Category Archives: pop culture

The Ivory Tower

I just passed by a pair of colleagues deep in conversation. They weren’t discussing a dangerous and complex scientific experiment or a social research project that could change the face of welfare. Oh, heaven’s no! Their intense discussion amounted to one man trying to explain the concept of the TV show survivor to the other. This was all the more entertaining because neither one of them seemed to have the foggiest notion of what they were talking about. God bless academia!

While I’m on the topic of survivor…
I was deeply disappointed by the outcome of survivor 2. I mean, I wanted Tina to win, but I really didn’t find all of the shenanigans leading up to the big announcement compelling. Or even interesting.

Make a totem and throw it over a cliff as a gesture, as a way to give back to the land? They were right, they were giving back to the land. Littering is – technically – giving back to the land. But it’s still littering. Was I the only one deeply scarred by that Indian in the “Keep America Beautiful” commercials from the 70s? I didn’t expect a great environmental message from a show that allowed goofy Colby to pillage the Great Barrier Reef for coral souvenirs, but still….

And what was up with that walk past the torches where they remembered their fallen comrades in cheesy slow-mo video montages? It’s not like Mad Dog and company died or something – they just did Letterman and Good Morning America, for pete’s sake.

My big question is, if that final vote count was live, why was it dark as night in LA? According to my watch it was 6:40 p.m. and the sun has not set by then. Did this not strike anyone as odd?

Life During Wartime

I continue to be convinced that we’re going to wake up one morning and find ourselves at war with Iraq. I told Husband this on election day, he told me I’m paranoid. I lack the faith in our current Congress necessary to think this is preventable, I feel a sense of doom.

In much more important news, my Lord of the Rings obsessed co-workers are atwitter that Ian McKellan will be in Philadelphia tomorrow for PrideFest, so it’s time to go to lunch and listen to the endless debates about how to justify a roadtrip as a professional development project.

Popular Culture Conference.

In a post last Fall, we were debating attending the annual conference of the Popular Culture Association in Philadelphia, but we decided not to attend for a variety of reasons, including being a bit over my head designing and teaching my first course as an adjunct.

Since there’s been some residual discussion about whether we’re attending in the comments of that old post, I thought I ought to post an update here.