How the internet shapes our illusory worlds. Plus, Tony nominations, Radha Blank and 40 Black playwrights plus Shia LaBeouf's drive-in play about COVID in our weekly arts newsletter
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
PRESENTED BY Berkley *
October 17, 2020
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Greetings, earthlings. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, and this week I come to you with lots of essential culture news and a whole lot of hammer:
Our digital morass
On Wednesday, the German ambassador to the United States, Emily Haber, [posted an image]( of the philosopher and theorist Hannah Arendt to Twitter, noting that one of Arendtâs many legacies was recognizing that âtotalitarianism can flourish where people systematically refuse to engage with reality, and are ready to replace reason with ideology and outright fiction.â
It read like a massive subtweet of U.S. society, which as of late has slid â or leapt? â straight into a pool of digital disinformation and unreality. We do, after all, have a president who [has praised the fictions]( of QAnon (âthese are people that love our countryâ) and recently various social media companies have [changed the ways in which they function]( so as not to completely destroy our election process. (Which leads me to wonder what their functions are doing to us the rest of the year.)
An illuminating piece by Andrew Marantz, [published this week]( in the New Yorker, plumbs the depths of Facebookâs content-moderation policies. Facebook flacks say blocking the hate can be like âlooking for a needle in a haystack.â Marantz writes, âThis metaphor casts [Mark] Zuckerberg as a hapless victim of fate: day after day, through no fault of his own, his haystack ends up mysteriously full of needles. A more honest metaphor would posit a powerful set of magnets at the center of the haystack â Facebookâs algorithms, which attract and elevate whatever content is most highly charged.â
Basically, Facebook was designed to be bad.
How did we get here? Iâve been finding some answers in Joanne McNeilâs recent book âLurking: How a Person Became a User,â a thoughtful examination of the evolution of the culture of the internet over time.
[A copy of the book "Lurking" on a floral carpet]
My well-thumbed copy of âLurking: How a Person Became a Userâ by Joanne McNeil. The book was published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in February. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times)
The book chronicles the instincts that powered early chat rooms, GeoCities pages and the creation of digital identities, as well as poignant internet artworks and niche communities. It also charts the corporate internet: the advent of search, the rise of mass social media sites (remember Friendster and MySpace?) and our current Facebook dystopia â from its awkward aesthetics (âit looked as if a government body were running itâ) to its ham-handed ways of regulating identity, requiring users to employ âauthenticâ names.
One incredible story: The site was deactivating the pages of Native American users with surnames like âIron Eyesâ (sometimes at [the urging of white supremacists]( because they didnât seem ârealâ to content moderators.
McNeil attributes some of Silicon Valleyâs impunity toward truth (and basic humanity) to a failure of criticism. Essentially, a lack of smart critical writing about these platforms during the key early years when they still might have been browbeat into doing less evil. âThe media â including culture critics â should have focused on issues of user consent, monopoly power, harassment, and all of the internetâs actual problems,â she writes. âInstead, the internet haters of the highbrow persuasion flaunted their ignorance.â The business pages, in the meantime, delivered âfanboyish reporting.â
In other words, the photos of breakfast that some thinkers spent a lot of wordcount pooh-poohing as irrelevant? They were irrelevant. It was the architecture that delivered them to our lizard brains that was far more insidious.
âLurkingâ is a curious, low-key guide to the culture(s) of the internet â McNeil was there in the early days, and is the sort to revisit old chat rooms years later because, why the hell not. The book also shows how web companies have inhaled us all. âEven Comcast lets you call in â thatâs not anyoneâs idea of fun, but you can call and ask a human a question,â she writes. âComcast has customers. Google has users.â
On the internet, of course, we are the product.
Find McNeilâs book [here](. And while youâre at it, sign up for her newsletter, [All My Stars](. Itâs a personable, irregular update of whatever happens to be traversing her wonderful, curious brain.
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Pandemic Tonys
Aaaaaand, the Tony Award nominations are in.... but [theyâre kind of a bust]( writes Times theater critic Charles McNulty. Because of the pandemic, they are highly abridged â with only 18 shows deemed eligible. Plus, given the moment, itâs not exactly the best time âto be doling out congratulatory Broadway bric-a-brac,â he writes. âIf the American Theatre Wing was a little more on the ball, it would be using this moment for an all-star digital telethon for theater workers anxious about their next meal.â
Ashley Lee compiles [the complete list of noms](. She reports that the musical âJagged Little Pillâ is in the lead (15 nominations), followed by âMoulin Rouge! The Musicalâ (14) and âTina: The Tina Turner Musicalâ and âSlave Playâ (12 each).
[Actors Annie McNamara and Sullivan Jones on stage in 19th century garb.]
Annie McNamara and Sullivan Jones as a couple seeking to heal bedroom problems through performance therapy in Jeremy O. Harrisâ âSlave Play.â (Matthew Murphy)
Plus, Aaron Tveit, who plays the lovelorn writer in âMoulin Rouge!,â is the only nominee for best performance by an actor. But he [could still lose]( reports Lee.
Making theater while Black
Radha Blanksâ âThe Forty-Year-Old Versionâ on Netflix is the story of a Black playwright who has to contend with a countless microaggressions and aggression-aggressions to get her work on stage. Blank tells Ashley Lee that some viewers think the character of the clueless white producer in the film is a caricature, but heâs based on real-deal theatrical artistic directors. âWith these predominantly white male gatekeepers,â says Blank, âitâs the same kind of person making the same type of choices, controlling what kind of diverse stories are told.â
That inspired Lee to speak to 40 Black theater workers to [share their experiences in theater](. As playwright Jocelyn Bioh tells her: âThis pushback against the whole system â these are conversations that artists of color have been dying to have for years.â
[A black and white photo grid shows an array of Black theater workers]
Black playwrights speak their mind. From top left: David E. Talbert, Aleshea Harris, Radha Blank, Stacy Osei-Kuffour, Jocelyn Bioh, Keenan Scott II and Donja R. Love. (Jay L. Clendenin, Kirk McKoy, Carolyn Cole, Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times; Serge Nivelle and Marcus Meisler)
Plus, Times film critic Justin Chang [reviews]( Blankâs movie. âThe sly achievement of âThe Forty-Year-Old Versionâ,â he writes, âis to turn a critical eye on the very idea of success (by whose standards?), and to ponder exactly what level of compromise is acceptable to secure it.â
Over [at the Undefeated]( critic Soraya Nadia McDonald describes it as a ârefreshing, unpretentious and often hilarious take on middle-aged Black womanhood.â
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Plays and players
Because we donât get enough COVID-19 in real life, Shia LaBeoufâs Slauson Rec. Theater Company has developed [a play inspired by a day in the life of a COVID-19 testing center](. Titled â5711 Avalon,â the collectively written work is staged to look like an actual testing site while audiences remain in their cars. The Timesâ Deborah Vankin took one for the team and attended a rehearsal, which featured a lot of yelling by LaBeouf, along with various meltdowns. Sample: âNo-no-no-no-no!â
Read this one to the end.
[A night-time photo shows actors in protective gear rehearsing a COVID-themed play in a parking lot.]
Actors rehearse â5711 Avalon,â a Slauson Rec. Theater Company play that explores life at a drive-through COVID-19 testing site. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
Heidi Schreckâs âWhat the Constitution Means to Meâ [premiered this week]( on Amazon Prime Video. Charles McNulty is offering it up as essential viewing for the Republican senators involved in confirmation proceedings for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. Schreckâs âdiscussion of constitutional history is full of humor and light,â writes McNulty, âbut behind it lies an emotional awareness of the direct impact the male-dominated Court has had on the liberties and possibilities of women.â
Plus, Times art editor Craig Nakano [hosted a conversation]( between Schreck and television director Norman Lear. âWhat the Constitution Means to Meâ was inspired by the format of American Legion oratorical contests. Lear, the force behind socially minded TV series such as âAll in the Familyâ and âThe Jeffersons,â also participated in these contests. Particularly moving: a section where the pair talks about the episode of âMaudeâ in which Maude (played by Bea Arthur) gets an abortion.
[Heidi Schreck in a scene from "What the Constitution Means to Me."]
Heidi Schreck in a scene from âWhat the Constitution Means to Me.â (Joan Marcus / Amazon Studios)
Art world
Meanwhile on the East Coast: the Baltimore Art Museum [announced the deaccession of canvases]( by Andy Warhol, Brice Marden and Clyfford Still to fund an endowment to correct pay inequities at the museum earlier this month. Now a group of 23 prominent supporters of the museum, including former trustees, have written a missive to Marylandâs attorney general and secretary of state to demand that they put a stop to the sale. Art critic Christopher Knight describes the letter as âblistering and closely argued.â Among other things, it states the museum âdid not sufficiently exercise its fiduciary dutyâ and that the canvas by Warhol âis likely being sold, or already has been sold, at a bargain-basement price.â
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Contributor Sharon Mizota checks out the annual âWomxn in Windowsâ exhibition, which âfeels made for our socially distant moment.â The exhibition consists of [10 works by eight female artists and filmmakers]( â including Jaâtovia Gary, Everlane Moraes and Rémie Akl â that play in storefront windows in Chinatown 24 hours a day.
Plus, artist Nina Katchoudourian has turned an Orange County lawn into [a political art installation]( â of lawn signs from failed presidential campaigns. After the election on Nov. 3, one losing candidateâs sign will be added to the show. The signs, Katchadourian tells Daily Pilot reporter Vera Castaneda, are âso particular to a North American landscape before an election.â
[A lawn features election signs of all colors for failed candidates like John Kerry and Martin Van Buren]
Some of the signs put up for the âMonument to the Unelectedâ art installation by Nina Katchadourian in Orange. (Raul Roa / Daily Pilot)
Essential happenings
The Timesâ Matt Cooper has all the culture happenings! This includes [18 picks for weekend culture]( including a virtual concert by the Pasadena Symphony and an online reading of Gore Vidalâs âThe Best Manâ featuring Morgan Freeman, Matthew Broderick and Zachary Quinto.
Plus, he rounds up [eight things you can do in person]( including an outdoor performance of Jon Lawrence Riveraâs âMarchâ staged by the Los Angeles LGBT Center and Playwrightsâ Arena â part of their âGarage Theatreâ collaboration.
Passages
Chris Killip, a British documentary photographer known for his chronicles of working-class struggles in northeast England during the 1970s and â80s, [has died at 74](.
In 2017, the Getty Museum had a terrific show of his work and [I had the occasion to talk to him]( âThey are at the tough end of things, the people in my photographs,â he told me at the time. âItâs about the struggle for work, being out of work, fighting for work.â
[A black and white photo shows a man steering a horse cart through shallow ocean waves]
âGordon and Critchâs Cart, Seacoal Beach, Lynemouth, Northumberland,â taken in 1982 by Chris Killip shows a man harvesting coal in the surf. (Chris Killip)
In other news ...
â Artists Christine Sun Kim, filmmaker Rodney Evans and dancer Jerron Herman [have been awarded]( the inaugural Disability Futures Fellowship, worth $50,000.
â How painter Amoako Boafo went from little-known painter to art star. [An absolutely wild story]( by Nate Freeman about art and hype and wealthy art flippers.
â The Getty has added [39 Dutch drawings]( to its collection. Personally, I am here for any and all illustrations of flora and fauna by Maria Sibylla Merian.
â [A short history]( of Sears department store buildings in L.A.
â The pandemic has [wreaked havoc]( on an icon of Los Angeles: Olvera Street.
â A new fellowship will explore [the history of slavery]( at the White House.
â 102 symbols of the Confederacy [have been removed]( from public spaces since George Floydâs death.
â The California Historical Society has [some great images]( related to the farmworker newspaper âEl Malcriadoâ and other 1960s-era ephemera connected to the movement.
â Hank Willis Thomas gives Alfred Barr Jr.'s abstract art chart [a Postcolonial update](.
â And I love love love New York Times food critic Tejal Raoâs compilation of [Los Angeles smells](.
Last but not least ...
I know the Hammer Museum at UCLA is important and all, but when the pandemic lifts, Iâm personally really dying to visit the Hammer Museum [in Alaska](.
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