Related Faves from shiwani

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    1
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 03 2008 | culture, news
    Emulating that Buddhist couple who're never more than 15 feet apart - Slate Magazine

    Great Slate article about emulating a Buddhist couple that never strays more than 15 feet from each other...

    Quoted: Of all the relationship experiments ever tried—polygamy, wife-swapping, no-fault divorce, open marriage—the one described in the May 15 New York Times might be the most perverse. For 10 years, Michael Roach and Christie McNally have been together—for every single minute. The two never stray more than 15 feet from each other.

  • vote
    10
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - May 19 2008 | new york, culture, news
    Burlesque Makes a Comeback in New York - New York Times

    This is a great story, but the return of burlesque is really a national trend - not just NY. I'm actually writing an article on burlesque's comeback in Seattle! Tons of shows around the city - Seattle's scene gives NY's a real run for its money.

    Quoted: Although burlesque was kicked out of New York in 1942, the gleefully bad-mannered entertainment has returned to the city.

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    23
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - May 07 2008 | food, culture, news
    Vegetarian myths, debunked. - Slate Magazine

    While this raises some good points about stupid questions people ask vegetarians (and even stupider assumptions that are made), I'm annoyed that it doesn't even consider religious/cultural vegetarians.

    Quoted: Every vegetarian remembers his first time. Not the unremarkable event of his first meal without meat. No, I mean the first time he casually lets slip that he's turned herbivore, prompting everyone in earshot to stare at him as if he just revealed plans to sail his carrot-powered plasma yacht to Neptune.

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    5
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - May 02 2008 | landscape, culture, news
    The decline of the American lawn. - Slate Magazine

    Very interesting article about how the American lawn isn't what it used to be.

    Quoted: The next time you drive down a street in suburban or exurban America, pay careful attention to the yards. Lurking somewhere, either peeping out from the back or nakedly displayed right in front, some form of children's play equipment, typically in plastic. How often do you actually see a child playing on, or near, one of these devices?

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    31
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 31 2008 | race, culture, news
    So is that Vogue cover racist or not? - Slate Magazine

    I agree with this author. Race is still so much of an issue in America (as evidenced by Obama's speech, the casting of '21' and this King Kong-ish cover of Vogue) but it's become 'impolite' to talk about it. It's especially sad considering this week (April 4) is the 40th anniversary of MLK's assassination.

    Quoted: No matter how many "courageous" speeches Barack Obama gives, America will never be a "Let's talk about race" kind of place. It'll always be a "Let's talk about how we can't talk about race" kind of place. I'm all for doing my part. I'd like to start by talking about the cover of Vogue's current "shape" issue.

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    23
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 22 2007 | movies, culture, news
    Dumbledore, meet Tinky Winky. - Slate Magazine

    A look at the history of outing fictional characters.

    Quoted: On Friday, a fan at a question-and-answer session asked J.K. Rowling if Harry Potter character Dumbledore had ever been in love. In response, Rowling declared, "I always thought of Dumbledore as gay." Rowling is hardly the first to out a fictional character.

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    2
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 19 2007 | music, culture, news
    The trouble with indie rock. - Slate Magazine

    This article raises some great points, particularly about the way this critic reduces "whitness" and "blackness" in terms of music. I agree with many of the critiques of indie rock and what it signifies, but the critic seems to lack the self-awarness that she writes for THE NEW YORKER, one of the most high-brow publications in the country. Don't get me wrong - I think indie rock and The New Yorker have a lot to offer. They're just not end-alls and be-alls.

    Quoted: New Yorker pop critic Sasha Frere-Jones has often indicated boredom and annoyance with a lot of the critically acclaimed, music-blog, and/or NPR-approved "indie rock" of this decade.

  • vote
    11
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 09 2007 | news, culture
    The Odyssey Years - New York Times

    My cousin sent me this article. It is absolutely true - the odyssey of the '20s is the best time to explore and become a full, independent person, particularly given how the demands of life have changed. I don't agree with David Brooks politically, but this is a very insightful piece and I think will give solace to parents with children in their '20s.

    Quoted: The decade of wandering that frequently occurs between adolescence and adulthood is a sensible response to modern conditions.

  • vote
    12
    0 starsshiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 24 2007 | culture, news
    Beware the overshare in everyday conversations - Mental Health - MSNBC.com

    Ha, this is so true. And I'm sure I've done it before...

    Quoted: Blurting out too much information, or TMI, is something we’re becoming more and more comfortable with, some psychologists say. We obsess over the mundane details of celebrities’ lives and are eager to tell our own stories on blogs and Flickr accounts. And often, all that online openness seeps into everyday conversations.