Monday, November 15, 2010
Radio Editing and Influence
Sunday, November 14, 2010
THREE Arts and Culture Events on Campus This Week
"AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE"
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday (Nov. 18, 19, and 20) in Hemingway Theatre at 8:00pm!
Tickets are $5 for students and seniors and $8 for the general public. This is a merit point event!
Refreshments will be served.
THE EXHIBITIONS AND COLLECTIONS CLASS PRESENTS
"METALMORPHASIS: ALCHEMY AND THE CONTEMPORARY ARTIST"
Exhibit Opening event in Cushing Martin- come to view the new installments, meet the artists and student curators, and enjoy delicious sweets!
Friday, Nov. 19th from 6pm-8pm
ENGLISH SOCIETY PRESENTS
A NIGHT AT THE HILL
An amazing showcase of talent! Come to see fellow classmates showcase their skills in music, dance, acting, poetry, and other performing arts. Open to all interested in participating.
Friday, Nov. 19th in the Hill from 9pm-11pm.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
He’s More than Just Tairy Greene
He’s so much more. Zach Galifinakis should be considered for more serious roles. With his work in Visioneers, Into the Wild, and, most recently, It’s Kind of a Funny Story, Galifinakis has proven he is capable of holding his own in more dramatic roles. I’m not saying that he should abandon his comedic endeavors. I relish each and every single one of Galifinakis’s comedic ventures, whether it be in film, television, or online. I’m just saying that Zach Galifinakis has the potential to be a fantastic actor, not just comedian.
-Dan PerryTuesday, November 9, 2010
Anthony the Crossing Guard
I came back from England disillusioned and depressed. It wasn’t that British people didn’t like Americans- it was just that they would rather talk to their fellow superior beings, other Brits. If you made small talk with your bartender, store cashier, or the group sitting next to you in the dining hall, they would of course reciprocate ever so politely- but never would they initiate such a thing, and they inwardly judged you for disrupting Well Established Decorum.
It was a relief, then, come June, to walk the streets of Cambridge- Cambridge Massachusetts, that is. I found it quite refreshing to exchange smiles with strangers on our respective walks to work, and to be greeted by the friendly crossing guard at the corner of Charles and Hurley streets.
“Good morning, Erin.”
“Good morning, Anthony.”
Each day we talked a little longer. I learned that Anthony’s aunt was turning one hundred, but she didn’t want Obama to call her- he does that, apparently, calls people on their hundredth birthday. So Anthony arranged instead for the Cambridge City Council to sing to her on local TV. Anthony was very interested in politics because he used to work “in the media” and once interviewed Walter Cronkite. He had to retire to take care of his aunt, but he keeps his mind sharp by reading extensively and listening to Harvard radio.
Anthony listened to an installment of Wagner’s fifteen hour opera The Ring every Sunday. From seven p.m. to midnight he would follow along with his book and immerse himself in the composer’s imaginary world.
And every week he would update me on what had just happened.
“Brünnhilde is trapped among the rocks, surrounded by fire,” he explained, his eyes lighting up as he described how the heroine raised her voice in competition with the roaring orchestral music meant to convey intensifying blaze. Anthony acted out swordfights and battles, completely forgetting about other pedestrians as they walked unassisted across the ever-empty neighborhood street.
I learned a lot about The Ring from our daily conversations. But I also learned something that has nothing to do with mythology or opera or art.
On my last day of work, I expected to be sad to leave my co-workers, who had become my friends over those eight weeks. I did not expect to miss Anthony the crossing guard just as much.
I hope he found another morning companion…I think he has…every commute could use an Anthony. You never know what you are missing when you only bother about yourself.
-Erin Horan
Friday, October 29, 2010
The Social Network
“You’re not an asshole, Mark. You’re just trying so hard to be.”
This is my favorite quote from The Social Network. Though a bit sappy, it sums up the film pretty well.
Zuckerberg tries so hard to be an asshole because assholes are successful. Assholes become bosses. And with this earned status, assholes can legitimate their innate feeling of superiority over others.
Jesse Eisenberg’s Zuckerberg disgusts us with his blunt, no-apologies pretension. He earns our respect as a perceptive genius with an uncanny ability to tap into not just the entire internet, but the interests of his generation. And he garners a pitying sort of sympathy for his struggle to keep friends as his personal desires continuously overrule his sensitivities.
The film’s accuracy has been a hot topic of debate since its release. Friends of Zuckerberg (predictably) defended his moral character, and the film’s insinuations that Zuckerberg desperately wanted to be accepted into a Harvard final club and win back an ex-girlfriend have been widely disclaimed.
Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin never touted a “true story,” though. He knew he was working with a good story, but took creative liberties in bringing it to the screen.
Inaccuracy is no reason to disregard this film. As an artistic interpretation of a sociocultural phenomenon we can all relate to, The Social Network serves as an incisive study of institutions both formal and unspoken, of rules and regulations guiding friendship and business both adhered to and disobeyed. The film explores our human desires to create an identity, to develop a personal worldview, to judge and be judged.
See it. I think everyone should discuss this movie.-Erin Horan '11