Green Lantern V.2, #5, March–April 1961, DC, by John Broome and Gil Kane |
“This coming Thanksgiving will be the first without her,” Guthrie said. “Alice and my daughter Annie had spoken together recently and Alice, knowing her circumstances, approved an exhibit at the church to tell her own story. Alice and I spoke by phone a couple of weeks ago, and she sounded like her old self. We joked around and had a couple of good laughs even though we knew we'd never have another chance to talk together.”
And if you're like me, you'll probably still listen to it at least once this week. It was, after all, ripped from the headlines:
You can get anything you want at Alice's Restaurant (excepting Alice). You can listen to it on You(rfaceforeverstompedbya)Boot, but at 18 minutes, you'll probably have to sit through half a dozen ads. Unless you throw more feed into the corporate trough. They'll have you know that Infinite Sustainable Growth is still possible if you wish hard enough.
ETA2 – About that Cormac McCarthy piece in Vanity Fair: I'm disappointed but not surprised by the actions of "Great Men" like him, and yes, I will continue to read his books (now ~20% less enjoyable), just like I'll watch Polanski's movies, read Salinger's stories, listen to Bowie and Miles and Zeppelin, etc... They failed as decent humans in profound ways, testing my ability to hold two opposing thoughts in my head at the same time. I haven't canceled anyone even if I find them morally problematic and find my enthusiasm for them somewhat (or a lot) diminished. At the same time, I fault no one for pressing the cancel button. (BTW, you know who never abused or raped an underaged victim? Vladimir Nabokov. That's right. The guy who wrote an entire novel about it. He's problematic for different reasons.)
That VF piece though. Yeesh. The author had a followup interview with Dan Kois at Slate wherein he welcomes all haters and claims that his favorite author to steal from is Martin Amis. I'm glad to know that someone's keeping the stylings of the New Unpleasantness alive. Find it yourself if interested. I'm not linking. I've no interest in helping some lucky, untalented hack self-promote. I'm not Oprah.
TL;DR: "Great Men" operate on the same moral level as the rest of us mediocre humans. Loving or liking a problematic artist doesn't make you a terrible person, but neither does despising them or their work now make you a good one.
Still TL;DR, don't care: Bully for you. Enjoy your damn self.
ETA3 – Older daughter just performed in a church with her Baroque ensemble. All the pieces were Spanish and there were various readings of Spanish texts dating from the 17th C to late 18th. The tilting at windmills chapter of Don Quixote was read beautifully. The word for windmill in Spanish is molino.
Live-streamed last night, luckily she informed spouse of the event so we could watch. Meanwhile, this is the kind of crap she sends me:
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