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	<title>MISCmedia &#187; Big Big Love</title>
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	<description>Popular culture in Seattle and beyond, by CLARK HUMPHREY.</description>
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		<title>MISC-AGENATION DEPT.</title>
		<link>http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/2009/10/13/misc-agenation-dept/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:34:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Big Big Love</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/?p=9237</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With all the aborted/infanticided girl babies in China these days (despite heavy-handed government efforts there to stop those practices), where will that nation&#8217;s rising population of surplus males find mates? Would you believe, Tanzania? (From the (London) Times.)
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With all the aborted/infanticided girl babies in China these days (despite heavy-handed government efforts there to stop those practices), where will that nation&#8217;s rising population of surplus males find mates? Would you believe, <a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article6871900.ece">Tanzania</a>? (From the (London) <em>Times</em>.)</p>
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		<title>12/87 MISC COLUMN FOR ARTSFOCUS</title>
		<link>http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/1987/12/01/1287-misc-column-for-artsfocus/</link>
		<comments>http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/1987/12/01/1287-misc-column-for-artsfocus/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Dec 1987 03:10:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Big Big Love</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/?p=8657</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[12/87 ArtsFocus Misc.
Cheer Our UW in the
Mediocre-Team-From-Big-TV-Market Bowl
INTRO: Welcome to a special condensed version of Misc., the column that hated yuppies long before USA Today said it was in to hate them. Yes, it&#8217;s now officially OK to say there must be something more to life than greed, smugness, defiant immaturity, emphatic bad taste, and all those [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;">12/87 ArtsFocus Misc.<br />
Cheer Our UW in the<br />
Mediocre-Team-From-Big-TV-Market Bowl</p>
<p><strong>INTRO: </strong>Welcome to a special condensed version of <strong>Misc.</strong>, the column that hated yuppies long before <em>USA Today</em> said it was in to hate them. Yes, it&#8217;s now officially OK to say there must be something more to life than greed, smugness, defiant immaturity, emphatic bad taste, and all those other model behaviors modern society&#8217;s been encouraging us to aspire to. More on this as we go along.</p>
<p><strong>FASHION: </strong>Don&#8217;t let your friends think you <strong>foolishly paid </strong>$30 for that new shirt or top (especially if you did). A common office paper punch will turn you from a fashion victim to a wise consumer by adding that <strong>&#8220;cut-out look&#8221;</strong> seen in the best clearance stores&#8230;. The<strong>mini-skirt look,</strong> spawned by designers determined to rip-off teen street fashion into a product for older (richer) women, shows a generation finally coming of age in terms of attention from the marketing culture, the dreaded Yups finally getting their comeuppance. O how great this spring will be, with all these self-proclaimed &#8220;grownup children&#8221; embarrassingly walking around trying to look like real kids.<strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong><strong>UPDATES: </strong>Have heard the <strong>PiL</strong> song &#8220;Seattle&#8221; a few more times and like it much more&#8230;. I said <strong>The Bon</strong> would never revert back to &#8220;Bon Marche&#8221; (meaning &#8220;cheap&#8221; in modern French) under its new French-Canadian owner. It is. It&#8217;s also replacing Seattle&#8217;s last bargain basement with a floor of gaudy boutiques as part of a massive remodel, set to be done by the 1990 centennial of its first store at 1st and Cedar &#8212; a building slated to be razed for Yup apartments.<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong><strong>LOCAL PUBLICATION OF THE MONTH: The Tunnel Times</strong> is Metro&#8217;s weekly newsletter of tunnel-construction progress, tunnel trivia and advance word of the next street closures. Free at the tunnel info stands outside the Courthouse and Frederick&#8217;s. Note that I used no puns about &#8220;underground newspapers.&#8221;&#8230; Emmett Watson&#8217;s <em>Lesser Seattle Calendar </em>goes beyond the one-joke concept of Watson&#8217;s old anti-tourist columns into a nifty little collection of Seattle history and folklore, ranking alongside the works of Murray Morgan and Paul Dorpat in helping establish a common mythology for this, the world&#8217;s youngest real city. Only complaint: he doesn&#8217;t go far enough in his barbs against developers, now that some of their most diabolical plots are coming true. (The calendar exists because Watson, as a <em>Times </em>freelance contributor, isn&#8217;t prey to the paper&#8217;s rule against outside work by its regular staffers.)<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong><strong>ECOLOGY: </strong>Puget Sound Bank&#8217;s promising to donate part of each <strong>bank machine fee</strong> toward &#8220;cleaning up Puget Sound.&#8221; The ads don&#8217;t say that the money&#8217;s really all going to a documentary film about the Sound &#8212; a film in which the bank&#8217;s bound to get a big plug.<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong><strong>CRIME: </strong>At press time it&#8217;s too early to tell who set fire to the <strong>Strand Belltown Cafe</strong>, but activist Bob Willmott has made a lot of enemies, some in very high places. Alternately, could there be any connection with the officially non-arson fire at the Trade Winds?&#8230; Kudos to <strong>Bill&#8217;s Off Broadway</strong> restaurant, set to reopen 7 months after a robbery-fire.<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong><strong>ART</strong> is certainly not the object of the anonymous (natch) buyer of the Van Gogh for $53 million &#8212; many times more than Van Gogh made in his life, even more than it cost to make <em>Ishtar. </em>It&#8217;s the ultimate example of the &#8220;big boy&#8217;s toy&#8221; syndrome that&#8217;s turned conspicuous consumption into a mass neurosis. In a saner world, at least a portion of any art sale over $10,000 would go into a trust fund for living artists.<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong><strong>MUSIC: </strong>CBS sold <strong>Columbia Records,</strong> the world&#8217;s oldest and largest label (founded on patent licenses granted by Edison himself) to Sony. Michael Jackson will not honor his new bosses by having plastic surgery on his eyebrows&#8230;. <strong>Bono Vox,</strong> caught spray-painting on a Frisco fountain, might have had to do public-service work cleaning city buses. If U2 had played here, where they&#8217;re saving water by keeping buses dirty, he&#8217;d have gotten off.<strong></strong></p>
<p><strong></strong><strong>CLOSE: </strong>While you put down your deposit on a home in Japan&#8217;s proposed new <strong>underwater city,</strong> be sure to use John Stamets&#8217;s<em>Gravity 1, U.W. 0</em> for all your Xmas cards, read Umberto Eco&#8217;s <em>Travels in Hyperreality </em>(now at the U Book Store remainder tables), and join us again in the year of piano keys and Oldsmobiles for our second annual alternative Ins/Outs list (send your suggestions in early).</p>
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		<title>11/87 MISC COLUMN FOR ARTSFOCUS</title>
		<link>http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/1987/11/01/1187-misc-column-for-artsfocus/</link>
		<comments>http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/1987/11/01/1187-misc-column-for-artsfocus/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Nov 1987 03:14:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Big Big Love</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.miscmedia.netarcadia.com/?p=8661</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[11/87 ArtsFocus Misc.
To comply with the water shortage, your favorite column, Misc., has made its wit even drier this month.
Earlier this year, I predicted a &#8217;70s revival. While wide ties, brown polyester and dope jokes aren&#8217;t back, we have seen the return of some of the decade&#8217;s worst musical acts (Boston, Fleetwood Mac), plus video games, environmental [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;">11/87 ArtsFocus Misc.</p>
<p>To comply with the water shortage, your favorite column, <strong>Misc.,</strong> has made its wit even drier this month.</p>
<p>Earlier this year, I predicted <strong>a &#8217;70s revival</strong>. While wide ties, brown polyester and dope jokes aren&#8217;t back, we have seen the return of some of the decade&#8217;s worst musical acts (Boston, Fleetwood Mac), plus video games, environmental activism, whale-mania, and economic stag-flation. And with water supplies so low, electricity cutbacks can&#8217;t be far off.</p>
<p>One great thing from the &#8217;70s we&#8217;re losing is the classic<strong> Starbucks Coffee</strong> mermaid. The chain&#8217;s new logo, previewed in flyers for its first out-of-state store (in Chicago), not only covers up the mermaid&#8217;s bust but makes her look like the &#8220;international-style&#8221; symbol of some Swiss bank or Danish tractor company.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, that late-&#8217;70s relic <strong>John Lydon</strong> and his latest incarnation of Public Image Ltd. have a very slick song called &#8220;Seattle,&#8221; full of lines about barricades and how &#8220;What goes up/Must come down/On unfamiliar/Playing ground.&#8221; The video, full of shots of fish and construction cranes, was all shot in London; I&#8217;ve played it 10 times and still can&#8217;t fully discern what inspired Lydon about Seattle, which he last visited two PiL lineups ago. Still, no local angle can hide the fact that Lydon, who&#8217;s now as old as the hippies were when he was slagging them as a Sex Pistol, is becoming the sort of rock dinosaur he&#8217;d denounced.</p>
<p>The prospects for the &#8217;70s revival, however, may be dimmed by another decade seemingly anxious to come back &#8211;<strong> the &#8217;30s.</strong> We&#8217;ve already got homeless legions and a plunging stock market; now comes a new twist on that nutty &#8217;30s sport of flagpole sitting. Actor William Weir plans to continue living in a tiny room built onto a Millstone Coffee billboard at 45th and Roosevelt until Nov. 12, for a total of 32 days. &#8220;I feel like a Woodland Park Zoo exhibit,&#8221; he told the <em>UW Daily.</em> A Northwest Harvest collection truck is parked under the billboard&#8230;. In other ads, <strong>Alaska Airlines</strong> had two Gold Lion awards in the Cannes Goods commercials festival recently seen at the Neptune&#8230;. Joanne Woodward&#8217;s appearing, but not speaking, in<strong> Audi</strong> ads. Here&#8217;s what she might say: &#8220;My husband Paul puts his life on the line when he gets in his race car. Now I can experience that same thrill every day.&#8221;</p>
<p>The most telling moment at <em>The Transit Project</em> performance piece came at the end. I stayed at the start-finish bus stop, waiting for a real bus to take me home. The rest of the audience all left by car. For all I know, perhaps nobody at any of the performances had ever ridden a Metro bus before. They&#8217;re missing a lot of real-life drama, much more interesting than the Yuppie angst of<em> The Transit Project,</em> though not as well choreographed.</p>
<p><strong>Local publication of the month: </strong>An anonymous flyer posted on light poles around town. For a title, it has a graphic symbol that looks like computer-punchcard lettering in Arabic. #6 has an essay on &#8220;The Freedom to Give Away Freedom,&#8221; a chart comparing gorilla and human cranial cavities, an Einstein quote, four brief poems, drawings of goddesses and half a dozen other items &#8212; all on one legal-size page.</p>
<p><strong>Pioneer Square&#8217;s bicycle police</strong> unit&#8217;s gained major press attention lately. Nobody&#8217;s mentioned that Seattle didn&#8217;t have the idea first. On an early Letterman show, <strong>Harry Shearer</strong> did a skit showing still photos he claimed were from a pilot for a bicycle-cop TV show. Shearer on his bike was shown aiming a gun at some bad guys, &#8220;but of course we can&#8217;t shoot them because we&#8217;d fall off the bikes from the recoil.&#8221;</p>
<p>An independent convenience store in town recently displayed a life-size cardboard stand-up display of a slickly made-up woman in a low-cut evening gown. Anyone with real taste, she asserts, will treat her to a bottle of <strong>Thunderbird</strong> &#8212; one of the horrible fortified wines the county may soon ban. The idea that any Thunderbird drinker could still have enough self-control left to accurately put on eyebrow pencil is just its most obvious improbability.</p>
<p>Imagine the gall of the developers who announced a 150-acre theme park (similar to California&#8217;s Knott&#8217;s Berry Farm) to be built near <strong>LaConner,</strong> perhaps the only place in the state besides Port Townsend where a promoter of such a thing&#8217;s likely to get thrown into an acid-filled hot tub.</p>
<p><strong>Philm Phun: </strong>William Arnold said the Union St. locations used for <em>House of Games</em> should be declared an historic landmark. He&#8217;s a bit late; the buildings are all slated for demolition or fatal remodeling&#8230;. Have you ever met anybody in Seattle who talks like the people in<em>A Year in the Life?</em>&#8230;. Vital film series to attend include Kenneth Anger&#8217;s<em> Magick Lantern</em> at SAM, A (Samuel) Fuller Frenzy at the Phinney Neighborhood Center, and 911&#8217;s Open Screening of local films and videos the second Monday night of each month at the New City Theater.</p>
<p><strong>As you ponder</strong> the mixed messages of the Honda Spree scooter seen on Queen Anne with a &#8220;no-55&#8243; sticker (it can&#8217;t go faster than 30), be sure to watch <em>Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures</em> Sat. morns (the first consistently good thing Ralph Bakshi&#8217;s ever made), see <em>The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle</em> at the Seattle Children&#8217;s Theater, don&#8217;t buy cheap stocks just because the certificates make elegant wallpaper, and return here next time.</p>
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