Tuesday, September 18, 2007

It was only a matter of time



MS is preparing to launch an integrated news service--with self-aggregating content and social bookmarking--in the coming weeks. MSpace members will be able to post the stories on their profiles, discuss, promote, and submit their own written content to be seen and ranked by other MSpace users . The new service is reminiscent of Digg and del.icio.us, with social bookmarking for news stories that can be promoted with user voting.
It was only a matter of time before this happened, considering MSpace has been owned by news mogul Murdoch since 2005 and gets 230,000 new registered users a day-arguably more than most Internet news sites. As Tech Crunch notes, the move to buy news aggregator service Newroo last year was not without purpose. The same technology likely will be in place for feeding stories to the site throughout the day.
Membership and usage are two things, but this move is a smart one on MSpace's part. Many users come online to trade messages with friends and browse profiles. Getting news stories on profiles means a lot of eyes to potentially read them. Not to mention, if there's a reason to come back several times a day to get news and share things with others, there's more of a draw to the site beyond profiles and band spam.
Now, the big question is what this thing is going to look like. If it's anything like the rest of MSpace, with slow page loads, flashing banner ads, and Web 1.0 design, you won't catch me using it.
Update: When asked about the new service, a representative for MSpace responded: "We do not comment on company rumors or speculation regarding our product pipeline."

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Galaxy shooting for SuperLiga jackpot


It was nearly five weeks ago to the day that the Los Angeles Galaxy opened up their SuperLiga campaign against CF Pachuca of the Mexican Primera Division, a game the Galaxy won 2-1. On Wednesday night, the same two sides square off in the championship game at The Home Depot Center with $1 million on the line.
Since that July 24 meeting, also in Carson, there have been some changes on both sides. Pachuca played that first game without some of their Mexican national team players, while the Galaxy were without the services of David Beckham. Pachuca is near full strength for the final, missing only Andres Chivita, who was sent off in the semifinals against Houston. The Galaxy have a laundry list of players missing due to injury, but David Beckham is expected to play some part in the match.
"I was here and watched the last game we played against (Pachuca), we beat them 2-1," said Beckham. "It could have gone either way. Pachuca is a very talented team. They've got some good players."
For the Galaxy, the game marks a step away from the struggles they've had in league play. The success they've enjoyed in SuperLiga has not translated into their league fixtures and Wednesday's final provides the club with a chance to accomplish at least one of their preseason goals.
"It's a final and we're at home. We're glad we're in it," said Galaxy head coach Frank Yallop. "We set our different goals at the start of the season. In this one, we wanted to win the tournament. Here we are. We have a chance to win a trophy."
Even Yallop concedes that this Pachuca team is a much improved side over the one they defeated in July. Not only is Pachuca going to field a stronger team, but the club was in their preseason a month ago. Now with the Mexican Apertura in full swing, Pachuca should be more game fit.
"They're further along in their season and further along in their play, so we expect a team to be a little bit sharper," said Yallop. "They've got some good players so we're expecting a tough game."
It would be a major coup, not just for the Galaxy but all of MLS, should Los Angeles manage to win the inaugural SuperLiga title. Pachuca has been one of the top sides in the Americas over the course of the last year and a half. With the Copa Sudamerica and the CONCACAF Champions' Cup trophies under their belt, Pachuca has proven that they are one of the most balanced sides in the region.
"They've got players who can defend and also win the game by scoring goals," said Beckham. "We know how tough Pachuca is going to be."
With any chance of making the playoffs seemingly slipping away with each league match, the Galaxy have a chance in Wednesday's final to put a feather in their cap in what has otherwise been a disappointing season. Standing in their way, however, is arguably the best team in the Americas.

GOP Senators Say Craig Should Resign

Idaho Sen. Larry Craig's political support eroded by the hour on Wednesday as fellow Republicans in Congress called for him to resign and party leaders pushed him unceremoniously from senior committee posts.
The White House expressed disappointment, too and nary a word of support for the 62-year-old lawmaker, who pleaded guilty earlier this month to a charge stemming from an undercover police operation in an airport men's room.
Craig "represents the Republican Party," said Rep. Pete Hoekstra of Michigan, the first in a steadily lengthening list of GOP members of Congress to urge a resignation.
The senator's spokesman declined comment. "They have a right to express themselves," said Sidney Smith. He said he had heard no discussion of a possible resignation.
Craig said Tuesday he had committed no wrongdoing and shouldn't have pleaded guilty. He said he had only recently retained a lawyer to advise him in the case that threatens to write an ignominious end to a lifetime in public office.
Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Norm Coleman of Minnesota joined Hoekstra in urging Craig to step down, as did Rep. Jeff Miller of Florida and others who joined them as the day wore on.
McCain spoke out in an interview with CNN. "My opinion is that when you plead guilty to a crime, you shouldn't serve. That's not a moral stand. That's not a holier-than-thou. It's just a factual situation."
Coleman said in a written statement, "Senator Craig pled guilty to a crime involving conduct unbecoming a senator."
For a second consecutive day, GOP Senate leaders stepped in, issuing a statement that said Craig had "agreed to comply with leadership's request" to temporarily give up his posts on important committees. He has been the top Republican on the Veterans Affairs Committee as well as on subcommittees for two other panels.
"This is not a decision we take lightly, but we believe this is in the best interest of the Senate until this situation is resolved by the ethics committee," said the statement, issued in the name of Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the party leader, and others.

Frocks and Darts

Ever since Autre began offering his two cents on fashion, people here and beyond have wanted to know one thing: Who is this guy? He posts in volumes on a range of subjects that are, somehow, related to fashion. He has influenced the opinion and debate on this blog. At least one other blog has attempted to recruit him. I often think he is trying with his writing to produce more than a thought — perhaps a whole catalog of thoughts, emotions, and impressions that don’t always seem clear or intelligible to us. Still, we keep reading.
About five months ago, Autre sent me an essay he had written about fashion criticism, using as his literary scalpel the film “The Silence of the Lambs.” I was intrigued, and after reading all 7,000 words, I said I’d publish it (with some trimming) on the blog. I especially liked how he saw a table-turning Imitation of Christ show.
Autre also revealed that his name is Marko. He is from Ljubljana, in Slovenia. He has studied art history, French language and literature, and he is now a junior researcher (and Ph.D candidate) in the department of art history, at the University of Ljubljana. When I started the blog, people told me it should follow a certain form, but, frankly, that idea just oppressed me. Why should fashion, which is so astonishing, perverse, neurotic and original, be confined to a form? So, here is your recommended reading in time for Fashion Week: Marko’s imaginative critique of fashion criticism, beginning with the keenly critical and hungry Hannibal.
Silence of Style
You’re so ambitious, aren’t you? You know what you look like to me, with your good bag and your cheap shoes?
If we think of the films that captivate the fashion world, “Silence of the Lambs” would probably not be among them. Yet not only does this film serve up some uncanny fashion points — from Buffalo Bill, the “couturier” who sews himself a new self from the flesh of others, to Hannibal’s stinging critique of Clarice’s attire — it also plays havoc with our assumptions about fashion and fashion criticism. It tells us how to see, and that perhaps we are not seeing enough or at quite the right distance to avoid moralizing, one of the traps in contemporary fashion criticism. If we long for a more intense, more cogent, more physical experience when reading about fashion, it may be because we need a new way of thinking about it.
In the script, Clarice’s appearance is rendered as sharply as one of Hannibal’s drawings. Her jailhouse attire is dully feminine, and she’s carrying her best bag that doesn’t match her second-rate shoes. Anxious, she passes Multiple Miggs’ cell. He can smell her, he says. Odor di femina. Odor di verità? Upon reaching Hannibal’s cell, she sees him lounging on his bunk, reading Italian Vogue. A deceptively prosaic moment omitted from the film. She introduces herself, but he wants to see her credentials first, saying: “Closer, clo–ser.” Things begin to fall into place: dress, smell, identity. Closeness. Anxiety. Screaming silence.
After glancing at her, he starts inquiring. What did Miggs say to her? Well, Hannibal says he can’t smell it himself. Nevertheless, he then proceeds to sniff the air,more expertly. He can tell she uses Evian skin cream, sometimes L’Air du Temps, but not today. A safe choice, a presumed traditionalist’s choice, as if she were going for the air of substance, buying identity, buying into rich history. And isn’t that what somehow unites Clarice with Buffalo Bill? Trying to get out, like that butterfly from its cocoon, by coveting a thing, having ambition? She comes to Hannibal in order to solve a problem, the case of Buffalo Bill, but this leads to another one — that silent scream of an innocent lamb being slaughtered like Hannibal’s victims. Triggered beyond control, it haunts her memory. No wonder Hannibal says to her that she needs to look deep within herself first — because she already has answers. Ask yourself what you see. Nothing remotely easy about exercising one’s eyes, seeing and reading. Having the power to avoid looking away. Remember Hannibal’s Belvedere: not just a beautiful view (of the Duomo in Florence) but also “to fully grasp with one’s eyes,” “to see properly, clearly.” Bel vedere. And won’t that be a town in Ohio where Bill lives?“I can see nothing.”
“On the contrary, Watson, you can see everything. You fail, however, to reason from what you see. You are too timid in drawing your inferences.”
It’s almost funny how little Hannibal needs to read her. He strategically snaps and tells Clarice how she looks. Like a rube, a well-scrubbed rube with actually only a little taste. One generation away from poor white West Virginia trash. All she could do was dream of getting out. Clearly agitated by his ability to read her motives and common fears of being common, even though she never truly was, her retort is probably a mere defense. Nonethless, her point is crucial. “You see a lot,” she says. She is trying to turn the tables on Hannibal. In a moment, we will see how, and where, this happened in the fashion world.
Why all this reference to smell, to the smell of truth? And to surface, not depth? We’re not superficial enough, I guess. Maybe the most difficult thing of all is unveiling the obvious, something that is simply there, yet unnoticed. There is definitely a logic to the reference of smell, usually seen as the lowest sense of them all, where we’re supposedly closest to animals. A logic of elusiveness that we must retain. And isn’t smell always related to closeness? Well, if Hannibal sniffs things out, this simply means that, when it comes to truth, we cannot rely on old, firm, unchangeable methods. It means constant thinking, rethinking, discarding and starting from zero over and over again, even suspending what we already know. How should we take Hannibal’s words, pointing at Clarice? Should we simply learn from his procedure, apply it to a different domain, that of fashion? Is it truly a matter of applying or does the film echo something already present in the fashion world? When he snaps at Clarice, is it an insult, a basic, and base, critique of her fashion choices? Or, does he make things, herself mostly, a certain core of her identity, visible to her? If we were to opt for the first possibility, we could end up saying that Hannibal is some sort of critic, even a pretentious, petty arbiter of good taste and morals. Since good taste is still seen as cleanliness preserved, a sign of a progressive and spotless spirit, Hannibal could then be a judgemental moral catechist, possessed by the idea that “something bad is happening.” He could be standing as the corrective of our decadent times, when every standard is disintegrating. And somehow he wouldn’t be far from mere gossip mongers, since they share their logic with the Moral Majority, both being obsessed by what’s going on behind their neighbour’s door.
The second option is therefore more inviting, and it even throws a different light on the first possibility. With Hannibal’s words, by fearlessly accepting his quid pro quo, Clarice finds herself in the place of truth, faced with the opacity of her desire, and mostly Bill’s, of course. This doesn’t mean that Hannibal is the master of truth. He can simply pinpoint it with his words, provoking shame. No wonder he had to be conceived as a cannibal, as someone who will (literally) eat you up, taking everything from you, leaving you with perhaps only your ability to lose. Therein lays our fascination with him, with evil, and our enjoyment upon hearing his words, smelling and reading Clarice as if he were doing it to us.
Two other film examples, different yet closely linked, can take us further down the road of identity, a fashionable topic if we consider all the talk about individuality and being yourself. Marcelo Kraslicic’s short movie for Kai Kühne’s Myself, featuring Chloë Sevigny, and the bathroom scene from David Lynch’s “Mulholland Drive.” In both cases, we’re dealing with the mirror or the perils of the looking glass. First, we see Chloë dressing up in a neutral setting, not in her private quarters, which gives us some breathing space. The basic premise is that the camera replaces the mirror, and so does the audience (as the mirror that looks back). Second, in “Mulholland Drive,” we see the amnestic Camilla standing in front of a mirror, in the bathroom, the most private of quarters. She is puzzled by Betty’s question, What’s your name? (In other words, Who are you?) The crucial element is that the large mirror is redoubled by a smaller one. And it’s exactly there that she sees the poster of Gilda as an image within the mirrored image. She names herself Rita. The image of Rita, whole and complete, responding to the lack of her own image. This is a delicate point, opening a two-way street. On the one hand, this moment can have an uncanny, alienating effect of not recognizing yourself. On the other hand, it can be soothing, offering a new shift or change in our perspective. Don’t we feel relieved when Camila/Rita finds her name in the mirror? However, in the relief, in the “this is me,” we must notice pressure and precipitateness, almost an overeagerness to find, to act.
The key element that links the three examples has to do with the intimate sphere, with the too-much constitutive of every identity, its kernel of non-identity. Why is there something so “other” about it? We might call it the unknowable, the ungraspable. It shouldn’t surprise us, then, that this is about revealing, and that disclosing the intimate can quickly lead to shame, disgust, and to obscenity. Not only to the obscenity of private ticks and fancies but also to the obscenity of the audience’s position being pornographically reduced to nothing more than a camera’s eye. Revealing is always about revealing the too-much. The unbearable closeness. We need a more dignified approach than disgust. This also makes us see where exactly the film moves away from voyeurism logic, and where we can go beyond discovering someone’s nature, which is so much a part of criticism–searching for talent or holy authenticity, endlessly removing masks. This is not about relativizing talent; it is about recognizing that even the talents themselves must discover their talent, be it through someone else, and even cope with it, its contingency. Yet we, like Hannibal, not only discover someone’s true, uncorrupted nature, but the unnatural part of human nature as such — the unclaimable, foreign imp of silence. It is exactly here that the story of Hannibal and Clarice, Chloë and Camilla, moves away from pure voyeurism and the current ideology of naturalizing, away from success and talent. If there is anything truly political nowadays it is focusing on the natural, on the private scene, establishing a direct equivalence between success and nature, someone’s being. The current motto of happiness and positivity means that being happy, and recognized by others as fulfilled with talent, is directly linked to uncorrupted self. This means that the old space of responsibility and decision making, correcting mistakes, is slowly closing up since corrupted selves cannot be cured. They are now natural. Do you feel guilty that you’re not happy? Here we’re faced with the results: societal differences are now naturalized through the private sphere. Someone’s work is not important; someone’s ticks are. Therefore, we’re not losing the private sphere, we’re loosing the public sphere. In other, more fashion terms, this would entail a redirecting of our focus from biographies, penetrating someone’s world, to monographs, grasping someone’s work. To put it differently, someone’s work truly is for all, and has its own autonomy, never fully reduceable to the private. It seems that today the aspect of public—what is for all—clashes with the prevailing naturalization. Hannibal’s not writing Clarice’s biography, he effectively closes it, and literally helps her with her work.
There is, however, another aspect to this. The choice of Chloë Sevigny is telling, and no wonder she’s playing herself. The audience, eager to advance in fashion, perhaps wants to learn how she does it, to discover how she covets, something that is inscribed in her choices. Let’s connect this to Hannibal’s statement: “[Bill] covets.” Apart form rightly deeming that his murders are incidental, he says that Bill thinks he’s a transsexual, and we might add: because he thinks transsexuals have it, that they possess the prestigious know-how That’s why he identifies with them. It doesn’t suprise us then that, while standing in front of the mirror, putting on his make-up, Bill utters his explicit come-on. He compulsively announces his value with his tucked-in privates, just as in some designers’ W spread, taming that point of anxiety with the help of a mirror. This is key: even Rebellious Bill wants to be someone’s It Girl, trying to captivate someone’s desire in the mirror, seeing himself as captivating and captivated.
We can now safely say that Hannibal’s words aren’t moralism or gossip fodder. Are they simply an insult? Was Hannibal absent during the most basic lesson of good manners, that one shouldn’t mock others? Is that a way to live with others? Lacking respect? Don’t we feel that Hannibal’s words are much worse? Some sort of demistifying? What is there to demistify anyway? The underneath is not hidden. Demistyfing, like gossip “revelations,” only deepens the secret. Perhaps we should stick to that special point, to the too-much we didn’t expect to find. And rethink criticism or fashion journalism in general. “Silence of the Lambs” is — again — seemingly nonfashion, but it offers a whole new approach. Through the gutter. It gives us the power to go beyond disgust, to think and inspect those base elements, those reeking leftovers that are discarded as non-fashion, since beauty has no smell, when in fact they belong to it as its constitutive innards. The outside innards. If there ever was a true film about fashion, it is perhaps this one.
The crucial thing about Hannibal’s words is the moment of rupture, the pinpointing that derails a certain self-immersion or immersion of self, into self — into dressing up, for example. One could say that this is close to becoming self-conscious. Becoming or being self-conscious is not a path of progress, a cage of being unrelaxed, or of gradually becoming more and more self-conscious, constantly shedding. Maybe this is again just the necessary appearance of it all. Simply a new distance is introduced, a point or place of unplugging, a distance that can be alienating, yet it has a thoroughly disalienating effect. Here, we come close to seeing or perceiving anew, to gaining a new lens and seeing something new in the old, and not something old in the new, as in recognizing an historical reference in a piece of cloth. Perhaps this is what it all comes down to in the end, and this doesn’t hold only for style, fashion and the basic premise of self-consciousness inscribed in both: that silent moment in front of the mirror that freezes our perspective and throws it in our face. Announcing a shift. Nothing but the shift, its place. Shouldn’t this be done over and over again? Whereby we, like Clarice, not only gain a distance towards the past, but mostly towards the present? And isn’t fashion always about the present? More than we usually think.
What about Clarice’s defensive retort? Who are you to do this to me? We can now finally introduce that fashion moment of turning the tables. We won’t steer away from Chloé. Nor Clarice. Imitiation of Christ’s Spring/Summer 2002 show was a genuinely good effort in turning the tables. One might say that it was a wrong step in the right direction. One could also definitely say that the show was in some small way spiteful, basically about a designer’s anger and taking offence at not being properly recognized, returning the most basic reproach back to the critic: But what have you done? Since critics, especially those that write negative reviews and offend the Majesty, are seen as people that haven’t done anything, and therefore don’t know what they’re talking about, going beyond someone’s intentions or motivations. This was not my idea, not my goal. You don’t get me. Do designers get themselves? Can you ever really know without telling it or showing it to someone, without being truly self-critical? Are they never occupied with the question: but what have we done? Do they ever have the need to interpret their own work for themselves, or do they shirk it by just moving on too fast, firmly relying on their short attention span? No responsibility for consequences? They don’t matter, so why struggle with them. Move on fast. Fashion is just fashion anyway. Some fashionistas need those words of consolation.
Fashion is so explosive, exploding, spreading like a plague over everything. Yet it rarely implodes. Do you like that you like it? In the outer boundaries, constantly receding like the horizon, constantly turning into advantages, notice the appearance of the inner limit. The true place of creativity.
The current motto in fashion journalism is, of course, better editing, making something out of an amorphous mass of stuff. Editing over and over again. Focusing on everything means more and more focusing on nothing at all. Decisiveness in editing is just a capricious travesty of itself, lacking purpose or goals. Being free and explorative is an order. Freedom is connected to not caring about consequences, since freedom, supposedly, means having no boundaries or obstacles. This is the first vicious circle of double-binds. What goes for some designers could be said for some of the critics, of course. And can’t one imagine a freshly offended critic using Hannibal’s words, retorting back to Imitation of Christ: Do you think you can dissect me with this blunt little tool? Hopefully for some, the fashion critics aren’t as epicurean as Hannibal. Maybe they should be. What we get here, in the final instance, is again another form of a vicious circle of a sender’s messages being continually addressed back to him or her (What are you doing?). Something akin to two bald men fighting over a comb. So, who’s going to turn the other cheek, and break the cycle? Maybe both parties should. One usually criticizes what one does best – maybe that’s the real, albeit inadvertent, self-critical message of the show.
Anyway, the show was basically about reversal. The models were seated as critics, connoisseurs, buyers, etc. Holding the pens, scribbling away, scrutinizing the “unusual” suspects who, for them, should be the usual ones, taking photos, all the while the speakers churning the proverbial fashion sentences: “Move along!,” “She’s gained so much weight!” Once-overs. Everybody trying to read everybody, trying to stay ahead of the game. And that simply is the game itself. Frivolous remarks, irony, gossip, insults, pointless subversion, constantly pushing the envelope, etc. Pretty normal rules of today. Talk about fashion being on the forefront. A naive – and that’s putting it gently — conclusion: Just because it is under pressure to continually reinvent itself, fashion is supposedly immediately way ahead. Side effects of following rules that don’t present themselves as just that, as being rules. Be yourself! Be free! Experiment! How to effectively step out of this? How to really see where fashion is on the forefront? Maybe we first need to establish where it simply follows the times. Yet fashion exposes the times, and that’s already a possibility of a way out.
There was another interesting point to the show—the silent scribbling. What do the critics see? What will they write? The pressure of silence, of those who simply sit on their chairs and let others reveal themselves for them: critics as doctors, inspecting the body, looking for little signs, little leads, little wounds. For the love or fear of detail! The body is an important coordinate, especially since so much of fashion is about physicality. Sometimes, one feels that all the focus on the body—training it, succumbing to it, nurturing it—is only to give a touch of reality to all the fleeting fashions, providing it with some sort of ultimate reference. The body, as such, isn’t far from the societal and cultural. The social body. Societal and cultural divides are bodily divides through and through. Witness disgust: disgust at the unruliness of the body, its special parts, at the inner attacking the outer, at the unruly social elements, the lower classes coming out of the gutter, spoiling the surface, leaving a smell. Disgust tames and introduces a hierarchy. Not totally culture, not wholly nature. Behind morals, behind the unveiling or searching for the pure and unspoiled kernel of authenticity, behind the appeasing image of wholeness in the mirror, find its reverse, and be disgusted. Again: we need to travel from distance to closeness.
The fashion show itself already appears as some sort of silent body (of work) uttering, wanting to be inspected — by Clarice. A body abused by a skilled tailor, by Buffalo Bill. Tell me what has he done? What have they done? Words that critics can supposedly provide. What did the designer want to say? Well, the designer is saying something, and maybe it’s not only a question, maybe it’s unknowingly already an answer. Yes, but an answer to which question? Here, the critics themselves start to feel the pressure of the silent bodily question. And the roles are reversed. Constantly. Ambiguity creeps in. Something is therefore always amiss in this delicately loving “relationship,” something that skips from party to party, overturning every intention or motivation. Isn’t that the basis of interpretation? Nothing pleasant about getting one’s own message back. Truly feeling »it«. So, we should admit that every utterance, and every fashion show, goes beyond intentions, inspirations and motivations. That’s why we need to inspect them and then move away from them, and go further, with a little help from those telling details that point to another story, to themselves.
If anything, Hannibal’s lesson isn’t so much about a certain content, but the most basic thing of all: the way he procedes, his “how.” Which is all about the logic of looking, seeing, and then reading. An athleticism of the eye which holds for the entire visual domain. From time to time, it is important to truly shed everything, that arsenal of self-important knowledge, fashionably displayed through sophisticated vocabulary, recognizing all the grand fashion history references, be it present or past, and move to the most basic coordinates of visual logic of bel vedere. The logic of words that work as magnifiers, microscopes, focus lenses. And that try to hold in their phantom hands that special moment of self-consciousness, or shame, that point of shift, of throwing a new light — of that one detail that obviously sticks out and overturns everything, inviting us, forcing us to put what we know into brackets. Focusing therefore on what we already had, yet weren’t aware of.
Clarice’s lesson taken was simple: simplicity is key, all good things to those (who can still) wait. But mostly think how (not what) you covet, and you’ll get closer to Bill. And vice versa. The same holds for fashion. It was of course easy to notice the elements of the Hannibal-Clarice “relationship” in the sphere of fashion. It just seems that in fashion it’s not as generous and patient, and it’s far from being radical enough. It could be. This is all about the key element the fashion world already has, yet rarely takes real notice of it, maybe because so much is invested in it: namely first impressions. In inspecting the body. It’s as if they effectively discard them, disinfect them, by simply admitting their importance. But they should be taken as literally as possible, stripped of their grand garb. It is truly all there: the experience of the times and places, the people, the feel, the mood, the smell of that something else that needs to be pinpointed, and that is never ever pretty. They already have it. It is exactly this that our film example makes us see.
Wherefore fashion critics in a time of distress?
If we return to Imitation of Christ’s show, we could say that it displayed a basic misunderstanding of two different types of doing. The hidden »argument« here is the following: there is a difference between my actually doing something, while you just describe and write about it. All the talk is therefore irrelevant because it is not a direct manifestation, but always an after-the-fact lazy rendering. As if perception, perspective or interpretation stand outside as just observing, unable to touch the core of it all. Doesn’t a change in perspective also mean a change in what we perceive, the “how” changes the “what”? Interpretation not only reflects, it actively cuts into what it only merely, on the surface, renders. But doesn’t the same difference hold for fashion criticism as such: it is one thing to describe or recognize, report on trends, fabrics, colors, references, and completely another to actually produce or formulate something on one’s own. And back to fashion: it is one thing to reference all sort of historical epochs, updating and tweaking them, and completely another to actually formulate a true design statement. Should it surprise us, then, that most designers, in following their predominant deep nostalgic ways, swept away by past or present grandeur, simply do so to avoid true thought – intelligent design in the most literal meaning of the term.
And back to critics: doesn’t the same hold for the vast knowledge they so keenly display, for their power of recognizing the old in the new? Things cannot only get better, they first need to get worse. Maybe the first thing for a fashion critic should be a more irreverent approach to fashion design. Critics should reference shows and apparel to produce and formulate their own work that goes below the grandeur and beyond intentions or motivations. That is perhaps the only true way of staying true to the greatness of design. Thorough descriptions are key, they’re the springboard. It’s just that most designers would simply love it if the critics would only report and describe. I saw some pants, a bit of pleating, a lot of yellow… No doubt, those “critics” would be immediately employed.
What we need today, more than ever, is something that goes beyond recognizing and descriptive reporting, especially beyond a type of criticism that somehow still resorts to moralizing. Funny, but isn’t moralizing what people outside fashion mostly do? It is more than easy to moralize about such supposedly trivial, frivolous and irresponsible fancies as fashion is deemed to be. Some stereotypes, those that disefranchise fashion designers and give the opportunity to those supposedly outside the circus to do the same, are unfortunately best promoted by the insiders. If we move forward, we could say that, for instance, distinguishing the trends is the most basic procedure of them all. Recognizing or establishing an apparent leitmotiv, seeing what repeats itself from collection to collection, from one of Bill’s murders to the next. The question is how much cognizance or, even better, cognition is to be found in trend reporting. We still need it in terms of content, just the form of how it is given should change. Trend reporting is the first step of trying to gain a perspective on the chaos or mess, trying to introduce order into it, giving the appearance that order is somehow already present in it, that chaos is just a semblance. But we first need to see ourselves in the outside chaos we attack. Remember Hannibal’s words on Clarice’s map: Doesn’t this seem desperately random? As in: not random at all.
The question behind all of this is: how to truly construct some sort of map of where we are in terms of fashion design, of what we have, of what we have already done and are doing? Stepping back and becoming attentive. Sit back and analyse. We won’t go far without pinpointing all the inconsistencies, all those blind spots, little imps of silence which grandeur and luxury package-deals only superficially oppose since they’re built on them or around them. Inconsistencies are not only about noticing bad execution, lack of inspiration, vision, etc. We get closer by following that other current theme: “fashion reflecting the times.” Which in most cases doesn’t tell us anything about the times and even fashion. Is it too selective? How about reflecting that reflection first? Who decides what is reflected, what collection truly reflects something? There just is no outside position. Not only is fashion a part of its time, time is already inscribed in fashion, like in designers and critics themselves. Fashion already is the times on its own level. With all its dreams, lies, ghosts, failures, presuppositions, all of its paradoxes and inconsistencies. Critics need to scratch this way. Since some fashion designers are already doing it, articulating it for us through their work, having the audacity to even do it inside the frames of a particular luxury package-deal, putting the question before us of just how far we are willing to go and can go within certain self-imposed boundaries of luxury, drawing a new horizon within the old one, travelling vertically, not horizontally. It doesn’t matter if this is intentional or not. Most of the time it isn’t. But it is simply out there.
We could propose five points, five primary locations on our map: 1. body (how it is treated, what inscribes itself in it or on it; individual and societal overlapping); 2. time (from archives, memories, personal or otherwise, to legends, nostalgia, modernity, “futurism”); 3. idiosyncrasy (a particular designer’s vocabulary, visions, and the vocabulary of them all, style and fashion as such, as natural, social necessity, and pleasure); 4. tradition (how it was, is done and will be done: the techniques, all the savoir-faire, including business); 5. inconsistencies (that run through all the other points, cut through them). From here on, one must pass to concrete analysis of any given designer’s work.
How much more fashion “reflects.” Zeitgeist is not enough. It never was. So, there’s truly no need to disenfranchise fashion designers and the fashion scene. The bad ones will disqualify themselves. Let them speak and show. But that’s not even the point anymore. They all somehow show us — and the really good ones not only make things visible, they can also make us see and think.. Not only see something, sometimes just making us see can be enough. Teaching us also about our desire to see. How strong is it anyway? As strong as Clarice’s? Fashion is obsessed by the idea of witnessing, sitting on the edge of your seat and wanting to witness. Wanting to see. The horror of the new? Not likely. Wanting to see usually means wanting to regain or reconfirm the private feeling of property. It’s “new,” yet it has always already belonged to me. But not for long. This is all about wanting to sleep. When it comes to number 5. To the obvious, embodied outside. To the unveiled. The never-veiled, actually. So, if anything, we need more alienation today, there’s not enough of it, and the critics need to give us just that, take us out of our comfort zone… like Hannibal. The times are reproduced through mindsets, through mentality. Fashion is only one of its never-veiled embodiments. With N°5 written all over it. As the smell of the times. Going beyond the times because it already has a minimal distance towards the present, especially because it’s so immersed in it. When the question of What is modern? arises, we should move away from only answering what people want to wear now. What is modern is what we have, this vast display of designers’ work, and that one point of minimal distance to this present container where the question of future as such springs up. That is the time loop.
And time to conclude at the beginning. If we leave aside the question why Ridley Scott’s stylized sequel “Hannibal” was so anticlimactic, and at one point simply wrong, we could notice the recurring fashion themes: smelling the letter, Hannibal visiting a perfumerie in Florence, attention to telling details, picking someone’s brain (even literally), the opened fashion magazine with a Gucci advert, a face in it replaced with Clarice’s. And, yes, he will buy her the good Gucci shoes, and a dress to boot. She’ll finally look like she has a lot of taste.
It is commonplace to say that we are fascinated by evil figures “we love to hate.” True fascination is always about opposites, though, about simultaneous attraction and repulsion. Repulsion at what or whom? Just Hannibal? Maybe this goes even more for Bill. And mostly for the true repulsion, which is repulsion at oneself, of course. The shame, the self-consciousness, fearing thyself. Of what we support, of what we do, say and think. Saying it with second-rate shoes. But this self-repulsion should never be self-congratulatory. To be avoided. It should be attacked full force, fully tasted. New epicureanism. As the magazine in Hannibal’s “bird cage” says: Bon appétit.

Which Album Will You Buy on 9/11?

We're exactly two weeks away from September 11th, the sixth anniversary of the World Trade Center terrorist attacks, which claimed 2974 lives. This year's 9/11 memorials will also share the spotlight with 50 Cent and Kanye West, as the two pop titans prepare to release their respective third albums on that historic day. Some call it the battle between good and evil; Kanye's soulful and conscious style vs. 50's boastful and braggadocios image. 50 raised the stakes when he told SOHH.com that he's betting his entire rap career on the showdown. "If Kanye West sells more records than 50 Cent on September 11, I'll no longer write music," he boasted. "I'll write music and work with my other artists, but I won't put out any more solo albums."
Kanye, on the other hand, took a more diplomatic approach when discussing the chart race with MTV. "I'd rather come out on a day like that, up against 50--where people are excited about going to the stores and it's an event and people talk about it--and be No. 2 on that day rather than come out and be No. 1 on a day nobody cares about," said Mr. West.Ultimately, it's up to music consumers to decide the fate of this battle. I'm sure you already know who I'm putting my money on. (Hint: it's not Kenny Chesney.) So here's the million dollar question for those of us that still buy CDs: Which Album Will You Buy on 9/11



Wednesday, August 29, 2007

MySpace has opened news service


The Social network MySpace has opened the own новостной a service, got name MySpace News.

The Service MySpace News presents itself something average between traditional новостными поисковиками and service, which users can value the placed material. MySpace News, like новостным поисковикам like Google News or Yahoo News, collects the material from different sources in интернете. The Exact amount of such sources is in MySpace to elaborate not steels, having noticed only that it exceeds the number a site, indexable service Google News.
The Main difference MySpace News from usual новостных поисковиков is concluded in that that visitors can expose the rating published material and be changed by them with the other user. In given plan service MySpace News similar service Digg.com. The Service Digg.com, shall remind, presents itself resource, add the material to which can any user интернета. Subsequently other users can value the publications at own discretion, and news, got high rating, are removed on main page.
All material on put MySpace News are divided into 25 main categories such as internet-technologies, гаджеты, cars, world news and pr. What reports PC World with reference to statements of the representatives MySpace, through new новостной service social network calculates to get additional profit from accomodation of the advertisment.
As of analytical company Hitwise, at the beginning initially present year MySpace amongst all social networks. At present, the portal MySpace comprises of itself блоги, internet-пейджер, services of the announcements, чаты and other "social-oriented" services. The Network MySpace presently counts the order 170 million registered user profiles, and each day their amount increases on 320 thousand.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Do the Dems have a Goldilocks?



Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is too experienced, Sen. Barack Obama too raw. Listening to Democrats give their Goldilocks view of the 2008 presidential campaign must make voters wonder: Will any candidate be just right for the White House?
"Senator Obama does represent change. Senator Clinton has experience. Change and experience," New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said Sunday, making a balancing gesture with his hands. "With me, you get both."
Richardson may be a long shot for the nomination, but his crack underscored a question that dominated the latest presidential debate: A change versus experience dynamic that almost surely will determine who represents the Democratic Party next year.
Obama, a first-term senator only three years out of the Illinois Legislature, casts himself as a change agent who would fix the nation's broken political system. He hopes to make Clinton's three decades in politics a detriment.
Clinton, a former first lady who entered the Senate as her husband left the White House, says she is the lone candidate with enough experience to enact change.
With Clinton and Obama defining the terms, the remaining Democratic candidates are trying to elbow their way into the "change" and "experience" camps.
"You're not going to have time in January of '09 to get ready for this job," said Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut when asked whether Obama had the background to be president. Dodd was first elected to Congress in 1976.
Put him in the experience camp with Delaware's Joe Biden, elected to the Senate in 1972. Biden said Obama was a "wonderful guy," but he stood by past statements questioning Obama's readiness.
Clinton portrayed Obama as naive and challenged his willingness to meet with leaders of renegade nations such as Cuba, North Korea and Iran.
"I do not think that a president should give away the bargaining chip of a personal meeting with any leader unless you know what you are going to get out of that," the New York senator said.
Obama felt the elbows.
"To prepare for this debate I rode in the bumper cars at the state fair," he said with a laugh before turning the issue of experience against his Senate colleagues — all of whom voted to give President Bush authority to go to war against Iraq, and now question Bush's policies.
"The thing that I wished had happened was that all the people on this stage had asked these questions before they authorized us getting in," Obama said.
"I make that point because earlier we were talking about the issue of experience," he added. "Nobody had more experience than Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney."
By putting his rivals in league with Bush's vice president and former defense secretary, Obama was telling voters that experience does not guarantee sound judgment.
Clinton, Obama and former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina share the lead in polls of Iowa Democrats.
Edwards clearly wants to be the Goldilocks candidate, offering bold proposals on health care and poverty while pledging to clean up Washington. The 2004 vice presidential nominee has challenged Democratic candidates to stop taking money from lobbyists paid to influence Washington politics.
"And at least, until now, Senator Clinton has not done it," Edwards said, citing Clinton's refusal to take the pledge.
Clinton fired back, knowing that both Obama and Edwards accept tens of thousands of dollars from special interests — including health insurance companies — that lobby Washington.
"There is this artificial distinction that people are trying to make: Don't take money from lobbyists, but take money from the people who employ and hire lobbyists and give them their marching orders," she said.
The truth of this matter is that none of the three leading candidates is pure on this issue. As Obama said in an interview with The Associated Press last week, he and his rivals swim in the same "muddy waters."
Values such as change and experience come into play when candidates have little else to debate.
"It's not unusual that this campaign comes down to qualities of a candidate because, when you get down to it, their policy differences aren't all that great," said Arthur Sanders, professor and chairman of the department of politics and international relations at Drake University.
Their change and experience narratives could backfire on Obama and Clinton.
For example, the audience of highly partisan Iowa Democrats sat stoney faced with their arms crossed when Obama pledged to tackle the nation's big problems in a bipartisan way.
And the former first lady frustrates her more senior rivals, such as Dodd, who cannot understand why she is carrying the experience banner.
After all, Clinton has never run a company or a government, and her signature public policy — health care reform — failed in 1993.
"The question is not just what is your experience," Dodd told the AP, "but what have you succeeded in doing with your experience?"
He said voters who care about health care should ask Clinton, "Why did you not succeed?"
Experience will not change that question.

Paul McCartney's Memory Almost Full

I have to admit that when I was first asked to review this record for Scenestars, I laughed - a lot. Sure, Sir Paul is one of my favorite songwriters of all-time and probably deserves a free pass to put out whatever dreck he throws together from now to eternity. But that doesn't make McCartney's last thirty or so years of mostly tepid, cloying pop songs any more listenable. I honestly can't say which would be worse: a ten hour root-canal with no anesthesia, or a full spin of of McCartney's pandering post-09/11 clunker "Freedom." And then there's the fact that the record label behind Memory Almost Full, Hear Music, is a subsidiary of the dreaded Starbucks corporation. That's strike two right there for those keeping score at home . . .I also have to admit that after a few critical listens, I find that Memory Almost Full is McCartney's most enjoyable and heartfelt effort since the Wings-era, which may not be saying much. But thankfully, the album is all-but free of the pointless-pop and clumsy political statements that marred the legend's last several releases. In their place, we find a more deeply thoughtful and sentimental McCartney - whether he's lamenting lost loves or musical endeavors gone south on "Ever Present Past," I'll probably never know for sure, but I do know this: it's a good rock song, and not the only one to be found on Memory Almost Full. "Dance Tonight," the album's opener, is as infectious and fun as a folk-rock ditty should be allowed, the playful "Vintage Clothes" is clever-Paul at his best.Memory Almost Full is also McCartney's most musically adventurous effort since the Fab Four days, unless you count his forgotten '90s flirtation with electronica as the Fireman. At different times, the production and musical arrangements recall some of the brighter ideas of Macca-contemporaries the Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin and Queen. All manner of psychedelia - affected strings, big horns, fuzzed-out guitars, heavily-layered vocals - provides an interesting framework for a solid collection of songs that marks a welcome, if not unexpected artistic comeback/assertion from a true rock legend.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

MySpace News Is Promising


News Corp's MySpace has launched a promising news aggregator in beta phase. Their engine tries to combine the Google News system, which crawls the websites of its sources and indexes, classifies and displays them organized in clusters and ranked by importance and the Digg-like system, where users determine the importance of a particular news story.However, a quick exploration of their website, news.myspace.com, reveals that MySpace's solution is so far much weaker than either Google News or Digg.It's quite important to note that both the Google and Digg approaches have their own specific disadvantages to start with. Google News, which is the better of the two, uses a complicated algorithm to rank news on the same subject according to their relevance. This algorithm is very effective most times, efficiently sorting through thousands of news in almost real time, entirely automatically.The algorithm also seems to keep out certain news which are classified as inappropriate. This is very useful, for example, if a source website gets hacked or an editor goes bananas. But the filtering also catches legitimate news, especially if they're on a controversial subject which contains keywords inappropriate in other contexts.On the other hand, Digg-systems let users select news displayed as headlines by voting either positively or negatively or only positively. This has many advantages, which are obvious, but also the very upsetting disadvantage that the timing of a particular story greatly influences the outcome. As an user sees the news story and votes for it, it then makes it more likely for the news to get voted subsequently.This means that if a story gets posted at a time when few users visit the site, it will fade away before it gets a chance to be selected, regardless of its content. It's also quite clear that user votes are not necessarily linked to the news' quality.The fact is that Digg only works well with certain categories of news. I think it works well primarily with sci-tech news and is much less efficient for other news categories.Google News, on the other hand, works equally well with any type of news and provides better news selection than that which would turn up as done by an unselected crowd. I think this system employed by Google will always be, at least for now, the best and foremost type of news website. The Digg-systems is also important, but it's bound to be less preeminent.There are 25 main news categories on MySpace's news site, with 300 subcategories. Clicking on a MySpace News item leads immediately to the original source of the story, but a banner runs across a story's source page identifying the news item as part of "MySpace News." It also shows the rating for the story as well as related links to other stories in that category.I think there is a lot of room for improvement in MySpace's news display system, but the idea looks promising and is worth following up. The news feature of MySpace is built using Newroo technology, a company they acquired in early 2006 for a rumored $7 million. Newroo never had the chance of displaying the merits of its technology in public because of the acquisition.Newroo founders Brian Norgard and Dan Gould said that MySpace’s scanning mechanism will use a similar algorithm found in Google News, meaning that it will grab content from trusted sources via RSS feeds and later aggregate it at the right categories."Many advertisers have expressed interest in the service, which allows them to target the MySpace community in a more direct way," Brian Norgard, co-founder of Newroo, a company purchased by News Corp. last year, which created MySpace News' technology, said in an interview.MySpace currently has 170 000 000 user profiles and is adding 320,000 profiles per day.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Digg-killer


MySpace has just put its new MySpace News service live, so I've been playing around with it. The service has been billed as a Digg-killer, but it's not really – at least, not in its current form.
It's a news-aggregation service with user voting, but with an extra layer of moderation in between the original news sources, and what gets onto the site itself.
You can't actually submit individual news stories for other users to vote on. Instead, you have to suggest a blog, website or RSS feed. "Our staff will review it for appropriate content and quality," says the site's FAQ. "If it passes inspection, we'll try to add it to relevant news topics."

There'll be plenty of people watching closely to see just how open Myspace News is, but on first impressions, it's not shutting out News Corporation's rivals. The World News section, for example, currently includes stories from CNN, USA Today, MSNBC, the Washington Post, ABC News, CBS News and Newsweek, among others.
Blogs seem well represented too. For example, on the Gadgets section, our very own Shiny Shiny is on the front page, along with the likes of Engadget, Gizmodo and CrunchGear. No Tech Digest as yet, but give us time...
The rating system is more like Amazon than Digg, as you mark stories out of 5, rather than just giving them your seal of approval or not. The homepage could be a bit better designed though – the links to Suggest A Topic or Suggest A Site / Blog / RSS Feed are buried right at the bottom.
Suggesting a new topic works slightly differently, in that you choose a subject area (the FAQ gives 'speed-knitting kittens' as a tongue-in-cheek example) and a category for it, then enter a short description, and a list of the websites, blogs and feeds that you think are relevant.
As far as I can make out, there are currently 25 major categories, which since you ask, are: Animals, Arts, Autos, Business, Education, Entertainment, Events, Food/Drink, Funky/Random, Gaming, Health, Home, Living, Local, Music, Parenting, Politics, Recreation, Religion, Science, Self-Help, Sports, Style, Technology and Travel.
Then each of these opens out into sub-categories, so under Technology, you'll find 27 seperate topics, with everything from Gadgets, Web 2.0 and Mobile Tech through to Nanotech, RFID and Futurism. Wot, no robots?
I do have concerns about the way the news stories are presented, though. Take the Gadgets category as an example, again. Clicking it brings up a 'Top News' page with 15 stories on it. Who decides which stories make it onto this page? I can't access any more stories to vote them on. And I can't search by keyword, or sort stories by date. Note, I'm using Firefox on a Mac, so do comment if all these features are available on your whizzy PC / IE combo...
This might just be first-day limitations, to make sure the service is working before rolling out more advanced features. As it stands, MySpace News is interesting, but too superficial as a news source, with no information on how stories make it onto the front (well, only) pages for each topic.
The sheer size of the MySpace user-base means MySpace News could be an important site, assuming the functionality improves in the coming months. For now, it's a bit of a let-down, considering the anticipation that's led up to its launch.