Pasadena Pictures
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Zach Urbina
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Jessica Paré - New York Magazine by Zachary Scott, May 2012
Paré laughs easily and often, despite a case of extreme jet lag. Bali is fifteen hours...
“MARLBORO” by:Dylan Silva on Flickr
breadfast: the world’s coolest future toaster.
80 posts tagged lit

For the second year in a row, the number of murders in the City of Los Angeles dropped below 300. When last that happened, it was 1967 and the population was 30% smaller than it is today. Former LAPD Chief of Police Bill Bratton quickly praised the police force.
“It’s human beings who decide intentionally to commit a crime, criminals, or many others who get caught up in the moment of passion under the inducement of alcohol or drugs and commit crimes. That’s what police exist for, to control behavior.” – Bratton on NPR’s Talk of the Nation.
However, rather than intervention by police upon errant Angelenos, I offer another idea: that the spread of technology has a major role in the falling numbers of violent acts, namely the ubiquitous mobile phone, working as both an adequate deterrent and an effective means of containment.
Allow, if you will, one writer a chance to elaborate.
To say that Occupy Los Angeles rang false and failed to capture the spirit of the 1960s would be both trite and obvious. In the end, the effort appeared more to be a symptom of the times than a true and definable cause. The movement became easy to ignore, especially considering the vast sprawl of Los Angeles and the current state of economic affairs for those who are employed. Who has time to stop and support an effort in the midst of such a troubling economic shakedown?
American writers like Charles Bukowski and Hunter Thompson both captured and uplifted the bohemian ideal, a principle receding from the subset of American cultural values, supplanted instead by the spreading tentacles of technology. Why else would Occupy LA come and go as such a flash in the proverbial pan? Those bohemian standards simply do not resonate with any depth in our increasingly modern society.
This city’s wholesale dismissal of the months-long Occupy LA movement and its timid cluster of campers around City Hall, compared to the attention given the recent spate of vehicle arsons (a series of rare, violent exceptions to relatively tranquil parts of the city) is telling of both media outlets and citizens alike.
We long ago became numb to the plodding humanistic plight of the Occupy crowd, despite its relative popularity, fringe-movement-wise, versus the even shorter-lived flash-in-the-proverbial-pan Tea Party endeavor.
That convoluted experiences have more US citizens embracing elements of beliefs into their cultural-philosophical lenses, rather than wholesale indoctrination by “noble causes,” appears to be the real story here. That we’re not necessarily disaffected or cynical, just ever more complicated, multi-faceted. Americans identify themselves in greater and greater numbers as politically independent. A December 21st, 2011 Gallup poll reported that a majority of participants responded with a no, when asked “Is there any candidate who would make a good president.” (Which is not to mention universally dismal Congressional job approval figures.)
We are entering again the choppy American political season. To follow national politics closely is to have your heart repeatedly battered and bruised, no matter with which party you most closely identify. Unlike the Occupiers or Tea Party-types, I am careful not to dismiss outright my many Libertarian friends. They are generally young, technologically savvy, and, on the balance, intelligent.
Their’s is a political platform with genuine potential that speaks to the possibility of governance with far less federal regulation that the US currently exhibits. Considering our post-industrial existence -this information age- aspects of Libtertarianism seem to speak directly to our more progressive behavior, though I am very careful not to embrace any nascent political ideology prematurely.
One fixation that both Democrats and Republicans enjoy, provided they can remain civil, is an ongoing dialogue of parry and thrust, both within their political circles and between their political circles. This is true both publically and privately. The Libertarians I often encounter have an odd way of sounding that like that crazy guy who repetitively mumbles to himself while waiting for a bus that has not, nor may ever, arrive. Flat tax! Smaller government! End the Fed! It’s a well-organized rant, not a two-way discussion.
If Libertarianism seeks to rise beyond the sadly symptomatic Occupy and Tea Party spells, it must find a means to position its ideas into the national conversation.
Many young Americans claim to be independent but default to the Democratic Party for what, to them, are fairly comprehensible reasons. After being lambasted as spoilers in 2000’s Gore-Bush fiasco, numerous younger voters see any effort away from the Democratic Party as by-proxy assistance to the GOP.
The younger generation takes it as a given that to grow up in an age of increasing global awareness -in which the entire world is accessible, visible, and on superficial terms, outright knowable- was an unavoidable aspect of our 80s and 90s media diet. Place this perspective against that of many older conservatives with more mono-cultural life experiences, and many young people can’t help but be embarrassed, in some cases mortified, by a GOP who seems to represent everything about the US that is abhorred abroad and to the culturally phobic, far too comfortable.
This is not a call for a Libertarian uprising. This is a plea to examine elements of a distinct philosophy that might better serve a technologically enmeshed society. To be abundantly clear, I am not talking about Ron Paul, who’s past ideologies and associations remain suspect and whose son is one of those Embarrassing Americans. Nor am I talking about Gary Johnson, who frankly, nobody’s really heard of.
I am speaking directly to those who knew the words of Marshal McLuhan and his predictions about “the electric age” and the evisceration of private identity. To coin a phrase I recently overheard, “That was now. This is then.”
In an era defined by vanishing privacy and increasing information transparency, the two-party system stumbles on, a petrified relic of political duality. Every American would be better served by a more nuanced selection of presidential candidates, perhaps not in this election, but certainly in those to come.
opinion by Zach Urbina
Television with Taste |
As you could probably guess, there are a lot of “Mad Men” fans here at FSG. Think about it: what other show on television features so many characters reading books? Or penning an autobiography, as Roger Sterling does, out of spite for a competitor’s success?
So with the new season starting on March 25th I thought I’d share the official “Mad Men” Reading List. Each of these titles has appeared or been referenced on the show:
Season 1
Season 2
Season 3
Season 4
via fsgbooks
By ANNIE MURPHY PAUL l NYTimes Sunday Review March 17, 2012
Amid the squawks and pings of our digital devices, the old-fashioned virtues of reading novels can seem faded, even futile. But new support for the value of fiction is arriving from an unexpected quarter: neuroscience.
Brain scans are revealing what happens in our heads when we read a detailed description, an evocative metaphor or an emotional exchange between characters. Stories, this research is showing, stimulate the brain and even change how we act in life.
Researchers have long known that the “classical” language regions, like Broca’s area and Wernicke’s area, are involved in how the brain interprets written words. What scientists have come to realize in the last few years is that narratives activate many other parts of our brains as well, suggesting why the experience of reading can feel so alive. Words like “lavender,” “cinnamon” and “soap,” for example, elicit a response not only from the language-processing areas of our brains, but also those devoted to dealing with smells.
In a 2006 study published in the journal NeuroImage, researchers in Spain asked participants to read words with strong odor associations, along with neutral words, while their brains were being scanned by a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine. When subjects looked at the Spanish words for “perfume” and “coffee,” their primary olfactory cortex lit up; when they saw the words that mean “chair” and “key,” this region remained dark. The way the brain handles metaphors has also received extensive study; some scientists have contended that figures of speech like “a rough day” are so familiar that they are treated simply as words and no more. Last month, however, a team of researchers from Emory University reported in Brain & Language that when subjects in their laboratory read a metaphor involving texture, the sensory cortex, responsible for perceiving texture through touch, became active. Metaphors like “The singer had a velvet voice” and “He had leathery hands” roused the sensory cortex, while phrases matched for meaning, like “The singer had a pleasing voice” and “He had strong hands,” did not.
Researchers have discovered that words describing motion also stimulate regions of the brain distinct from language-processing areas. In a study led by the cognitive scientist Véronique Boulenger, of the Laboratory of Language Dynamics in France, the brains of participants were scanned as they read sentences like “John grasped the object” and “Pablo kicked the ball.” The scans revealed activity in the motor cortex, which coordinates the body’s movements. What’s more, this activity was concentrated in one part of the motor cortex when the movement described was arm-related and in another part when the movement concerned the leg.
The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated. Keith Oatley, an emeritus professor of cognitive psychology at the University of Toronto (and a published novelist), has proposed that reading produces a vivid simulation of reality, one that “runs on minds of readers just as computer simulations run on computers.” Fiction — with its redolent details, imaginative metaphors and attentive descriptions of people and their actions — offers an especially rich replica. Indeed, in one respect novels go beyond simulating reality to give readers an experience unavailable off the page: the opportunity to enter fully into other people’s thoughts and feelings.
The novel, of course, is an unequaled medium for the exploration of human social and emotional life. And there is evidence that just as the brain responds to depictions of smells and textures and movements as if they were the real thing, so it treats the interactions among fictional characters as something like real-life social encounters.
Raymond Mar, a psychologist at York University in Canada, performed an analysis of 86 fMRI studies, published last year in the Annual Review of Psychology, and concluded that there was substantial overlap in the brain networks used to understand stories and the networks used to navigate interactions with other individuals — in particular, interactions in which we’re trying to figure out the thoughts and feelings of others. Scientists call this capacity of the brain to construct a map of other people’s intentions “theory of mind.” Narratives offer a unique opportunity to engage this capacity, as we identify with characters’ longings and frustrations, guess at their hidden motives and track their encounters with friends and enemies, neighbors and lovers.
It is an exercise that hones our real-life social skills, another body of research suggests. Dr. Oatley and Dr. Mar, in collaboration with several other scientists, reported in two studies, published in 2006 and 2009, that individuals who frequently read fiction seem to be better able to understand other people, empathize with them and see the world from their perspective. This relationship persisted even after the researchers accounted for the possibility that more empathetic individuals might prefer reading novels. A 2010 study by Dr. Mar found a similar result in preschool-age children: the more stories they had read to them, the keener their theory of mind — an effect that was also produced by watching movies but, curiously, not by watching television. (Dr. Mar has conjectured that because children often watch TV alone, but go to the movies with their parents, they may experience more “parent-children conversations about mental states” when it comes to films.)
Fiction, Dr. Oatley notes, “is a particularly useful simulation because negotiating the social world effectively is extremely tricky, requiring us to weigh up myriad interacting instances of cause and effect. Just as computer simulations can help us get to grips with complex problems such as flying a plane or forecasting the weather, so novels, stories and dramas can help us understand the complexities of social life.”
These findings will affirm the experience of readers who have felt illuminated and instructed by a novel, who have found themselves comparing a plucky young woman to Elizabeth Bennet or a tiresome pedant to Edward Casaubon. Reading great literature, it has long been averred, enlarges and improves us as human beings. Brain science shows this claim is truer than we imagined.
via itwonlast
(via jesuisperdu)
Beholding Holden, by writer Mike Norris and artist David Richardson, an illustrated imagining of J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye.
Six Tips on Writing from John Steinbeck
via nevver
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