Omniculture

Web ‘Superbrain’ Predicted ‘House’ Plot Surprise

April 7, 2009
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Web ‘Superbrain’ Predicted ‘House’ Plot Surprise

Last night’s episode of the Fox Network medical-mystery series House included a Big Event meant to shock the show’s viewers and send the story line in an interesting new direction, as one of the main characters of the series was killed. As it happens, the show’s fans figured out exactly who it would be, several days in advance of the program’s airing, as the kind of public conversation the Internet makes so easy enabled a mass pooling of information and instant critiquing of same. This almost instantaneous accumulation and processing of information makes the web something of a superbrain. Yes, figuring out the plot twists of television shows may not be the most productive use of people’s time and brainpower, but this somewhat frivolous achievement does indicate the impressive potential of the internet as a mass information processing tool. This capability makes the internet simultaneously a potential source of astonishing public benefits and the most powerful generator of nonsense ever created. An interesting side note (plot spoiler follows): Entertainment Weekly revealed this morning that Kal Penn, who played the character who died in last night’s episode, will be leaving the show to join the Obama administration as associate director in

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“Eleventh Hour’ Outdoes TV News on Stem Cell Debate

March 31, 2009
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“Eleventh Hour’ Outdoes TV News on Stem Cell Debate

An episode of CBS-TV’s mystery series Eleventh Hour entered the debate over stem cells to make a strong and valid scientific point with important moral and political implications. It did more to educate viewers about the issue than the network’s news programs have ever done.

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New Essay Refutes Fantasy of Life Without Limits

March 31, 2009
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New Essay Refutes Fantasy of Life Without Limits

A new essay by S. T. Karnick outlines and refutes "the American fantasy that both individuals and society as a whole can overcome every obstacle to our numerous desires, provided we only wish strongly enough and get our friends on our side." It also points out how the recent comedy film Marley and Me constitutes a refreshing criticism of this vulgar and adolescent fantasy of godlike power.

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PBS Dickens Adaptation Politicizes and Vulgarizes Classic Novel

March 29, 2009
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PBS Dickens Adaptation Politicizes and Vulgarizes Classic Novel

      The latest PBS Masterpiece Classics adaptation of Charles Dickens’s classic novel Oliver Twist demonstrates the urgent need for reform of the taxpayer-supported broadcasting service, S. T. Karnick notes.  

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‘Last Templar’ Shows Value of Cultural Freedom

February 2, 2009
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‘Last Templar’ Shows Value of Cultural Freedom

                NBC’s miniseries The Last Templar is an interesting antidote for those bothered by The Da Vinci Code and worried about cultural freedom in general.  

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‘Village Voice’ Layoffs Exemplify Decline of Mainstream Counterculture

January 12, 2009
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‘Village Voice’ Layoffs Exemplify Decline of Mainstream Counterculture

Continuing the beneficial meltdown of the mainstream media, including bastions of the erstwhile counterculture (which long ago became the mainstream culture), Village Voice magazine has laid off three editors, including longtime columnist/editor Nat Hentoff. Hentoff, who wrote about jazz and then civil liberties for the newspaper for the past fifty years, was a staunch leftist and counterculturalist, but he showed some intellectual integrity on the subject of freedom of speech in recent years, exemplified by his book Free Speech for Me—But Not for Thee: How the American Left and Right Relentlessly Censor Each Other. The premise of the book is rather skewed, given that the right has virtually no power in either academia or the culture, especially the elite culture. Nevertheless, the fact that a well-known leftist and ACLU-style civil liberties advocate (meaning those who use the subject as a stalking horse for the left’s agenda) would acknowledge the left’s illiberalism was an important cultural event. The decline and perhaps eventual fall of the Village Voice will be equally salubrious. Update (1/15/09 11:30 a.m.): As Joe notes in the comment section below, another policy position that made Hentoff unusual—and unwanted—among the left was his opposition to legalized abortion. It was

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The Exemplary Butkus

December 31, 2008
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The Exemplary Butkus

By S. T. Karnick     The quarterbacks, running backs, and wide receivers tend to get the glory, but football is really about blocking and tackling, and games are still won or lost at the line of scrimmage. One of the greatest tacklers of all time was football Hall of Fame honoree Dick Butkus, who played for the University of Illinois and then the Chicago Bears in the 1960s and ’70s. Butkus was one of the hardest hitters of all time, and he attacked the game—and opposing ball-carriers—with a savagery extraordinary even for his time. Yet his ferocity as a player was in service of a greater good—team success—and although he had an engaging personality and ultimately had some success as a movie actor, during his playing days Butkus never sought undue acclaim from the press or the fans, going about his job as a true professional who simply loved his work.

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Che Movie; Palin Haters; New Number 1 on TV

December 19, 2008
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Che Movie; Palin Haters; New Number 1 on TV

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TNT’s Latest ‘Librarian’ Movie Premieres Tonight

December 5, 2008
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TNT’s Latest ‘Librarian’ Movie Premieres Tonight

        TNT’s Librarian film series is highly enjoyable entertainment with some serious and valuable points to make.      

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Intolerant Homosexual Activists Force Resignation of LA Film Festival Director

November 26, 2008
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Intolerant Homosexual Activists Force Resignation of LA Film Festival Director

          A film festival director has been forced to resign his position because he supported California’s successful Proposition 8 referendum that prevented the state courts from forcing all the state’s citizens to recognize same-sex marriages.    

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New AC/DC Album to Be Sold Only at Wal-Mart and Band’s Website

October 14, 2008
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New AC/DC Album to Be Sold Only at Wal-Mart and Band’s Website

      AC/DC’s forthcoming album, Black Ice, won’t be available as a legal music download—or from any source other than retail giant Wal-Mart and the band’s own website.  

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Revelations: Communitarianism, the NEA, Detective Fiction

October 9, 2008
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Revelations: Communitarianism, the NEA, Detective Fiction

        Anti-communitarianism, the National Education Association, and what fictional detectives tell us about ourselves.   A regular feature of The American Culture, highlighting items that reveal trends in American society and culture, compiled by TAC correspondent Mike Gray.

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