The Awl http://www.theawl.com/ Be Less Stupid Mon, 08 Aug 2011 11:20:02 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.2 Girls, "Vomit" http://www.theawl.com/2011/08/girls-vomit http://www.theawl.com/2011/08/girls-vomit#comments Mon, 08 Aug 2011 11:20:02 +0000 Dave Bry http://www.theawl.com/2011/08/girls-vomit
Everyone knows you can't dust for vomit. But, man, Pink Floyd's fingerprints are all over this new song from the wonderful San Francisco band, Girls. (I know that metaphor is sort of backwards, since the thief, or "borrower," leaves his or her fingerprints on the thing they stole from somebody else, rather than vice versa, but for chronological reasons, it doesn't make sense to set it up that way.) You can hear very distinct elements of two different eras of Pink Floyd music here.

I know mentioning this will be fodder for our friends who bemoan Girls frontman Christopher Owens as just another "deep dude in the dorm who's just so, like, misunderstood."

But we should also point out that this particular type of cribbing has been done before. It's well documented.

I however will continue to love Christopher Owens and Girls, regardless. I really like the song. And I can't wait 'til the whole new album, Father, Son, Holy Ghost, comes out next month.

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Everyone knows you can't dust for vomit. But, man, Pink Floyd's fingerprints are all over this new song from the wonderful San Francisco band, Girls. (I know that metaphor is sort of backwards, since the thief, or "borrower," leaves his or her fingerprints on the thing they stole from somebody else, rather than vice versa, but for chronological reasons, it doesn't make sense to set it up that way.) You can hear very distinct elements of two different eras of Pink Floyd music here.

I know mentioning this will be fodder for our friends who bemoan Girls frontman Christopher Owens as just another "deep dude in the dorm who's just so, like, misunderstood."

But we should also point out that this particular type of cribbing has been done before. It's well documented.

I however will continue to love Christopher Owens and Girls, regardless. I really like the song. And I can't wait 'til the whole new album, Father, Son, Holy Ghost, comes out next month.

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Indicators That the Book Party Scene on HBO’s Forthcoming Lena Dunham Show "Girls" is an Unconvincing Approximation of the Real Thing, as Conveyed to Me by a Former Book Editor Working On-Set as an Extra (“Publishing Executive”) http://www.theawl.com/2011/08/indicators-that-the-book-party-scene-on-hbo%e2%80%99s-forthcoming-lena-dunham-show-girls-is-an-unconvincing-approximation-of-the-real-thing-as-conveyed-to-me-by-a-former-book-editor-working-on-se http://www.theawl.com/2011/08/indicators-that-the-book-party-scene-on-hbo%e2%80%99s-forthcoming-lena-dunham-show-girls-is-an-unconvincing-approximation-of-the-real-thing-as-conveyed-to-me-by-a-former-book-editor-working-on-se#comments Wed, 03 Aug 2011 17:00:17 +0000 Marissa Walsh http://www.theawl.com/2011/08/indicators-that-the-book-party-scene-on-hbo%e2%80%99s-forthcoming-lena-dunham-show-girls-is-an-unconvincing-approximation-of-the-real-thing-as-conveyed-to-me-by-a-former-book-editor-working-on-se 11. The pervasiveness of eye shadow.

10. A The Situation/Vanilla Ice look-alike in shiny jacket, aviator sunglasses and jauntily tilted hat.

9. General lack of pastiness.

8. None of the following were present: Colson Whitehead, Sloane Crosley, Sylvia Miles.

7. And yet: a racially proportioned crowd.

6. No Housing Works tote bags.

5. Loud colors.

4. The author’s writing professor from college was present.

3. The author’s writing professor from college was played by Michael Imperioli.

2. The fictional author's publisher paid for the party.

1. Only six people wore glasses.



Marissa Walsh is a literary agent and author.

Photo by Bruce Ronn.

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11. The pervasiveness of eye shadow.

10. A The Situation/Vanilla Ice look-alike in shiny jacket, aviator sunglasses and jauntily tilted hat.

9. General lack of pastiness.

8. None of the following were present: Colson Whitehead, Sloane Crosley, Sylvia Miles.

7. And yet: a racially proportioned crowd.

6. No Housing Works tote bags.

5. Loud colors.

4. The author’s writing professor from college was present.

3. The author’s writing professor from college was played by Michael Imperioli.

2. The fictional author's publisher paid for the party.

1. Only six people wore glasses.



Marissa Walsh is a literary agent and author.

Photo by Bruce Ronn.

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13 comments

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Inside "American Idol": Flesh Against the Barricades http://www.theawl.com/2010/05/inside-american-idol-flesh-against-the-barricades http://www.theawl.com/2010/05/inside-american-idol-flesh-against-the-barricades#comments Thu, 27 May 2010 11:00:01 +0000 Natasha Vargas-Cooper http://www.theawl.com/2010/05/inside-american-idol-flesh-against-the-barricades LEE ESCAPESIt gets messy in the Idoldome. But all of the mania happens on stage, not in the audience. The colossal disco lights create a dizzying swirl. Fifteen-foot sheets of white fabric are propped up by a hurried squadron of grips. A pack of deposed Idols appears. They are chunkily boxstepping and no one can answer the question "How deep is your love?" Cameramen circle the 12th place and 4th place contestants as they try to remain on key, then, black-out. Poof! Ryan Seacrest materializes on a massive rafter, the two-chord theme for the show booms over the speakers, a disembodied voice screeches "Two minutes!" A man in a rhinestone tie hustles the crowd to keep the energy up. "Where are you from? How long have you been 12-years-old? Here's an iPod Touch!"

Audience approval. Tear the white walls down, then judges shuffle to their places between songs, look thoughtfully into the camera for a few seconds and retreat backstage. Look! Christina Aguilera is doing an uncanny Evita impression; the Idols, Hall, Oates, Chicago follow. (Who knows if it even is Chicago? Could just be tanned men in Bahama shirts? Who would know the difference? Troubling.)

Then, "Four minutes!" Alanis Morissette and Crystal Bowersox are criss-crossing the stage, chased by the merciless cameramen, Idols reappear, stammering, unsure where to look, their eyes dart around like they are 3rd graders at a holiday pageant waiting for their supportive teacher to queue them from the front row, but there is no teacher, only a quartet of women playing violins! Thirty seconds, and a skit goes wrong, eliminated auditioners come back to show their resolve and/or swallow more humiliation, tension fills the arena, they are rallied by more giveaways and touching slow motion montage courtesy of Ford Fiesta, sobs and hugs, Seacrest! Grips, fog, duet!

How does this transfer to the screen with such control? There are a few rough moments-closeups on empty chairs instead of the judges plaintive faces, some notes gone terribly flat-but that this is made into a TV show, this is a feat. The mechanical transfer of anxious pandemonium into precise minutes of television, compelling television at that, is astounding.

* * *

Except for the snakepit of glittery teen girls at the foot of the stage, all tube-topped and gangly, the audience is adult and sedate. They are engaged but not giddy, often needing to be coaxed from respectful applause to something more rousing. There are some radio contest winners scattered about-you can spot them by their home made signs (neon and delightful)-but many of the seats in the 7,000-capacity arena belong to employees of Ford and Apple, the corporate sponsors of our Idols. They were given the tickets. They did not buy them. They did not line up for them. So this was a crowd of observers, not participants.

* * *

Before the finale, the non-ticketed fans jostled for position at the press pool barricade. They were all female, most of them teenagers and younger. But between the tank-topped tweens who delighted in screaming the names of their favorites, their faces still too young to be painted, were women. Women over thirty-five elbowed their way through the frenzy with their own pleadings for signatures and snapshots of the Idols. Space is scarce at the barricades. Every space a woman takes up at the plastic barrier is one she denies a young girl. Being a teenager is sacred, it is not meant to be shared, most of your energies are spent on keeping adult invaders out. I don't want to imagine the horror and confusion I would feel if I were a young girl pressed up against a woman twice my age-who had a driver's license, was allowed to drink, knew what the stormy world of sex was actually like-and was forced to compete with her for the recognition of a newly-minted celebrity. That's havoc on a teenage girl's psyche. Then you know that the fantasizing that motivates a girl to cry at the sight of semi-famous person does not evaporate with age. How did they go to sleep with any security, knowing that they will probably never grow up?



Natasha Vargas-Cooper, at least, is sleeping it off.

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LEE ESCAPESIt gets messy in the Idoldome. But all of the mania happens on stage, not in the audience. The colossal disco lights create a dizzying swirl. Fifteen-foot sheets of white fabric are propped up by a hurried squadron of grips. A pack of deposed Idols appears. They are chunkily boxstepping and no one can answer the question "How deep is your love?" Cameramen circle the 12th place and 4th place contestants as they try to remain on key, then, black-out. Poof! Ryan Seacrest materializes on a massive rafter, the two-chord theme for the show booms over the speakers, a disembodied voice screeches "Two minutes!" A man in a rhinestone tie hustles the crowd to keep the energy up. "Where are you from? How long have you been 12-years-old? Here's an iPod Touch!"

Audience approval. Tear the white walls down, then judges shuffle to their places between songs, look thoughtfully into the camera for a few seconds and retreat backstage. Look! Christina Aguilera is doing an uncanny Evita impression; the Idols, Hall, Oates, Chicago follow. (Who knows if it even is Chicago? Could just be tanned men in Bahama shirts? Who would know the difference? Troubling.)

Then, "Four minutes!" Alanis Morissette and Crystal Bowersox are criss-crossing the stage, chased by the merciless cameramen, Idols reappear, stammering, unsure where to look, their eyes dart around like they are 3rd graders at a holiday pageant waiting for their supportive teacher to queue them from the front row, but there is no teacher, only a quartet of women playing violins! Thirty seconds, and a skit goes wrong, eliminated auditioners come back to show their resolve and/or swallow more humiliation, tension fills the arena, they are rallied by more giveaways and touching slow motion montage courtesy of Ford Fiesta, sobs and hugs, Seacrest! Grips, fog, duet!

How does this transfer to the screen with such control? There are a few rough moments-closeups on empty chairs instead of the judges plaintive faces, some notes gone terribly flat-but that this is made into a TV show, this is a feat. The mechanical transfer of anxious pandemonium into precise minutes of television, compelling television at that, is astounding.

* * *

Except for the snakepit of glittery teen girls at the foot of the stage, all tube-topped and gangly, the audience is adult and sedate. They are engaged but not giddy, often needing to be coaxed from respectful applause to something more rousing. There are some radio contest winners scattered about-you can spot them by their home made signs (neon and delightful)-but many of the seats in the 7,000-capacity arena belong to employees of Ford and Apple, the corporate sponsors of our Idols. They were given the tickets. They did not buy them. They did not line up for them. So this was a crowd of observers, not participants.

* * *

Before the finale, the non-ticketed fans jostled for position at the press pool barricade. They were all female, most of them teenagers and younger. But between the tank-topped tweens who delighted in screaming the names of their favorites, their faces still too young to be painted, were women. Women over thirty-five elbowed their way through the frenzy with their own pleadings for signatures and snapshots of the Idols. Space is scarce at the barricades. Every space a woman takes up at the plastic barrier is one she denies a young girl. Being a teenager is sacred, it is not meant to be shared, most of your energies are spent on keeping adult invaders out. I don't want to imagine the horror and confusion I would feel if I were a young girl pressed up against a woman twice my age-who had a driver's license, was allowed to drink, knew what the stormy world of sex was actually like-and was forced to compete with her for the recognition of a newly-minted celebrity. That's havoc on a teenage girl's psyche. Then you know that the fantasizing that motivates a girl to cry at the sight of semi-famous person does not evaporate with age. How did they go to sleep with any security, knowing that they will probably never grow up?



Natasha Vargas-Cooper, at least, is sleeping it off.

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New Video: Girls, "Substance" http://www.theawl.com/2009/11/new-video-girls-substance http://www.theawl.com/2009/11/new-video-girls-substance#comments Wed, 18 Nov 2009 15:10:46 +0000 Dave Bry http://www.theawl.com/2009/11/new-video-girls-substance
You never want to go for the flavor of the month-but I'm predisposed to like current indie-scene hero Christopher Owens of the San Francisco duo Girls because he reminds me of Jason Mewes, who plays the lovable doofus Jay in the Kevin Smith movies. And then the guy can also write these gorgeous melodies and sing all stuffed-up-and-stoned but still so heartbreakingly like he does on this clip of his song "Substance," up at Pitchfork, and-what're you gonna do? I'm all in. Plus, look how charming!

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You never want to go for the flavor of the month-but I'm predisposed to like current indie-scene hero Christopher Owens of the San Francisco duo Girls because he reminds me of Jason Mewes, who plays the lovable doofus Jay in the Kevin Smith movies. And then the guy can also write these gorgeous melodies and sing all stuffed-up-and-stoned but still so heartbreakingly like he does on this clip of his song "Substance," up at Pitchfork, and-what're you gonna do? I'm all in. Plus, look how charming!

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Asian Poses Dot Com: Racist? Accurate? I Don't Know? http://www.theawl.com/2009/06/asian-poses-dot-com-racist-accurate-i-dont-know http://www.theawl.com/2009/06/asian-poses-dot-com-racist-accurate-i-dont-know#comments Thu, 11 Jun 2009 09:58:40 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2009/06/asian-poses-dot-com-racist-accurate-i-dont-know I... Do Not KNOW?Today on the Internet: Asian Poses Dot Com is "the definitive guide to Asian poses." 1. It is run by a Chinese guy. 2. It is actually overly-researched to the point where something that seems racist and awkward actually begins to impress you with its internal logic? 3. Also still weird. [via]

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I... Do Not KNOW?Today on the Internet: Asian Poses Dot Com is "the definitive guide to Asian poses." 1. It is run by a Chinese guy. 2. It is actually overly-researched to the point where something that seems racist and awkward actually begins to impress you with its internal logic? 3. Also still weird. [via]

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