"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Blue Language

Shit, how did I miss this?

Blue Language is a live double-album from some of the most talented people I've had the distinct priviledge to hear perform in the great underground cultural mecca that is Portland, Oregon. If you have any sort of taste for acoustic music with wit, you should
give it a listen on CDbaby. Then buy it. I did.

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Hustle and Flow

Via the bliss of Bittorrent, I watched Hustle and Flow last night. It's good! MTV films is a hit-or-miss operation, but this is a real winner. I've been meaning to see it since I met (rather was picked up by) the assistant location manager in Memphis on the road this summer and los Vagabenderosos spent a day with her parents (her mom was the Memphis location hefe), but never got around to it.

The movie essentially rests on the shoulders of Terrance Howard, and he carries it with style and grace. He really makes you believe that a Pimp can be a good man, and really makes you want to pronounce "man" like he does, kinda like, "main." The rest of the cast is quite good as well, even the token nerdy white kid producer. It's a bit of a cinderella story, and the Moral Majority would see it as bedrock proof that hip-hop, MTV and "those people" are out to ruin the US of A, but it's thoroughly enjoyable and even a little bit moving.

It's also really nice to see a little bit of the Dirty up on the big screen. I think the rising cultural gravity of the South is a good thing overall, CMT included. Regionalism helps drive innovation, quality, etc, and frankly I think the old-line cultural centers (NYC, Hollywood) need competition. They're getting fat and lax. I also appreciate the re-appropriation of the verb "to hustle" and the noun "hustler," which I think have a lot of potential in postmodern America.

Hustle and Flow, people; thoroughly worth your netflix/rental dollar.

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Proportional Representation

Back in the heady days of Deanism, one of the things I was harping on was how one of the problems we have in governance these days was the ratio of representation. Congress is currently 666,000:1, up from 50,000:1 back in 1800.

Makes for an interesting graph, if I do say so myself.

At some point there will be a realignment of these ratios if representation is to continue to be effective.

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Changing Norms

Amanda at Pandagon writes well about changing norms, and how they may the the genesis for a lot of the current culture war hullabaloo:

It occured to me while we discussed this that this sort of thing probably goes a long way to explain why right wing blather about "traditional" families has really gained such a toehold in the public arena lately. For all the attention pain to the Baby Boomers who were into the counter-culture and whatnot, the vast majority of them really did make an effort to create the sort of family life they were raised to believe was standard--young marriage to a high school sweetheart, children, working hard, saving, enjoying some retirement time with the grandchildren. The dream didn't work out for a lot of people as planned, as the high divorce rate is evidence for, but they at least tried. But then they look at their kids who are really becoming full adults and a whole bunch of us clearly don't even care to try to achieve the dream.

For my part, I didn't grow up in any sort of traditional household, but I find the theory interesting. Worth reading and thinking about at any rate.

What I wonder about is this: it's not as though norms are simply disappearing. They may be factionalizing, national consensus on the wane, but the whole area of Family is too socially important for communities to not exert a norming influence. What's the new model, or what are the new values?

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