Thursday, April 2, 2026

We Need Real Art

 American culture sucks right now. The culture is starving for new things, and all major cultural outlets are pumping out sequels and reboots, and even "new" things are banking on nostalgia for engagement. Things are so dire that Taylor Swift is a corporation more than a human being, who, as a victim of her own success, now exists merely to please her rabid fanbase and cannot afford to progress as an artist or explore new facets of creativity (Blank Space by W David Marx).

 We went to see Project Hail Mary in the theaters two weeks ago, and while it's a nice, crowd-pleasing scifi movie, there was nothing new or noteworthy in it. Crystalline spaceships aren't even a novelty--The Expanse has them, and Megan E O'Keefe's Devoured Worlds trilogy both feature them. Worse, Andy Weir went on a podcast and straight-up said that he likes Star Trek for the shooty-shooty and hates it when fiction writing--including his own!--has an agenda or message. Of course, he apologized to the Star Trek people, but he certainly damaged my opinion of him and his work. Also, as an aside, Star Trek fans are generally gross and have been egregiously misinterpreting their favorite show for decades.

My own position on Star Trek is that it's a nostalgia trap that, like everything else, is being put through the Hollywood Meat Processor in order to squeeze every last bit of juice from long-rotting offal well beyond its expiry date. To be fair to Trek, however, this is not a problem exclusive to TrekWars has fared even worseScream is the latest craze, and even that heretofore cancelled Bebop copycat that everyone on the planet seems to love is being fed into ChatGPT for a resurrection attempt. Also, while we're here, shoutout to Adam Sandler for Happy Gilmore 2! Who the fuck asked for that?

 If you read my end-of-the-year Best Of list, you know I'm not watching any of that shit. The real question to ask, though, is: 

 How did it get so bad?

This was a relatively slow process that occurred over a few decades and across media. Marx, in Blank Space, mostly covers music and fashion, singling out Pharrell Williams, the villain who infected the planet with "Happy," a pernicious anthem that every human on Earth listened to on repeat for about a year and drove me literally insane with its repetitive and THX-1138-inspired lyric (Because I'm happy! Clap along if you feel the beat!--The robot police brandish cattle prods: >He's not clapping along. >Dial up the emotional controls...say, to 40. >Roger...39....40. >>Deafening tinnitus, clapping). 

 Here's a bit about what happened to film and the Internet:

It is my belief that The Matrix 1999 was the last truly great Hollywood film. It wasn't based on anything, and it was loaded with interesting ideas inherited from other sources, such as Ghost in the Shell and Serial Experiments Lain. It had two sequels of diminishing quality, but it was a riveting hybrid of storytelling, ideas, and visual spectacle. It succeeded on every level.

But then, not long after that, when I was in college, the ground shifted. It started with Spider-Man and The Hulk. There were Star Wars sequels that were atrocious, but George Lucas hadn't yet sold his soul to Big Mouse. That would come a bit later.

I regard the annihilation of the Star Wars Expanded Universe as a pivotal moment, when the power of  engagement with a property shifted from fans to corporations. The SWEU was a largely fan-driven project, whose only real guidelines were continuity. When Disney acquired it, they would set the terms of engagement, while at the same time engaging in all sorts of happytalk about "respecting the fans" or whatever, turning Lucas's darling into nothing more than a toy commercial. It's now even worse than what people said about Power Rangers or 80s-90s mecha anime being toy commercials, because the stories have no emotional stakes, there's an incredible oversaturation of associated media, and Disney exploits cute characters (BB-8, Grogu) to a degree that I have no qualms dubbing pornographic. For a useful comparison, watch K-Pop Demon Hunters and The Mandalorean back to back.

And I've said nothing about Marvel. Disney owns that, too. Everything I've said about Star Wars is true about Marvel, and I have even less respect for it. 

As such, this trend has exacerbated, to the point where competing studios are trying to establish their own Cinematic Universe, with multimedia properties across streaming and theaters. Warner Bros even tried it with The Matrix 4, but Lana Wachowski heroically gave WB a suicide bomb of a film that made it almost impossible (hopefully!--jury's still out on this) to turn into franchise slop. Some are successful, many are not. But they still try, and the consequence of these trends--and I haven't even said a single word about corporate mergers and acquisitions (wait, yes, Disney, but also Amazon-MGM)!--is that

Hollywood films have no sauce.

Andy Weir said that fictional stories shouldn't have messages. That's a perfect film adaptation for Jeff "Pull the Harris EndorsementBezos's Amazon-MGM! Eat sparkly cotton candy for 2h40m--there's that Amazon smile on your face!

We are going to take a quick detour into video games for a second to discuss The Outer Worlds 2, which I haven't played, but PCGamer's discussion of its "toothless" politics is relevant here. While it criticizes capitalism, it is being produced by a large corporation that is both complicit in genocide and itself is devouring Activision-Blizzard. Brown writes:

None of this is evident in the silly, toothless satire presented by The Outer Worlds 2. There's no fury, there's barely even any cutting remarks. Instead, Auntie's Choice is comically villainous, completely detached from the real corporations that should be serving as its inspiration. Instead of tapping into something true, Obsidian gives us villains who are so removed from reality that they actually serve to soften the actions of their real-world counterparts.

Sure, it sucks that Microsoft is punishing workers for its own greed and bad business decisions, but hey, at least it isn't running horrific experiments on soldiers. It's just selling the US military AR devices to make soldiers better at killing! Microsoft is one of the good ones, guys.

There's a very good chance that if you're reading this, you're from a country that's currently dealing with the return of everyone's favourite baddies, the fascists. Here in the UK, we're stripping rights and dignity from our country's most vulnerable people, and the fastest-growing political party is a radical right wing outfit that loves to talk about cultural purity and how there are too many Black people on television. And in the US you've got Donald Trump.

This is the kind of bullshit we are getting in major studio media."Hey, capitalism and genocide are bad, but don't forget to Be Happy." 

The Internet - Influencer Culture

 A major point that Marx makes in his book is that, somehow, after Pearl Jam heroically refused to sell out and become famous, selling out became cool. Every middle schooler knows the refrain, "Mr Beast, gimme some monay!" The end goal of nearly all content created on the Internet--especially Youtube--is to make it big and get picked up for a rapturous contract. It is a big, brutal lottery where everyone wants a rich patron's attention. 

As such, the opinions expressed by content creators are largely those that are amenable to corporate sponsors. This means, invariably, that they also have no sauce

A Culture Devoid of Meaning

 Our country has been ruled by a demagogue and his sycophants for a decade, boosted by a sham religion. All of the aristocrats that control our culture suppress our outrage. No one is making anything that meets the needs of the people because everything we see on our screens is stripped of meaning. Meaning is risk, and Jeff "Buy More and Be Happy" Bezos can't afford risk. The risk part is probably the impetus behind the rush to endlessly regurgitate expired meat, but it is also true that the fans demand it because nostalgia is as addictive as it is poisonous

The culture is starving for new things. We need art with meaning, that challenges us to think in new ways, that inspires us to slough off this dying king and his lackeys, and rejoin the world stage.

Friday, March 6, 2026

Lifting Up Rocks and Smashing Their Own Feet

Pew Research Center came out with a survey saying that 53% of Americans believe that other Americans are bad. My first response was that this is bad for society and democracy (as per Hannah Arendt),and my second thought was, Well, they are. *Gestures toward...everything*

I had worried that legitimately electing Trump a second time was a worst-case scenario; that forcing him to try to steal the election would have at least rendered the American electorate less culpable for whatever happened afterward, but that did not happen. Instead, Trump eked out a victory with just around 1% over Kamala Harris, with help from military servicemembers, who voted for him over Harris 2:1. 

In sum: I believe that the American electorate is entirely culpable for Trump, and I believe that they willfully ignored evidence and arguments revealing who he is and what he was going to do (warnings that have proved extremely correct). Furthermore, I believe that the people on r/LeopardsAteMyFace, who are currently eating the consequences of their choices, not only do not deserve relief, but should be restricted from voting in the futureI firmly believe that such people voted for Trump because they wanted his policies to only affect people they hate, and are only upset because they have since discovered that they are more acutely vulnerable to the actions of the federal government than their political opponents. They have lifted up a large rock and ended up smashing their own feet. More pathetically, MAGA's entire raison d'etre--allegations of pedophilia at the highest echelons of power--has entirely backfired as details emerge alleging that nearly every important member of Trump's administration--up to and including Der Orangenfuhrer himself (hoo boy is he ever!)--is involved with Jeffrey Epstein.

In Russia, both before and during the Soviet era, the serfs that ended up catching the attention of the Okhrana--and later the Soviet secret police--and ended up in a concentration camp of some kind, would complain amongst themselves that "There must be some mistake! If only the Tsar knew, then I would be free!" [Also, "If only Stalin knew..."]

 In the United States, we have our own equivalent: Facebook posts beginning with: "Dear President Trump, ICE deported my spouse/child. Please help get [them] back!" or: "Dear President Trump, I voted for you three times and I lost my government job and my healthcare. Please help! Thank you and God bless you." [Reader, do you believe even for a single 0.0000000000000000001th of a second that Der Orangenfuhrer has ever spared a thought for these people who believe in him so ardently?]

Putting what I said in bold aside for a second--because I really am of two minds about this--it is important to understand that, on some deeper level, the Republican electorate has been horrifically abused for decades, with the most absolutely evil bait-and-switch propagandizing seen in a (formerly) democratic country. Their ability to think has been annihilated (as per Hannah Arendt again). However, as much as they might turn on Trump at the fringes ("I'm never voting for you again!"), and no matter how many MAGA hats they might burn (Why do they light everything on fire? Let's not think about that...), it is hard to believe that they could ever switch parties as they are liable to get sucked in by another egregiously cynical propaganda campaign.

The point about them not voting in the future is not (only) about them being fascists; it is about the fact that they are not fit to be discerning participants in a democratic society. They cannot evaluate information, and they cannot disbelieve the propaganda that they are absorbing. Brain off Project 2025 go brrrrrrrr -- TRUMP'S NOT DOING PROJECT 2025! HE DOESN'T EVEN KNOW WHAT THAT IS! I HEARD HIM SAY SO ON THE TV!

The Impending Death Spiral of the United States

 Frankenstein seems to be all the rage these daysdoesn't it? Well, it turns out that it's a true story--as literal as you can get--about the United States. And it happens over and over again.

The basic plot of Frankenstein is as follows:

- Victor creates the monster
- Victor abuses the monster
- The monster escapes
- The monster wrecks havoc on society
- Victor hunts the monster

In the case of the United States, Victor is the GOP, and the monster is the parade of demagogues (Ronald Reagan, Dubya, and Trump--of course) who have been and will be unleashed upon society. In our case, unfortunately, Victor feels no obligation to society at all and actively helps the monster destroy society.

Once Trump is gone--and one day, he will be--the GOP will still exist with its stranglehold on parts of the country and its six SCOTUS judges. It will use its structural advantages and the negligence of the electorate to try again--repeatedly--until the country is destroyed (if it isn't destroyed this time).

Once they survey the damage to see what they managed to break, they will engineer some other dark money-aligned aspiring authoritarian to press further, and take that as far as it can go. Rinse, repeat. 

 When I wrote about the Assault on the Capitol Building 5 years ago, I said that the abyss would return, and I was right. Here, I will make a further claim: That the abyss will be with us for a long time. 

Conclusion

What is the appropriate balance between the moral culpability of Trump's supporters and the possibly mitigating circumstances of their historical abuse at the hands of one political party?

This is not a question I believe that I can answer on my own. We know that going too hard on those responsible causes ressentiment to fester and will result in much more trouble down the road, but how do you safeguard society? How much can you safeguard society? Is it too late?