The title refers to Brit Marling from the previous post.
The quote, below, refers to today's news.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
A Quote for Brit
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Saturday November 24, 2007
standards of seriousness
is almost complete.”
— Susan Sontag
Doonesbury 11/23/07:
For standards of comedy,
see Angels in Arabia.
For standards of tragicomedy,
see Molly Ivins on the owner
of Condé Nast Publications:
‘I think Si Newhouse has
lost his moral compass
since Roy Cohn died.'”
— Molly Ivins
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Happy Holidays from Roy Cohn,
Mike Nichols, Al Pacino, and Elvis:
The magazine, which covers music and its impact on filmmaking, launches in November as a supplement in the December subscriber issues of 14 Condé Nast publications.”
Sunday, May 2, 2004
Sunday May 2, 2004
The Script
Hollywood Writers, Producers
Fail to Reach Agreement
Some scripts just write themselves.
Falluja Plan in Doubt
as U.S. Deals With
Furor Over Abuse
Our Man in Baghdad
by Jon Lee Anderson
The New Yorker,
issue of 2004-05-03,
posted 2004-04-26:
“My host was a Shiite cleric, Ayad Jamaluddin…. He lives on the river, in an imposing house supplied by the Coalition Provisional Authority, to which he has close ties….
Ayad Jamaluddin dismissed the idea of the Iraqis policing themselves any time in the near future. He believed that Iraq needed shock treatment, and that it would be best administered by the Americans.
The New Yorker,
online images
‘Iraqis are sick, you know, and what they need is a psychiatrist,’ he said. ‘For thirty-five years, Saddam Hussein didn’t allow Iraqis to think. The Iraqi people are missing something: they are missing a soul. They need a dictator—that is their problem. The Shia want their dictator; the Sunnis want theirs. Unfortunately for us, the Iraqi people’s only model of a leader is Saddam Hussein.’
I remarked that his hopes for a sweeping transformation of a national psyche had few historical precedents, at least under modern American stewardship. The postwar transformations of Germany and Japan were possible only because there was a wholesale capitulation by the regimes in both countries after devastating military assaults. In Japan’s case, this had come about after the atomic blasts at Hiroshima and Nagasaki and after Emperor Hirohito’s radio broadcast offering Japan’s unconditional surrender, and the admission that he was not a divine being. Jamaluddin smiled: ‘Then maybe what we need is another Hiroshima for Iraq. Maybe Fallujah will be our Hiroshima. Inshallah.’ ”
“Lovely.
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See, too, The New Yorker‘s press release for
on the legal career of presidential candidate John Kerry:
“Kerry says his background as a prosecutor made criminal-defense work unappealing. ‘I took a court appointment once in a criminal case,’ Kerry says, ‘and I realized I just didn’t want the guy out on the street. I knew he was guilty. It takes a certain kind of makeup as a lawyer to dedicate yourself to having someone like that out on the street. I know our system says someone has to represent everyone, but I just couldn’t do it. I went to the court and asked them to take me off the case.’ “
Recall the conclusion of Devil’s Advocate: