Martin Schneider writes:
This is really neat. The New Yorker is teaming up with well-known Photoshop humor website Worth 1000 (lovingly known as W1K) to present the “Dogs at the Bar” Contest. And it’s even being hosted at the New Yorker website; so odd to see all of that rampant scurrilousness underneath the familiar august sedate navbar (there is no such thing as an august navbar).
The way it works is, you have to create the cartoon in Aviary, and all the visual elements you will need to do it are supplied. The only constraint? It’s got to be about dogs in bars! Surely a comedic goldmine. (I gently propose a ban on “hair of the dog”-related wit.)
Wow. If only I had a graphical sensibility, a proficiency in Photoshop/Aviary, or a sense of humor, I’d be all over this.
Monthly Archives: March 2009
New Yorker Blog Roundup: 03.31.09
Martin Schneider writes:
(This content is taken directly from the left nav bar on the magazine’s website.)
Evan Osnos wonders about China’s new Tibetan holiday.
George Packer finds out that Ulysses S. Grant enjoyed spanking.
James Surowiecki thinks it makes sense to treat automakers differently than banks.
Steve Coll and the stimulus go back to nature.
Hendrik Hertzberg says the Denver Post suffers from state chauvinism.
The Front Row: “Katyn” and the Holocaust.
News Desk: Guns lead to no good.
Sasha Frere-Jones hosts a roundtable about Haitian music.
The Book Bench: Anne Carson in Iceland.
The Cartoon Lounge: The supremacy of string.
Goings On: The Vaselines reunite. So what?
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Lettuce Prey
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The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Trevi Fountain Trickle Down
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Helen Levitt, 1913-2009
Martin Schneider writes:
A great chronicler of New York’s children and street life, and a great New Yorker.
This photograph is one of my favorite things ever. By all means look at on the larger version to get the full effect, and look at more of them.
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What’s in This Week’s New Yorker: 04.06.09
Martin Schneider writes:
A new issue of The New Yorker comes out tomorrow. Here is a description of its contents.
In “Syria Calling,” Seymour M. Hersh reports on the prospects for peace talks between Syria and Israel, and the opportunity that now exists for the Obama Administration to mediate them—”a role that could offer Barack Obama his first—and perhaps best—chance for engagement in the Middle East peace process.”
In “Cash for Keys,” Tad Friend looks at the housing crisis in Southern California and follows Leo Nordine, one of L.A.’s leading brokers specializing in selling foreclosed homes, who “has a knack for pricing houses aggressively, so they sell fast, a valuable skill in a county where values are declining two to three per cent a month.”
In “Message in a Bottle,” John Colapinto chronicles the development of Plastiki, a sixty-foot “bottle boat” which David de Rothschild, the environmentalist better known for his family’s banking fortune, and a crew hope to sail across the Pacific Ocean.
Nicholas Lemann comments on populist rage and the Geithner plan.
In Shouts & Murmurs, Bruce McCall launches a company to help executives escape their bad behavior.
Rebecca Mead profiles Matthew and Michael Dickman, twin brothers and poets.
There is a poem by A. S. Byatt.
Anthony Gottlieb explores the miserable history of the Wittgenstein family.
Peter Schjeldahl views paintings by European masters from the Norton Simon Museum at the Frick Collection.
Hilton Als reviews Exit the King, People Without History, and Rambo Solo.
Sasha Frere-Jones listens to U2’s new album.
Anthony Lane reviews Monsters vs. Aliens and Shall We Kiss?
There is a short story by Brad Watson.
Sempé Fi (On Covers): Multiple Dearth
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_Pollux writes_:
Eight bawling babies squirm across the cover of the March 23, 2009 issue of _The New Yorker_. By some unfortunate genetic defect, the octuplets have all been born with the features and demeanor of Rush Limbaugh. The same tragic defect has affected these babies’ ability to close their mouths and stop bawling. Blitt’s babies cannot be mollified, cannot be placated, even when given their favorite cigar (a Ramon Allones Gigante Double Corona).
From a pile of humidors and dirty diapers, a barrage of noise emerges. It is unceasing, brutal, and unnerving. Barry Blitt’s “OctoRush” is a collection of infants that could very well represent the eight sides or shades of Limbaugh. Here we have a chance to explore the heretofore hidden aspects of Limbaugh’s personality, a chance to excavate at an octahedron lying in the desert sand.
Excitedly, we dig at the seven hidden sides only to discover… that all of the sides are exactly the same, that they all represent a “colossal wreck, boundless and bare,” to quote Shelley.
Limbaugh is nothing but pure noise, like _The Phantom Tollbooth_’s Awful Dynne, a mindless megaphone whose core philosophy seems to be centered on the idea that constant repetition equals fact and that wishing that the failure of President Obama can be the patriotic hope of a “real American.” There is no complexity to this 21st-century Father Coughlin.
But I’ll stop myself here. The less I say about the man who calls himself “The Fourth Branch of Government” and “America’s Truth Detector” the better, for he feeds off controversy and publicity, like a mushroom growing and flourishing in the shadows, and seems to be the de facto leader of the Republicans, whether Republicans like it or not (if they don’t like it, they largely keep it to themselves, for fear of a very real form of punishment from “The Mandarin of Talk Radio”).
Limbaugh’s “entertainment” manufactures clouds of poison from which emerges nothing but barren rhetoric. This rhetoric builds and grows nothing, and offers no hope or sense of optimism, all of which are needed in these hard times. As Kurt Andersen “remarked”:http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1887728,00.html in a recent article in _Time_, “hyperbolic rants and rigid talking points, in either Limbaughian or Olbermannian flavors, now seem worse than useless, artifacts of a bumptious barroom age.”
Blitt’s eight babies of course refer to that other figure in the media, dubbed the “Octomom,” as if she were a nemesis of Spiderman or the Blue Beetle. Whether you agree with Nadya Suleman’s decision to have eight more babies (in addition to the six other young children she already had) or not, it is clear that the media has created a villain for our condemnation. The Octomom represents the same noise, the same hysterical cry of negativity that drowns out any hope for constructive and worthwhile dialogue. It is a story that has subsisted on endless coverage as well as the willingness of Ms. Suleman herself to maneuver her way towards the lucrative goal of flash-in-the-pan notoriety.
In fact, Barry Blitt has masterfully captured the essence of Limbaugh, the Octomom story, and the cacophony that both have produced. Blitt seems to be used by _The New Yorker_ as a sort of illustrator-hitman, and sometimes he hits his target cleanly and clearly (“and sometimes not”:http://emdashes.com/2009/02/sempe-fi-pinch-hitter.php).
Here, Blitt has expertly captured the open mouth and gray hair of Limbaugh while seamlessly grafting these features onto the Spring Line of Designer Baby Clothes. Artistically speaking, Blitt has accomplished what can be difficult to do: he has combined the fragility and immaturity of a two-year old with all the grizzled and bloated pomposity of a fifty-year old. You can almost hear the bawl of eight badly-behaved babies emanate from _The New Yorker_ cover. We can only hope that it is a bellow that one day we can learn to completely ignore.
Snopes: Recent Woody Allen “Shouts” Authored by Some Guy Named Konigsberg
Martin Schneider writes:
I’m glad that Snopes.com was able to crack the Case of the Utterly Unmysterious Woody Allen Article. Although to be fair, it is a little strange that every weekly magazine issue has what amounts to an incorrect date on the cover.
More information on Konigsberg.
The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: The Black Death
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“The adventures continue.”:http://emdashes.com/2009/02/the-wavy-rule-a-daily-comic-by-155.php Click on the cartoon to enlarge it!
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Donnelly and Maslin: Story of a Marriage–And a Book
Martin Schneider writes:
I just saw this on The Daily Beast and wanted to post something about it as soon as I could. (It was posted to coincide with Valentine’s Day, but I missed it at the time.)
Liza Donnelly and Michael Maslin are both New Yorker cartoonists, and they are also married to each other. They have a new book out called Cartoon Marriage: Adventures in Love and Matrimony by The New Yorker’s Cartooning Couple, which I haven’t seen yet, but everything that I have seen and heard about it suggests that it will be full of wit, sensitivity, and insight.
This multi-panel cartoon, by Donnelly and Maslin both, is the story of how they met and fell in love. Not only does it succeed on its own terms, as story, as graphic art; it’s also great fun for anyone interested in The New Yorker, as it references several of Donnelly and Maslin’s cartoonist colleagues as well as the many New Yorker anniversary parties that served as occasions for their initial meets. Never has the title of this category been more apropos, since James Thurber played a major role in their intertwining.
The cartoon reminds me a little of the R. Crumb/Aline Kominsky joints that sometimes appear in The New Yorker, but without the internal stylistic clash that those always featured. Maybe the cartoon stylistically reflects their compatibility!
Here’s a brief feature that CBS Sunday Morning did on Donnelly and Maslin:
