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Love as Art in One Man’s Schizophrenia

Culture

Kevin Hilke

Los Altos, CA

Around 5:00 a.m. on a cold Northern California morning in 2005, Aaron Fielding of Los Altos, artist, poet, and musician, 27, entered his mother’s bedroom and told her that he may have to castrate himself. Caroline Fielding expressed concern for her son while Aaron lay down beside her on her bed. Aaron saw before him an hourglass full of sand as real as Macbeth’s dagger. He knew that the hourglass was illusory, but he also saw that it was about to run out. Its purpose was to communicate a message from God: You’re running out of time and you’re going to go to Hell if you don’t castrate yourself, Aaron.

Seinfeld’s Slow Shift on Mental Illness

Culture Television

Kevin Hilke

Jerry steals the depressed Martin's girlfriend in "The Suicide"

Seinfeld is callous. The show seems, deceivingly, to eschew all responsibilities at sensitivity to marginalized others in favor of a cruel, mocking engagement with the otherness of those others. Nowhere is this as stark as in Seinfeld’s treatment of mental illness. Until late in the series, only two beings are discussed as carrying anything like a true mental malady worthy of deference. One of them is a fat, pitiful, failing artist. The other is a monkey.

Avatar: Empire’s Analogical Machines

Culture

Neima Jahromi

Avatar

As I left the theater last December, having watched Avatar in 3D IMAX, I removed my glasses and was struck by the impression that I was staring out of my own head. What do I mean and what did the striking? Read on to find out…

I Survived a Taping of American Idol

Culture Television

Aysha Pamukcu

American Idol Judges

There are the bizarre rules: dress in “trendy, upscale” darks; clap with your hands above your head; do not hug Justin Bieber. There are awkward and unscripted moments: an overcome fan bum-rushing the stage to hug Bieber in violation of Bizarre Rule #3, Usher doing a second take of his single “OMG” because the crowd wasn’t adequately pumped the first time, a fifteen-minute search for the fedora Usher tossed into the crowd during his first try.

Avatar and the Hollywood Blockbuster

Culture

Eric Freeman

Jake and a Monster

It’s the unwillingness to explain that makes Avatar so successful. It realizes that the plot relies on relatively common archetypes that any audience can understand. Instead of trying to make everything plausible, Avatar piles on the spectacle.

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