Your Name Here

I was in Borders last night trying to find a gift for the upcoming Yankee Swap at Lauren’s mom’s pad for the holiday when I came across a gem. I faintly remember seeing once before after Googling my name or something, but it was altogether different to see it in the flesh, so to write. It was settled in the New Age section, branded with a peace sign and carrying my name. It turns out that there is a German music-making collective known as Vargo who put out soothing sounds for chill-house compilations such as Cafe del Mar and Buddha Bar. Trying to decide whether I should pick this up or e-mail them to request a free copy.

magic

Is it me, or are all the kids now-a-days saying ‘magic’, using it as a stand alone word? The way it’s often used makes sense to me but I can’t describe what it means at all. Whenever I think I’m falling behind on a slang term I turn to the urban dictionary for a refresher course. It’s totally deck. Magic is in there as a synonym for cool or awesome… among other things, such the only explanation for the unexplainable.

I like the word and I think it’s here to stay (for a month or two).

Magic.

Cultural Learnings for to Make Glorious Benefit

Over the weekend I saw the film, Borat…

I have taken away some things from this brash and brave comedy of Sasha Baron Cohen. He is fearless in his portrayal of completely fabricated characters. It seems akward to refer to him by anything other than the name of the character he is. He completely buys into his own lie and makes the people he interacts with buy into it as well. Ironically, the act he is putting on (devoid of all veracity) draws absolute honesty from those around him. Also, he enters every situation with total disregard for consequence. Perhaps this is a product of taking on the role of Borat, but it seems a more general quality of his brand of comedy. In any case, it illicits feelings from his ‘victims’ so real they are unexpected, especially on the silver screen. The people he meets say anything because they feel liberated from judgement and consequence as well. By taking sterotypes to an extreme he causes ‘normal’ folks to exibit the qualities that define stereotypes.

True, Cohen picks and chooses his meetings and leads people where he wants them to go, but maybe it all just shows how morally weak we are. Or are we too kind to disagree? He runs into both and those that disagree with him show extreme discomfort in the things he says but the correlate is much funnier on screen.

Of course this may all change now that the cat is out of the bag and people become more familiar with what the situation is.

.v.