Time magazine calls this sort of playfield-leveling a “new digital democracy.” Perhaps. But what seems more interesting is that while technology — moviemaking, recording radio shows, networking on a grand scale — used to be a thing of privilege, now it’s for everybody.
Case in point: one of the biggest Kings of the Mountain felt the only way he could comment on the phenomenon was to dismiss it. “I don’t surf the net, no, I never been on MySpace,” said Jay-Z in “Beach Chair” from his post-retirement Kingdom Come CD. Of course, this is also the album whose early leak caused Universal to sue MySpace. (And never mind that in Sean Carter’s Hewlett-Packard commercial, Jay-Z admits to playing chess and tracking his stocks online.)
Think about it: everybody’s using the Web to define themselves these days. The only way you’d already heard LCD Soundsystem’s Sound of Silver was by finding the You-Send-It link. You probably found out about that crazy loft dance night from a particular message board. Your favorite DJ? He has a blog, probably even a fat directory of digital mixes. So-called “tastemakers”? They’re regularly scouting and/or writing about their thoughts. Your little cousin? He’s got a MySpace page.
The New York Times may think it takes a certain kind of “geek” to spend a significant amount of time online. But according to Time magazine’s Person of the Year, that “geek” is you.
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Clips ahoy, Puppet government, Comedy Rambo, More
- Clips ahoy
This past February, Tina Fey returned to host Saturday Night Live and announced, in mock triumph, that the Writers Guild of America had struck a deal with the studios that would pay them for on-line content.
- Puppet government
When Stephen Colbert threw his hat into the presidential ring — before South Carolina threw it back — he was embarking on a remarkably recurrent pop-culture event.
- Comedy Rambo
Misunderestimate Stephen Colbert at your peril.
- I ruined Stephen Colbert's coffee
It’s 11:39 pm on June 26, and my cell phone is about to explode.
- No laughing matter
The funnymen Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert have a big edge over supposedly serious bloviators employed by the networks.
- What smell?
It’s always summer to George W. Bush, our lazy, hazy, crazy commander in chief who puts in shorter presidential work weeks than Woodrow Wilson did after he was paralyzed by a stroke.
- It's hip to be icosahedral
Be they beer geeks, comic-book geeks, or music geeks, nowadays people flout their geekdom proudly, even wearing it like a badge.
- Idiot wind
Last spring, after the state Legislature rejected a bill that could have resulted in a wind farm being constructed on two undeveloped mountains in Redington Township, a lot of people in western Maine, figuring the controversial project was finally dead, expressed their joy by doing the chicken dance in the streets.
- Din - side
- Wind-farm debate
Would opponents of the proposed Cape Wind offshore energy parkbe more amenable to the idea if the project were prettier?
- Hot and bothered
I believe President George Bush V when he says we don’t really need the polar ice sheets anyway.
- Less
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Lifestyle Features
, Rupert Murdoch, Magazines, Bill O'Reilly, More
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