amyvanhym: (brainchild)
Mirror: goodreads

An easy read. Pleasurable infotainment where it confirms my preexisting positions, but unconvincing where it tries to change my mind. Educational in a shallow way: I acquired some new facts but no new arguments. Milo is often right, sometimes funny and sometimes trite. He is the most right about the most important thing: freedom of expression. He is also a character, though his exact degree of fictitiousness seems to be a closely kept secret. It's important not to take him more seriously than he takes himself, maybe even less so. While Milo is not an authority, this book contains solid recent political histories, a few good stories and some giggle-worthy jokes. He gets GamerGate right (ch10), having been so close to the centre of it. The story of his US college tour is also a good read. Unfortunately he doesn't always cite sources clearly enough to make it easy for readers to double-check his claims, which readers should do whenever skeptical.

I found the writing to be more witty than logical. It's great fun to watch Milo fearlessly eviscerate low-hanging extremist fruit in Feminism and Islam, but his higher philosophical aspirations are at times beyond his reach. For example, on page 203 he takes an anti-intellectual turn by claiming that a leftist ideologue's failure to understand a piece of fiction means we shouldn't think critically about fiction at all. He suggests that it's possible for a story to "simply be intended to entertain, shock, or amuse." But nothing (nothing good, anyway) can be that simple, as the conceptual tools used to elicit such reactions are always there, operating below the surface of a work. These meaningful tools, whether conscious or intuitive, are what good stories and performances are made of; likewise, their misuse is what makes bad work bad. They should be studied deeply. The real fight is to ensure that they are studied in an objective way rather than in a way driven by ideological bias. When one instead dismisses the whole matter of depth and seeks to "simply" elicit strong reactions from an audience, one becomes boring, cliche and irrelevant. If Milo truly doesn't understand this reality well enough to wield it, he may lose his grip on his influence and be forgotten much sooner than he would like.

Milo's deliberate cheeky offensiveness grows a bit stale when he is addressing an audience who, having sacrificed time and money to read his book in private, are very likely to already support him. I enjoy watching him troll others but am not easily trolled myself, so when he uses his provocative language in support of stupid things (like when he disparages abortion as "baby killing" and "child murder" while thoughtlessly conflating correlation with causation in the matter of post-abortion unhappiness in women, p88), I roll my eyes and get bored. Milo also appears to flit back and forth between supporting and attacking gay individualism throughout the book, as though it's okay for gays to freely direct their own lives as long as they don't freely choose domesticity -- also known as "heteronormativity," a far-left jargon term that would fit in well with some of his arguments against gays being anything but slutty shit-disturbers. Not that there's anything wrong with slutty shit-disturbing, of course.

I got bored enough to stop reading about two-thirds through the book, and came back a couple months later to get it out of the way before starting a new book. I expected the rest of the reading to be a chore, but I actually enjoyed the last few chapters, wherein Milo made fewer sociopolitical arguments and spent more time narrating his own activism. I'm much more interested in Milo's actions than in his beliefs, as the former are true adventures, while in cases of the latter I either already agree with him or already know why he's wrong.

One more small thing: on page 208, Milo spends a paragraph or two disparaging Richard Spencer as cringy, unconvincing, offensive, hateful and unfunny. Then he says, "I don't fear the ideas of people like Spencer, nor do I feel a need to hide them from view. [...] 'Sunlight is the best disinfectant.'" But while throughout the book Milo revelled in accurately documenting the words and actions of his opponents to expose their weaknesses, he did not do this for Spencer. He did not quote, paraphrase, refute or address a single one of Spencer's "forbidden (and bad)" ideas. Why not?
amyvanhym: (themist)
Edit Nov 11: reddit thread

Oct 31st:

I'll try to be chill about this. After giving ST2 the benefit of the doubt for as long as I could, I stormed out of the living room a few minutes into episode 6 last night, and ranted a bit too angrily about it on Gab. I'm sure I'll go back and finish watching it after all, if only just to finish this entry.

Everyone's IQ has dropped twenty points, slowing progression drastically. They have lost sight of their common enemy to get into petty squabbles with each other. The plot is moving far too slowly and repetitively. There is far too much character-focused content with no plot backbone to provide tension and drive. Questions left open at the end of season one (how to harness eggo fuel, how to talk through lights, the role of energy) were forgotten rather than answered. The characters have lost their heart and heroism, the dialogue has lost its honest brevity, the story has lost its tension and mystery, and the pacing has lost its concision. The men are largely passive. The women are largely cold. Drama is constantly either nullified or blown out of porportion rather than resolved or developed. Ideals of justice, truth and honor, once central, are absent. In a story that was once about good people vs bad, the good people are going bad and the bad people are so incompetent they may as well be illusory.

Thoughts on episodes 1-6 )

Thoughts after finishing the whole season. )

Edit Nov 6: It sure doesn't take much to get a block from Stranger Things writer/editor -- and lover of all things #RAW -- Jesse Nickson-Lopez.
amyvanhym: Matt Taylor is life (rockabillyscifi)
==============
Update: Here's the KiA reddit thread for this entry. 100+ comments, most of them thoughtful. Turns out /r/KotakuinAction beats /r/RickandMorty for quality conversation about the show. Yay.]
==============

"Pickle Rick" was a groundbreaker: it was the first episode of Rick and Morty written for fans of Rick and Morty who hate Rick and Morty. Or at least, it was the first episode written for fans who hate Rick and aren't interested in anyone else. Beth flipped wildly back and forth between being a deranged jerk and being absolutely right, the kids were mentally retarded, Rick was plain, and Jerry was absent. All to make way for...

the therapist

Behold this enormous sack of cringe, nope and word salad they've tried to pass off as a rhetorical crescendo. )

big

Jun. 6th, 2017 04:44 pm
amyvanhym: fiction + reality intertwine (cover)
William Faulkner on Ernest Hemingway: “He has never been known to use a word that might send a reader to the dictionary.”

Ernest Hemingway on William Faulkner: “Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions come from big words?”

Poor Hemingway.

I read the first two chapters of A Farewell to Arms today. The drivellingly passive circular paragraphs and embarrassing run-on sentences put my mind out of breath, so I put myself out of my misery by throwing the book across the room. What an empty load of nothing to say.

Profile

amyvanhym: fiction + reality intertwine (Default)
Amy VanHym

January 2018

S M T W T F S
 1 23456
78910111213
141516 17181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios