【USA】
2025-06-27 05:13:25
366 views
13839 comments
The USAMuseum of Broken Relationships, and Other News
On the Shelf
- I hear you’re moving to Buffalo to pursue a more affordable, creative, authentic life in the smoldering remains of the Rust Belt. That’s neat. But what are you buying into, really? In cities like Pittsburgh and Troy, David A. Banks argues, “a ‘cool’ lifestyle is still the bait, only its terms have shifted toward more regional flavors. Cities that no longer produce physical goods can instead produce their own image as a kind of marketed product. If once they smelted steel or manufactured textiles, now they trade on the unique cultural history that is the legacy of those lost industries. The relatively cheap standard of living in places like Buffalo or Pittsburgh offer a more ‘authentic’ urban experience in terms of sampling gritty make-do entrepreneurial creativity, while also letting new residents dismiss those in more expensive cities as unimaginative dupes taken in by luxury branding … To attract new residents, cities must understand how their character can be conveyed through a smartphone.”
- In 2010, the brokenhearted and salty-cheeked could find solace only in Croatia, where a melancholy place called the Museum of Broken Relationships held the keepsakes of sundered romance. Now the Museum is coming to Los Angeles: “More than 100 exhibits range from everyday artifacts (a spare key never given to its intended recipient, a mirror that didn’t go with an ex’s decorating scheme) to signifiers of deeply troubled unions (a pair of silicone breast implants a woman got at her boyfriend’s urging). Some radiate sorrow, like the blue chiffon blouse a wife wore the day her husband told her he was moving out. All objects are submitted anonymously and come with stories explaining their significance.”
- T-shirt idea: “I majored in English because my university didn’t offer comp lit.” Jeanne-Marie Jackson argues that there’s a critical (in every sense of the word) difference between the two disciplines: “The reason that comparative literature as a discipline, and comparatists as an ad hoc community, somehow escape the intellectual trap of confusing redundant, self-congratulatory polemic with genuinely advancing thought is that, in having to build its own comparative apparatus, the discipline is forced to balance breadth against depth. It can’t escape either geographical reach or philosophical literacy. This is, at its outer reaches, a recipe for something like multicultural dignity, the kind that is achieved rather than avowed, at least in one’s reading and writing.”
- Thorsten Schütte’s documentary Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words looks at one of the few genuine iconoclasts in rock music: the man who hated both the squares and the hippies, the man who preferred to chain-smoke as he cranked out musique concrète. “Schütte’s film is a fluid mosaic of concert footage, TV appearances, and interview clips, much of them never seen before: Zappa on the Steve Allen Show in 1963 ‘playing’ the bicycle; hunched over staff paper notating music in his Laurel Canyon studio in the seventies; stalking through airports with a Mephistophelian leer; leading staggeringly well rehearsed bands … Zappa’s antidrug stance made him an oddity in the rock world, defying the idea, foisted on him by journalists and TV commentators, that someone of such profligate imagination must be on drugs. ‘They write about me like I’m a maniac,’ he says at one point. ‘I’m not … I’m forty years old, I’ve got four kids, a house, and a mortgage.’ ”
- Public service announcement: be around trees. I say this not as some kind of granola-crunching hiker-guru type but as someone with a body of hard data to back it up. A new study by Marc Berman, a University of Chicago psychology professor, “compares two large data sets from the city of Toronto, both gathered on a block-by-block level; the first measures the distribution of green space … and the second measures health, as assessed by a detailed survey of ninety-four thousand respondents. After controlling for income, education, and age, Berman and his colleagues showed that an additional ten trees on a given block corresponded to a one-per-cent increase in how healthy nearby residents felt. ‘To get an equivalent increase with money, you’d have to give each household in that neighborhood ten thousand dollars—or make people seven years younger.’ ”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
New 'Destiny 2' catch
2025-06-27 04:49Jordan Peele's 'Us' is a force to be reckoned with: Review
2025-06-27 04:42Seth Rogen and Charlize Theron can't save awkward rom
2025-06-27 03:21Broncos vs. Bills 2025 livestream: How to watch NFL online
2025-06-27 02:48Popular Posts
Toyota says selling full
2025-06-27 03:41Watch out, AT&T: Trump says he opposes your Time Warner merger
2025-06-27 03:11Featured Posts
Amazon Kindle Paperwhite Kids: $139.99 at Amazon
2025-06-27 04:52Spotify Premium now includes a free Hulu subscription
2025-06-27 04:49Slack's mobile dark mode is available now for beta users
2025-06-27 04:27Slack's dark mode on mobile is now available to all users
2025-06-27 03:27How to Get Your Significant Other Into Gaming
2025-06-27 02:51Popular Articles
Best robot vacuum deal: Save $500 on Roborock Qrevo Edge
2025-06-27 05:11'Fantastic Four' director expertly roasts himself on Twitter
2025-06-27 03:46Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (882)
Belief Information Network
Lehecka vs. Dimitrov 2025 livestream: Watch Brisbane International for free
2025-06-27 04:34Warm Information Network
Katy Perry, John Mayer and Taylor Swift all attended Drake's birthday party
2025-06-27 03:57Music Information Network
5 red flags that will make you rethink what you privately say about women
2025-06-27 03:34Miracle Information Network
Google Doodle celebrates 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web
2025-06-27 03:02Warmth Information Network
Wordle today: The answer and hints for January 28, 2025
2025-06-27 02:44