Art that conflicts with itself is – if judged solely on this quality – inherently more intriguing than art that does not. How successfully a
Author: Jordan Mark Sandvig
An Oral History of The Pandemic: Month 6, Middle America
For regular listener’s to Dan Carlin’s irregularly released podcast Hardcore History, Dan’s obsession with military history, especially ancient military history, is as familiar to them
White People Love Us Some Sad Ass Cover Songs
Spotify Playlist of Sad Ass Cover Songs That White People Like Leave it up to White people to take an upbeat, joyous piece of pop
The 1 Thing I Learned from Weezer, and the 1 Thing I Should Have
It must have been 6th grade. If my memory serves me, (which it does, in that it serves the motives of my present moment), I
Want to Advertise to Young People of Color? Why Not Have Them Dance!?
“Hey Everyone, thanks for coming to our brainstorming session.” “I know we said this would be a free flow of ideas, but don’t worry, I’ve
Identity & Basketball in the Time of Corona
For 15 years, I watched basketball from afar, keeping not much more than wandering eye on the NBA. I came back just in time. I
Sad Is Not Only Specific
Exploring The Nuances of Gladwell’s Assertions That Country is Better at Being Sad than Rock ‘n Roll In Season 2 of Malcolm Gladwell’s Revisionist History,
Is America Really a Third World Country in a Gucci Belt?
On Marr 22, 2020 @jasminetyon tweeted and birthed, very possibly, a new sentence into the American conversation. America is a third world country in a
The Shared Universe of Springsteen’s Nebraska
Everyone knows Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska is not a set of 10 separate stories taking place in an elaborately inter-related and overlapping shared universe.
10 Songs That Describe 10 Aspects of Adulthood
These songs aren’t explicitly about being an adult, nor are they about growing up (well, mostly). These songs embody adulthood, they are it. They are