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Midweek Miscellany

Chris Ware’s cover for the latest issue of The New Yorker (via The Ephemerist).

Pop Will Eat Itself — Author Lev Grossman (The Magicians) on automated recommendations:

[Recommendation engines] introduce us to new things, which is good, but those new things tend to be a lot like the old things, and they tend to be drawn from the shallow pool of things other people have already liked. As a result, they create a blockbuster culture in which the same few runaway hits get recommended over and over again. It’s the backlash against the “long tail,” the idea that shopping online is all about near infinite selection and cultural diversity. It has a bad habit of eating its own tail and leaving you back where you started.

The Dark Underside of American LifeThe Observer‘s film critic Philip French on the late Jim Thompson and Michael Winterbottom‘s film adaptation of The Killer Inside Me:

Thompson was a man of the left, a lifelong alcoholic and became closely acquainted with the dark underside of American life, the lonely crowd where petty criminals, low-level cops, conmen and prostitutes rub shoulders… One of Thompson’s critics has called him without disparagement “a dime novel Dostoevsky”…

And finally… Popville, a super stylish pop-up book by Anouck Boisrobert and Louis Rigaud, published by Macmillan (thanks Sio!):

5 Comments

  1. Did you ever see Chris’ rejected illustration for FORTUNE magazine? It was featured in Adbusters mag…

    • Dan

      Hey Ian — I did see Ware’s rejected illustration for Fortune. I just seemed all rather tragic to me you know?

      I was sad that someone important at Fortune didn’t like the work, and disappointed, of course, for Ware (and the person who commissioned him) because the illustration wasn’t used.

  2. Glad to see The New Yorker on here. I’m a proponent too.

    • Dan

      Thanks Joanna. It’s think great that the New Yorker uses artists like Ware, Dan Clowes, Seth and Adrian Tomine…

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