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Items Tagged With Jack Hudson

Bill Clinton Calls Jay-Z
Written By: Jack Hudson
2008-04-01 11:55:15
Bill Clinton calling Jay-Z is the third of my three aspirational and fictional ideas that are (relatively) cheap, that would make concrete environmental gains, that could be accomplished almost instantaneously by motivated people in positions of power (by phone calls, in two cases), and that would immediately set an agenda for the next election.


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Carbon and "The Good Life"
Written By: Jack Hudson
2007-09-14 00:55:31
As a symbol of our cultural moment, the MTV Video Music Awards program Sunday September 10 was unexpectedly complex. I tuned in mid-Sarah Silverman, who was already deconstructing Britney 2.0, who had just gotten offstage. MTV (VIA), where the target demographic has drifted down to tween girls (largely because of the influence of Britney 1.0) now has the awkward problem of trying to recover buzz for a TV channel in a MySpace (NWS) world. And so the setting was the Palms in Las Vegas, America’s city of the future. Vegas is both a-historical and could be powered by the sun (WFC) (see also here and here), so it’s a place to watch (unlike the spent cultural dinosaurs of New York and LA).

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Conde Nast Puts Its Money Where Its Mouth Is
Written By: Jack Hudson
2008-04-01 11:51:27
A policy shift at Conde Nast is the second of my three aspirational and fictional ideas that are (relatively) cheap, that would make concrete environmental gains, that could be accomplished almost instantaneously by motivated people in positions of power (by phone calls, in two cases), and that would immediately set an agenda for the next election.


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Green Backlash
Written By: Jack Hudson
2007-07-11 13:46:59
The backlash on the green trend has finally arrived, and the question now is if the current wave of environmentalism has staying power.

The people at Spiked see environmentalism fundamentally as an emotional spasm, a twitch of guilt and angst, which dresses itself in "frightfully dry statistics" to look grown up. Greenormal argues that "the fact that it is fashionable at the moment gives us no indication as to its prospects, either way." But my favorite recent sentence for clarity and wisdom comes from the New York Review of Books:
The genius of the tobacco companies has been to exploit not just the purchasing habits of the young and the addictive centers of their brains, but their dreams for a better life and their constant search through fantasy for meaning and identity.

That's a sentence which says more than it lets on -- not only because the climate change issue (especially the US auto market) is remarkably like where tobacco was in 1950 (which is a grim prospect), but also because it hints that what the people at Spike really want, as do the people giving green awards and organizing Live Earth, is meaning and identity.

Here is the full article from the current New York Review of Books, written by Helen Epstein, the daughter of Barbara Epstein, the NYRB editor who died of lung cancer last year. Barbara Epstein was also the editor of Anne Frank's Diary.

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In the Valley of Elah
Written By: Jack Hudson
2007-09-14 01:08:32
In the Valley of Elah is a new film from Paul Haggis (director and writer of Crash, writer of Million Dollar Baby, among others).

I should say at outset I am ambivalent about Haggis’s work. In previous films, he tends to write “on the nose,” choppy, emotionally overwrought scenes that shove their message directly at the audience. Crash had some great performances and moments, but breathlessly raced from one emotional payoff to the next in a way that flattened everything. And the plot of Crash was wildly improbable.


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