The Television Will Not Be Revolutionized."

The Television Will Not Be Revolutionized."

Friday, April 26, 2013

"Raylan County, KY."

People act like the latest season of Justified was the vindicating flaming sword of justice in the hands of the returning Christ-Child mounted on an elephant, come for your sinful enemies, but it wasn't.

I kept watching it to see if anything would turn up, as usually it does, but this time it really didn't.

Of course New York magazine elected to declare it this week's "heir to the Sopranos" at this point. What'd the Sopranos ever get us anyway? Boardwalk Empire. Or, as it's known, The Implausible in Pursuit of the Unintelligible. Who among you buys Steve Buscemi as a mob boss?

Last season of Justified was a Dick Tracy arc of excesses and grotesques. It was Justified over-heating, over-reaching itself and turning into a cartoon, but it was a total swell to behold. Even when they stole the shock of the arm-chopping motif from Big Love it was fine. The season before that, the old Harlan County, Which Side Are You On? bit, I thought at first was hard-going down a terminal mine-shaft but when I watched it again on DVD it was full of subtle delights. Principally, the Bennetts.

The first season of Justified, as I believe I noted elsewhere, is a protracted version of a Road Runner cartoon, or Sylvester & Tweetie Pie, or Tom & Jerry. Punisher versus Wolverine. You get the idea. They managed to sustain that somehow but I think the ghost got coughed up this season. What's left to say between Raylan and Boyd? They need to shit or get off the pot. "Get a room."

This season blew partially from bad "American Southron Gothic" mis-writing and terminally purple over-writing. They cranked up the good-old-boy trash-talking into turbo overdrive but that didn't work, it just choked the viewer with exhaust fumes.

Raylan Givens was so full of liquid smarm and drawling olde county saws that he was rendered nonsensical and vapid. It was like he stepped out of a Foxfire book and was going to show us how to whittle a banjo from a gourd but that was about all he'd contribute. He'd smirk and squint for money. Conversely, Boyd Crowder worked like a dray horse. That boy was all over the shop, both figuratively and literally. That poor old boy don't know if he's coming or going, whether he's a prophet or a small-time oxycontin dealer. I missed the days when he was the snake-handling born-again blood-drinking Great Awakening come-outer. "Thems was good times, sho." Now it's all just ambling around the bar and the trailer park looking for his script and his teeth-whitener.

After the grotesques of last season the "bad guy" this season was a nebulous identikit bald guy. A poor man's Vic Mackey. That pepped-up screen hood Wynn Duffy was better than this. I was actually relieved when Wynn Duffy sauntered into a scene this season. Raylan dispatched this same nameless, nebulous "bad guy" as an afterthought. Why he did it with a phone call. He really did phone it in. You got the sense that his nonchalance was mirrored by the geek assholes at the writers' long table too. Phoned-in. They're just so happy they're in Hollywood in the sunshine and they're getting laid and they can live out their Turtle-from-Entourage fantasies.

Good luck to 'em. I like Hollywood. I especially like walking in the hills and going to the Laurel Canyon store to buy a packet of the red Monster Munch for a dollar, which is actually cheaper than they cost at Heathrow Airport or even (depending on the exchange rate) in a Waitrose.

It's cheaper to buy the six pack than a single packet.

At Heathrow, they were selling three packets of crisps for £3, and they called that a "sale."








Thursday, April 25, 2013

"Miller Gaffney Ain't Well." Or, "She Moves Through the Fair (In An Invalid Car)."



"Let's do it to it." KEVIN BRUNEAU.

On the recent show in Liberty, North Carolina, Miller Gaffney was at her most un-Millerish. In fact she said outright, "I'm going to throw up." She drifted away, dazed, hand poised daintily over her mouth. Five minutes later she came positively bouncing back on to the show, jaunty as you like. Soon enough she was saying to somebody at a stall, "Is that a funnel cake? Yum." I turned to my wife and said, "That must have been a really good puke."

Despite her seeming recovery, Miller blundered around for the rest of the show on John Bruno's scooter. On another episode, this same scooter that I have mentioned in a separate "post" came a cropper in the mud & this debacle made John late to get to the table.



Contestants have a set time to scout about the fairs and markets looking for superior items per the week's instructions. They are timed each week by an antique clock and if they turn up back at the long table outside the time limit they are fined $50 by each successful contestant.

The other contestants are never more bloodthirsty than when they come scrounging meanly for their meagre $50 bonus from a latecomer. John Bruno was late because his scooter was bogged in the mud, which is to say on account of his personal infirmity, but the others still leapt on him for $50 each. It was like a scene from a Jack London novel for sheer natural barbarism.

The wolves leaping on the ancient native in the snow.

The cannibalism of the Donner Party.

The leader in such bloodthirstiness is Bene.

She smiles an awful lot but she is a skinflint and a cut-throat and she has blood on her hands.

I nearly accused her of actual murder but I stopped myself short.





Word is out that the show is to be cancelled. Let me here register my hearty, lousy regret. Predictably, now come the carrion crows. There is lots of bitching online about this show where formerly there was no word about it at all. The level of this skirmishing isn't high. But when was the repartee online ever thrusting, indeed? People online are cruel and vindictive and routinely impotent and inert and dishonest and they have poor hygiene and bad acne also.

One sour character yowls in outrage several times that Miller isn't a natural blonde. Another kvetches that they never make any money at auction. Disregarding the fact that Kevin does handsomely most weeks, and Bruno patently don't give a drat about the materialist side of things,  I don't think that's really their fault. The hare-lipped hill folk that show up to these auctions are unwilling to go above $40 for anything. Their attitude is buy low, sell high and burn down Washington DC.  In these hard last times they control the market it seems. If you had the actual Sistine Chapel ceiling up for auction in Old Viriginny, they'd bid maybe $20 if they felt flush.

There was the same sort of toxic fantard rumbling about Storage Wars, which I have to concede I eventually came to feel was a fix. Mostly Barry's "finds." I liked Barry but he was a committed piss-taker and a joker and a charlatan and a disgrace to the profession. (What profession exactly, I do not know.) That was really a gang of crooks, wasn't it? I know I have nearly accused Bene of actual murder, but I think that the crowd on Storage Wars really have killed people before. It's just a sort of suspicion I have. I can't prove it of course.

Anyway, what the hell, all things must pass & ubi sunt. Cheers to the passing spring. I hope Miller and John and Kevin get some other show because I like them. You know what I think about Bene.

It's a regrettable disgusting shame but on the other hand I watch too much TV as it is.



Sunday, March 24, 2013

"John Bruno Again."



The finest, funniest, highest times of our lives spent alongside the Market Warriors, we realised with some shock, were those spent cruising about on the back of the buggy with JOHN BRUNO.

How often does JOHN say of an old dilapidated toy car or airship or G.I. Joe or wind-up deep-sea diver that he "had that exact one when he was a kid"?  You start to wonder if, within his dirt-poor Brooklyn tenement community, JOHN was that child who had every toy that ever came onto the market.

Sometimes watching the show you have to ask why they gave JOHN the epithet "The Professor." The question is irresistible and must be asked aloud, "Professor of what?"

Professor of losing the game every week?

Such titles are almost as useless as a Doctorate in American Studies!

__________________________________________________________


NPR on Bloomberg funding projects in other cities. "He is literally getting down into their garbage cans."
Is that strictly true?

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

"Going Loco Down in Adam Lanza."

Frontline recently ran a series of documentaries each as depressing as the next about the actively gun-having portion of these United States.

One of the documentaries was called Raising Adam Lanza. It was about the titular character, America's latest nascent lunatic gunman, this time from Newtown, Connecticut.

I say nothing of the matter contained therein. I want to speak here only about the title.

Is Raising Adam Lanza a pun on Raising Arizona, the title of a Coen brothers film starring a young Nicholas Cage?

I can't see how it was not a pun on that film's title.

It could be it was an unconscious pun, since punning on such a serious subject seems rather risqué  for PBS.

My wife naturally took issue with my remarks along this line. She said, "It's about how Adam Lanza was brought up. How he was raised."

"Yeah," I said. Gritting my teeth. "I see that. But the title is still a reference to the Coen brothers' film. The whole point of it is to recall the title of Raising Arizona, the movie starring Nicholas Cage. The rich pleasure and cranial amusement, that rare treat of recognition."

The format of the documentary was to follow around these two workmanlike journalists on the Hartford Courant who were never exactly blindingly dynamic in their work. They would show bull sessions where the office would have group conversations, bullpen hashing out. They would try to bungle randomly towards a solution or an explanation for this remarkable evil.

This was not Woodward and Bernstein. Unfortunately it more keenly recalled to this viewer nothing so much as those circle jerks on TMZ where "Harvey" brandishes his XXL coffee and the assembled  wisenheimers all lounge about the office and crow about the bathetic antics of the Hollywood C-List.





"Miller Gaffney Threatened By Gunman at Minnesota Fair."

This week's Market Warriors came from an antiques fair in Oronoco, Minnesota.

Mark Walberg, our disembodied omniscient narrator is like "Knowledge" in the Everyman play, who verily says




Everyman, I will go with thee
and be thy guide,
In thy most need to go
by thy side, 

Mark Walberg, who goes with us and is our guide, noted that there had been a "Gold Rush" in Oronoco Minnesota once, but there hadn't been a heck of a truckload of gold. The rush without the gold

His comments on that score foreshadowed the way the episode went, because there wasn't much to be got at the Ornoco Antiques Fair either. Things were so dire that Bene won the competition this week with some costume trinkets and more fool's gold. 

Kevin Bruneau was reduced to riding on the back of John Bruno's invalid car scouting for the lowest chintz.

John Bruno spent most of the episode ruminating back and forth about whether to buy a toy frogman from the Sixties. This was less like television and more like a trip through my own interminable internal monologue. 

Should I buy the Norm Show DVD box set at Academy Records on 18th Street.
Should I buy the hardback Larry Hama G.I. Joe volumes when I already have the paperbacks.
Should I sell those Comics Journal Special Editions.
Should I sell at Strand or Popfuzz or Unnameable or PS Bookshop.
Maybe PBS would like to give me my own show.

These Minnesotans were most vicious to Miller Gaffney in particular. 
Maybe she did swan around a bit like Scarlett O'Hara this week, not overly interested in oiling the wheels and greasing the palms and kissing the babies and sugaring her bartering among these hinterland vulgarians. 
Maybe she didn't want to get spittle on her taffeta dress

She breezed into one tent with a thirty dollar bangle and said, "Wouldn't yeou, ah say Wouldn't yeou, gimme this for twenny?"
"Don't reckon I would nor," came the peevish grunt from a part-man, part-alligator, mostly squirrel object, hacking on cue into a spittoon.
"Yeou won't give me it for twenny-teau?"
"Naw," came the mean unfriendly response from the catamount, who had plainly refused to go "on camera" and would deliver his lines "without representation or taxation".
"Yeou shure?"
Miller was confused. How shall bartering endure if these backwater graspers won't bite and play ball?
"What part of Naw don't you understand?" growled the off-camera sprig of iceberg lettuce.
("What part of bartering doan't yeou unnerstand?" should have been the comeback.)

Poor Miller not only gave up the attempt at bartering, she actually reached meekly into her purse and drew out the thirty dollars. I never saw the like. The taming of the shrew.

Another participant in the fayre acted even weirder with Miller and, following the recent horrible events of Newtown Connecticut, not to mention Superstorm Sandy, with quite menacing overtones. 

As the show began, we seemed to enter midway through a tart exchange between Miller and a gentleman brandishing a BB gun. 



This only days after PBS's frankly depressing series of shows on "gun control" (laughable turn of phrase!) in these United States in which it was revealed fairly conclusively that the United States is positively alive (pardon the inapt figure) with twenty-two calibre cockblockers who haven't got a lick of gulchur or book-larning but they do know their "Second Amendment Rights" and all they want to do is shoot guns for "entertainment" and they will go to actual Civil War to defend their right to this "entertainment." 

These gun-show knuckle-draggers, these county-fudge mouth breathers, these rocky-road glue-sniffers, these fucking taxidermy enthusiasts

Miller was exchanging remarks with such a man in a CHICAGO tracksuit top with his face blurred out. This signified to the audience that he had not signed the "release form" for his "image" to be shown on TV, which usually tells the savvy viewer that this character is going to come across badly as a character. Indeed, this man did.

One cannot judge very generously a man who threatens on television to shoot a lady in the eyes.

He spat back to Miller, "I'll shoot yore eye out!"




He was like the eye-gougers in old South-West almanacks of the Jacksonian day. Except that even Sut Lovingood, even Simon Suggs, wouldn't gouge aout the eyes of a lady. 
He was all snaggle-toothed misogyny and weird misdirected Freudian energies. 
I say candidly that he had misread his Oedipus Rex and should go back to school.

Miller replied with superior and airy gaiety, "Aow, leook aout. Ah knew somebody who got shot in the bottom once." 

While Miller is too sweet to get down to low skirmishing with such back-water country-churn bottom-feeders, the tool got schooled by Mark Walberg in the voiceover. 

"In all seriousness, you should keep the barrel pointed either up in the air or down at the ground," Mark said as the camera showed the CHICAGO moron dully fiddling with the gun, barrel tipped up and veering around, always pointed (though not aimed) at head height. 




A portrait of America in 2013. 

It was redolent of the local news, when they show you some grainy, phrenzied ruckus at a gas station cash booth, and a blurry image leaps over the counter and rifles through the register, or when a neighbourhood rapist is shown lurking in a stairwell on CCTV, and the anchorwoman requests plaintively that if we recognise them would we please telephone the police force? 

We chuckle to see it, we say aloud, "Who could recognise that blur?," but then presumably if you knew somebody well you'd recognise them even in the blurred state. 

It's entirely probable that even this unmemorable fist-hatchet is recognised by family and friends in his CHICAGO tracksuit top. 

Perhaps he even bragged to his hare-lipped kinfolk, "Ah threatened to blind a woman with a gun on television today! Yew–all set the DVR y'hear!"













Tuesday, February 19, 2013

"Crybabies."

Slipping standards at the New Yorker, people. Slipping standards.

Gotta pick it up.

But people been singing this song for years, ever since Ross went and off and died.

It doesn't make it any the less true.

Do you remember when S.J. Perelman descried the decline of the magazine in the writing of Donald Barthelme? He said Barthelme should be "nailed to the nearest sour apple tree"? It sounds almost quaint now. Perelman is dead and so is Donald Barthelme.

But for me the straw that broke the bee's knee was a review for a film, I forget which, in the current number, in which it is said with complete seriousness of Jennifer Lopez that in her role as "a Realtor", she "gets to strut her considerable charisma."

This is, amazingly, not the same reviewer as the one who said that the guy who plays The King of Queens was a "comic genius."

It is hardly surprising then that Nussbaum, who reviews TV this week, says in her not-strictly-excoriating review of Girls that the ultra-dull HBO comedy Enlightened "makes me cry more than any comedy I've seen."

Always a good recommendation for a comedy: aptitude to make you cry.

I am reminded of those characters, the Asian-American blogger (nearly wrote "bilger") and his wife, who sat through The Royal Tennenbaums "openly weeping tearfully" the while.

Their tears make me laugh aloud!

I said to my wife, "Why are so many people, in positions of relative responsibility mind you, crying willy-nilly, and then making public proclamations thereof?" Bad enough that ostensibly intelligent people are sitting about bleating like wookies. It is, I find, a shortcoming in a writer's abilities when they can no longer praise an object except by howling aloud.

This willingness to cry and then brag about it must come from watching too many Andy Cohen shows. On Bravo channel reality shows, when the "cheftstants" come across anything the least bit challenging to their various projects and machinations, their first recourse is to "go feral" like Wolverine; that is, to lash out wildly with lachrymosity, often invoking childhood traumas or ancestor worship.

All well and good in a cheftestant on America's Next Top Model, whose ghetto tough-guy shtick has been sharply shut down by another character more ghetto than thou, but writers for the New Yorker are supposed to be better than that. Like Harvey Keitel says in Mean Streets, "They're supposed to be guys."

[...]

This issue also features fiction by Zadie Smith.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

"Flabbergasted Into Madness: Market Warriors Again."

John Bruno is known as "The Professor" on Market Warriors.

If by that they mean that he's got tenure and they can't kick him off the program, although they'd like to, then it makes sense.

If they call him it on account of his encyclopaedic knowledge of the arts antiquarian then I'll boldly say it: the epithet is an inapt misnomer.

This venerable codger has fudged many an episode by now, throwing good money after bad. It's like he's so sick of casting pearls before swine, cannily paying high for tasteful products at one state fair only to have therm bought for next to nothing by uncomprehending heathens in another state, that he has elected to deliberately buy inferior dross so that he won't get disenchanted any further.

After all, men of fragile sensitivity can only stand so much crass vulgarity in the face of their refined tastes before they crack and become cynical and thwarted and warped and bitter. Who can blame JOHN for going "off the reservation"? He has been flabbergasted into real madness.

Mark Walberg (the Antiques Roadshow presenter, not the film actor who interestingly insisted that he could have single-handedly fought off the Al-Qaeda terrorists who caused the 9-11 attacks if only he had "been on that plane") seems to blame him. He loves to make fun of John Bruno. He takes a certain vicious sneering delight in it.

Now John Bruno has taken to riding around in an invalid buggy. When did he start this strange habit? Is this how he managed to avoid being culled by the PBS politicos? "You can't kick me off the show," he trilled, all defiance. "I'm too diverse. I have an invalid buggy."

John is close to botching this loophole though.  There have been scenes captured on camera when he is standing up in his buggy peering around. It's like he's using the buggy as a way to get better elevation rather than as a mode of perambulation. Other times, he is clearly visible wheeling the buggy along like it was a scooter, pushing it along with one leg. Impatient with its pedestrian pace.

It's like when people claim for compensation because they were "hurt" and rendered unable to work because of their injuries and he firm being sued hires a private dick to photograph the person acting all able-bodied. Almost invariably at a gas pump. Except John Bruno is going around acting able-bodied on national TV.

In one episode John Bruno was bargaining with a seller. This is his real forte, actually. He might preface the barter with the words, "Shall we begin to dance?" He has a really beautiful way of being shockingly cheap.

Well, this seller wasn't budging beyond a certain point, and none of the BRUNO CHARM would change it. John was trying to make a virtue of the fact that although he would pay a derisive low price, it would be in "cash". "That's cash you can take straight home."
His nemesis responded coolly, "Cash doesn't matter to me."
"I hear ya," John says, turning off the charm and losing interest fast.
The guy deadpanned, "I'll take a company check..."
"Right," John said, totally uninterested now.

The best part of this exchange was the seller's expression as he said it. Wily, canny, equal to BRUNO'S TRICKS. I took a photo of it from the TV using my wife's phone, to publish it here for you to see.

Unfortunately, her phone crashed at the airport and all her photos were lost. I don't mind about all those pictures of family and friends lost forever, but she also lost my picture of the flea market guy bargaining with John Bruno and that's a real shame.

Another occasion. John Bruno said, "We got punked."
Miller Gaffney retorted, "We didn't get punked."
That's all the notes I have here.
[Looking over the piece of paper with the original joke on it. Checking there isn't anything written on the other side.]
Without context that line doesn't have much... resonance...

And that is the end of this rash of Market Warriors notes.

"Come back real soon y'hear."

"Deleted Scenes, Deleted For a Reason." Or, "Christ Re-Re-Crucified, Re-Rewind."

Time for a roundup of the recent DVD extras:

1. Rounders (Dir. John Dahl, 1998)

I watched this strictly average movie about poker because I like poker and I'd heard that it had a certain cachet in the world of "high stakes poker players". This is faulty logic. Since when (I should have reasoned) were "high stakes poker players" the least bit doyennes of the arts? Would I read a novel recommended to me by Annie Duke?

Let me be clear: I do not accept anybody's novel recommendations at this stage in my life.
Life is at too great a premium to waste your time muddling through some middlecore fudge cause one of your big palsy-walsy bum-chums thinks it's a hoot. Fnack that dust.
I love my friends but their tastes are routinely seriously off-kilter and I wouldn't want to be them for all the tea in China.
The lives these people live!

(I should say, however, that I was in Trader Joe's on La Brea & Third last night and I was exhausted and holding in one hand the standard "water cracker" and in the other the "Golden Rounds" packet of crackers. My dull skull trying to do the arithmetic to work out which had the less calories. As I did it, and as my wife was putting in her two penn'orth on the subject of crackers, a complete stranger offered the unsolicited recommendation of the Pita Bite Cracker with sea salt. Thinking for a moment to take offense, I instead decided to follow his recommendation, reasoning that "wisdom cries out in the street." That is, however, as far as my taking of recommendations commonly goes.)

Rounders is an all right film, if you like watching Edward Norton really chew up the scenery, snort it like snuff and then sneeze all over his fellow members of the cast.
If not, it's not.

The DVD extras are quite interesting though because they feature some of the stars of the "real life" poker world giving their "insider" tips "for free of charge". I like this because alongside that ill-named, seasoned hack Fat Chris Moneymaker, we also get my preferred player, and proud possessor of a hare lip, the so-called "Poker Brat" Phil Hellmuth.

Phil's advice is superficial , as is Fat Chris's –– what did you expect though, that they'd really give you the golden ammunition to annihilate them at the table? –– and I'll pass over them without comment.

The advice I want to look at today is that imparted by Chris Ferguson, who is known in poker circles as "Jesus" (for his supposed resemblance to the Son of God). (This means he has long hair and a beard.)

Chris Ferguson says good words, right full of sound sense and mercifully free of the egotism or facetiousness commonly associated with the poker circuit. His recommendation to the "studio audience at home" is to play with your friends.

This might seem blindingly obvious at first, but then I re-examined it and found that Chris Ferguson's resemblance to Jesus had imbued his very soul and he sounded like the Son of Man in his casual poker advice now. It's like Christ Recrucified by Nikos Kazantzakis, the novel in which Manolios, the humble shepherd lad who plays Christ in the village pageant, takes on the mien and the saintly convictions of Christ as he increasingly "inhabits" his role. Just so with Chris Ferguson. Play with your friends, he bids us. Go among men and spread fellowship and equity.

Idea for a novel: Poker player with delusions he is Christ.

Gets crucified.