Nine Burning Questions About the 2020 Tony Awards – Time Out New York

Since the beginning of the Broadway shutdown on March 12, two questions have been on every theater lovers lips. To the first and most pressing onewhen will theaters reopen?we still have no firm answer, though several productions are optimistically selling tickets for performances in early 2021. To the secondwhat will become of the Tony Awardswe now have the very beginnings of an answer, but one that raises a host of smaller questions in its wake.

Since so many of this year's scheduled Broadway productions never got to open, there had been speculation that the Tonys would be scrapped entirely this year, and that potential nominees would be bundled in with next years crop.But on August 21, the Tonys announced that the 74th annual awards, honoring achievements in the abbreviated 201920 Broadway season, would indeed be presented in a digital ceremony this fall. That seems like the right decision; to do otherwise would have penalized shows that opened earlier this season. But where will this years Tonys take place? And when? And how? Those are things we dont yet know. (Additional information, including a date and platform for the awards ceremony, will be announced soon, the press release promised.)

The Tony Awards Administration Committee, which makes rulings about eligibility and other questions, is set to convene later this week for the third and final time this season. In terms of its normal work, the committee will be considering only three productions that openedsince the last time it met: My Name is Lucy Barton, A Soldiers Play and Grand Horizons. (The new cut-off date has been established as February 19, 2020; Girl from the North Country and the revival of West Side Story, which opened after that but before the March shutdown, have been deemed ineligible because not enough nominators were able to see them.) But this is no normal season. Will the unprecedented nature of the season lead to changes in the rules that ordinarily govern the Tony nominations?

With that in mind, please join us in a deep dive into the weeds. Here arenine of the main questions that remain, as of now, unanswered.

Asnoted above, the Tonys timetable is still amystery:All we know for sure is thatthe ceremony will be in the fall. But the Tony nominations usually follow closely on the heels of the final Administration Committee meeting, sothosemightbe announcedas soon asnext week. Traditionally, there are about five weeks between the nominations and the ceremonya period usually packed with lobbying from the nominated shows' producersbut this year's gapcould easilybe shorter or longer.

One answer to this question is clear:Since all three of the seasons scheduled musical revivals are ineligible (West Side Story, Company and Caroline, or Change), there will be no award this year for Best Revival of a Musical. Five scheduled revivals of plays also didnt open, but that leaves four play revivals: enough, if only barely, to populate a category for Best Revival of a Play. Heres where things get tricky: According to the Tony rules that govern the Best Show categories, if there are only four eligible nominees then the category automatically shrinks to three nomineesunless the difference in votes between the third-highest ranked show and the fourth-highest ranked show is ten percent or less. Will one of the four potential nominees (A Soldiers Play, Betrayal, The Rose Tattoo or Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune) be left in the cold? Or will the committee decide to waive that rule this year?

Of the four new musicals that opened in 2019-2020, only one, the lukewarmly received The Lightning Thief, had an original score. But the Tonys permit nominations in this category for original music in straight plays as well, for which at least six productions this season would be eligible. Will the committee choose to err on the side of generosity and leave the category as is, at the risk of harming the awards reputation? Will it decide to give the award to one of the potential nominees by acclimation, as it did when Sunset Boulevard hadthe sole new book and score in the shockingly thin 1994-1995 season? Or will it eliminate the category entirely, as it did in the 198889 season when faced with the alternative of nominating the scores for the flops Starmites, Chu Chem, Welcome to the Club and Legs Diamond? If we were betting folk, wedput our chipson the last option.

As things stand, only two nominees are eligible: Moulin Rouge!s Aaron Tveit and The Lightning Thiefs Chris McCarrell. As with Best Score, this leaves the nominators with a decision. They could have a category of two, like the Best Actress in a Musical category in 1995. They could just give the award to one of the two (read: Tveit) outright; they could also reverse course on an earlier decision and fill out the category by bumping Tinas Daniel J. Watts and/or Jagged Little Pill's Sean Allan Krillup to the leading actor category. (Both of these options would ordinarily be against the rules, but the rules can be flexible in an emergency if the Administration Committees oversight group, the Management Committee, decides there is good cause to do so.) Or they could drop the category, as they did for both Best Actress and Best Actor in a Musical back in the weak 1984-1985 seasonand perhaps make Tveit and McCarrell eligible for Best Featured Actor (which is what happened to many leads in 1985, and which is the category they would be in anyhow if they hadnt been bumped up to leading status in an earlier rules decision).

Ordinarily, the categories for Costumes, Set, Lighting and Sound of a Musical have at least four or five nominees. This year, however, there are only four eligible musical productions, which would mean automatic nominations for everyonesomewhat defeating the prestige involved. The administration committee could leave that in place, which would be great news for, say, The Lightning Thief. Alternatively, it could thin the lanes to two or three nominees in each race. Another option might be to drop the split, for this season alone, between musicals and playsa split that has only existed since 2005, after alland put all the productions in one category. (The same logic might apply for Best Director, though in that case the split dates back to 1960.)

David Byrnes concert show was not submitted by its producers for Tony contention, though it has been widely expected to receive a Special Tony Award for merit. Given the situation, howeverand if enough of the nominators and voters saw it anyhowmight the Tonys decide its an eligible musical after all? The answer here is: almost certainly not. But it would make several of the categories more interesting if they did.

If the Tonys hew to their ordinary rules, then the race for Best Play will be the most straightforward, since ten new plays are eligible and only four that had been scheduled to open are not. That translates into fine, fat categories of five nominees for Best Play, its attendant acting awards andif the nonperformance categories are not combined (see above)Best Costumes, Set, Lighting and Sound of a Play. Expect big hauls for Slave Play andThe Inheritance.(The categories for featured performances in musicals, which usually have more than enough candidates, may end up with only four nominees apiece this year.)

Now we move into a very tricky area for the Tonys: not the nominators and administrators, but the voters. Two years ago, the Tonys instituted a new system to ensure that the pool of more than 800 Tony voters had actually seen all of the nominated productions; voters had to visit a special portal and provide proof of attendance for each show. That system might prove very exclusive this year, however, since a larger proportion of the voters might not have seen all of the nominees in many of the categories. (They might have been putting off seeing Jagged Little Pill, for instance, on the assumption that they would have plenty of time to do so before voting in May.) Enforcing the existing standards strictly might limit the voting pool significantly; dropping it, on the other hand, would tacitly acknowledge that the voters were judging work they hadnt seen.

For many theater lovers, who rarely get to see Broadway theater except on the annual Tonys telecast on CBS, this is the really important question. Its also, unfortunately, the question we have the least information about. Giving out the awards themselves is easy enough: Other awards showsthe Obies, the New York Drama Critics Circle, the Lucille Lortel Awards, the Drama Desk Awards, the new Antonyo Awardshave already given out their prizes online, and you can watch those ceremonies here. But the most exciting moments of the Tonys, for many viewers, are the musical numbers from nominated shows. Its hard to know how that part would be accomplished in a satisfying way. First of all, there are only four potential musical nominees this year (plus American Utopia). Yes, the broadcast could easily also include numbers from shows that were supposed to open this year and will instead be part of next seasons crop. But assembling such numbers in a way that would showcase them at their best would be extremely difficult: A number like Moulin Rouge!s Bad Romance simply doesnt fit in Zoom boxes. In theory, casts could be gathered, quarantined, rehearsed and filmed on stagebut the logistics would be a nightmare and the expense would be prohibitive, especially since the numbers would not be fulfilling their usual function of trying to generate ticket sales for the shows in question. Under the circumstances, we lean toward expecting a relatively modest virtual ceremony in October or Novemberjazzed up with numbers that can be performed more or less solo and pre-recorded effectivelywith a larger Broadway special of some kind to follow, months down the road, once the Street is open for business again.

As we await the answers to these questions and others, it is worth remembering what Broadway did manage to offer this season: ten new plays, four new musicals, four play revivals, a memorable theatrical concert and many glimpses of exciting things to come. Theres a lot to celebrate, and we look forward to doing just that with this years Tony Awards, in whatever new forms they assume.

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Nine Burning Questions About the 2020 Tony Awards - Time Out New York

The 14 Best New Books of 2020 – Men’s Health

One of the very few perks to life in lockdown (and boy, do you really need to look for the silver linings) has been that we've all had a lot more free time to dedicate to that stack of unread books on the nightstand. And as 2020 is officially the year of the staycation, we thought we'd bring you our faves from this year's releases, from gritty thrillers to far-flung fantasy to big idea non-fiction.

1The City We Became: A Novel (The Great Cities Trilogy Book 1)

This innovative modern fantasy epic by the author of The Fifth Season takes place in a version of New York City very much like the one we know except its alive. In Jemisons world, cities have souls, and The City We Became is the story of the human incarnations of the Big Apple as they fight to defend the metropolis they love from an otherworldly, Lovecraftian horror.

2Here for It: Or, How to Save Your Soul in America; Essays

Playwright and columnist R. Eric Thomas debut collection of personal essays explore big themes of race, sexuality and religion that authors have been grappling with for years and manages to make them funny. With the trademark wit and insight that made his Ellecolumn Eric Reads the News so popular, Thomas recounts some of the most formative, hilarious experiences of his childhood and young adulthood, before turning his wry-yet-hopeful eye to the future.

3The Glass Hotel: A novel

Mandels previous novel, Station Eleven, followed a disparate group of characters through the outbreak of a global plague, then caught up with the remnants of human society decades later. Her latest book may feature fewer apocalypses but is no less sprawling in scope, beginning with one fateful evening at the Hotel Caiette in British Columbia, and tracing the echoes that reverberate through several characters lives over the decades that follow.

4Antkind: A Novel

One of the greatest screenwriting minds of all time takes his shot at the literary with the sprawling, funny, mind-warpingAntkind.Much like he did withBeing John MalkovichandAdaptation,Charlie Kaufman gets very meta in this novel that also invokes the films of Judd Apatow and the surreal, speculative workof Philip K. Dick. With just about every single one ofAntkinds 720 pages, youll be testing your own mind, and getting another rare and exclusive glimpse into Kaufmans (and laughing all along the way).

5The Answer Is . . .: Reflections on My Life

Game show host Alex Trebek has been a beloved part of the American cultural canon for more than 30 years, and when he revealed in 2019 that he had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, the public responded with unanimous messages of love and support. Trebek says this memoir was written as a kind of thank you to those unwavering fans; each chapter takes its title from a Jeopardy!-style question, and includes never-before-shared stories from Trebeks life and his time on the show.

6Blacktop Wasteland: A Novel

Billed as Oceans Eleven meets Drive, this gritty modern noir follows Bug, a former getaway driver who earned a reputation as the best wheelman on the East coast. Hes trying hard to go legit, but as a Black man living on the brink of poverty in the rural South with a family depending on him, the promise of one last job is all too alluring, and so he agrees to take part in a heist which could change his life for good or be his undoing.

7The Vanishing Half: A Novel

The Vignes sisters are identical twins, and were once inseparable. But when they ran away from home at the age of sixteen, their lives diverged. Ten years later, one of the sisters passes for white, with a husband who has no knowledge of where she comes from, and the other sister lives in the same community they once tried to escape. And then their daughters paths cross. The Vanishing Half weaves together elements of family saga and social commentary to ask the question: what makes us who we are?

8Mexican Gothic

Noemi, a society girl living in Mexico City in the 1950s, receives an alarming letter from her cousin, Catalina, claiming her husband is trying to poison her. What follows is a richly imagined take on the Gothic fiction genre, complete with a baroque remote mansion, a complicated and brooding male lead, and a mystery in dire need of solving.

9Smoke & Mirrors: How Hype Obscures the Future and How to See Past It

Were living in a time of technological marvels, but all too often, the lofty claims and bombastic headlines surrounding new advances tend to obfuscate or oversimplify. How many times over the last few years have we heard that robots are coming to take our jobs?Through chapters on everything from healthcare to energy to artificial intelligence, science writer Gemma Milne makes the argument that hype is a dangerous tool when it comes to shaping human progress, and that we all need to be able to think critically.

10Such a Fun Age

A young woman of color is accused of kidnapping a white child in a supermarket at the outset of this Booker-longlisted novel. Things only get worse for Emira, the babysitter, when the childs mother Alix tries to make things right by taking to the internet, igniting a series of events that feel both gripping and inevitable.

11If It Bleeds

In addition to churning out one doorstopper of a novel per year, preternaturally prolific horror writer Stephen King is also a master of short-form suspense. His latest collection comprises four characteristically original, unnerving novellas, including the titular If It Bleeds, which functions as a standalone sequel to Kings 2018 thriller The Outsider, which wasrecently adapted into a chilling miniseries by HBO.

12The Paper Girl of Paris

The YA debut of Mens Healths own deputy editor Jordyn Taylor, The Paper Girl of Paris unfolds over two timelines. In the present day, 16-year-old Alice inherits an apartment in Montmartre that has been locked ever since the Second World War. And in the 1940s, a young socialite named Adalyn experiences the first spark of resistance during the Occupation. Part mystery, part love story, The Paper Girl of Paris is a timely novel about coming of age and doing the right thing.

13Utopia Avenue: A Novel

This kaleidoscopic tale of sex, drugs and rocknroll focuses on the fictional band Utopia Avenue and their stratospheric rise in the late 1960s. There are very few genuinely greatbooks about music, and it takes a novelist of David Mitchells talents to satisfactorily capture the ineffable thrill of a live gig. Utopia Avenue is a love letter to a specific time, and a specific kind of band and for Mitchell fans, its also full of Easter eggs that place it firmly in the wider, deeply strange shared universe of his other notable works likeCloud Atlas andThe Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet.

14A Traveler at the Gates of Wisdom: A Novel

Ambitious doesnt even begin to describe this novel, which starts out as the story of a family in Biblical times before taking the reader on an epic journey across continents and through centuries, ending in the year 2080. With the introduction of each new character and setting, Boynes thesis becomes increasingly clear: everything (and everyone) is connected, and history will be doomed to repeat itself unless people start to figure shit out.

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The 14 Best New Books of 2020 - Men's Health

The Wind’s Twelve Quarters, Part II: Le Guin’s Psychomyths and Those Who Walk Away – tor.com

A biweekly series, The Ursula K. Le Guin Reread explores anew the transformative writing, exciting worlds, and radical stories that changed countless lives. This week well be covering the first half of the short story collection The Winds Twelve Quarters, from Nine Lives to The Day Before the Revolution, pp. 105 to the end, in the 1975 Harper & Row hardcover edition.

In the last post of the Le Guin Reread we looked at the first half of Le Guins first story collection, The Winds Twelve Quarters, which we continue here. I was pleasantly surprised that no one shamed me (to my knowledge) for my comments about short stories generally (thanks for sparing me, Rich!), and in fact one reader wrote elsewhere in recognition of the feeling of getting lost in a world as opposed to a story.

While the early stories of the collection are something of a retrospective on the first few years of her life as an SFF writer, coming up through the magazine world with increasingly better and more ambitious short storiesseveral of which launched the storyworlds that made her career, quite literallythe second half reflects the difference of a writer finally coming into her own. I (regrettably but, for me, truthfully) called the first half meh, but the nine stories of (my arbitrarily divided) part two are individually and collectively anything but meh. Semleys Necklace and The Good Trip were but a taste of what Le Guin can do with the short story form, and Winds Twelve Quarters culminates with a bevvy of heady, beautiful, and thought-provoking stories composed with a careful, sometimes quiet, power. The stories are as myths or fableslittle bits of truth and reality poured into SFF skins.

Unsurprisingly, a shared set of symbologies unite the stories of the collection, and these meanings are drawn all the more clearly in the later stories. Among these are an abiding interest in and love for the rural and the rustictrees, caves, roads, pathwaysas well as in the myths, mysteries, and psyches of human cultures across time, space, and genres. Indeed, Le Guin labels nearly every story in the second half of Winds Twelve Quarters as a psychomyth, though shes never really clear what she means by it beyond a short description in her foreword to the collection: more or less surrealistic tales, which share with fantasy the quality of taking place outside any history, outside of time, in that region of the living mind whichwithout invoking any consideration of immortalityseems to be without spatial or temporal limits at all.

Whew, a mouthful, but which basically means: a fabilistic or mythological story independent of most temporo-spatial markers that would place it noticeably in, say, medieval Europe or far-future China, and that by virtue of being tempo-spatially (and, to the extent possible, linguistically) unmoored is able to focus on human truths. Of course, the idea of a psychomyth is itself a fantasynot unlike the idea of a shared, universal human experiencebut its a nice fantasy and one allows Le Guin to establish a kind of writing unto herself that helps her carve a literary-intellectual niche for herself. And this isnt a bad thing, since with few other exceptions (at least in this collection!), Le Guins stories that actively aim for being labelled fantasy or science fiction are, well, just OK (a surprising thing, since her SFF novels are fucking fantastic, but every writer is different!). Psychomyth is nonetheless an interesting concept for thinking through these storiesGabrielle Bellot, for example, pinpoints how Omelas uses the psychomyth to defy generic categoriesand at the same time points toward just how much thinkers like Carl Jung (sorry, but blech!) influenced Le Guins writing in the early half of her career.

There are nine stories and psychomyths in this reread, three of which will likely be familiar to Le Guin stans, and the others of which, if unfamiliar, will come as a wonderful surprise. These stories are:

Ill do what I did in the previous reread and cover each story shortly and succinctly, discussing plot and theme, and what the story means for Le Guin as writer-thinker, the idea being to provide a somewhat holistic picture of The Winds Twelve Quarters as a whole. In taking this route, I end up deemphasizing the final two stories, which are no doubt Le Guins most famous, but others have written about those stories at great length and Im not sure I can add much to the din.

Onward, then, to the stories!

To start withno. Nine Lives is not, unfortunately, about cats. Let the disappointment sink in for a moment and remember that Le Guin probably wrote Catwings to correct this immense error, or at least thats my headcanon. So Nine Lives isnt about cats, but the title is probably an immense troll on the storys publication venue: Playboy. Yep, the magazine that built Hugh Heffners empire and made porn mainstream. And its the only story she wrote under a pseudonym (U.K. Le Guin) at the editors insistence. To be sure, theres a lot of sex in Nine Lives, until theres a lot of death. This is the story of a tenclone, a group of five male, five female clones of a brilliant scientist named John Chow.

The clones (theyre actually referred to as a singular) have come to the planet Libra as an elite work-crew for a newly discovered mine; they work better than non-clones because of their intense bond and social cohesion (the nightly sexual pairingsis it sex or masturbation, one non-clone asksbetween male and female clones helps). One accident later, however, and only one of the tenclone is left: Kaph. The nine lives, then, is a reference to the nine lives, the nine selves, Kaph loses when the rest of the tenclone dies; he experiences intense pain and suffering, almost as though a psychic bond is shorn at the others death, and through it all he is aided by two non-clones, who show him the way toward making human connections outside of the clone collective. Its a very sweet story about homosocial (potentially homosexual between the two non-clones, though I dont think thats Le Guins intention) bonding and grief, learning to see other humans as people to share life with.

Things, by turns, is not sweet, but bittersweetand my favorite story in the collection next to Semleys Necklace and The Good Trip. Originally titled The End, altered by Damon Knight from Le Guins preferred title, it is a psychomyth as close to Le Guins definition as possible (or at least as comparable as Omelas); she might have called it a pure psychomyth. The story takes place in a village at the supposed end of all things. The villages are split between the Weepers, those who gather to lament the end, and the Ragers, those who party hard until its all over. The Weepers and the Ragers have left the things that mattered behind, detaching themselves from whatever made meaning in life, what glued together the social order, what made the village a village.

In between these groups are folks like Lif, a former brickmaker, along with the widow of one of Lifs fellow bricklayers. These two havent yet detached from the order of things / Order of Things, and so go on trying to find meaningat first in trying to do what brickmakers and widows do in the normal course of things, and later in one another. Lif turns to a myth of far-off islands to create meaning for life in the end times, but his culture has no boats, so he decides hell chuck all his bricks into the sea in the hopes of making a pathway to islands that may or may not exist. This gives his life meaning and as his relationship with the widow develops, she too becomes interested in his project, and together they build a path. One night, all the villagers are gone, their attachment to the world finally severed. For Lif and the widow, this signals the end, so they decide its time to try the path. Try they do, and soon myths become real.

I love Thingswhich I agree is the better and more thought-provoking titlebecause its beautifully written, short, and simple, evidencing just how well an economy of language and form can create something so amazing. At the same time, its a complex questioning of the relation between lifeways and cultural meaning, between things (as objects, as cultural practices, etc.) and the meaning that has both Buddhist and anti-capitalist overtones (that interact in not-so-easy ways). Its a story that deserves more attention and one Im sure Ill be returning to again and again.

I cant say the same for A Trip to the Head, which demonstrates that an economy of language and form, even in Le Guins hands, dont always produce little works of staggering literary genius. Its another psychomythological story, by her description, in which the object of extrapolation is the question of how powerful an imaginative force is the mind. It pairs well, in this way, with The Good Trip, and also places the mind above psychotropics as a force for creation. In this story a person, Blank, emerges from a forest with no knowledge of their identity (City of Illusions vibes, anyone?). Blank talks to another person, imagines who/what they might have been, and becomes that person, only for it to not feel right, so he (the newly assumed identity) takes off for the forest to forget this iteration of self, starting the cycle all over again. Its a story worth reading once in your life if you have the inclination or if it happens to be in front of you; otherwise, its nothing to go out of your way for. What it has to say about the mind and imagination have already been said, and said better, in the other novels and stories weve covered.

By contrast, Vaster than Empires and More Slow is one of those stories that says what it says well and also resonates powerfully with many of Le Guinsother themes, making it something worth seeking out and wrestling with. Its a novelette in the Hainish cycle that departs from the usual heres how humans evolved on this world fare to instead imagine a world of collectively-sentient arboriforms (tree-like and plant-like organisms). At the same time, its a massively problematicand as a result, critically interestingstory featuring an autistic character (or, really, a character cured of autism).

The set-up of the story is also quite unique among the Hainish stories, since most feature some sort of League representative to a human world, whether before or after their integration into the League. But Vaster is about Terras fundamental dissatisfaction with the fact that all sentient life in the universe was seeded by the Hains; its not a major plot point, nor discussed very often, but Le Guin uses the frame to highlight that Terrans as a group dont deal super well with being told they arent specialreally an allegory for Americans. So Terrans send out Extreme Surveys, crewed by the occasional non-Terran curious about the wider universe, to spend several hundred years traveling in FTL ships to see if anything sentient exists outside of the Hainish sphere of influence. Well, reader, you can guess what happens: they find something. A whole planet of plants that, after many months, the crew discovers has evolved into a collectively sentient lifeform that is terrified of the otherness represented by the humans.

This is all quite interesting, but the real focus of the story is on the cured-autistic crewmember Osden, who has apparently been cured of his inability to parse external emotional stimuli (only one possible manifestation of autism) to such an extent that now he is magnificently empathic, and can feel all sentient beings emotions. As a result, most people are uncomfortable with him and he lives constantly in their disdain, discomfort, and even hate. But its his abilities to sense emotion and feelings that help the crew discover the plant planet is sentient. Its a story that simultaneously does everything wrong you could do when writing about autism, but also demonstrates forcefully and tragically the ways in which neurotypical folks ostracize neuroatypical folks. But Ive never claimed Le Guin is perfect, and the story provides a great deal to think about with regard to disability, ecology, sentience, and emotion. No wonder it has remained one of Le Guins most discussed stories.

The next two stories in the collection are short, intelligent, fun mysteries (of a sort). The Stars Below is a fantasy about an astronomer whose science is considered heretical and who is literally forced underground, to live in the dark of a mine nearing the end of its productivity. The Field of Vision is science fiction about two astronauts who return from an archaeological dig on Mars, one deafened and the other blinded.

Both are, in Le Guins presentation, psychomyths. The Stars Below doesnt have much to recommend it, honestly, except that it is a great example of a person losing their shit because, well, a bunch of priests burned their livelihood and forced them into underground exile as a hereticbuy, hey, at least the astronomer helps the struggling miners find a new vein of silver! Actually, whats great about this story is you can see Le Guin returning with gusto to writing about people learning to live underground and in the dark, as she did so perfectly in The Tombs of Atuan. The Field of Vision is by far the better story, with an Arthur C. Clarke feel to it, what with the giant, unfathomable alien structures and the revelation of Gods reality and immanent presence in the universe. Which isodd?for Le Guin. I wont spoil it; check it out for yourself, since the mystery is worthwhile.

The final story before we get to the Big Two of this collection is The Direction of the Road, a story that like many of her shorter ones grew out of a family moment, a familiar memory, a Le Guinism. In this case, its a tree off Oregon State Highway 18 that Le Guin and her family passed several times a year, a tree that came to define that particular stretch of highway for the family, a part of the Order of Things. And so Le Guin spins a tale of that tree, of its long life among humans, of the coming of cars, the paving and repaving of roads, the explosion of traffic, and, after so many years, the death of a heedless driver at the base of the oak. The story is told in first-person and is at first rather confusing, since the oak speaks of itself as an entity in constant motion, growing and galloping and roaming, but while some of Le Guins language confuses, her intent is purposeful: to bring to life the inner being of an organism that, to many humans, hardly seems to be living but is almost always a backdrop in a world of roads and cars. Le Guins oak is a vibrant being and one who rejects the meanings humans place upon it: when the human dies, he sees in the oak the face of Death, freezing that vision in eternity through his death. But the oak rejects this, refuses to be an eternal symbolof death or elsewiseand instead embraces its ephemerality in the organic sphere, as long and ancient as that may seem to us short-lived humans. Its a great story that leads well into the final two of the collection.

And so we come to Omelas, a story about which I have little to say beyond what has been said by othersand often better (or at least more forcefully). It is not only Le Guins most well-known story, it might also be the most well-known science fiction story of all time, if only because every other philosophy course in college assigns it and (dryly) asks students, So, what would you do? Discuss! I jest, mostly because my partner is a philosopher, but truly Le Guins set up of the moral and ethical dilemma is an important one, and as she notes, its a questionwould you let the child suffer in order to live the dream?at the heart of modernity, whether you understand the modern world as one forged by the industrial revolution, the birth and growth of capitalism, or the expansion of overseas empires through colonial landgrabs. ()Omelas() is a powerful allegory for the ways in which systems of power lift up some at the expense of others.

The particular ways Le Guin tells the story, that utopia exists for all because one person (a child) lives in pain and horror, comes from a critical tradition that frames questions of systemic oppression in individualist tonesin this case the thinking of early psychologist William James. So the utopia of Omelas and the utopian bargain emerge from an intellectual tradition that attempts to understand how people think and why they think, especially with regard to our ethical duties to other people. As a result, walking away seems perhaps radical in this situation, an allegorical disavowal of the system as a whole.

Thats the psychomyth; taken literally, however, as something other than a parable, the decision to walk away looks a lot grimmerand thats exactly what other writers, for example, N.K. Jemisin, who responds in The Ones Who Stay and Fight by suggesting that the more radical thing to do is, well, reread the title; or Egyptian author Mona Namoury, who turns to the agency of the one imprisoned. Omelas is for sure an ambivalent story, one that has no easy solution because there is no solution, because utopia is ambivalent, because utopia doesnt exist, is only ever in the making, just over the horizon, the journey and not the destination, and it always implies the presence of dystopia. For Le Guin: yin and yang, no light without the dark. But, seriously, dont take my word for it; check out one of any several thousand essays on the story.

Though Omelas has become Le Guins most famous story, she ends The Winds Twelve Quarters with a different banger of a tale: the prequel to The Dispossessed, the story of the founder of the anarchist movement that ends up on Anarres. The Day Before the Revolution is the story of Odo, manifester of the Odonian revolution that upset the Urras political world 100 years before The Dispossessed. It isand Im sorry if this sounds repetitive, but its only because its so true of Le Guins shorter fictiona great little piece, particularly for the way it presents this revolutionary icon as a curmudgeonly old woman not all that interested in the final ends of the revolution, in part because the youths have taken it their way. But so it goes, so political movements transform, because a living politics is not defined by an individual, and Odo knows this, too. Through this Le Guin extends her argument in Omelas that utopia is open-ended, ever-changing, not an Eternal force but a Relative one, like the oak by the roadside.

What I particularly love about the placement ofThe Day Before the Revolution in The Winds Twelve Quarters is that Le Guin calls it a story thats actually about the ones who walk away from Omelas, or more precisely that the Anarresti are the ones who made the decision to leave the utopia of a lush, verdant planet for the harsh desert of the moon. Its honestly not a great parallel between Omelas and Urras, butlets go with it?Le Guins forcing of the parallel reveals who got left in the wake of the Odonian movement. After all, when Shevek visits Urras, he finds that there are many anarchists and revolutionaries fighting against the violence of two oppressive statesthe folks who, in Jemisins words, stayed and fought.

In all, The Winds Twelve Quarters is a multifaceted, intellectually rich, and artistically transformative collection of short stories that showcase the vibrancy of an artist becoming an artist. As a collection, its a fascinating microcosm of the same pattern of transformation and growth we see across the novels already covered in the Reread. Some stories are forgettable, many are worth a reread every couple of years, and a few stick tenaciously to the mind like a utopian parasite. Whatever the aesthetic judgmentshey, maybe you found these stories pretty boring, and thats all goodthe historical one is clear: here is a story collection that serves as a foundation for the larger storyworlds, themes, and political concerns that make up our collective cultural memory of Le Guin.

Join me in two weeks on Wednesday, September 9 as we read Le Guins not-very-SFF YA novel Very Far Away from Anywhere Else. Be seeing you!

Sean Guynes is an SFF critic and professional editor. For politics, publishing, and SFF content, follow him on Twitter @saguynes.

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The Wind's Twelve Quarters, Part II: Le Guin's Psychomyths and Those Who Walk Away - tor.com

Hollywood Was Supposed To Be A Christian Utopia Free From Alcohol, Gambling And Prostitution. How’d That Work Out? – LAist

A photographic of Daeida Hartell Wilcox Beveridge, patron of the arts and founder of Hollywood along with her husband. (University of Southern California Libraries/California Historical Society)

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When 22-year-old Daeida Hartell married 51-year-old real estate developer Harvey Wilcox in 1883, she had no idea she would go on to establish one of the most famous locales in the world or cement her destiny as the mother of Hollywood.

Born in 1861 in a small Ohio town called Hicksville (yes, really), Daeida grew up a devout Episcopalian and worked for a time as a milliner. She inherited her spirit of adventure and a love for the outdoors from her family, which had first settled in Rootstown in 1804.

Although Harvey Wilcox was 30 years her senior, he and Daeida shared a strong sense of religion and idealism. As a child, Harvey had been crippled from the knees down after contracting polio. To cope with his decreased mobility, he became an avid horseman. He worked as a cobbler but earned a small fortune in real estate in Kansas. In 1883, he and his new bride headed west and settled in Los Angeles, where they bought a house at 11th Street and Figueroa Boulevard (it's now part of USC).

"Harvey decided he wanted to be a gentleman farmer," says Ann Otto, a distant relative of Daeida and author of the historical novel Yours In A Hurry. The couple tried raising figs and apricots but Harvey got bored and went back into real estate, according to Otto.

Daeida stayed home and took care of their first child while developing techniques for drying figs. The death of their 19-month-old boy left the couple grief stricken. They found solace by taking carriage rides around Los Angeles, much of which was still unpaved and undeveloped. Daeida became especially fond of the Cahuenga Valley and took a particular interest in an abandoned fig orchard around Pass Road and Prospect Avenue.

The Wilcoxes bought four separate parcels of land bordered by what is now Gower Street, Whitley Avenue, Sunset Boulevard and Franklin Avenue. In 1887, Harvey registered a "Map of Hollywood" with the L.A. County Recorder's Office. Glen Creason with the History and Genealogy Department at the Los Angeles Public Library explains says during that era, registering a map meant it had been presented to "the L.A. County Board of Supervisors to be recognized as accurate."

In an essay in the book Los Angeles in Maps, Creason writes:

"Wilcox hatched a plan to develop a perfect suburb and set about to buy up the land, subdivide some 640 acres and create the city of Hollywood... This map, distributed by Wilcox from his Spring Street realty office paints a rosy picture of that dream with the Pacific Ocean, seemingly just a stones throw from the perfect grid layout spreading out from the main intersection of Prospect and Weyse (later Vine street). The campaign that launched this map promised choice land with ocean views, two railroads, a grand hotel, Sunset Boulevard one hundred feet wide and six miles long, concrete walks and fine water for the 'future home of the wealthy.' This piece of paradise was just $350 an acre."

Daeida was reportedly the one who chose the name. According to Gregory Paul Williams in his book The Story of Hollywood, she had been riding a train back to Ohio when she had supposedly heard the word "Hollywood" from a woman who owned an Illinois estate with the same name. Harvey agreed with Daeida it was the perfect moniker for their utopian community.

The two of them envisioned a town where alcohol, gambling and prostitution were forbidden and religion was the foundation of the community. By the early 1900s, Prospect Avenue, later renamed Hollywood Boulevard, would house churches representing every major Christian denomination, according to Williams.

Harvey and Daeida relished their new roles as town founders. They planted rows of pepper trees and later added streets following those paths. Williams writes:

"During rest breaks and lunches, Harvey and Daeida sat in the shade of the fig barn near Prospect Avenue and Pass Road, refining his map of Hollywood with its ramrod-straight streets, parks and picnic grounds. The two amused themselves creating street names... For a personal touch, there was a street for Harvey Wilcox Avenue, and one for Daeida Dae Avenue (later Hudson Avenue and Schrader Boulevard). They named two streets after the children of Mr. Weid, the Dane who farmed plots of land around Nopalera... His two children crossed the Wilcox property daily on their way to a one-room school at Sunset and Gordon. Daeida named the children's path after them, Ivar and Selma Avenues."

Not long into their new venture, tragedy would again strike Daeida. Harvey passed away on March 19, 1891. Shortly before his death, the real estate market had taken a turn for the worse. Although she faced financial difficulties and water shortages from a long drought, Daeida refused to give up on her dream of a Christian temperance community.

Three years after Harvey's death, 33-year-old Daeida, met and married 43-year-old Philo Beveridge, the son of former Illinois governor John Beveridge. She would give birth to four children, two of which would die young. Otto notes how different Philo was from Harvey. "He was a tall, blonde, handsome businessman, but not focused. He bounced around from different things," she says. This included a failed water heater business.

Daeida and Philo opened a real estate office on the corner of Hollywood and Cahuenga boulevards, and Daeida became more engaged in philanthropic endeavours. "She had so much power and was a force in the community," Otto says. She donated land for a city hall, post office, library, police station, banks, churches and even turned her fig barn into a primary school.

"They sold lots mostly to conservative Midwesterners who strongly agreed with Harvey Wilcox's hatred of alcohol," Williams writes in The Story of Hollywood.

By the early 1900s, Hollywood had become a community of large, beautiful homes dotted with citrus groves. Residents hosted lawn parties, played tennis and held an annual Mayday celebration with a four mile-parade down Hollywood Boulevard.

Daeida brought in Hollywood's first celebrity resident, French artist Paul De Longpre, who was famous for his watercolors of flowers. In Los Angeles, he found a wide variety of flora blooming year round. Daeida had met him at an exhibition in 1901, and when he told her he wanted to move to Hollywood, she gave him some land near her home, at Cahuenga and Prospect, then moved her family to a nearby farmhouse. The De Longpre estate, opened to the public in 1901, attracted tourists from around the world who came to stroll its verdant grounds.

By 1903, Hollywood had approximately 700 residents and they decided to incorporate as an independent city. Daeida did not support the decision. If she had been allowed to vote, she almost certainly would've voted against it. According to Williams, "Daeida Beveridge considered the action too costly. Additionally, she felt having the name Hollywood applied beyond her housing subdivision did not benefit her family's interests."

Hollywood's independence turned out to be short lived. The new city couldn't solve its sewage problem and, Williams writes, "The city of Los Angeles refused to share any Owens Valley water with the community unless they became a part of the larger city."

In 1910, Hollywood became a district of Los Angeles. What had once been a rustic temperance community was defenseless against, "the blight that consumed Los Angeles at the end of the twentieth century," Williams writes, and was now subjected to taxes and assessments from L.A. officials.

Daeida Wilcox Beveridge died of cancer in 1914, at age 53, just as the movie industry was coming to Southern California, ushering in a new era of prosperity and licentiousness. Although Hollywood is as much an imagined place as a real one, her legacy remains etched in the street names and buildings still scattered throughout the area.

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Hollywood Was Supposed To Be A Christian Utopia Free From Alcohol, Gambling And Prostitution. How'd That Work Out? - LAist

Amazons Utopias Biggest Differences From The UK Original (So Far) – Screen Rant

How different is Amazon'sUtopia remake compared to the original, based on the footage seen so far?The epicUtopia story began in 2013, with Dennis Kelly's vision making an instant impact on UK TV.Utopia courted controversy due to its brutal, unflinching violence, but also attracted acclaim for its direction, story, characters and music. A dense, winding conspiracy story,Utopia wasn't necessarily a ratings smash, and was cancelled after two seasons, much to the ire of fans. The original series wasn't afforded a proper ending, andUtopia's cult following has passionately campaigned for a third season or movie ever since, but to no avail.

Despite being off-screen since 2014,Utopia's sterling reputation as an underground hit has remained intact, leading to Amazon's announcement of a U.S. remake in 2018. A reinterpretationofUtopia had been in the works previouslywith David Fincher, but it took the might of Amazon to get things movingand with Gillian Flynn as showrunner,the newUtopia will arrive in September 2020. The main cast includes Sasha Lane, Rainn Wilson, Cory Michael Smith, John Cusack, Dan Byrd, Desmin Borges andAshleigh LaThrop.

Related:Every Streaming Service Available In 2020

As with any UK-to-US television remake, changes to the source material are inevitable, and the recent trailer highlights just how much Amazon's series will be forging its own path. The general basis ofUtopia remains intact - a global conspiracy woven around a little-known, esoteric comic book, the titularUtopia. As a group of fans uncover the secrets behind the comic, they find themselves hunted down by a powerful, shadowy organization whose methods are less than gentle. Here are all the differences between the originalUtopia and Amazon's remake so far.

As mentioned above, the original UKUtopiaruffled feathers with its grizzly approach to violence. Select highlights include a man's eye being removed with a spoon and an assassin shooting a classroom of schoolchildren, and it's no surprise that the latter attractedsignificant media attention, especiallyairing weeks after the Sandy Hook massacre. Arguably, this controversy overshadowedUtopia's first season, causing mainstream outlets to associate the series more with gratuitous violence than the unique visuals or compelling narrative. However, the violent scenes did serve a purpose, spelling out the threatposed by the villainous Network in no uncertain terms and underpinning the story with a true sense of dread. The timing might've been appalling, and the sequences themselves were intentionally uncomfortable, butUtopia actually wasn't as bloody as its reputation suggests, using choice examples of intense, extreme violence, as opposed to a constant stream of gore.

It's clear from the newUtopia trailer that Amazon's series isn't going to be anywhere near as confrontational or challenging in its use of violence. As a general rule, trailers will tend to omitany gritty and mature moments, but this isn't the case withUtopia. Gillian Flynn has openly confirmed that the U.S. version won't be as brutal as its British counterpart.

Utopia's enduring legacy can be partly attributed to thecinematic visuals,utterly unlikeanything else on the small screen. Mixing together open, gorgeous urban and rural landscapes with striking, vivid colors,Utopia's wide shots quickly became legendary, while the juxtaposition between thepeacefullocales and the murky conspiracy bubbling underneath created a quirky contrast.Utopia's photography will be used in case studies for years to come, and the remake was always facing an uphill battle to replicate that.

Related:What To Expect From Amazon's Utopia Remake

Amazon'sUtopia trailer does contain several visual homages and parallels to the original. The bright yellow bag and recurring color palette are retained, and attempts are made to mirror the trademark landscape shots of theUK series. Inevitably, however, there's a certain quality missing. Where 2013'sUtopia was artfully framed, the cinematography in Amazon's series looks like any other show. The trailer stillbrings some fantastic looking scenes to the table, but where a trailer would usually seek to highlight the most impressive visuals a series has to offer, there's a clear difference compared to the old series.

Where is Jessica Hyde? Right there in trailer, around 15 seconds in. The line "where is Jessica Hyde?" became a calling card forboth Utopia fans and its characters - a memorable catchphrase that neatly sums upUtopia'skeen mystery and offbeat humor. The line was also utilized heavily in marketing,sinceJessica Hyde's enigmatic whereabouts are a key plot point in the original story. Jessica Hyde appears at the end of the first episode, but until that point, her presence and role is kept secret. By contrast, Amazon'sUtopia trailer doesn't use the Jessica Hyde name, and explicitly shows the character aiding the protagonists on their journey.

Perhaps the newUtopia is assuming viewers will already be familiar with the cast before tuning in, meaning any attempt to obscure Jessica Hyde would be useless. Or maybe Amazon are simply looking for fresh marketing tricks that aren't already associated with the original series. Nevertheless, it's strange that themain taglineof the UK'sUtopia doesn't even get a reference in the new trailer, and also unusual that the footage would give away Jessica Hyde so easily.

Dennis Kelly'sUtopia was dark, there's no argument to be had over that. The series was comedic, butstrictly in the mold of a black comedy, where laughs were borne from tragedy or deeply inappropriate situations, like a young child swearing, or a stranger cheerfully telling a young mother that her choice to become a parentis destroying the environment. There are no such dark jokes in the Amazon trailer, which instead showcases a much lighter tone in general. Dan Byrd's character enjoys some goofy lines, Rainn Wilson makes a joke about evil, and the whole ensemble is ironically accompanied by REM's "It's The End Of The World As We Know It."

Related:Why The Expanse Was Cancelled (& Why Amazon Saved It)

Similar to howthe violence has been toned down and the visuals feel more familiar,Utopia's humor is more mainstream in the remake. Like an adventure thriller peppered with a handful of wry gags. It's possible that this is merely the trailer's doing; it's not unusual for promo footage to strike a moreaccessible chord compared to the finished product, after all. Either way,Utopia's less intense approach will help Amazon's series stand out from its predecessor, but fans of the UK series could miss that lack of darker comedy.

In the originalUtopia, The Network conspire to release Russian flu upon the world's population as part of a deeper, more sinister conspiracy against mankind. As seen in the trailer, however, the US version has reworked this storyline, replacing Russian flu with Stearns flu, named after Rainn Wilson's character, Michael Stearns. A scientist by trade, Stearnsworks on the virus without knowing how his pathogen will be misused by the story's villains. After unwittingly creating a worldwide pandemic, Stearns teams up with the Utopia comic conspiracy gang to help put things right.

This is a complete rewrite of Kelly's story. While the British group of protagonists do eventually ally with a scientist who was dragged into The Network's plot against his will, he's nothing like Stearns, and wasn't responsible for creating the flu strain being spread across the world. Having Stearnsjoin Jessica, Ian and Becky's group could potentially grease the wheels of story progression. The heroes of the original story had to piece everything together for themselves, with no expert knowledge of their own to call upon. Having the man who created his own version of flu on their side could create a pacier tempo inUtopia's first season on Amazon.

Utopia didn't originally have a single overarching villain throughout its two-season run.Villain duties inseason 1 were shared by The Network as an organization and the two assassins sent to track down Jessica Hyde, but a bigger enemy emerged in time for season 2. AlthoughUtopia season 3 never happened, an entirely different antagonist was set up. The real villain ofUtopia was never a single figure, but an idea that differentpeople would adopt over the course of the series. Judging from Amazon's trailer, however, John Cusack's Dr. Christie will give theUtopia remake its central face of megalomania and evil.

Related:Lord of the Rings: Every Character Confirmed For Amazon's TV Show

Cusack's character appears to be the head of ChristieBio - and the company name alone sounds incriminating in a show with a flu pandemic. Dr. Christie is a powerful, influential public figure with a much darker streak behind closed doors, and could be the central villain thatUtopia UK never had. Moreover, ChristieBio is a private company, whereas the Russian flu incident in the original series was being peddled by governments and a secret worldwide organization, changing the complexion of the remake entirely.

It could just be the trailer's clever editing, or a dream sequence completely removed from its intended context, but does Amazon'sUtopia introduce superpowers? Around the 1:36 mark, two armed figures with platinum blonde hair and white suits fire their guns towards unseen opponents. Then nextframe appears to show the intended target (potentially Ian) deflecting the bullet with their hand, leaving behind a black mark. The originalUtopia wasn't even remotely fantastical in this sense, with an intricate conspiracy the most outlandish element in the mix. Introducing supernatural themes toUtopia would be a controversial move, and fans will be hoping there's more to this scene that the trailer lets on.

More:Rainn Wilson Roles: Where You Recognize The Office Star

Utopia premieres September 25th on Amazon Prime.

Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Every Mistake The Reboot Must Avoid Repeating

Craig first began contributing to Screen Rant in 2016, several years after graduating college, and has been ranting ever since, mostly to himself in a darkened room. Having previously written for various sports and music outlets, Craig's interest soon turned to TV and film, where a steady upbringing of science fiction and comic books finally came into its own.Craig has previously been published on sites such as Den of Geek, and after many coffee-drenched hours hunched over a laptop, part-time evening work eventually turned into a full-time career covering everything from the zombie apocalypse to the Starship Enterprise via the TARDIS. Since joining the Screen Rant fold, Craig has been involved in breaking news stories and mildly controversial ranking lists, but now works predominantly as a features writer. Jim Carrey is Craigs top acting pick and favorite topics include superheroes, anime and the unrecognized genius of the High School Musical trilogy.

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Amazons Utopias Biggest Differences From The UK Original (So Far) - Screen Rant

Bookmark: Missing the State Fair? These books will transport you – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Missing the midway? The giant hogs, the smell of grease, the ironic artwork made entirely of seeds?

Here are 10 books that take place at worlds fairs, county fairs, and Minnesotas own State Fair. Read them and catch a whiff of mini-doughnuts and cotton candy and everything on a stick.

Devil in the White City, by Erik Larson. Well start with the creepiest one, a work of nonfiction. Larsons compelling narrative follows the twisted career of Dr. H.H. Holmes, a pharmacist and serial killer who lured victims to their doom as the 1893 Worlds Fair was built and then opened just blocks away. There are quite a few books set during the Chicago Worlds Fair this one might be the best.

Araby, by James Joyce. Not a book, but one of the short stories in his Dubliners collection, and probably the first piece of writing by Joyce that I ever read. A nearly perfect coming of age story, it is told in first person by a boy who sees the glittering lights of the Araby bazaar in the distance and plans to go there to buy a present for a girl he has fallen hopelessly in love with.

Charlottes Web, by E.B. White. A farm girl named Fern grows up one summer at the fair; her pig, Wilbur, has his life saved; the pigs friend Charlotte, a spider, gives her all for him; and Templeton, a gruff and stinky rat, saves the day (but only because it suits him). We all love Wilbur and Charlotte, but the scene with Fern and Henry Fussy on the Ferris wheel perfectly captures every teenage experience at every fair.

Worlds Fair, by E.L. Doctorow. A young boy named Edgar modeled closely on Doctorow finds the 1939 Worlds Fair in New York to be a glittering, mesmerizing utopia.

So Long at the Fair, by Anthony Thorne. Also a movie, this 1947 novel is set in Paris in 1889, when a brother and sister attend the Paris Exhibition. The next morning, the sister knocks on her brothers hotel room door to find that he has disappeared and there is no evidence he was ever actually there.

Meet Me in St. Louis, by Sally Benson. A charming and sentimental novel about a family looking forward to the 1904 Worlds Fair in St. Louis.

Vanity Fair, by William Makepeace Thackeray. OK, Im cheating with this one because Vanity Fair, of course, is not an actual fair. But still, what a great novel. Becky Sharp is one of the best characters of all time shrewd, manipulative, cynical, amoral. I loved her from the get-go when she throws a book through the carriage window as she drives away forever from school.

Minnesota State Fair: An Illustrated History, by Kathryn Strand Koutsky. Loaded with tidbits and anecdotes, this 2007 book published by Minneapolis Coffee House Press contains 1,200 photos and more than 100 recipes.

Blue Ribbon, by Karal Ann Marling. Through memories, photographs and ephemera Marling tells the history of the Minnesota State Fair and illustrates how the fair changed as society changed.

State Fair: The Great Minnesota Get-Together, by Susan Miller. Primarily a photo book (Miller estimates she shot more than 10,000 images over four years; this book contains 150 of them), this colorful and vivid homage to the fair includes an introduction by quintessential Minnesotan Lorna Landvik.

These books should help you get through the 12 best days of summer without the pork chops on a stick or the midway. In fact, they might help tide you over until 2021.

Laurie Hertzel is the Star Tribunes senior editor for books. On Facebook: Facebook.com/startribunebooks. E-mail: books@startribune.com

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Bookmark: Missing the State Fair? These books will transport you - Minneapolis Star Tribune

The ‘Mother Of Hollywood’ Thought The City Was Going To Be A Christian Utopia Free From Alcohol, Gambling And Prostitution – LAist

When 22-year-old Daeida Hartell married 51-year-old real estate developer Harvey Wilcox in 1883, she had no idea she would go on to establish one of the most famous locales in the world or cement her destiny as the mother of Hollywood.

Born in 1861 in a small Ohio town called Hicksville (yes, really), Daeida grew up a devout Episcopalian and worked for a time as a milliner. She inherited her spirit of adventure and a love for the outdoors from her family, which had first settled in Rootstown in 1804.

Although Harvey Wilcox was 30 years her senior, he and Daeida shared a strong sense of religion and idealism. As a child, Harvey had been crippled from the knees down after contracting polio. To cope with his decreased mobility, he became an avid horseman. He worked as a cobbler but earned a small fortune in real estate in Kansas. In 1883, he and his new bride headed west and settled in Los Angeles, where they bought a house at 11th Street and Figueroa Boulevard (it's now part of USC).

"Harvey decided he wanted to be a gentleman farmer," says Ann Otto, a distant relative of Daeida and author of the historical novel Yours In A Hurry. The couple tried raising figs and apricots but Harvey got bored and went back into real estate, according to Otto.

Daeida stayed home and took care of their first child while developing techniques for drying figs. The death of their 19-month-old boy left the couple grief stricken. They found solace by taking carriage rides around Los Angeles, much of which was still unpaved and undeveloped. Daeida became especially fond of the Cahuenga Valley and took a particular interest in an abandoned fig orchard around Pass Road and Prospect Avenue.

The Wilcoxes bought four separate parcels of land bordered by what is now Gower Street, Whitley Avenue, Sunset Boulevard and Franklin Avenue. In 1887, Harvey registered a "Map of Hollywood" with the L.A. County Recorder's Office. Glen Creason with the History and Genealogy Department at the Los Angeles Public Library explains says during that era, registering a map meant it had been presented to "the L.A. County Board of Supervisors to be recognized as accurate."

In an essay in the book Los Angeles in Maps, Creason writes:

"Wilcox hatched a plan to develop a perfect suburb and set about to buy up the land, subdivide some 640 acres and create the city of Hollywood... This map, distributed by Wilcox from his Spring Street realty office paints a rosy picture of that dream with the Pacific Ocean, seemingly just a stones throw from the perfect grid layout spreading out from the main intersection of Prospect and Weyse (later Vine street). The campaign that launched this map promised choice land with ocean views, two railroads, a grand hotel, Sunset Boulevard one hundred feet wide and six miles long, concrete walks and fine water for the 'future home of the wealthy.' This piece of paradise was just $350 an acre."

Daeida was reportedly the one who chose the name. According to Gregory Paul Williams in his book The Story of Hollywood, she had been riding a train back to Ohio when she had supposedly heard the word "Hollywood" from a woman who owned an Illinois estate with the same name. Harvey agreed with Daeida it was the perfect moniker for their utopian community.

The two of them envisioned a town where alcohol, gambling and prostitution were forbidden and religion was the foundation of the community. By the early 1900s, Prospect Avenue, later renamed Hollywood Boulevard, would house churches representing every major Christian denomination, according to Williams.

Harvey and Daeida relished their new roles as town founders. They planted rows of pepper trees and later added streets following those paths. Williams writes:

"During rest breaks and lunches, Harvey and Daeida sat in the shade of the fig barn near Prospect Avenue and Pass Road, refining his map of Hollywood with its ramrod-straight streets, parks and picnic grounds. The two amused themselves creating street names... For a personal touch, there was a street for Harvey -- Wilcox Avenue, and one for Daeida -- Dae Avenue (later Hudson Avenue and Schrader Boulevard). They named two streets after the children of Mr. Weid, the Dane who farmed plots of land around Nopalera... His two children crossed the Wilcox property daily on their way to a one-room school at Sunset and Gordon. Daeida named the children's path after them, Ivar and Selma Avenues."

Not long into their new venture, tragedy would again strike Daeida. Harvey passed away on March 19, 1891. Shortly before his death, the real estate market had taken a turn for the worse. Although she faced financial difficulties and water shortages from a long drought, Daeida refused to give up on her dream of a Christian temperance community.

Three years after Harvey's death, 33-year-old Daeida, met and married 43-year-old Philo Beveridge, the son of former Illinois governor John Beveridge. She would give birth to four children, two of which would die young. Otto notes how different Philo was from Harvey. "He was a tall, blonde, handsome businessman, but not focused. He bounced around from different things," she says. This included a failed water heater business.

Daeida and Philo opened a real estate office on the corner of Hollywood and Cahuenga boulevards, and Daeida became more engaged in philanthropic endeavours. "She had so much power and was a force in the community," Otto says. She donated land for a city hall, post office, library, police station, banks, churches and even turned her fig barn into a primary school.

"They sold lots mostly to conservative Midwesterners who strongly agreed with Harvey Wilcox's hatred of alcohol," Williams writes in The Story of Hollywood.

By the early 1900s, Hollywood had become a community of large, beautiful homes dotted with citrus groves. Residents hosted lawn parties, played tennis and held an annual Mayday celebration with a four mile-parade down Hollywood Boulevard.

Daeida brought in Hollywood's first celebrity resident, French artist Paul De Longpre, who was famous for his watercolors of flowers. In Los Angeles, he found a wide variety of flora blooming year round. Daeida had met him at an exhibition in 1901, and when he told her he wanted to move to Hollywood, she gave him some land near her home, at Cahuenga and Prospect, then moved her family to a nearby farmhouse. The De Longpre estate, opened to the public in 1901, attracted tourists from around the world who came to stroll its verdant grounds.

By 1903, Hollywood had approximately 700 residents and they decided to incorporate as an independent city. Daeida did not support the decision. If she had been allowed to vote, she almost certainly would've voted against it. According to Williams, "Daeida Beveridge considered the action too costly. Additionally, she felt having the name Hollywood applied beyond her housing subdivision did not benefit her family's interests."

Hollywood's independence turned out to be short lived. The new city couldn't solve its sewage problem and, Williams writes, "The city of Los Angeles refused to share any Owens Valley water with the community unless they became a part of the larger city."

In 1910, Hollywood became a district of Los Angeles. What had once been a rustic temperance community was defenseless against, "the blight that consumed Los Angeles at the end of the twentieth century," Williams writes, and was now subjected to taxes and assessments from L.A. officials.

Daeida Wilcox Beveridge died of cancer in 1914, at age 53, just as the movie industry was coming to Southern California, ushering in a new era of prosperity and licentiousness. Although Hollywood is as much an imagined place as a real one, her legacy remains etched in the street names and buildings still scattered throughout the area.

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The 'Mother Of Hollywood' Thought The City Was Going To Be A Christian Utopia Free From Alcohol, Gambling And Prostitution - LAist

Our Only Black Moon Of 2020 And A Stargazing Utopia: What To Watch For In The Night Sky This Week – Forbes

Any nights with clear skies this week will be perfect for stargazing.

Each Monday I pick out the northern hemispheres celestial highlights (mid-northern latitudes) for the week ahead, but be sure to check my main feed for more in-depth articles on stargazing, astronomy and eclipses.

This week is all about the absenceand then the dramatic and delicate reappearanceof the Moon. Its absence from the night sky is a boon for stargazing, making it much easier to see deep sky sights such as star clusters, galaxies and nebula (but also more stars).

It also means that for most of this week we can seefrom a dark sky sitethe Milky Way arcing across the sky and streaming down to the southern horizon right after dark. Look for Jupiter and Saturn in the south; the Milky Way is right there!

However, who doesnt like to see a super-slim crescent Moon emerge in the western sky during twilight?

After a New Moon this Wednesday, watch out for a crescent Moon hanging in the west after dark on Thursday through Saturday.

What is a Black Moon? Although it can also be the second New Moon in a single calendar monthwhich happens sometimesa Black Moon is better defined as the third New Moon in a season with four New Moons.

Either way, its a calendar quirk. More importantly, the New Moon occurs at 02:41 UTC and makes sure that this week is perfect for stargazing and looking for the Milky Way.

The Crescent Moon and Spica on Saturday.

In the nights after New Moon our satellite gradually moves away from the Sun and becomes slightly more illuminated by it each night. It will be a fabulous, but fleeting (and ultra-slim) 5%-lit sight on Thursday, August 20look just above the western horizon at dusk.

The following night, on Friday, August 21, look to the west again, this time slightly higher, to see a 12%-lit crescent Moon. Even on Saturday, August 22, the crescent Moonby now 20% illuminatedwill remain a delicate and fascinating sight, this time with bright star Spica just below it (see above).

The "Great Square of Pegasus" around midnight this weekand below it, the planet Mars!

Or is it the Great Diamond of Pegasus? Rising on its side in the eastern post-sunset night sky is a vastand one of the most geometrically preciseasterisms (shapes) in the night sky. Part of the constellation of Pegasus, the winged horse, the Great Square is easy to find because its corners are marked by four stars of roughly equal brightness.

The highest top star is Scheat, which is flanked by Alperatz (below, left) and Markab (below, right), with Algenib at the bottom, near to the horizon.

Once found, you can use the Great Square to gauge the darkness of your location. If you can see more than five stars within its boundaries, its pretty dark!

If youre looking an hour before midnight, look underneath the Great Squaredown to the eastern horizonand youll see the planet Mars rising.

Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.

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Our Only Black Moon Of 2020 And A Stargazing Utopia: What To Watch For In The Night Sky This Week - Forbes

HINAPIA disband after 10 months together – Metro.co.uk

HINAPIA are no more (Picture: OSR Entertainment)

HINAPIA have officially disbanded after 10 months together.

The K-pop girlband made their debut in November 2019, with four of the members coming from the Pledis Entertainment group PRISTIN, who had disbanded in May.

However, after less than a year together, the group has gone their separate ways, with OSR Entertainment terminating the five members exclusive contracts.

A statement from the agency shared on HINAPIAs official fan cafe read: First, we wish to apologise for bringing unfortunate news to the fans who have always loved and waited for good news from HINAPIA.

We wish to speak to you of HINAPIAs disbandment and the termination of all members contracts.

Our agency has spoken at great lengths with the members over a substantial period of time, and we all came to the decision to disband the group and terminate ourexclusive contracts with all five members.

The members of HINAPIA are set to be active in a variety of fields in the future, and we hope you will support their new beginnings as well.

Thank you for loving HINAPIA till now, and we wish to apologise once more.

HINAPIA was formed of former PRISTIN members Minkyeung (previously known as Roa), Gyeongwon (previously known as Yuha), Eunwoo and Yaebin (previously known as Rena), as well as newcomer Bada, who was the last member to be revealed.

It was confirmed that the ex-PRISTIN members were forming a new band in October 2019, and after Bada was unveiled as the final member, the girls released their debut single Drip the following month.

Their first mini-album Pursuit of a New Utopia was also released in November, with a second record initially promised in early 2020.

However, the new music never materialised.

MORE: Pharrell and Jay Z give fans chills as they drop new Entrepreneur single

MORE: We needed a breakthrough to overcome the emptiness: Everything we learned from BTSs Dynamite press conference

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HINAPIA disband after 10 months together - Metro.co.uk

Want to Flee the City for Suburbia? Think Again – The New York Times

Walking the streets of San Francisco during these coronavirus days, youll see a sight rarer than Bigfoot: for sale and for rent signs.

Six months ago, Id have texted pictures of them immediately to friends who were hoping to move. You had to act fast if you wanted a good slot on the list of dozens of potential buyers.

Now, some of those friends are posting on Instagram about their freshly built suburban homes, surrounded by trees, wild animals and lots of space. Living in San Francisco used to be an impossible dream; today, the dream is to escape it.

For the first time since the tech crash of 2000, housing vacancies in San Francisco are skyrocketing, and rents on one-bedroom apartments are down by 11 percent. Still, this isnt like previous economic busts. For the most part, the people leaving havent lost their jobs, and they arent being priced out of rapidly gentrifying neighborhoods; theyre the ones who are rich enough to work remotely from a bucolic palace with high-speed internet and a two-car garage.

And its not just in San Francisco. Real estate services in Florida and Arizona are reporting similar patterns. Expensive cities are losing their luster, while smaller cities and towns feel like the wave of the future. It seems a harmless enough trend. After all, what could be bad about getting more fresh air and space to take walks?

A lot, it turns out. The 20th century offers object lessons in why fleeing cities for suburban and exurban settings can backfire even if it seems like a good idea at first.

In the early 1900s, many large cities were suffering from the side effects of rapid industrialization: they were polluted, full of high-density housing with bad sanitation. Crime flourished under corrupt policing systems. There were disease outbreaks, too; in San Francisco, bubonic plague killed more than 100 people at the turn of the last century.

In response, a new wave of utopian thinkers proposed moving to what Ebenezer Howard, a British urban planner, called the garden city in his 1902 manifesto Garden Cities of To-morrow. His garden cities would be planned communities of limited size, built with ample park space and free housing for people in need. Everyone could eat locally, from sprawling farms that ringed the city.

Howards ideas were so compelling that he was able to work with planners to build two English towns to his specifications Letchworth and Welwyn, both of which still stand today a few dozen miles outside London. Though both towns are pretty, they fell short of Howards vision, which was to provide shelter for the needy as well as prosperous country folk.

During the Great Depression, American planners funded by the Works Progress Administration tried their hand at creating some garden cities. They founded Greenbelt, Md., a community that offered extensive social support services to its residents at first though today it has become a hotbed of private development.

As the craze for these British-style garden cities grew in the States, Frank Lloyd Wright wrote about building a uniquely American version. He called it Usonian the Us in the name stood for United States, to distinguish it from the Central and South American cities he didnt like.

Wright argued that the Usonian city wouldnt be a flight from modernity instead, he would liberate ordinary people from high-density industrial tumor metropolises through technology. Brand-new inventions like telephones, radio and automobiles meant everyones work could be done remotely. Sounds familiar, doesnt it?

Some of Wrights followers eventually built a garden city called Usonia in Westchester County, N.Y. Its 47 homes are still occupied, each at the end of a winding driveway, surrounded by flower beds and groves. It was supposed to be an idyllic rural community, progressive and affordable, welcoming people of all backgrounds. And yet, though its first homes were built in the late 1940s, it was decades before the self-declared diverse community welcomed a Black family. This wasnt a unique problem; the progressive garden city of Greenbelt was also built for whites only.

There were other issues, too. Though Usonias homes were inexpensive in theory, the reality was that they were quite expensive to build and maintain. And to this day, everyone who lives there is dependent on cars. Those gardens that give the town its special character are at odds with a world of carbon-belching transportation machines.

Utopian communities like Usonia are still relatively rare, but Wrights urban plan became a template for thousands of midcentury American suburbs, with their low-slung, ranch-style homes and endless lawns. These suburbs, like their more idealistic ancestors, were a mess of contradictions. Supposedly democratic, they were ground zero for redlining policies. Plus, their commuter populations often depended on nearby light industries that flatlined in the 1990s. Eventually, wealthy young people fled these suburbs as urban cores bloomed in the early 2000s.

Now the cycle has come around again, as the middle class flees cities in pandemic panic, seeking unpolluted yet car-dependent places. But we need to pay attention to the tragic fate of the garden cities that Howard and Wright dreamed of nearly a century ago.

Ultimately, the garden city future is a false Utopia. The answer to our current problems isnt to run away from the metropolis. Rather, we need to build better social support systems for people in cities so that urban life becomes healthier, safer and more sustainable.

Annalee Newitz (@annaleen), a science journalist and contributing opinion writer, is the author of the forthcoming Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

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Want to Flee the City for Suburbia? Think Again - The New York Times

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry Make First Appearance Together in Their New Montecito Home – ELLE.com

Last week, news broke that Meghan Markle and Prince Harry quietly moved to Montecito a few weeks ago. Now, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have made their first joint appearance in their new house, joining a Zoom call for the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, of which they still preside over as president (Harry) and vice president (Meghan). The Duke and Duchess joined a conversation about "the role of the online world as a force for good," as QCT's YouTube summed it up.

They were joined by Brighton Kaoma, founder of Agents of Change Foundation in Zambia; Hunter Johnson, founder of The Man Cave in Australia; Rosie Thomas, co-founder of Project Rockit in Australia; and, Vee Kativhu, Study & Empowerment YouTuber and founder of "Empowered by Vee."

Meghan, dressed in a black and white sleeveless dress, and Harry, complementing her in a white button-up, sat in what appears to be a room from their estate in Santa Barbara, giving fans a little glimpse at their new place.

The couple spoke with the young leaders about their work and Meghan and Harry's own thoughts on the role of social media and its potential harms. At one point toward the end, Harry commented that the future was in those young leaders' hands, and Meghan laughingly told him not to count themselves out: "Stop, were not that old."

Meghan, earlier in the discussion, more seriously discussed how the toxicity of negative online communities can really hurt people. "Everyones mental and emotional wellbeing are perhaps more fragile than ever before, certainly with COVID and our dependability on our devices right now in the absence of human interaction," she started. "People are going online more than ever before to feel community. And unfortunately, which you rightly point out, when that community becomes divisive, when that community isnt a pact for good but is a pact of people ganging up on one another, I think whats challenging about that is if people dont feel an escape, and it can probably feel really lonely in that space."

She added later that "[a healthy online community] is not an echo chamber. Its not everyone being in agreement all the time but being able to have a healthy discourse, being able to disagree. That is so key is not trying to build utopia. Its trying to build a healthy community so people feel safe or heard and perhaps walk away with a different perspective that they hadnt encountered or experienced or thought at the onset but that they have that interaction, thats whats so important. Thats what this life is all about, learning everyday, but if you dont feel youre in a space that is safe enough to express those thoughts and to be heard and supported in a way that is actually beneficial for us as a community, then where does that leave us?"

"This isnt for lack of desire that its not out there," she continued. "This is for lack of it being built. And so you guys out there doing the work and building what people really need is really everything."

You can watch their full discussion below:

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The story behind the debut album from Todd Rundgrens Utopia – Louder

By 1974, fans of Todd Rundgren had had to get used to him changing from record to record. But if the shift hed effected between his first three albums and 1973s A Wizard, A True Star had seemed dramatic, this was another quantum leap entirely.

Todd Rundgrens Utopia was this most mercurial of artists first recorded foray with a band since his (late-60s) stint with The Nazz, but it was a long way from Anglophile power-pop and winsome balladry. Four cute guys sporting Beatle cuts this was not. If the image on the front cover of an all-seeing eye at the centre of a pattern of coloured balls suggested there might not be too many I Saw The Light-style three-minute pop singles on this latest venture, confirmation lay with the live photograph on the back: it showed Rundgren on stage at his most gaunt and strange, leaning back, lost in music, flanked by four musicians with outsized hairdos in full space-age regalia, and surrounded by a shiny arsenal of hi-tech equipment that looked as though it was capable of some serious instrumental bombast.

Final proof that Rundgrens days as a purveyor of sweet pop candy and rock nuggets were behind him was provided by the tracklisting: there were just three numbers on side one, and one taking up the whole of side two. Goodbye, pop concision; hello, elaborate compositions bearing complex multipartite structures.

The Mahavishnu Orchestra were a big part of our musical lexicon at the time, as were Return To Forever and Weather Report, says Rundgren, as erudite (not to mention tonsorially idiosyncratic) as ever, talking to Prog in a London hotel ahead of a gig at the Jazz Cafe.

You can discern the impact of the aforementioned jazz-rockers and fusioneers on the music of Todd Rundgrens Utopia, but there is a funkiness to the playing that led Rundgren to describe it as Grateful Dead meets P-Funk. He also cites the influence of Frank Zappas Mothers Of Invention. But how did the performances of the musicians on Todd Rundgrens Utopia arguably the first ever American prog album compare with those of their UK counterparts in terms of technoflash expertise?

The difference was, those English prog rock bands like Yes and ELP, most of their influences were in the classics, whereas ours were in jazz and R&B, and we were more inclined to do something from a funk standpoint, he reiterates. That didnt necessarily stop us attempting to play fast, but I dont think anyone in the band had the desire, or the chops, to play that way. That would have required a whole other level of woodshedding discipline, and we were having too much fun playing to want to do our exercises.

Was he aware of developments across the pond?

We werent ELP fans particularly, and we didnt mix in the same circles, but we were big Yes fans, he replies. ELPs music was something else it was about highlighting an instrumentalist, Keith Emerson, whereas Yes were more of a band.

Another explanation for the way that the tracks on the album - even the 10-minute Freak Parade, 14-minute Utopia Theme and half-hour-long The Ikon sounded less like lengthy extrapolations and more like short bursts of intricate rhythm and melody fastidiously edited together, was that Rundgren was a superb arranger.

I was an orchestrator as much as a player, he asserts of the fragments pieced together at Secret Sound studio in New York in early 1974 (with the exception of opener Utopia Theme, which was recorded live the previous November at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia). My job, beside fronting the band, was to make decisions as to how the various musical sections should fit.

Furthermore, his fellow Utopians were songwriters in their own right whose skills had been honed on the NYC circuit (Mark Moogy Klingman, who sadly died in November 2011, had jammed with Hendrix while his songs were covered by everyone from Johnny Winter to Bette Midler). This was something else that separated them from the UK prog fraternity.

We came from a songwriting sensibility as opposed to having freeform song structures where only playing was necessary, explains Rundgren. We didnt have a strictly purist prog rock approach. There was jamming, but it came between more melodic verse/chorus things.

He agrees, however, that Utopia provided him with his first opportunity for some serious guitar wizardry since The Nazz, even if virtuosity for its own sake wasnta priority.

Id made my success as a songwriter and singer so I wanted a band principally so I could play guitar in one form or another, he admits. Fusion presented challenges so you had to be very good performance-wise. It was very technically ambitious. I certainly got faster, although I had no aspirations to be a John McLaughlin.

He continues: We all looked at this as an opportunity to do something aggressive and experimental in instrumental music because theres werent many of those until prog rock and jazz fusion became popular forms. It was a lot of fun. My success as a solo artist allowed us to take a slightly radical approach. The tenor was enthusiastic and experimental.

It also came with its in-built philosophy. Talking to me in 1999 for a series of CD reissues, Rundgren explained the Utopia concept, and the sense of missionary zeal expressed throughout the album.

I realised I had an inclination to get into an elitist music that only certain people could appreciate, music with transportive elements, he declared. There were no 10 Commandments of Utopianism, but I did feel that we should have the same quasi-spiritual objectives as the fusion bands. More than a commune, Utopia would be a model for human interaction. And I felt the audience should be encouraged to become a society of the mind.

Back in the present, I ask whether Rundgren and co were high at the time?

We were all into different things, he reveals. No one was into heroin or methedrine. I do remember being up in Santa Fe and someone bestowing upon us a whole load of mushrooms that everybody took.

But, he adds, laughing, I know for a fact that I was the only one in the band who would show up for work with a peyote button in my mouth.

In addition to his mescaline trips, Rundgren was, he says, trying to integrate my expanding view of the world and cosmology by augmenting it with a lot of reading material, although he admits that there are some books that he has still to read 38 years later.

There is a feeling of furious spiritual uplift about Todd Rundgrens Utopia, one enhanced by the trebly nature of the sound, the result of so much music (the album is almost an hour long) being crammed into the grooves. Mark Chapman, the man who murdered John Lennon and notoriously a Rundgren obsessive who left a copy of The Ballad Of Todd Rundgren by his hotel bed on the day of the assassination, picked up on this quality of transcendence. In the Jack Jones biography Let Me Take You Down, in a chapter entitled God And Todd, Chapman waxes euphoric about his favourite Rundgren tracks, especially Freedom Fighters (at four minutes, the shortest song on the album), as though its intense urgency somehow justified his heinous zealotry.

It was a disturbing outcome for a positivist album designed to counter the downer consciousness of the early 70s, and the likes of Lou Reed, Bowie and Iggy Pop.

Rundgren is uncomfortable about being drawn into a conversation about Chapman, dismissing Freedom Fighters as a musical after-thought written at the last minute because there was nothing on the album that vaguely resembled a single. But he accepts that it was meant as a call to arms (Kind of pick up your guitars, boys, and rock out) on a record broadly concerned with providing succour for societys marginal types.

The lyrics were for people on the fringes, he explains. Freak Parade, The Ikon, too, was about fringe-thinking. The Utopia Theme was about that state of consciousness, the city in my head, thatmental state.

Collectively, Utopia a sort of benign dictatorship, with Rundgren affording the others ample chances to take instrumental flight achieved a higher state of consciousness when they took the album on the road. Concerts might last three or four hours, with renditions of The Ikon being feats of improvisatory endurance lasting three times longer than the album version.

That was just the state you got into, recalls Rundgren, when everybody knows where theyre at and theyre fairly confident about where theyre going. You get into the zen of it. Youre just there. You dont even think about how long youve been doing it suddenly, three or four hours have gone by and its time to wrap it up.

In those days, he furthers, we had a guitar player and three keyboard players and everyone took a 10-minute solo on every song. The audience didnt notice the time going by as they were so high on acid!

In January 2011, Rundgren and his Utopians (minus green-haired synth whiz M Frog Labat) reconvened for the first time since 1975 for a charity gig in aid of Moogy Klingman, then battling bladder cancer. They played the album in its entirety every speed-racing, prog-inflected, funk-addled note.

We were struggling a bit, grins Rundgren, but everyone in the audience was so thrilled to see us, they werent aware of our shortcomings. I never make the assumption that the audience comes to see how well you can play it, like going to see an orchestra where they have to do it perfectly every night. We like it when things dont go exactly as planned.

Did the audience get off on the cosmic joy of it all?

If there is such a thing, he says, drily, There was a soupon of that.

Probably more than was felt by Rundgrens record company, Bearsville, when he delivered the commercially unviable finished product in 1974.

I dont know to what degree they were delighted or horrified by it, he considers. Suffice to say that there were people at the label who had no compunction about telling me flat-out that they didnt care about the band. But then again, when they signed me, they didnt know they were also going to get Utopia.

So they got much more than they bargained for?

You could say that, yeah.

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The story behind the debut album from Todd Rundgrens Utopia - Louder

Around the Remote: What not to miss next week – The Union Leader

Top picks on TV and streaming services next week:

DONT MISS: Yellowstone Another gripping occasionally gruesome season of Kevin Costners wildly popular summer drama series comes to a close and theres an ominous feeling in the air. As the battle for the ranch reaches a boiling point, John Dutton (Costner) sits down at the negotiating table with former friends and foes. We wont be at all surprised if someone doesnt make it out of the finale alive, but were at least heartened by the fact that the series already has been renewed for a fourth season. (9 p.m. Sunday, Paramount Network).

Other bets:

SUNDAY: In the new season of Alaskan Bush People, the Brown family is locked in a brutally challenging race against time. In subzero temperatures, they need to complete work on their dream cabin on the mountain before spring. (8 p.m., Discovery Channel).

MONDAY: Brace yourself. A second season of Love Island kicks off with a two-hour premiere as an all-new cast of lustful islanders attempt to find romance while sequestered in a bubble at a Las Vegas hotel. (8 p.m., CBS).

MONDAY: The gripping first season of I May Destroy You concludes with an episode that has Arabella closing in on the answers she seeks about her drugged sexual assault. And now she must drag the last of her demons out from under the bed once and for all. (9 p.m., HBO).

TUESDAY: Need more soapy story lines in your life? Tyler Perrys The Haves and the Have Nots launches the second half of its seventh season with back-to-back episodes that promise more revenge, deceit, betrayal, decadence and destruction. And, yes, were all in. (8 p.m., OWN).

WEDNESDAY: Women in Film Presents: Make It Work is a special with a blend of music, comedy and celebrity testimonials. The program, aimed at exploring the issues and solutions for getting women back to work, boasts a talent lineup that includes Mara Brock Akil, Alison Brie, Connie Britton, Rosario Dawson, Jane Fonda, Jennifer Garner, Rita Moreno and many more. (8 p.m., The CW).

THURSDAY: The 2020 Republican National Convention, held in virtual style, concludes tonight. President Donald Trump is scheduled to accept his partys nomination and make his case that he deserves four more years in the White House. (Check local listings for times and networks).

THURSDAY: Pure is a new comedy about a young, London-based woman named Marnie (Charlie Clive) who is caught in the grip of an excruciating obsessive-compulsive disorder. Seems that her mind is teeming with a constant barrage of intrusive sexual thoughts. (HBO Max).

FRIDAY: In the 2019 feature film Bombshell, Charlize Theron and Nicole Kidman play real-life TV journalists Megyn Kelly and Gretchen Carlson. The story recalls the accounts of women at Fox News who leveled explosive allegations of sexual harassment against network CEO Roger Ailes. The stellar cast also includes Margot Robbie, John Lithgow, Kate McKinnon and Connie Britton. (8 p.m., Epix).

FRIDAY: Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe is a new animated saga that follows stepbrothers Phineas and Ferb as they trek across the galaxy to rescue their sister Candace, who after being abducted by aliens, finds utopia in a far-off planet free of pesky little brothers. (Disney+).

SATURDAY: In the TV film Sorority Secrets, a young college student (Brytnee Ratledge) is all excited when she gets her first taste of the Greek life until she discovers that the chapter president is running a gasp! clandestine escort service. (8 p.m., Lifetime).

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Around the Remote: What not to miss next week - The Union Leader

Flock Theatre stages Aristophanes’ ‘The Birds’ in Westerly – theday.com

Flock Theatre will perform Aristophanes Greek utopian comedy "The Birds" outdoors following strict COVID-19 safety guidelinesin Westerly'sWilcox Park, at 7 p.m. Aug. 27-30.

A modern adaptation designed to sound the way it might have to an Athenian in an ancient comic theater, "The Birds" (written in 414 B.C.) details the escapades of the comedy team of Pithetaerus and Euelpides as they set out to create a utopia. Fed up with Athenian society, they seek out Epops, the King of the Birds who was once a human himself, to found a new civilization where the birds reclaim their status as the original gods and goddesses.

Leading the cast are Flock regulars Eric Michaelian as Pithetaerus and Madeleine Dauer as Euelpides, with Eric Propfe returning from Flocks2003 production of "The Birds," and featuring musical arrangements of choral odes by Noah Todd.

Circles for households will be painted on the park lawn suitable for groups of up to five, and there will besix feet of space between each circle in every direction. The circles closest to the performance area are set 12 feet away, and all performers will be using face shields. The audience will also be asked to be masked when not enjoying their picnics, and there will be space for 75 audience members. Passersby are welcome towatch the performance from beyond the audience seating area.

Hand sanitizer will be available for audience members, and there will be porta-potties open for use before and after the performance and during intermission.

Performancesrunone hour and 45 minutes, including intermission. Admission is free, and donations to Flock Theatre will be accepted at the door and at flocktheatre.org.

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Flock Theatre stages Aristophanes' 'The Birds' in Westerly - theday.com

World Photography Day: 5 of the year’s best photo series – CNN

With Wednesday marking World Photography Day 2020, CNN Style is looking back at some of the most striking photo series published over the past 12 months.

Whether showcasing new work or delving into their archives, these five photographers demonstrate the diversity and vibrancy of the medium, bringing together images from Mexico, Nigeria, England and beyond.

Justine Kurland imagines a girls' utopia

Throughout the series, ideas of freedom and belonging prevail as girls form their own communities off the grid. Credit: Justine Kurland

Justine Kurland's "Girl Pictures" imagines runaway girls roaming the American landscape in a sylvan utopia where girls make their own rules. Taken between 1997 and 2002, but released as a book this year, the images offer a nostalgic glimpse of a bygone era and an exploration of timeless themes such as defiance, self-actualization and female sexuality.

"I had this desire to make this girl world, this feminist utopic solidarity between (young) girls and teenagers," Kurland said. "But between women, really."

Steve McCurrry explores the relationship between humans and animals

Many of the photos in "Steve McCurry. Animals" include human subjects, but those that don't hint at the presence of humans, or at least what they've left behind. Credit: 2019 Steve McCurry, Long Island City, NY

"Animals are in constant motion, have a mind of their own and rarely pay any attention to directions from a photographer," McCurry said. "Understanding animal behavior is essential to making good animal photographs, just as understanding human behavior can help with taking someone's portrait.

Oye Diran embraces vintage Nigerian style

From Diran's "A Ti De" series. The photographer has honed a minimalist yet warm aesthetic, citing renowned West African photographers J.D. Okhai Ojeikere, Malick Sidib and Seydou Keta as influences. Credit: Oye Diran

For his latest project, Oye Diran looked to images from Nigeria in the 1960s to 1980s -- including old family photos -- for inspiration. The resulting series "A Ti De" (We Have Arrived) recreates the era's aesthetic through the elegant clothing his parents used to wear, including his mother's classic Nigerian "iro" and "buba" (a wrapped skirt and tailored top).

"I was struck by how appealing and rich these outfits looked and was reminded of how well my parents and their friends were attired when I was young," Diran said. "The relevance of iro and buba doesn't dissipate over time, so I came up with this story to shed light on the beauty of my heritage to the world."

Orlando Gili goes in search of 'Englishness'

Every year, a village in Gloucestershire hosts an annual cheese-rolling competition, in which participants chase a wheel of cheese down a steep hill. Credit: Orlando Gili

A cheese-rolling competition (pictured above) and an annual "bottle-kicking" are among two of the odder pastimes captured by Orlando Gili, who set about documenting how the English have fun. Inspired by the divisions caused by Brexit, his series "Trivial Pursuits" captures a humane portrait of a nation navigating its history and place in today's world.

"We are really more similar than we like to think," he said. "And going to all these different types of events, and seeing different sections of society having fun, you see essentially the same things being played out.

Tania Franco Klein asks if we can ever disconnect

Klein shot "Proceed to the route" across California, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah. Credit: Tania Franco Klein

Tania Franco Klein's ongoing series "Proceed to the Route" combines dystopian unease with the warmth of nostalgia. At first glance, one might not think that the Mexican photographer is examining our modern digital age, but she wields ambiguity to examine our relationship with -- and reliance on -- digital technology.

"You cannot fully escape and fully disconnect from everything," she said. "But how can you (find) balance?"

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World Photography Day: 5 of the year's best photo series - CNN

The Unbearable: Toward an Antifascist Aesthetic | by Jon Baskin – The New York Review of Books

Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty ImagesDirector Leni Riefenstahl operating a camera from a lift basket while filming Triumph of the Will at the Nazi Partys Nuremberg Rally, Germany, 1934

Triumph of the Will, the 1935 Nazi propaganda film directed by Leni Riefenstahl in Nuremberg, comes up twice in the final volume of Karl Ove Knausgaards six-volume autobiographical novel, My Struggle. Both mentions of the film occur in the midst of Knausgaards epic tangent on Hitlers autobiography and the rise of National Socialism in Europe.

The first comes during a discussion of the conversion of Martin Heidegger and other German intellectuals to Nazism. Quoting a German journalist on how Nazism provided a widespread feeling of deliverance, of liberation from democracy, Knausgaard indicates the sense we can get of this aspect of the Third Reichthe popular demonstrations, the torchlit parades, the songs, the sense of community, all of which were unconditional joys to anyone who participatedby watching Riefenstahls films of the Nuremberg Rally where all these elements are present. Precisely because Riefenstahls film was so meticulously staged, Knausgaard alleges, it is striking how its content far eclipses the fact, because emotions are stronger than all analyses, and here the emotions are set free. This is not politics, but something beyond. And it is something good.

Knausgaard does not mean good in the moral sense. He refers to the feelings of the people involved in the marches and parades. As he does throughout the four-hundred page section, Knausgaard attempts to reconstruct the thoughts and emotions of those who were attracted to National Socialism, under the principle that it is impossible to understand the emergence of Nazismthe last major utopian movement in the westwithout understanding what moved the people of Germany, and later of other European countries, to embrace it. And what moved them, in Knausgaards view, was not the Nazis promise to redistribute income, or Hitlers analysis of world affairs, or even, initially, their hatred of the Jews. What moved them was, rather, the joyful feeling of togetherness and community, of being able to transcend not only the fragmented democracy of the Weimar period but politics altogether.

In National Socialism, writes Knausgaard, philosophy and politics come together at a point outside the language, and beyond the rational, where all complexity ceases, though not all depth. Riefenstahls film communicates the pleasure the people experiencedhow good it felt to themat having escaped the quotidian chaos of their shabby republic and their trivial private lives, at being liberated from the restrictions of rationality and deliberation, at being on the brink of achieving something large and lasting, deep and simple.

A similar focus on the emotional wellsprings of Nazi politics is evident in an important but largely overlooked recent film, which opens with black and white footage from Triumph of the Will. At the beginning of Terrence Malicks A Hidden Life, we seein lieu of opening creditsimages of Hitler in the open cockpit of a plane descending through the mist as he lands for the rally in Nuremberg, Hitler standing before a teeming square of Nazis in neat lines, Hitler riding in his cavalcade through the streets. The film then shifts abruptly to the mountain town of Sankt Radegund, in the Austrian countryside, which appears at first to exist in total isolation from the opening tableau.

Against a backdrop of green hills and blue skies, we are introduced to Franz, a farmer and father, along with his mother, his wife, Fani, and their three young daughters. There are no military parades in Radegund, and, in the consciousness of the farmers, there seems to be hardly any politics. Fanis and Franzs lives are consumed by their faith, their work on the land, and their family. They live in what appears to be a fairytale innocence.

The fairytale ends when Fani is shown looking skyward, alarmed at the sound of planes buzzing overhead. The war has arrived, and Franz is soon sent to a training camp for the German army. At the military camp, Franz watches quizzically as the recruits are shown filmed imagesprojected on an outdoor screenof Nazis marching victoriously through foreign cities in flames. But the propaganda has the opposite of the effect it is supposed to have on Franz. When he is called to fight again, Franz informs the recruiters that he wont go. Later, he resolves not to serve Hitler in any way.

Based on the life and letters of Franz Jgersttter, a farmer born in Radegund in 1907, later beatified by the Catholic Church, the character cites his faith in God and his love for Fani as his inspirations for refusing to do what everyone around him does without exception and, in most cases, without hesitation. When asked to articulate his reasons, he says little; when challenged with the fact that his resistance will change nothing, he merely nods. Offered a chance to avoid military service if only he will sign an oath of loyalty to Hitler, Franz refuses. He is taken from his wife, mother, and daughters, then imprisoned, tortured, and eventually executed. In Radegund, his family is outcast from the community and deprived of wartime rations.

Some critics of A Hidden Life have bemoaned the films lack of historical detail, pointing out that hardly anything is said about concentration camps or about the intricate political circumstances that prepared the way for Nazism. According to The New Yorkers Richard Brody, Malick uses Nazi Germany emblematically, as a merely metaphorical backdrop to illustrate the ultimate clash of good and evil, the ultimate price of resistance. Likewise, The New York Timess A.O. Scott lamented that Nazism is depicted a bit abstractly, a matter of symbols and attitudes and stock images rather than specifically mobilized hatreds.These criticisms not only miss Malicks point, they invert it.

Malick, like Knausgaard, thematizes the symbols and attitudes of Nazism because he perceives how central these were to the appeal of Nazism itself. The film demonstrates impressionistically what Knausgaard, with his characteristic thoroughness, lays out in voluminous excerpts of diary entries and contemporaneous accounts from the period: the goodness of Nazism was as much about its symbols and attitudes as it was about its policies and actions. But the appeal A Hidden Life makes as an artistic experience is the opposite of symbolic. For the contemporary viewer, the films power flows from the fact that, whatever political and social convulsions led to the moment when Fani cranes her neck skyward, individual Germans like Franz and Fani were confronted by a choice that remains perfectly legible today.

Some at the time may not have felt Nazism to be a choice at all. History nevertheless records that there were, without any doubt, resisters. The existence of these resisters has proved crucial to establishing a kind ofex post factomoral compass, writes Rand Richards Cooper in Commonweal magazine, reminding Germansrather in the way that the witness of passionate nineteenth-century abolitionists reminds Americans regarding slaverythat a point of moral sanitywasin fact visible to some, and thus available to all.

How does Franz achieve this moral sanity? That is the central question of A Hidden Life, and it is in how he addresses it that Malicks critics find special cause for complaint. Scott, at the end of his review, confesses that his incomprehension of Franzs motives may be related to his personal preference for historical and political insight over matters of art and spirit. It is refreshing to hear a critic be so honest about their intellectual biases. It is also revealing of the assumptions that seem to pervade the broader discussion in recent yearscarried on mostly by academics and op-ed writers, as opposed to artistsabout the relationship between the politics of 1930s Europe and those of our own time. But what if the capacity to appreciate the relevance of Nazism to our own time is, in fact, inseparable from our willingness to attend seriously to matters of art and spirit?

Knausgaard finished his noveland Malick likely started working on his filmwell before Trump took office, so it is misleading to think of their artworks as responses to the events of the past four years. Nevertheless, and partly for that reason, they offer a useful vantage point from which we can evaluate not only our own relation to that past, but also the limitations of the intellectual tools we have tended to turn to when trying to articulate that relation.

Beginning not long after the 2016 election with the historian Timothy Snyders bestseller Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century (2017), soon followed by the philosopher Jason Stanleys How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them (2018), numerous scholars have sought to use historical analysis of the Weimar period to alert Americans to the early signs of fascistic rule. As the Trump presidency has dragged on, these urgent warnings have given way to a wide-ranging debate, including in these pages, about whether such historical analogies are warranted or appropriate.

Understood in relation to that debate, Malicks and Knausgaards artistic treatments of Nazism may persuade us not of the inaccuracy or inappropriateness of such analogies, but of their utter and complete futilityat least insofar as it is claimed such comparisons can inoculate us against repetition. In their focus on the emotional pull of Nazismits promise to liberate citizens from the frustrations and banalities of an alienated, lonely existence, to connect them with a mass of like-minded souls in unconditional joythe works of Malick and Knausgaard expose us to aspects of how fascism works that it would be laughable to think could yield to academic analysis, no matter how accessibly arranged.

Establish a private life, warns Snyder. Listen for dangerous words. Do we really imagine it was advice such as this that interwar Germans lacked?

*

The second time Triumph of the Will comes up in Book Six of My Struggle, Knausgaard reflects that Nazi Germany was the absolute state. It was the state its people could die for.

Watching Riefenstahls film of the rallies in Nuremberg, its depiction of people almost paradisiac in its unambiguousness, converged upon the same thing, immersed in the symbols, the callings from the deepest pith of human life, that which has to do with birth and death, and with homeland and belonging, one finds it splendid and unbearable at the same time, though increasingly unbearable the more one watches, at least this was how I felt when I watched it one night this spring, and I wondered for a long time where that sense of the unbearable came from, the unease that accompanied these images of the German paradise, with its torches in the darkness, the intactness of its medieval city, its cheering crowds, its sun, and its banners [and] I came to the conclusion that it came from something in the images themselves, the sense being that the world they displayed was an unbearable world.

Once again, the emphasis is on the affective allure of this paradisiac world, the pleasure that is involved in sublimating ones individual will to the mythic collective. To make one feel justified in dying for ones country is, in some sense, the greatest gift a country can bestow on an individual. And yet Knausgaard, watching the film as an adult in a liberal democracy more than seventy years later, finds it unbearable. What is it in this worldor, more precisely, in these images of itthat are so unbearable to Knausgaard?

One of the chief insights yielded by Knausgaards close reading of Mein Kampf is that Hitler, for all his vehement disgust with modernity, was one of us. He was modern and Western in the sense that he was secular yet wanted some larger meaning; modern and Western insofar as he craved something that the rationalized, bureaucratic nation-state is organized to exclude. To say that Knausgaard arrived at this insight by making an analogy between Hitlers time and our own would be to miss its force, for the analogy presumes a distance requiring some leap of imaginationor historical scholarshipin order to bridge it. In fact, no such distance exists.

At the dawn of the twentieth century, Knausgaard recounts, large portions of Western high society closed the door on religion, while millions were uprooted from their communities and traditions, often settling in overcrowded cities teeming with poverty, exploitation and, soon, militarism. If we can only clear our eyes of self-serving fantasies, Knausgaard believes, we will see that we are still living, spiritually if not quite synchronously, in that century, and that its problems are still our problems. Among the largest of these is how individuals cut off from religion and tradition can satisfy their craving for meaning and transcendence, how they may connect with that deepest pith of human life.

Knausgaard acknowledges the salience of this problem, and also the ugliness of the ways many modern societies have endeavored to solve it. His artistic project in My Struggle may be viewed, in one respect, as an argument for art, rather than politics, as the proper place to explore the transcendent. Throughout the six volumes, Knausgaard strives to make contact with the inexhaustible feelingsfeelings he associates with experiences of joy, beauty, plenitude, ecstasy, and reverencethat he believes are suppressed in so much of modern, secular life. In Book Six, he emphasizes that these emotions are also at work in Riefenstahls film, and that they speak to some of the elemental forces that drove Nazi ideology. But whereas Riefenstahl intentionally blurs the line between aesthetic feelings and political ones, Knausgaard insists on the necessity of segregating them. In contrast to the undifferentiated masses that populate Riefenstahls German paradise, the responsible modern artist anchors their artistic vision in distinctive personal experience, which they invest with what Knausgaard calls the inimitable tone of the particular.

But even within art, Knausgaard argues, the Nazi experiment has had its effect. So complete was the catastrophe of Nazism that it warns us not only against the danger of utopianism in politics, but also against the danger of utopianism in any collective cultural endeavor, including art. Knausgaard laments the extent to which Western art after Nazism has been oriented toward ideas (the cerebral, the critical) rather than toward the emotions (the passionate, the inexpressible), but his novel, about the life of a bourgeois man raising his family, demonstrates that even he does not wish completely to disavow this orientation. Indeed, as many critics have noted, Knausgaard surrounds his musings on the transcendent with thousands of pages documenting a man making cereal, tidying his childrens bedrooms, checking his email, and agonizing over whether he should get off the couch to make another cup of tea.

The prosaicness of My Struggle is, in this light, an act of prudence and self-limitation: while expressing his perennial attraction to the inexhaustible emotions, Knausgaard never forgets their danger. The long digression on Hitlerthe culmination of Knaugaards book-length Kampf against what he takes to be his own Hitlerian impulsesends with Knausgaards remembering the moment he felt most powerfully the stirrings of the we he associates with fascism: in the aftermath of Anders Breiviks summer camp mass shooting outside of Oslo in 2011.

This we emerged amid a moment of national mourning and grief, and yet Knausgaard still perceives in it the germ of a potentially fascist collectivity. Even sitting alone, as he writes the final portion of his book from his home office in Malm, a medium-sized city in Sweden, where he lives with his wife and his (then) three children, Knausgaard recognizes in himself a desire he identifies with Nazism: to reach beyond the dull comforts and tedious complications of bourgeois democratic life. But he also knows something the Germans marching in Riefenstahls film did not know, and this thing compels him to resist this desire, as it relates to politics and even to art.

What makes Riefenstahls film unbearable to Knausgaard is that he knows the catastrophic endpoint of the joyful, torchlit parade. We might even say My Struggle in its entirety is an investigation of the liberal-democratic selfin its nobility as well as in its banalitythat has been shaped by the knowledge of where Hitlers parade of the we ends.

Malick, too, knows where this parade ends, yet he comes to a conclusion different from Knausgaards about how art might be meaningful after Auschwitz. In a review that chided the film for its heavy-handed moralism, the critic Lidija Haas observed that it was hard to tell whether its an intentional irony that Malick begins A Hidden Life by showing a fantasia of a mountain community that a fascist would adore. I dont see anything ironic about it, but Malicks romantic evocation of life in the mountains, in a movie that begins with footage from Riefenstahl, could hardly be accidental.

Before her Nazi period, Riefenstahl both starred in and directed a series of mountain films that were reputedly admired by Hitler. In these films, wrote Susan Sontag in her famous essay on fascist aesthetics, the mountain is represented as both supremely beautiful and dangerous, that majestic force which invites the ultimate affirmation of and escape from the self. A Hidden Life also makes use of a majestic romantic imagery: the mountains shrouded in mist form the backdrop for more than one scene in which a farmer is tilling the fields at dusk. That this imagery is deployed in a film devoted to resistance to Nazism, however, might inspire us to ask whether it is necessaryor wiseto abandon the field of the emotional sublime to the fascists.

Ever since Walter Benjamin observed, in the epilogue to his much-cited 1935 essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, that the logic of fascism was toward the introduction of aesthetics into political life, Western artists have gravitated toward one of two paths. Many leftwing artists, suspicious not only of the aestheticization of politics but of any emotional appeal not immediately assimilable to their political purposes, have taken part in a counterattack that culminates, as Benjamin predicted it would, in the full politicization of artthat is, the reduction of art to agitprop. Liberals and many conservative writers have, on the other hand, predominantly done as Knausgaard recommended and tried to sequester aesthetics within the artistic sphere, even there taking care not to let things get out of hand.

An appreciation of the full spiritual force of movements like Nazism might encourage us to countenance a third alternative, one that acknowledged the centrality of symbolism and emotion to political life, and deployed them againstthe eroticized collectivism that is so evident in Riefenstahls film. This aesthetics would honor the triumph, we might say, not of the collective will, that threatening we, but of the individual conscience.

Midway through A Hidden Life is an arresting tableau: Hitler, again in grainy film footage, appears in uniform, playing with a little boy on the viewing deck of his retreat in the Bavarian mountains, the sun glittering off the mountainside behind him. The interludebeautiful but haunting (haunting because beautiful)underscores, just as the films opening does, the aesthetic and emotional appeal of the Nazi project. Malick does not shrink from this appeal, but neither does he allow it to shrink his own ambition as an artist. In a film that begins with Riefenstahls footage, the very worst that can ensue from the politicization of such ambitions is in full view. ButA Hidden Life rather than being intimidated into modesty by fascist art, presents a countervailing utopia to the vlkisch collectivist one, holding out the prospect of a different kind of escape from the self.

It is not incidental to Franzs story that, for him, religion is still an open door. Christianity provides both the substance and the inspiration for the orienting world beyond politics in A Hidden Life. Of course, as the film depicts, plenty of churchgoing Christians were among Nazisms most enthusiastic supporters. And conversely, the aesthetic power of Malicks late films, even as they have grown more explicitly Christian in their imagery and message, is perfectly accessible to many of us who are not Christians. Christianity, in these films, is one among many educators of the moral sentiments, one among many reminders that ethical action is not dependent on historical and political insight and often will remain unmoved by it. Art can be another such educator.

I have thisfeeling, Franz tells the Nazi judge who presides over his trial. If God gives us free will, were responsible for what we door what we fail to do. I cant do what I believe is wrong. Franzs belief, like the beliefs of the fascists, is based on a feeling. This why his resistance has seemed opaque to those more accustomed to researching and factchecking their way to virtue, but it is precisely what gives his story its relevance in a period in which a new emotional sincerity is spreading throughout our political life, often overpowering our liberal-democratic caution about political passions.

Yet, in contrast to the fascists, Franz does not clothe his moral feeling in self-certainty; still less does he attempt to transform it into dogmatic judgment. Rather, he accepts that his decision is vulnerable to counterarguments, including those that his wife and lawyer repeatedly put before him. He could be wrong, he acknowledges to the judge, but he cannot sign the oath. It is not only fascist feelings that are, sometimes, inexpressible.

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The Unbearable: Toward an Antifascist Aesthetic | by Jon Baskin - The New York Review of Books

Recruiting for Utopia: Print and the Imagination Opens Next Month at Fruitlands Museum – ArtfixDaily

After design by Charles Fitch & Apollos Hale, Detail, A Chronological Chart of the Visions of Daniel & John, 1842, hand-tinted lithograph on cloth, 55 x 39 inches, J.V. Himes, Boston.Fruitlands Museum collection.

Boston & Harvard, MA Shana Dumont Garr and Fruitlands Museum have announced their newest exhibition, Recruiting for Utopia: Print and the Imagination, opening to the public September 5,2020 and running through March 2021. Recruiting for Utopia considers the influence of printed matter on Utopian thought in 1840s New England and encompasses both historical and contemporary sections.

Recruiting for Utopia is about how and why people share ideas that feel urgent and of the utmost importance in their time, notes organizing curator, Shana Dumont Garr. Today, in a relatively secular society, we might consider climate change to be comparable to the Biblical apocalypse that loomed in the fears of many nineteenth-century New Englanders. The exhibition focuses on the power of design to share a particular ethos and influence others.

Radical and alternative ideas were among the first to be distributed via the growing industry of print facilitated by new technology in the early 19th century. Inspired by the Millerite banners in the Fruitlands Museum collection, the focus of the historical portion of the exhibition illuminates the use of and message it shared, specifically the imminent, apocalyptic end of the world. Banners hung on tents and pamphlets shared at meetings were an important part of the Millerite message, with the group effectively sharing their message through print in the United States.

In addition to Millerite ephemera, subject matter from the Shakers and Transcendentalists are included in the exhibition. New England has always served as an incubator for alternative ways of society and Recruiting for Utopia incorporates wider themes, including early female spiritual and lay leaders in the United States whose influence we can trace with early testimonies, biographies, and even an anonymously published narrative. At a time when females having influence outside of the domestic sphere was rare, figures including Mother Ann Lee (1736-1784) and Jemima Wilkinson (1752-1819) provide inspiring examples of early leading female leaders.

Accompanying the historical materials show, the contemporary section showcases the priorities of activism and community building still prevalent in New England today. Contemporary publications include the print of an Auction Block Memorial by Steve Locke, a Repatriation Comic by Sonya Atalay, Jen Shannon, and John G. Swagger, and a poster by Demian Dineyazhi. These materials will appear throughout the museum, including historical spaces. This part of the exhibition is co-curated by art historian Paige Johnston.

In addition, site-specific artwork by artist-in-residence Jane Marsching complements the significance of print both historically and now whilereferring directly to history reflected in Fruitlands Museums permanent collection. Marschingcreates large-scale banners with ink she made from plant materials foraged from the Fruitlands forest and printed on Tyvek, a collaborative process executed on the museum grounds. The banners feature quotes from authors in the Museums Transcendentalist archives as well as utopian thinkers from the mid-nineteenth century and today. These banners hang in trees through the landscape and connect the cultural landmarks of the Museum with its trail system.

Artist-in-Residence Maria Molteni creates a performance video within the museums 1790s Shaker Office. Developed in coordination with artists Allison Halter and Gabe C. Elder, the film incorporates the imagery of Shaker gift drawings or sacred sheets, spiritualism, and nature.

In conjunction with Recruiting for Utopia, concurrent and related exhibitions are also on display at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, also a Trustees reservation located in Lincoln, and the Fitchburg Art Museum.

Visionary New EnglanddeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park | Lincoln, MA | October 8, 2020 March 14, 2021

Visionary, mystical, and utopian practices are crucial to New Englands culture, history, and character. From the experimental agrarian communities founded in the 1840s, such as Brook Farm andFruitlands, to the intersections of spiritualism and experimental psychology at the turn of the 20th century, New England has long developed alternative ways of nurturing community, personal growth, and societal reform. Related artists and writers frequently united their intimate connection to nature with a search for access to alternate dimensions or higher powers.

After Spiritualism: Loss and Transcendence in Contemporary ArtFitchburg Art Museum | Fitchburg, MA | Through September 6, 2020

The group exhibition offers an occasion to reflect on personal and shared losses through varied contemporary art practices. The works on view focus on trauma and mourning and is inspired by Spiritualisms aims to connect the living with the dead for comfort, guidance, and enlightenment.

About Fruitlands Museum

Fruitlands Museum, a property of the Trustees since 2016, is a historic, natural, and cultural destination in Harvard, MA. Founded in 1914 by author and preservationist Clara Endicott Sears, the Museum takes its name from an experimental utopian community that existed on this site in 1843 and was led by Transcendentalists Bronson Alcott and Charles Lane. Fruitlands is dedicated to New England history, art, and nature, and its collections include: The Fruitlands Farmhouse, The Shaker Gallery, The Native American Gallery, and The Art Gallery. It is located on 210 acres of land with panoramic views of the Nashua River Valley, including 2.5 miles of meadows and woodland recreational trails. http://www.thetrustees.org/fruitlands.

About The TrusteesFounded in the city of Boston by landscape architect and open space visionary Charles Eliot in 1891, the Trustees is the nations first and the Commonwealths largest preservation and conservation non-profit. For more than 125 years, we have worked to preserve and protect dynamic natural and cultural sites from beaches and community gardens to farms, historic homesteads, designed landscapes, and hiking trails for public use and enjoyment. Today we are working to engage a larger constituency of Massachusetts residents, members, visitors, and public and private partners in our work to help protect our beloved and fragile natural, ecological, cultural, and coastal sites for current and future generations.

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Recruiting for Utopia: Print and the Imagination Opens Next Month at Fruitlands Museum - ArtfixDaily

Utopia: Amazon Preview Shows Some Conspiracy Theories Are Real – Bleeding Cool News

WhileGone Girl author-screenwriter Gillian Flynn's upcoming Amazon Studios adaptation Utopia may still be listed as "Fall 2020" as its premiere window, that doesn't mean it's too early for a new set of preview images that we would like to say clear up everything and give us an easier understanding of what the series is all about. But they don't, and we don't think they were intended to. What they did do was confuse us in all the right ways, and curious to see how it all connects- so we're guessing "mission accomplished" (and just in case you don't believe us, there's something waiting for you mid-article that makes our case for us).

Utopia follows a group of young adults who meet online that are mercilessly hunted by a shadowy deep state organization after they come into possession of a near-mythical cult underground graphic novel. Within the comic's pages, they discover the conspiracy theories may actually be real and are forced into the dangerous, unique, and ironic position of saving the world. John Cusack(High Fidelity), Ashleigh LaThrop(Fifty Shades Freed), Rainn Wilson(The Office),Sasha Lane (American Honey), Javon "Wanna" Walton (Euphoria), Jessica Rothe(Happy Death Day 2U), Ashleigh LaThrop (Fifty Shades Freed), Dan Byrd (Cougar Town), Desmin Borges (You're The Worst), Farrah Mackenzie (Ascension), Christopher Denham (Billions), Felisha Terrell (Shooter), andDustin Ingram (Watchmen) star.

But that's not all. We're taking a brief break from the preview images to offer up the next two cryptic teasers, with their ominous captions: "First we reap, then we sow" and "A vial a day keeps the doctor at play."

Cusack's Dr. Kevin Christie is a charismatic, media-savvy, and brilliant biotech mind who wants to change the world through science. Wilson's Michael Stearns was once a promising virologist, now a forgotten scientist who's lost his edgeunder-appreciated and underfunded in his laboratory work. When a nationwide outbreak of a deadly flu arises, Michael offers his expertise, and soon finds he has landed smack in the middle of something much bigger. Lane's Jessica Hyde: tough and feral after a life on the run from a mysterious and dangerous group, Jessica believes all the answers about her perplexing life story may be hidden in the graphic novel Utopia. Walton's Grant is streetwise beyond his years, independent, fearless, crafty, and charming. Raised in the Kansas City projects by an alcoholic single mother, he's now roaming the streets alone.

Grant embarks on a dangerous mission to uncover the secrets from Utopia. Rothe's Samantha is extremely idealistic, sharp-witted, and a natural-born leader. She earnestly believes in changing the world through action and scoffs at cheap rhetoric about progress. She could school any comic book nerd about the graphic novel Utopia and is embarking on a mission to uncover its secrets. Terrell's Hailey Alvez is a sharp, rising star in journalism with a friendly air and affable manner. She interviews pharmaceutical giant Kevin Christie about his groundbreaking new product and asks some serious, pointed questions. Ingram's Tallman is extremely wealthy and eerily eccentric. A collector of priceless comic books, Tallman will go to great lengths to get his hands on the mysterious graphic novel, Utopia.

LaThrop's Becky is bright and big-hearted, using her kindness and empathy as a way to get closer to the graphic novel she desperately needs to save her life. Borges' Wilson Wilson is a brilliant, paranoid, and eccentric conspiracy theorist who is obsessed with Utopia and convinced that it hides more dark secrets about the very future of our world. Mackenzie's Alice is an adopted foster child who is bright and curious, with a steely resolve when challenged and thrown into the dangerous world of our Nerds. Denham's Arby is a shark-like menace who's emotionally stunted and socially disconnected but whose cold facade starts crumbling as he learns some dangerous truths about his childhood.

Created byDennis Kelly and produced by Endemol Shine Group's UK production studio Kudos, the original Utopia premiered on Channel 4 and aired for two seasons. Leadcharacter Jessica Hyde was portrayed byFiona O'Shaughnessy(Striking Out, My Mother and Other Strangers) Utopia is a co-production between Endemol Shine North America/Kudos and Amazon Studios. Flynn, Kelly, Jessica Rhoades, Kudos'Karen Wilson, and Diederick Santer, andSharon Hallwill executive produce. President of Unscripted & Scripted Television for Endemol Shine North AmericaSharon Levywill oversee production.

Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray began five years earlier as a contributing writer/photographer before being brought on board as staff in 2017.

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Utopia: Amazon Preview Shows Some Conspiracy Theories Are Real - Bleeding Cool News

Hey Look, There Are Some Cars In That New Animated Star Trek Show – Jalopnik

Screenshot: CBS / Jason Torchinsky

As you may be aware, the Start Trek franchise is finally taking a real stab at a show that doesnt take itself so damn seriously. I mean, yeah, I get that its wonderful to have a show about the future thats utopian and not the now-far-more-common dystopian hellscape, but even a utopia needs to get the piss taken from it every so often. The show Lower Decks intends to do that, and Ill let our pals at iO9 handle full reviews because I just want to talk about the fact that an actual car shows up in the pilot episode.

Of course, by actual car I mean something thats very much not an actual car, because not only is it fictitious, and wont exist until several centuries from now even if it wasnt fictional, its animated, so its just a bunch of drawings of a fake car thats from the future.

Still, it has actual (again, not actual actualwhy am I explaining fiction here? Get a grip, Jason) wheels, which, for a vehicle on a Star Trek show, is pretty rare.

Heres what it looks like:

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Huh. Thats kind of small. Hold on. Computer! Zoom and enhance!

Thats a little better. Lets try again. Computer! Uh, focus in on the coordinates with, um, the car, and zoom and enhance! Maximum resolution! Engage!

Oh good, much better.

Okay, so, lets see what were looking at here: its very much a utility vehicle type of design, with an open cab that I think seats four roughly human-shaped beings and with a short open truck bed at the rear.

Its got large wheels with lots of suspension travel and looks to be made to handle off-road use, which I suppose is smart since it may be used on planets without developed road networks.

If it looks kind of familiar, that may be because weve seen a vehicle like this at least once before in Star Trek, in the 2002 movie Star Trek: Nemesis that, if I recall, kind of sucked? I dont really remember, to be honest.

The Nemesis vehicle, the Argo, was very similar in overall design, but a bit different in details. Still, I think the Lower Decks truck thing is pretty similar.

Having an open cab is kind of a strange choice for a multi-use, multi-planet ground vehicle when you think about it. If this thing could end up on all kinds of planets with all kinds of environments and climates, wouldnt you want to have an enclosed cab that could be heated or cooled as needed?

I mean, hell, at least a windshield would be a good idea, so you dont get any weird alien bugs slamming into your face, which could cause all kinds of problems. Hell, the plot of the first episode here revolves around problems from an alien insect!

The front end design is quite different from the Argo, too, with a larger, more prominent intake area for, presumably, cooling air and some lights, which of course would be useful. Theres no evidence of signal lights or anything like that, which I suppose makes sense given that these are not really designed for established road networks.

Maybe the lights are advanced enough to interface with local planetary databases and configure themselves to blink in whatever crazy alien color aliens like to use to indicate turns or other maneuvers.

Man, Id love to be an exoturnsignologist.

The instruments and controls seem to consist of a Starfleet-standard LCARS display in the center (perhaps with provision for Apple ShuttlePlay or Android Starship) and a yoke-like steering assembly that may also control throttle and brake.

If I had to guess what powered these things, Id go with some kind of microfusion reactor to produce electricity instead of batteries they seem to use those things for everything from little computers to vibrators, probably. Id imagine that these would provide power for these things for years and years of hard use.

The power from those reactors would power some suitably futuristic version of electric motors, likely one powering each wheel. Honestly, this type of machine would be absolutely trivial for Federation industry to crank out hell, we could basically build this thing today, albeit with batteries.

Aside from the open cab, I think these are smart vehicles to have available on a starship, and it always baffles me why wheeled vehicles werent more common on every other Star Trek show. How many times have we seen a team of Starfleet crewpeople in dress shoes and hot polyester pants beam down into the empty outskirts of some settlement or colony or whatever, and then have one of them look down at their little tricorder thing and announce oh, no biggie, we just have to walk five kilometers to the south or some shit?

Why dont any of them start bitching about how would it have killed them to beam them down some bikes, at least? Why dont they always beam down with a little vehicle to get around? Hell, they even had one on Firefly, and that was in a universe with much less advanced tech:

So, good for Lower Decks for including several good old wheeled vehicles on the show. We always sort of knew humble machines like these had to still have some role in this utopian future, and I suppose its fitting that it took a show about the unsung parts of the Star Trek universe to give old-school cars a place.

Maybe well get to see more alien cars! Its happened at least once before, after all.

See original here:

Hey Look, There Are Some Cars In That New Animated Star Trek Show - Jalopnik

Comforters Market with Competitive Analysis, New Business Developments and Top Companies: Utopia Bedding, AmazonBasics, Elegant Comfort, Comfort…

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Comforters Market with Competitive Analysis, New Business Developments and Top Companies: Utopia Bedding, AmazonBasics, Elegant Comfort, Comfort...