Subject: Re: articles |
From: Paul Caine <pcaine@theonion.com> |
Date: 11/30/09, 13:08 |
To: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> |
On Sat, Nov 28, 2009 at 9:29 PM, Barrett Brown
<barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Paul-
When you get a moment, please let me know if you received that Kilstein/Kilkenny article I sent you last week and if it needs any revision on my end. Sorry for the delay on the lobster piece; I had to go to Dallas again for my uncle's funeral but will try to get the article done tomorrow.
Thanks,
Barrett Brown
Brooklyn, NY
512-560-2302On Fri, Nov 20, 2009 at 7:13 PM, Barrett Brown
<barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Here's a rough draft of the Kilkenny/Kilstein piece. I've got tons of other quotes and material, so let me know what you'd like to see emphasised more. Will have lobster piece in soon.
Meet the Anti-Power Couple
History is filled with
couples who have been kind enough to illustrate some or another place
or time or culture that happens to need illustrating. Something
important is expressed by such pairings as that of Antony and
Cleopatra, Sid and Nancy, and William F. Buckley and his wife, with
each breeding pair giving us some clue about the respective
environments in which they thrived or at least set each other on fire.
Allison Kilkenny and Jamie Kilstein are hardly akin to most power
couples of the past. They are not all that powerful, for instance, and
at any rate they do not seem comfortable even with the idea of power.
We ought not expect anything interesting from the two of them in the
way of personal exploits - no civil wars, heroin addictions, or
journals of increasingly mediocre conservative commentary are likely to
emerge from this marriage. They are vegans, for instance.
The history of their relationship, meanwhile, is insufferably romantic
insomuch as they met when each was poor and unknown and then together
became slightly less poor and moderately well-known. "She was starting
as a writer and I was failing as a comic and we were both working at a
bookstore," Kilstein recalls. "So we quit, left our closet in NYC, and
hit the road." Their self-imposed exile worked out well. A stand-up
comedian, Kilstein now tours internationally alongside long-established
comics, while Kilkenny is among the handful of youngish political
journalists to have recently gained a solid readership by the direct
and unorthodox means of the blogosphere. Together, they host Citizen
Radio, a weekly public affairs program that regularly features such
leftist luminaries as Noam Chomsky, who himself has made three
appearances so far; on January 10th, the show will switch to a live
format with a studio audience of sorts, with the first such event to be
held at The PIT and featuring Janeane Garofalo alongside other,
similarly nifty guests. Meanwhile, the couple is in the midst of talks
regarding another project of considerably higher visibility.
What does the accelerating success of this couple tell us about the
here and now and perhaps even the little bit later? Kilstein, whose act
draws heavily on politics and religion, has found particular success in
Europe, the denizens of which are hungry for reassurance that Americans
still understand irony; that he is far better known internationally
than he is in the U.S. may probably be explained by this hunger for an
America that can once again evoke laughter of the intentional sort.
Kilkenny's increasing prominence as a journalist and commentator is
perhaps more telling, and at any rate ought to be reassuring to those
worried about the degeneracy of America's opinion-making class. In a
manner that would have been impossible fifteen years ago, the
26-year-old writer managed to build her own audience by virtue of
ability, a commitment to actually getting the story right, and other
such novelties; she's now a regular contributor to The Huffington Post and True/Slant as well as such more traditional outlets like The Nation.
That real journalists with talent are now replacing fake ones with
credentials is particularly heartening when one considers how many
mediocrities had risen to the top. On the right, for instance, Kilkenny
looks to Peggy Noonan when in need of something to ridicule ("Every
column is a hysterical cry
for a man to stick a penis in her and make the world right again"). On
the left, she looks to Maureen Dowd when in need of a reminder how
vapid the commentariat has become ("She's useless,
and she's taking up valuable real estate. I've never read an
interesting idea in her columns. All she writes is bad puns when she
isn't plagiarizing or repeating gossip"). Like her husband, Kilkenny is
too nice to make such criticisms on her own and must be prompted to do
so by vindictive feature writers. She's quicker to praise those
journalists who actually break important stories and provide accurate
analysis - people like Amy Goodman of Democracy Now ("fearless and wonderful") and Glenn Greenwald of Salon ("the most morally
consistent journalist I've ever read").
Even if she represents a restorative dynamic in American journalism,
Kilkenny remains pessimistic about the uphill battle against such
terrible-yet-respected commentators as Thomas Friedman. "The news," she
notes, "exists to turn a profit." It used to, anyway.On Fri, Nov 20, 2009 at 3:46 PM, Barrett Brown
<barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi, Paul--
Finishing up the Kilstein/Kilkenny article now; looking for 700 words or should it be longer? Sorry for all the delays; been asked to serve as a writer on a pilot plus finishing up this second book and whatnot; usually I can get these finished much more quickly.
Thanks,
BarrettOn Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 6:37 PM, Barrett Brown
<barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Both almost done; I just met with Kilkenny and Kilstein today to flesh out the interview answers I'd already gotten via e-mail, and visited the lobster joints over the weekend. Will have at least one in tomorrow, the second later this week.
On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 2:38 PM, Paul Caine
<pcaine@theonion.com> wrote:
Hi Barrett,
Hope all is well. Just wondering how the lobster article is coming, as well as the interview. Thanks,
Paul
--
Paul Caine
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