"The upcoming film Love Me has an intriguing concept.
In a post-apocalyptic world in which humans have gone extinct,
a buoy falls in love with a satellite. To be together, they review
historical accounts of humanity and create avatars of themselves,
played by Steven Yeun and Kristen Stewart."
Saturday, January 4, 2025
Graphics for Avatars
(New “Love Me” Trailer)
(New “Love Me” Trailer)
Saturday, March 8, 2025
New from Apple TV
See as well Kafka in this journal.
Related New York humor . . .
|
From Today.com on March 8, 2025 . . . https://www.today.com/popculture/tv/is-snl-new-tonight-rcna195170 Is there a new episode of ‘SNL’ tonight? Yes! The March 8 episode will be a new, live show hosted by Lady Gaga. Gaga will also perform as the episode's musical guest. A double-duty "SNL" episode seems especially fitting for Gaga, who's been nominated for four Oscars and 38 Grammys. Gaga also released her latest album, "Mayhem," on March 7. Ahead of the episode, the singer and actor gave viewers a glimpse of her creative “process” when she played piano and made up impromptu lyrics about the show’s embarrassed cast members in a hilarious promo. Dressed down in a ball cap and eyeglasses, Gaga noted that Andrew Dismukes ordered his breakfast sandwich at 2 p.m. and that Devon Walker was "taking a big swing" by donning a new cowboy hat. Gaga then busted Heidi Gardner, who emerged from her office in jammies and an eye mask, for sleeping on the "SNL" set. "And the question is why?" Gaga sang, hitting a dazzling high note. "And the answer is bed bugs," Gardner sang back, which seemed to inspire the crescendo for Gaga's song. "She has bedbugs!" Gaga belted out with passion. — |
Some dialogue better suited to flyover country . . .
From the first episode of the TV series “The West Wing“:
|
Original airdate: Sept. 22, 1999
MARY MARSH
CALDWELL
MARY MARSH
JOSH
TOBY [A stunned silence. Everyone stares at Toby.]
TOBY (CONT.)
JOSH |
For "Love Me" fans, some less clownish material . . .

Saturday, February 22, 2025
Color-Space Art
Subtitles for the recent Kristen Stewart film "Love Me" —

Friday, January 31, 2025
♪ “By these festival rites from the age that is past . . .” ♪
Elvis, 1958, "Spearhead" Division . . .
Kristen, January 2024 Sundance photo by Mariah Tauger:
publicity photo for "Love Me" . . .
Friday, January 3, 2025
Die Verhexung
Lester del Rey, Pstalemate , 1971 —
"Distilled from her frantically escaped mind,
the words still drew her back, let her relax
to some-thing that would be almost sleep
in the living. She could no longer find
the way out when her mind was tense.
Once the whole world was open at all times,
but now there was only the single tunnel
to the Boy, and she could not reach that until
everything else was blanked from her mind
and she could draw help from the symbol
she had planted."
Song lyric —"Let's hear it for the Buoy !"
(Vide "Love Me" trailer)
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Story Space
than cipher: a mask rather than a revelation
in the romantic sense. Does love meet with love?
Do we receive but what we give? The answer is
surely a paradox, the paradox that there are
Platonic universals beyond, but that the glass
is too dark to see them. Is there a light beyond
the glass, or is it a mirror only to the self?
The Platonic cave is even darker than Plato
made it, for it introduces the echo, and so
leaves us back in the world of men, which does
not carry total meaning, is just a story of events.”
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Logo
than cipher: a mask rather than a revelation
in the romantic sense. Does love meet with love?
Do we receive but what we give? The answer is
surely a paradox, the paradox that there are
Platonic universals beyond, but that the glass
is too dark to see them. Is there a light beyond
the glass, or is it a mirror only to the self?
The Platonic cave is even darker than Plato
made it, for it introduces the echo, and so
leaves us back in the world of men, which does
not carry total meaning, is just a story of events."
Judy Davis in the Marabar Caves
The above image is from this journal on Sunday, April 13, 2008.
The preceding cover of a book by Northrop Frye was suggested
by material in this journal from February 2003.
See also Yankee Puzzle and Doodle Dandy.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Sunday April 13, 2008
in Plato’s Cave
“It is said that the students of medieval Paris came to blows in the streets over the question of universals. The stakes are high, for at issue is our whole conception of our ability to describe the world truly or falsely, and the objectivity of any opinions we frame to ourselves. It is arguable that this is always the deepest, most profound problem of philosophy.”
— Simon Blackburn, Think (Oxford, 1999)
Michael Harris, mathematician at the University of Paris:
“… three ‘parts’ of tragedy identified by Aristotle that transpose to fiction of all types– plot (mythos), character (ethos), and ‘thought’ (dianoia)….”
— paper (pdf) to appear in Mathematics and Narrative, A. Doxiadis and B. Mazur, eds.
Mythos —
A visitor from France this morning viewed the entry of Jan. 23, 2006: “In Defense of Hilbert (On His Birthday).” That entry concerns a remark of Michael Harris.
A check of Harris’s website reveals a new article:
“Do Androids Prove Theorems in Their Sleep?” (slighly longer version of article to appear in Mathematics and Narrative, A. Doxiadis and B. Mazur, eds.) (pdf).
From that article:
“The word ‘key’ functions here to structure the reading of the article, to draw the reader’s attention initially to the element of the proof the author considers most important. Compare E.M. Forster in Aspects of the Novel:
[plot is] something which is measured not be minutes or hours, but by intensity, so that when we look at our past it does not stretch back evenly but piles up into a few notable pinnacles.”
Ethos —
“Forster took pains to widen and deepen the enigmatic character of his novel, to make it a puzzle insoluble within its own terms, or without. Early drafts of A Passage to India reveal a number of false starts. Forster repeatedly revised drafts of chapters thirteen through sixteen, which comprise the crux of the novel, the visit to the Marabar Caves. When he began writing the novel, his intention was to make the cave scene central and significant, but he did not yet know how:
When I began a A Passage to India, I knew something important happened in the Malabar (sic) Caves, and that it would have a central place in the novel– but I didn’t know what it would be… The Malabar Caves represented an area in which concentration can take place. They were to engender an event like an egg.”
— E. M. Forster: A Passage to India, by Betty Jay
Dianoia —
or Resplendent Trinity?
“Despite the flagrant triviality of the proof… this result is the key point in the paper.”
— Michael Harris, op. cit., quoting a mathematical paper
Online Etymology Dictionary:
flagrant c.1500, “resplendent,” from L. flagrantem (nom. flagrans) “burning,” prp. of flagrare “to burn,” from L. root *flag-, corresponding to PIE *bhleg– (cf. Gk. phlegein “to burn, scorch,” O.E. blæc “black”). Sense of “glaringly offensive” first recorded 1706, probably from common legalese phrase in flagrante delicto “red-handed,” lit. “with the crime still blazing.”
A related use of “resplendent”– applied to a Trinity, not a triviality– appears in the Liturgy of Malabar:

— The Liturgies of SS. Mark, James, Clement, Chrysostom, and Basil, and the Church of Malabar, by the Rev. J.M. Neale and the Rev. R.F. Littledale, reprinted by Gorgias Press, 2002
A Passage to India:

Judy Davis in the Marabar Caves
In mathematics
(as opposed to narrative),
somewhere between
a flagrant triviality and
a resplendent Trinity we
have what might be called
“a resplendent triviality.”
For further details, see
“A Four-Color Theorem.”





