Martin Schneider writes:
Richard Brody, who covers movies from “The Front Row” in the blogs section of the New Yorker website, has taken up Twitter.
The main New Yorker/Twitter post has been updated accordingly.
Category Archives: New Yorker
Area Twitterer Muses About Literary Magazine in 140 Characters or Fewer
Martin Schneider writes:
You guessed it, more New Yorker mentions from the aether! Let’s dive right in, shall we?
LeonardoZ Reading The New Yorker. Such a well written magazine. Wondering how even good mags can survive, specially in this economy.
cazelk It’s about time the New Yorker coughed up a solid 12,000 words on DFW. What do we pay them for again? Ohhhh right, I get it.
PaigeWiser The cover of the New Yorker magazine features Michelle Obama… with sleeves. Didn’t recognize her.
ericaceous Is there a bookstore in all of New York that carries anything by James Wood? He writes for the New Yorker, fer cripes sake!
judygoldberg I’m a finalists in this week’s New Yrker Caption Contest! I’ll just come right out and ask pls vote 4 me!!! http://tinyurl.com/anban5
mnreads listening to the new David Foster Wallace excerpt in the New Yorker, the read pronounces Edina, Minnesota wrong
nancheney David has the newly arrived New Yorker with the David Foster Wallace article. I had it first. grrrrrr.
alsolikelife: thinks David Denby’s New Yorker mumblecore piece reads like a teacher-parent consultation during PTA week: “Little Joey is making movies…”
wackjack I find it charming that The New Yorker still refers to publicists as press agents.
ErikHagen I like his beard so much that I want to draw pictures of it, and send them to the New Yorker to be published.
samduke left my new yorker at the taqueria only a 1/3 way through that epic DFW profile. 2nd time this week i’ve lost something before finishing it.
Cartoonless Captions Twitter: Inspired by TV on the Radio?
3/18: Catch the Simon Rich and Benjamin Nugent Event in Brooklyn
Martin Schneider writes:
There’s a fun event with two New Yorker luminaries on March 18 at the powerHouse Arena. From the press release:
The powerHouse Arena is pleased to invite you to a talk and reading
“Funny Because It’s True”
with Simon Rich and Benjamin Nugent
Moderated by Ben Greenman
Wednesday, March 18, 2009, 7-9PM
The powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn
For more information: (718) 666-3049
RSVP: rsvp@powerhousearena.com
The powerHouse Arena invites you to a night of laughs, moderated by Ben Greenman, featuring Simon Rich, author of Free-Range Chickens and Ant Farm and Other Desperate Situations and Benjamin Nugent, author of American Nerd: The Story of My People.
About Free-Range Chickens
Simon Rich is a 24-year-old writer for Saturday Night Live, former president of The Harvard Lampoon, and author of the acclaimed book, Ant Farm (Random House, 2007). In his second book, Free-Range Chickens, Rich returns with another collection of humor pieces that mines more comedy from the absurdities of everyday life in our hopelessly terrifying world.
In short comic vignettes divided into sections such as “Growing Up,” “Going to Work,” “Relationships,” and a topic that has always puzzled him—”God,” Rich examines life’s biggest and smallest questions, from why people check their email every three minutes to God’s master plan for mankind.
In the nostalgic opening chapter, Rich recalls his fear of the Tooth Fairy (“Is there a face fairy?”) and his initial reaction to the “Got-your-nose” game (“Please just kill me. Better to die than to live the rest of my life as a monster”). He goes on to imagine office life as a “Choose Your Adventure Story” and later points out how we could all learn a lot about life and happiness by looking at the world through the eyes of free-range chickens. In his final chapter Rich imagines a conversation with God: Does God really have a plan for us? Yes, it turns out. Now if only He could remember what it was…
About American Nerd: The Story of My People
“American Nerd is very funny and consistently smart, but it’s also mildly controversial—I’m not sure I’ve ever seen these kinds of cogent, intuitively accurate arguments made about any ‘type’ of modern person. Benjamin Nugent is just weird enough to be absolutely right.”
—Chuck Klosterman, author of Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs
“The coolest book about nerds ever written. Heck, one of the coolest books ever written, period. Benjamin Nugent is the Richard Dawkins of geekdom. Outsiders of the world, this is required reading. Know your roots!” —Paul Feig, creator of Freaks and Geeks
“What everyone should be talking about…funny.”—GQ
Most people know a nerd when they see one but can’t define just what a nerd is. American Nerd: The Story of My People gives us the history of the concept of nerdiness and of the subcultures we consider nerdy. What makes Dr. Frankenstein the archetypal nerd? Where did the modern jock come from? When and how did being a self-described nerd become trendy? As the nerd emerged, vaguely formed, in the nineteenth century, and popped up again and again in college humor journals and sketch comedy, our culture obsessed over the designation.
Mixing research and reportage with autobiography, critically acclaimed writer Benjamin Nugent embarks on a fact-finding mission of the most entertaining variety. He seeks the best definition of nerd and illuminates the common ground between nerd subcultures that might seem unrelated: high-school debate team kids and ham radio enthusiasts, medieval re-enactors and pro-circuit Halo players. Why do the same people who like to work with computers also enjoy playing Dungeons & Dragons? How are those activities similar? This clever, enlightening book will appeal to the nerd (and anti-nerd) that lives inside all of us.
About the author:
Benjamin Nugent has written for The New York Times Magazine, Time, New York, and n+1. His first book, Elliott Smith and the Big Nothing, was published in 2004.
About the moderator:
Ben Greenman is an editor at The New Yorker and the author of several acclaimed books of fiction, including Superbad, Superworse, and A Circle is a Balloon and Compass Both: Stories About Human Love. His fiction, essays, and journalism have appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, the Washington Post, the Paris Review, Zoetrope: All Story, McSweeney’s, and Opium, and he has been widely anthologized.
His current projects include Correspondences, a limited edition handcrafted letterpress publication created by Hotel St. George Press and Please Step Back, a novel published by Melville House (due in April 2009). He is also a regular contributor to the music and psychology blog www.moistworks.com.
Best of the 03.09.09 Issue: Masters of the Universe
Martin Schneider writes:
Bob Staake’s takedown of Wall Street CEOs was on the cover. Features included Ian Parker’s report on Iceland’s economic collapse, D.T. Max’s look at the life of David Foster Wallace, and Sasha Frere-Jones’s appreciation of Lily Allen.
New Yorker Blog Roundup: 03.08.09
Martin Schneider writes:
(This is taken directly from the left nav bar on the magazine’s website.)
George Packer praises an obscure civil servant toiling in federal bureaucracy.
The Front Row: Hilton Als can’t stop watching Helen Mirren in Prime Suspect.
Steve Coll unravels the broadband plans in the stimulus bill.
Evan Osnos, Twitterer, expects more surprises from China’s National Congress.
Hendrik Hertzberg thinks Ronald Radosh has lost his marbles.
News Desk: Lauren Collins on James Salter; the dog handler at Abu Ghraib dies.
Sasha Frere-Jones suggests Neko Case and house music for the weekend.
James Surowiecki won’t be watching Jerry Seinfeld’s new TV show.
The Book Bench: A poet submits to a vote; will Reader’s Digest go bankrupt?
The Cartoon Lounge: One million dogs; David Sipress draws man’s best friend.
Goings On: Michael Jackson’s big announcement; Britney Spears returns.
What’s in This Week’s New Yorker: 03.16.09
The Style Issue of The New Yorker comes out tomorrow. Here are the prominent things therein:
D. T. Max goes on set with Tony Gilroy, the screenwriter and director of the upcoming film Duplicity, starring Julia Roberts and Clive Owen.
Lauren Collins interviews the famously reclusive Bill Cunningham as he documents the fashion of New York for his Times column, “On the Street.”
Ariel Levy profiles Alber Elbaz, the designer of the Paris fashion house Lanvin.
Max Vadukul photographs Thakoon Panichgul and Jason Wu, who have both designed dresses for Michelle Obama.
In Shouts & Murmurs, Paul Rudnick reveals the confessions of a Pilgrim shopaholic.
Patricia Marx shops for products made in the U.S.A.
There is a sketchbook by Roz Chast.
John Cassidy writes about Obama’s plans to combat the economic crisis.
Judith Thurman writes about the playwright and novelist Yasmina Reza’s return to Broadway.
John Updike contemplates the end of life in a series of poems.
Sasha Frere-Jones explores the music of Neko Case.
Joan Acocella examines vampires in fiction.
Nancy Franklin reviews the HBO series Eastbound & Down.
Alex Ross visits the newly reopened Alice Tully Hall, at Lincoln Center.
Hilton Als reviews a new production of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town.
David Denby looks at mumblecore movies.
More Twitter on The New Yorker, Memorable and Otherwise
Martin Schneider writes:
Without any ado, some painstakingly selected comments about our favorite magazine:
teamziller Forget DiMaggio: 64 straight days of understanding the joke on my New Yorker cartoon daily calendar.
alitvinov Loved the New Yorker article on fact checking. Feb 9th issue. Yes, I’m three issues behind.
cartgis is there any way to mention The New Yorker without sounding like a jerk? It’s a great magazine. no apologies.
johndunne This week’s New Yorker has two articles which were published posthumously. Weird.
keithcmartin Sitting here wondering how I’ve spent almost 3 decades of my life NOT reading The New Yorker..
stevenblum “I think people just like the font”- one of Eli Sander’s friends, on “The New Yorker.”
gizmo0718 @heymerrididdle I want a dramatic reencatment of that! I also wish i could umlaut the second ‘e’ a la The New Yorker. Listening Twitter God?
msgier Trying to think of a name for an alien magazine based on The New Yorker. Maybe something based on star names?
I think I might have sounded like a jerk just then. And in my last 400 posts. Have a good weekend, all!
The Unfinished Pale King: Guilt, Boredom, Acceptance, and Hope
Martin Schneider writes:
I’m still not all that comfortable about reading an unfinished work by a writer as fiercely scrupulous as David Foster Wallace was, but after reading the D.T. Max article and pondering his two great, flawed novels and his three great, flawed short story collections, I wonder if this isn’t, inadvertently, sadly, unwittingly, the proper (if that can be the right word) form for a work of the type Wallace was attempting, a meditation of the salvational qualities of boredom, using as a vehicle the IRS and the U.S. tax code.
I thought I would never be able to read The Pale King. Now I think I probably will be able to.
David Foster Wallace, Background Hummingbird
Martin Schneider writes:
Reading about David Foster Wallace’s researches into the U.S. tax code makes me think that Wallace conformed better to Ian McEwan’s ideal of the scientist-novelist than McEwan does.
