Entertainment industry’s best friend
Man’s best friend – that’s how dogs are portrayed in the media, and you know what? I agree.
Man’s best friend – that’s how dogs are portrayed in the media, and you know what? I agree.
As Union Board directors, we take our roles as student leaders seriously, and we listen carefully to any feedback our programs receive. With this in mind, I am concerned by the inaccuracies and accusations made by Yahya Chaudhry in his Tuesday column. First, he claims that Union Board paid the band, Chairlift, $250 more than it had requested for its Nov. 1 performance. Chairlift’s agent had initially contacted Live From Bloomington requesting a performance fee of $500. During contract negotiations a month later, the band had increased its fee to $750 because of routing changes in its tour. This type of change is fairly common in the concert industry, and Union Board still felt confident the show was a great opportunity for students. As for the financial details of the show itself, Mr. Chaudhry unfairly alleges that Union Board “lost” $1,000 on the concert. Union Board does not look to make a profit on any of its events. If we did, what would be the point of Union Board receiving student activity fees in the first place? For ticketed events, our main objective is to keep ticket prices as low as possible in order to serve the most number of students.
I must confess that at the beginning of the semester, when one of my English professors assigned a graphic novel as required reading, I was a little bit nervous. Weren’t graphic novels just elongated comic strips? Doesn’t the position of illustrators on the artistic fringe suggest something about the level of high art that might be limited in such a medium?If I were to associate myself with a graphic novel, would I become subject to connotations of weird science fiction and other longtime disregarded genres of literature? These were the questions that made me realize the many problems each question imposes on sub-mainstream artistic genres. And as I discovered the many fallacies in each supposition, I was able to understand the importance of the medium’s contributions to visual and literary art.The novel, Alison Bechdel’s “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic,” is, first of all, unlinked to any elements of science fiction, which threw off my original conception of the graphic novel medium.Furthermore, I realized it delved into very deep literary waters, as the style narrates a highly complex and realistic tale – much unlike the idea of the comic book hero’s supernatural, episodic adventures. These disparities caused me to reevaluate my prejudiced stance on graphic novels and, in the true fashion of artistic deconstruction, go to the history of the graphic novel as my primary resource.Around the 1920s and 1930s, a revival of the medieval woodcut tradition in Northern Europe occurred, which led to developing American techniques in comic illustration. As a result, long-form comic narratives emerged in newsprint, predating the modern comic book that became an enormous form of popular entertainment by the 1950s.The graphic novel diverged from the comic book around this time as a means of creating a more complex, mature narrative style and character development that sets it apart from comic books from an art history perspective. However, this taxonomic distinction should not be seen as an illegitimacy imposed on the comic book.In its modern form, the graphic novel covers the gamut of genres and subgenres, including the increasingly popular novels “Maus” and “V for Vendetta.”In this evolution of an artistic medium, we see the typical melding of multimedia that is responsible for the emergence of great art. The graphic novel fuses popular American literary and visual traditions and has brought about a new way of looking at a form associated inappropriately with “low art” of science fiction and mass print. This association is not inappropriate, because the graphic novel is not connected to science fiction, but rather because this connection between fine art and popular entertainment speaks for the devalued cultural feats accomplished by the medium’s origins.
When IU alumnus Jon Coombs first started interning at local independent music label Secretly Canadian, he came with the desire to become a part of the music industry. Just a month before he graduated last May, he asked if the label happened to be hiring.
I have a confession to make. My father helps outsource jobs to low-cost countries, and given my political sensibilities, visits home can get quite interesting. I often wonder whether offshoring advocates (such as my father) would be as likely to support this growing trend if their own jobs were threatened. The answer is: of course not. Many Americans have long taken comfort in the fact that their jobs were unlikely to be outsourced. From 2000 to 2005, more than 3 million manufacturing jobs have been shipped overseas while skilled labor has remained relatively unscathed. Indeed, by many accounts, free trade has benefited college educated individuals while hurting everyone else. It has increased wages for those with a four-year university degree by about 3 percent and lowered wages for all other workers by about 4 percent. But if the financial crisis has taught us anything, it’s that greed drives capitalism. Corporations are increasingly moving jobs overseas in a bid to exploit cheap labor, scant regulations and tax loopholes. No one is safe anymore, including us journalists.
Colombian musicologist Egberto Bermudez has joined with the Ensemble Fénix de los Ingenios, a Bloomington-based ensemble specializing in Iberian-American early music, for a series of concerts in Indiana.
In recent years, the ideological battle between the religious community and the atheist community has captured national attention. Such sacrilegious and blasphemous characters as Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens have vehemently written of the evils of religion. But has the current escalation in discourse strengthened the cause of the secular community? Are we atheists winning the culture war? I think not. Our rhetoric is shock and awe. Our arguments unearth ancient animosities and further alienate our opponents. We approach religion as a macro-issue, believing that we are capable of conquering the entire structure in one fell swoop. Indeed, the atheists have the correct intentions. I agree with their view of religion as perhaps the most distressing perversion of human intelligence in history, whose edicts and influences have stagnated the progress of civil society.
Ever since Virgin Mobile USA launched its Chrismahanukwanzakah ad campaign, where characters such as a Hindu Santa and a gay elf sing a happy song; people of all creeds sing along with the commercials and buy the ringtones during the winter holiday season.
I don’t know why when I ask everyone what they did for Thanksgiving break, they always seem reluctant to say they just lounged around their parents’ house. It’s certainly not shameful for me to say I spent my entire break just relaxing. College kids need that. If it weren’t for Thanksgiving, when would we be able to fit in watching those guilty pleasure movies and shows? You know, those programs where you can just turn on and tune out (and if your sister does find you drooling on yourself while watching “Legally Blonde” you can just say the turkey made you and the dog both salivate). Thanksgiving is perfect for relaxing. Like I said, I’m not bashful to say that I vegged out for a couple days. It even got me to do some appropriate introspection about the American tradition.
If the progression of industries begging the Department of the Treasury for bailouts has left you increasingly unsympathetic, consider these people the icing on the cake: the ones you’ll be indebted to for 20 years after you graduate. In a recent change to the Treasury’s bailout bill, the government has announced that part of the money will be used to guarantee consumer lending in order to stimulate spending in the economy. Among possible candidates were private student lenders, more than 60 of which have, in recent months, ceased offering loans. The possibility has ignited a heated debate among education circles as to whether the decision places the interests of students at heart. Some wonder whether the money could be better placed. And while the Secretary of Education has already indicated that she will bolster federal loans, some feel that private loans should receive no assistance, or that any bailout package given to private lenders should include more stringent guidelines to benefit students. Critics, such as the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, American Association of State Colleges and Universities and half a dozen similar groups recently sent a letter to the Secretary of Treasury urging his department to reconsider. Their concern is understandable – just last year, a massive scandal broke over conflict of interest between university financial aid departments and private lenders, especially notable since it’s many of the same groups implicated in last year’s scandal that are now cheering the Treasury’s decision.
December 21, 2012: the day the world ends. Or at least that’s what various experts (or conspiracy theorists, depending on your view) want us all to believe. And there is certainly intriguing information that would back up those claims. First of all, there’s the fact that the ancient Mayan calendar either ends on that day or at least poses the idea of a world-altering event occurring. Then there is astrologer John Jenkins’ assertion that on that date, the northern hemisphere winter solstice sun will cross with the galactic equator. Put simply, some very interesting and crazy developments point out that at the least, 12/21/2012 will be the most anticipated day since 01/01/00.
GREENFIELD, Ind. – Gov. Mitch Daniels said Tuesday he generally supports a federal stimulus package that would include some money for Indiana and other states, particularly for infrastructure projects such as highways and bridges.
INDIANAPOLIS – Sixteen Indiana National Guard soldiers filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday against a defense contractor they say knowingly allowed them to be exposed to a toxic chemical in Iraq.
WEST LAFAYETTE – Authorities believe that the man found dead behind a Purdue University residence hall was a student who apparently jumped from one of the building’s upper floors.
A 21-year-old man watching TV on Tuesday night was interrupted – by a brick.
The IU men's basketball team could not hang with a more athletic, more experienced Wake Forest squad as the Demon Deacons stomped the Hoosiers 83-58 tonight in Winston-Salem, N.C. For complete coverage, visit the Basketblog.
Follow reporters Matt Dollinger and Tom Kirby and columnist Zachary Osterman as they blog during the men’s basketball game against Wake Forest. Follow the action on the Basketblog.
Paul Mattingly analyzes which Oscar races could be most competitive...before the show even airs.
Three WEEKEND reviewers discuss the newest tracks in music.
I can’t recommend this movie for general viewing, but if you like the Flaming Lips, psychedelic science fiction or seeing a lot of vaginas, you’ll like “Christmas on Mars.”