Reheated (124)
Because some things do bear repeating, a few items from the archives:
On Calvin and Hobbes – and progressive journalists who find it “problematic.”
By which I mean, it was once possible to stumble across lengthy articles on niche pop-culture subjects, often written with an affectionate expertise. Now, however, it’s difficult to differentiate one contributor from another. The content doesn’t read as if anyone in particular wrote it. It’s flavourless, uniform in its politics and ideological assumptions – both pointedly announced – and uniform in its tone. It might as well be generated by an algorithm.
I suppose that’s what makes the Calvin and Hobbes article grimly funny, in a disappointing modernity kind of way. If you poke through Mr Shayo’s other, numerous contributions, the tone, such as it is, is much the same. There’s no obvious personality – no sense of any particular person having written it – no sense of mischief, and no discernible wit. Mr Shayo is, however, capable of making entirely contradictory claims, on the very same subject, mere days apart.
For instance, in the article quoted above, Mr Shayo worries that the absence of smartphones and GPS tracking devices may be “baffling for young readers,” and he bemoans how the strip “doesn’t have any modern technology.” And yet we’re told – days later – that, “the lack of technological influence makes the strip read as a timeless work.” “It always feels that it’s something that could still happen today… the absence of technology is hardly notable.”
Likewise, Mr Shayo insists that “ending Calvin and Hobbes is exactly what saved it,” and praises the strip’s creator, Bill Watterson, for refusing to license spin-offs, adaptations, and potentially lucrative merchandise, thereby “living up to the ideals that the strip… championed.” “Ending the strip,” we’re told, “was a good decision” and “there is no reason to tarnish that legacy by adding more to an already concluded work.”
While, one week earlier, “Calvin and Hobbes needs to be an animated show.” Because “an adaptation or continuation is essential.”
Let’s Do It, But In A Way That’s Less Likely To Work.
In which we poke through the Parenting pages of the Guardian.
Providing the sperm. A joyous and maternal turn of phrase.
Also of note, the idea of wanting a baby, but with only a third or a quarter of the responsibility. A kind of low-commitment parenting.
Bodes well.
Readers are invited to ponder the appeal, for any gentleman with fatherhood in mind, of effectively becoming a sperm donor who is also expected to perform household chores, for many years, and to pay child maintenance. In a sexless relationship with random lesbians who may find him barely tolerable, a necessary complication.
But this, it seems, is how one “redefines the family unit completely.” It’s “the ideal parenting setup.”
Cross-dressing man issues orders to women.
On the non-random nature of who you are.
The newborn me was a result of a particular lineage, of choices made by specific individuals and the genes of those individuals – who can of course say the same thing about themselves. To imply that anyone’s birth is a random thing, as if it could have happened anywhere, at any time, as if the particulars were immaterial, is, it seems to me, a little odd. Indeed, arse-backwards.
And I doubt that many parents see the birth of their child as some random occurrence, unmoored from any context or preceding events. I’d imagine it wouldn’t seem random at all.
Unless you imagine a queue of souls waiting to spawn in some small but arbitrary body on a continent chosen by the spin of a wheel. Or cosmic bingo balls.
For those craving more, this is a pretty good place to start.
Consider this an open thread. Share ye links and bicker.
Oh, and a reminder that this rickety barge is kept afloat by the buttons below.





I can relate.
Now, get off my lawn.
Somehow, for some reason, I think this will offend a lot of feminists:
I mean, seriously: https://x.com/i/status/2039886277022273804
Also, the American conundrum: https://x.com/i/status/2040104938496290927
That thing that never happens…
More degeneracy from black queer leftists:
End racism? More like increase it to “by any means necessary” levels.
Quasi-consensual – where one party consents and the other doesn’t object because there’s a hand covering their mouth.
I should know better than to wade into this argument, but sometimes one must.
OP: “Why does modern art attempt to evoke disgust whereas classic art attempted to evoke beauty?”
Snarky reply: “There are many examples of classical art that evoke disgust. For instance, Goya’s “Saturn Devouring His Son,” Rubens’s “Massacre of the Innocents,” and Géricault’s “Anatomical Pieces.” I suspect you would know this if you were better educated in the subject you talk about. … In my opinion, the answer to this is very simple: people online who purport to love classical aesthetics are not actually interested in art, architecture, or tailoring. They are, instead, culture warriors primarily interested in politics.”
Eminently brilliant rebuttal: “I’m a well-educated person, knowing enough about art history to recognize the difference between Goya’s psychotic nightmares, Bosch’s weird Garden of Earthly Delights, and Picasso’s horrifying Guérnica on the one hand (having seen all of them in person) and the deliberate degradation, dehumanization, and scatology that’s often pursued today.”
And so on…
Holy crap, I just read that thinking it had to be a cruel April Fool’s joke. WTAF?
I’ll take things that never happened for $200, Alex.
More:
The girls of Rotherham would like to have a word.
And this?
Primitive, tribal and rape-splaining. Cause getting rid of people of pallor is the goal one way or another.
Anyone have a shocked face I can borrow?
That thing, never happens, &c., &c.
Nine years.
The process is the punishment, and they have deep enough pockets to dish it out at will.
Thanks KA-ma-la.
The mindset is truly distorted and depraved. And yes, misogynistic as hell.
Just a little bit freaky.
Ah, I remember the days of heading out for revelry at 10pm.
Now the yawning starts about 8:30.
Who prevailed?
Whistling past the graveyard.
Sending their best.
À la recherche du temps perdu.
Hobbies.
I suppose every age has had its share of farce. It just feels that ours is really pushing the boat out, on pretty much every front.
“art is anything you can get away with”.
you think about that.
Because we can afford it. Until we can’t.
Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote . . .
More like feeding the crocodile. Islam is only open to interfaith tolerance as long as they are the minority. Period.
One doesn’t need to be fluent in French to understand this.
Minor emendation.
An Easter miracle!! Behold, an act of journalism.
It might be difficult for
herhimit to stone itself. Even more than for Angus Podgorny to win Wimbledon.What? It can be a con. So can any number of activities. I like candles. Candles can be cool or they can be a con (see: Gwyneth Paltrow). The “con” doesn’t negate the legit.
The existence of “ugly” doesn’t negate the existence of “beauty”. Exceptions to “ideal” doesn’t negate the concept of having an “ideal”.
Art is a lot more than slapping paint on canvas. It exists in architecture, landscaping, and things like carpentry and the making of home goods.
Someone’s about to be handed all the crap jobs.
If “art is anything you can get away with”, then it is indeed a con. If. But to my other point, the vast majority of people whom I know, successful, productive people, have little to no use for art beyond a few popular songs or movies that they like or other otherwise pedestrian things. Most have never been to a play that one of their children wasn’t in. Rarely read books and if they do, it’s usually some thriller or romance novel. They live perfectly happy and normal lives without knowing a Rembrandt from a Gauguin from a Botticelli. Though when pressed a few can spot a Bosch or a Salvador Dali or an M.C. Escher. The people who get things done so that other people have the time, money, and opportunity to make and enjoy art. Saying all that amongst art-appreciative people sounds like I am describing philistines, shallow people. Yet most of them, to my observation anyway, lead much more fulfilling lives than most (not all) of the types of people who like art so much that they just can’t shut up about it and simply must show how much more they know than others. And if that desire to appear superior in art awareness cannot be met in the conventional, traditional manner, they will run down our entire civilization and its beauty, style and grace just to prove how right they are. See Obama’s library for one example. And of course Di’s point about the pissing whore.
Did you grow up in the ’70s?
“Your parents weren’t your friends. They were the authority.”
I keep meaning to introduce WTP to the concept of paragraphs.
I keep wishing I could have reintroduced Terry Pratchett to the concept of chapters.
Those ‘growing up in the 70s’ were born in the late 50s/early 60s. And it was true for me (b. ’54) and generally all Boomers. There was a pretty bright line between “childhood” and “adulthood”. Yet, we had a lot of freedom out of sight of adult supervision because we also knew the consequences of FA would be meted out by our parents immediately. Swipe even penny candy from the local grocer and be marched into the store to apologize, publicly, to the manager and pay them for item swiped from one’s own allowance.
These tight expectations on behavior contributed to the trust our parents put on us to spend all day roaming the neighborhood on our bikes or skates or scooters with little/no direct supervision “until the streetlights came on”. We were expected to learn how to settle arguments on our own. And the only “screentime” was either the treat of going to the movies or the 18″ black and white TV with 3 major channels.
Unfortunately, the culture of the late 60s and of the 70s kind of blew a lot of these to smithereens in the quest to “find ourselves” “be authentic to ourselves” etc.
Yes…sorry. Sometimes I get interrupted then get back and hurry to finish and in my haste to move on, fail to proofread. Probably more than sometimes.
Needs some more dogs.
He knew what they were. Even employed them a time or two. However, from his telling of how he got on with writing it seems likely they’d largely have been a distraction.
And Bronx wishes you all a Happy Easter!
At some point in his career he decided that he didn’t like them, said they were arbitrary divisions. This is unhelpful when I want to remember where I left off, or when I want to tell someone where to find a passage.
They’re not mobs. They’re “large gatherings”:
Solid investment
A Play: Nine Days Later, or “The NY Times Has Always Sucked”.
NYT also claimed that Robert Goddard didn’t know high school physics and that “space” rockets could not possibly work. And their latest is renaming NATO to the North American Treaty Organization.
Parents didn’t lose trust in their kids; they became terrified that they’d be snatched off the street by a p3do. It took only a few stories to crank up maternal anxiety way past 11 (Amber, she of the alerts, and John Walsh’s headless toddler, to name two).
We can be thrilled with our free-range upbringings, but we’re also the ones who became utter helicopters when the faces started showing up on the milk cartons.
The Millennials are freaks because GenX parented badly. Just as the Greatest Generation raised hippies.
That’s a whole ‘nother language. Maybe Dutch.