"A New York Treasure" --Village Voice
Category: Arts and Culture

Beat of the Day

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Man, this picture is just so dope.

Good Times Roll

Morning Art

Paintings by Cameron Howell.

“Bill’s nicknames are ‘Cuffs’ & ‘The Inspector.'”
2013
acrylic and card stock on panel
20″x 16″

“Benny’s leisure activities include dancing.”
2013
acrylic and card stock on panel
20″ x 16″

The Old Turkey Bacon Routine

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There is a good profile of George Clooney in the latest issue of Esquire. Tom Junod is an expert at this kind of celebrity writing and Clooney is a gracious, professional subject. A lot of insights in this piece but this one stands apart:

You must love him.

For one thing, he’s lovable, professionally so. For another, he leaves nothing to chance. If he can’t win you over with his fame, his charm, and his good looks, he will win you over with preparation. It’s not that he’s needy, like an actor; it’s that he’s competitive, like an athlete. He’s always been good at making people love him; he’s not about to give up his edge now.

Of course, he is not often challenged, and risks the fate of a fighter whose dominance is tainted by a lack of worthy opponents. A few years ago, however, he lost one of his dogs to a rattlesnake. He is a dog guy—a little sign about men and dogs adorns a living-room wall otherwise dominated by signed photographs of dignitaries—and he set about to get another, preferably hypoallergenic. He saw a black cocker-spaniel mix on the Web site of a rescue organization and called the number. The woman who answered said she’d be happy to bring the dog to his house, but then she explained that the dog had been abandoned and picked up malnourished off the street. “He has to love you,” she told George Clooney, “or else I have to take him back.”

At first, he found himself getting nervous—“freaking out.” What if the dog didn’t love him? Then he responded. “I had some turkey bacon in the refrigerator,” he says. “I rubbed it on me. I’m not kidding. When she came over, the dog went crazy. He was all over me. The woman said, ‘Oh, my God, he’s never like this. He loves you.’ ”

He has told this story before. He has even told it to Esquire before. That he tells it again—that it’s the first story he tells—serves to announce what is essential about himself: that he’s a man who will do what it takes to win you over, even applying bacon as an unguent.

I’m seduced and repulsed by charming people. I’m sure Clooney would charm the pants off me like he does with most people. But the turkey bacon story is revealing because it doesn’t just suggest that he’ll do whatever it takes to win you over but that he’s willing to cheat to get there. Beneath the surface there is something desperate about it (“You really like me!”. He wanted that dog and the trainer to like him so much that it was more important than giving the dog the home it needed. What we don’t know is how the dog got along with him after the stunt. Maybe he did give him a good home. Did Clooney bring the dog with him on location? Did a house sitter look after the dog most of time?

We don’t know. The seduction is the thing here not necessarily the reality.

[Photo Credit: Nigel Parry]

Beat of the Day

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Groove.

[Photo Via: MPD]

Anatomy of a Bomb

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Not not Marty but this: From the A.V. Club…


Jackie Gleason : “You’re in the Picture” by werquin

Taster’s Cherce

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Yes, please.

Morning Art

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Hugo Pratt.

Go West

 

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Paintings by Tracy Stuckey.

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Beat of the Day

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Wonder wrote it.

Million Dollar Movie

More on Short Cuts. Dig this excellent documentary.

Morning Art

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Woof. 

Super Oy

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Colossal.

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The Hardest Part…

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There is an article in the Times today about the right way to say “Godot” in Samuel Beckett’s iconic play, Waiting for Godot. I’ve come to believe that the character Godot isn’t a mystery to be solved. The title of the play in French, the language in which it was written, is En Attendant Godot or which I always took to mean While Waiting for Godot. To me, that’s what the play is about, what we do while we wait, not who we are waiting for.

Taster’s Cherce

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Seven hot drinks from Food 52. 

Million Dollar Movie

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Cinephilia and Beyond knows the score. 

Morning Art

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“Still Life with Jars” by Jan Bogaerts (1936)

Sundazed Soul

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“Nobody’s Fault But Mine”–Sister Rosetta Tharpe

[Picture Credit: Hasui Kawase: Rock Waterfall]

Saturdazed Soul

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“Welcome”–John Coltrane

[Photo Credit: Farbod Green]

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"This ain't football. We do this every day."
--Earl Weaver