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Media
Mickey's surprise
An alternative juror gives his impression of the case of a Disney exec charged with crossing state lines to have sex with a minor.

By Sean Elder
[12/13/99]

Media
Media man
With his new Web venture, magazine veteran Kurt Andersen promises a must-go news and information site that's as witty as the Wall Street Journal.

By Susan Lehman
[12/13/99]

Alt
Unto us, a poster child is born
They are the heroes and victims upon which we affix life's tragic lessons and drill them into your head. Plus: Is James Ellroy snubbing L.A.?

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[12/10/99]

Alt
The unbearable lightness of Schwarzenegger
Film critics struggle to review "The End of Days" and still retain their indie cred. Plus: The AIDS crisis in Africa and one writer's desperate attempt to get a job at Maxim.

By Jenn Shreve
[12/06/99]

Media
Tina fires back
The most controversial editor in the history of American magazines slams her critics, defends her business acumen and says Talk will probably be her last magazine.

By Susan Lehman
[12/02/99]

Complete archives for Media

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alt

-----------ALL TECH, ALL THE TIME
Going e-postal and other tales of the technological
revolution. PLUS: Blood-spurting penises and mushrooming,
adventure sport for the elite?

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By Jenn Shreve

Dec. 17, 1999 | There are those who would argue that too much print is devoted to the topic of technology. It does seem that a senseless glut of gadget reviews and CEO profiles are spilling out from our printing presses and server rooms. But how else are we supposed to come to terms with the sweeping revolution that is taking over our lives if not by communicating it as it happens?

I am reminded of D.H. Lawrence, who frequently would step out of his novels' plots and characters (quite notably in "Lady Chatterly's Lover") to reflect on what the Industrial Revolution meant to the English countryside he grew up on. Today, his worries seem quaint. But they are a useful reference point. Like Lawrence, we are struggling to understand and explain the changing landscape of our culture. Future readers may look upon these stories and chuckle at our naiveté and excessive verbiage. For now, let's take a moment to immerse and confuse ourselves in this brave new world.

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Seattle Weekly, Dec. 16-22

"Option envy" by Soyon Im

This is not a typical "Everyone's getting rich off the new economy but me" essay; instead, Soyon Im bluntly discusses her desire and inability to keep up with a city being transformed by new wealth. The gap in spending power between her and her newly enriched friends has been insurmountable. It led to the breakup of one relationship and much soul-searching about her decision to be a poor but proud writer. Her desire to get rich too isn't greed, per se, but fear of being left out of her social circle.

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Long Island Village Voice

"A Trip Down The Scary AMAZON.COM" by Mark Fefer

It's easy to forget this, as you're hurriedly surfing the Internet for that perfect present to give to Auntie May, but somebody actually had to write those 25-word e-commerce descriptions. Mark Fefer talks to three of the freelance "content providers" who have been hastily reviewing toys for Amazon.com. One writer tells Fefer: "I'd be looking at one of these no-purpose gelatinous balls with hunks of plastic floating around in it, made in some sweatshop in Singapore, and think, 'What am I supposed to say about this?' ... Sometimes my approach was, 'Let's see what it would take to break this.'"

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Metro Times Detroit

"Rethinking ink" by Curtrise Garner

Here's some big, exciting news for all those fools with Loony Toons cartoon characters inked into their skin: Thanks to laser surgery, tattoos are no longer permanent. This is technological innovation at its finest. It takes a common problem ("This tattoo is no longer cool") and provides help where there once was only misery. Oddly enough, the writer of this piece naively asserts that the only people who have and would like to get rid of tattoos are Gen Xers who fell prey to "a major fashion trend of the '90s."

. Next page | Going postal digital-style; blood-spurting penises



 

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