a crossover.

P: I used to drag guys to the worst romantic dreck I could find on early dates to see how sporting they were–I figured if I’ll go see really awful action movies etc., they should be able to sit through Something New (landscaper and uptight accountant interracial romance) and find some comedy or redeeming value in it. It’s a decent character test. Yes, KU is a crossover, as are the other Apatow movies, and Crowe’s. Most of the time it’s very hard to get men to romantic movies unless there are explosions or it’s so-called art. Easier if there is poop, of course. Or a lot of nudity.

Some of the ones Denby wrote about did okay I think–The Break-Up, etc. Did you hear Anne Hathaway turned down KU because of the birth scene?

Me: No way! That girl in KU was cute. Way, way too cute for loser SR. (I’m afraid I never liked him that much on F&G, either, though I’m not saying there isn’t a role for him somewhere. Maybe as he ages, he could be more like John C. Reilly and less like Bozo the Jerk. While I’m on the subject, how outrageous was it of The Holiday to pair Kate Winslet with Jack Black? As Anthony Lane would say, break me a fucking give.)

P: Been chewing over your musing on how a blast of web courtship (to be genteel) would knot DD’s undies, and it makes me think that besides faith, the other ingredient in romantic comedy via movies, i.e. through a lens smeared with Vaseline, is a healthy dose of truth-fudging.

The thing about online dating, of course, is not that people are brutally honest all the time, but that the reasons to lie are really just in the eye of the beholder. Thus many people–esp. when they’re just looking for a hookup–are pretty specific about exactly what it is they want, which is the opposite of romance, right? Romance is what porn isn’t, it’s all about what you don’t see (or you can’t tell what it is up close, then the magic disappears), it’s vague, inexplicit, full of promise, illusory, poetic.

On the web, in ads, people are generally at their most prosaic, basic, needy. No one looks good when they’re looking for love. You can do a certain amount of imagining what people might be like on the web, but therein danger lies. In the movies, however, and in life, to some extent, you have to imagine, project, hope, dream. Just because the goods are low-quality it doesn’t mean the projection process does not happen. It just means in movies, as in life–maybe?–women are settling here and there (oh no! paging Maureen Dowd!). Maybe having it all can mean being happy with a little less–or that’s what H’wood, and male directors, are trying to sell us.

* * *

Well, that should hold you for a while. I think I need to go watch Holiday (1938) or Sullivan’s Travels now. And what do you think? Gen-X and -Y men, are you satisfied with the portrayal of you and your desires and dreams in Hollywood movies, or do you, like me, pine for more Mark Ruffalo, a desirable, grown-up guy with no shortage of 2007-style existential shadows, heroism, or soul?

You Might as Well Sue 2: The Dorothy Parker Trial; Plus, the Poetry of Captions

Kevin Fitzpatrick from the Dorothy Parker Society is covering the trial of the century: Stuart Y. Silverstein vs. Penguin Putnam, Inc., a copyright snafu years in the making that’s going to take days to unravel in court. Here’s his excellent coverage of day one of what promises to be at least ten. For background, here’s my previous post on the same topic. Kevin also wrote a detailed explanation of the case on the Dorothy Parker site last year, newly updated.
And in his “Paper Cuts” blog on the Times website, Dwight Garner congratulates and briefly interviews the latest New Yorker caption contest winner, Joel Brouwer, who also happens to be a poet and contributor to the Book Review. Brouwer told Dwight (who’s edited me a few times):

I sent in a caption on a lark – first time! – and laughed when they called to say I was a finalist, but then was kind of weirdly embarrassed to win. I was particularly amused/suicidal to note that my winning caption came out the same week that Poetry magazine published a long poem of mine, and the e-mail congratulation ratio for the two achievements ran about 50 to 1.

There’s more, so read all about it! Joel, I hope you have some time to talk to our intern, John, about your many talents and preoccupations.

7.09.07 & 7.16.07 Issue: Anderson’s Super, and a Surfeit of Sedaris?

In which John Bucher, Martin Schneider (currently on Austrian holiday), and I review the high points and discuss the particulars of the issue you may just be getting to. We occasionally carp, but mostly we celebrate.
I never read thrillers growing up, unless you count the Hardy Boys. And no spy novels, apart from John LeCarré’s Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, which I had to read for a fourth-year class on espionage—the class I was in, incidentally, when the attacks of September 11 took place. I didn’t play with G.I. Joes, and, frankly, never understood the ecstasies my Egyptian friend Kareem found in them, flinging himself, and the figurines, around the pool deck at his Toronto home, spittle flying from his mouth—rat-tat-tat-tat-tat, Snake Eyes…noooo!!!
So I was unprepared, at least in a literary sense, for Jon Lee Anderson’s ducking, barrel-rolling, ricocheting account (audio here) of American opium eradication efforts in Afghanistan, “The Taliban’s Opium War.” About midway through the piece, the prose turned all And then we heard an explosion over the ridge; there were shell casings and bone fragments all around. We poked our head out of the foxhole, and I had to remind myself that I wasn’t reading a paperback I’d found wedged between two bus seats. And just seconds after that admittedly disparaging thought, I had another: Shit, the guy got shot at, for four hours, in Afghanistan. He’s got more street cred—field cred, whatever—than Fifty. —JB
I’m a fan of David Sedaris, and in part because the Greyhound bus system and I have recently been excessively intimate, I’ve been catching up on old episodes of This American Life. I’m always glad to hear a Sedaris segment is coming up; I relish his clever, absorbing, self-aware, drolly delivered spoken monologues. So maybe that’s why “This Old House” went down the wrong way—it’s quite possible I’ve just hit my Sedaris quota for the month. But I think it might have more to do with Sedaris’s characterization of “Rosemary Dowd” (a needlessly unkind, and comically unnecessary, pseudonym), his antiques-obsessed landlady. She’s the hero of the story, then she’s discarded as evidence that Sedaris still had some growing up to do. I was sad for poor Rosemary, the crumbling symbol of remembrance. And it reminded me again that I would love to see more of these personal histories and reflections from people who are ladies themselves. —EG

The People’s Handsome Prince? More Tina Brown Topics

From an interview with Tina Brown, today in the Independent:

What inspired you to embark on a career in the media?
I was a newspaper and magazine junkie from the year dot. My father was a film producer and I have always loved the narrative drive of the great non-fiction stories. Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood made me see what a great literary journalist could do with the facts.

How do you feel you influence the media?
At The New Yorker and Vanity Fair we constantly set the agenda for TV discussion and editorials. It was great to see how you could help to move the media in a new direction. At Vanity Fair I was proud of publishing William Styron’s piece about his manic depression. He turned it into a bestseller with the same title as the piece, Darkness Visible.
What is the proudest achievement in your working life?
Waking up the sleeping beauty of The New Yorker magazine. It was a very difficult challenge to modernise the grand old lady of American letters.

What are your weekend papers? And do you have a favourite magazine?
I read all the weekend papers when I come here. My favourite magazines are still The New Yorker and The Spectator, which I subscribe to in the US. I still enjoy Vanity Fair, love Foreign Affairs in the US and The Week in both places.

I love that expression “the year dot.” We should really reintroduce it over here.

Lizza’s Gold: He Culls His Best From The New Republic

If, like me, you want to get the feel of this Ryan Lizza character in advance of his August 1 start as The New Yorker‘s Washington Correspondent, you’d do well to wander through the ten pieces the writer himself feels to be his finest. —John Bucher
From the New Republic intro:

After a nearly a decade…Ryan Lizza will leave us to become the Washington Correspondent for The New Yorker. From impeachment to the 2000 recount, from the White House to the presidential campaign, Ryan has covered it all, so we asked him for his favorite pieces from the past ten years.

Simon Rich and Malcolm Gladwell: “Busted” and…Busted?

Matthew Yglesias calls out Simon Rich on a few points in this week’s Shouts:

When I was eighteen and Simon Rich was fifteen we were both in Mr Young’s homeroom and he really wasn’t the “sitting silently in the corner” type. I distinctly recall him showing off his juggling moves.

Ha! Writers do so love that “shy little me” voice. Still, as commenter ostap points out, “Showing off juggling moves in home room is entirely consistent with sitting in the corner at parties.” But what’s with that (not Constant) Reader commenter? Sheesh.

Meanwhile, those meanie scientists are after Malcolm Gladwell again. (The subtitle: “Sorry, Malcolm, but the Tipping Point Might Be More Myth Than Math.” He’s a first-name monolith!) Is it me or do Gladwell’s books get treated like original science more than they should be? I regard it as a compliment—Gladwell is so darn good at popularizing, explaining, and repackaging original work mostly done elsewhere that people feel the need to pick apart his theses.
Let’s look at one line from the article: “In reality, tipping—experiencing that exponential growth—is very difficult.” How this represents a debunking is beyond me. Show me the passage where Gladwell says tipping things is a piece of pie, and you win, Ad Age! (But you can’t.) —Martin Schneider
[There’s at least one of Gladwell’s theses that is surely undebunkable! Also, I liked this comment on the Yglesias post: ‘The best part, though, are the key words on the side: ‘Children; Teen-agers; Baseball; Erections; Mothers; Concerts; Popularity.’ From now on, I’m restricting my reading to only what comes up from a Google Alert on those seven words.” —EG]

“I Propose a New Yorker Revision”: The Design, the Drawbacks, and a Dream

On the AIGA website, design critic and scholar KT Meaney, formerly of Pentagram, has a detailed critique of the longstanding, beloved but, she argues, “stagnant” look of the magazine that Ross and Irvin built.

She quotes her former boss Michael Bierut, who praised the magazine as a model of “slow design” in Design Observer (read the star-studded comments, too), but concludes:

I believe that the New Yorker layout is comprehensively flawed and a revision is overdue. Any redesign is up against a begrudging audience of grammatically correct but graphically unconscious * standpatters (and design giants as well). So how do you persuade such obstinate admirers? The answer is, respectfully.

She goes on, “Break the gridlock (literally and graphically) and change,” calling for—and picturing—a proposed set of updates toward that end. (In his DO link to Meaney’s analysis, Bierut calls it a “convincing case.”)

As part of her close reading, Meaney reproduces a hilarious Bruce McCall drawing from earlier this year, “First-Ever Guided Tour of The New Yorker,” which our stalwart Martin Schneider brilliantly unpacked here. Martin scrutinized the “Wheel of Article Ideas” (“Logs,” “Naps,” “Oxen,” “Ballet Design,” “J.Lo I.Q.,” etc.), and found that, in fact, much of it had historical precedent in the magazine’s archives. I’m happy to have that image online at last!

* This phrase was hyphenated, but I removed the hyphens because they were confusing my columns.

“The Stakes Were So High With The New Yorker”: Tina Brown’s Second Act

MediaBistro’s smart series continues with Diane Clehane’s “So What Do You Do…?” interview with Tina Brown. A highlight from the section Emdashes readers will be jumping to anyway:

What do you consider your greatest success?
I do think The New Yorker was a very exciting success. As much as I loved Vanity Fair and still do, I still feel The New Yorker was the harder challenge. The stakes were so high with The New Yorker. I felt all the time I was doing it there wasn’t an option to fail. If the magazine not a viable proposition or set for closure — and it was really going down so badly when I took it over. It was so important to revitalize this magazine — the letters, narrative journalism, high standards and the writers that could take three weeks to six months on a story could still be allowed to do that work. What I did realize was that no one again ever was going to start up a magazine that would allow literary journalists to go off months at a time to study and write and do something, so if we failed it would be a horrible consequence.