Tag

Los Angeles


  • Smiling Donors, Bored Recipients: Free Food In America

    Smiling Donors, Bored Recipients: Free Food In America

    People lining up for free food are often tired, bored, and shabbily dressed …

  • The Bingewatch: #Resist

    The Bingewatch: #Resist

    After November’s election, I only wanted to watch normporn. Craving fallible yet manicured characters whose gaffes—provoked by pain mired in class privilege—always culminated in tear-jerking …

  • Making Labor Visible: An Interview with Ramiro Gomez

    Making Labor Visible: An Interview with Ramiro Gomez

    The work of Ramiro Gomez draws attention to the domestic workers and day laborers upon whose ministrations luxury lifestyles depend …

  • The Bingewatch: “Love” Angeles

    The Bingewatch: “Love” Angeles

    Despite today’s abundance of “quality television” programming, TV has yet to fully shed its reputation as a degraded medium. Why else would the binge have taken hold as a (if not the) prime metaphor for contemporary television viewing? Where the representative of televisual excess was previously the couch potato, a human-turned-tuber upon cathode-ray immersion, today’s TV-watching…

  • When Art Disrupts Life

    When Art Disrupts Life

    Since its debut at last year’s Sundance festival, the raucous, gorgeous new feature Tangerine has received plenty of well-deserved praise. It has been called, alternately, a “triumph,” “remarkable,” a “small wonder,” and a “minor miracle.” And yet beneath many of those accolades seems to run a thin current of condescension, a reluctance to take the film completely seriously. The…

  • The Stranger’s Voice

    The Stranger’s Voice

    The Sympathizer, Viet Thanh Nguyen’s riveting debut novel, is a chronicle of war wrapped in a spy thriller and tucked inside a confession. It is also a political satire, a send-up of Hollywood, and a scathing critique of mid-20th-century Orientalism. Nguyen juggles genres like so many flying AK-47s, and to dazzling, often hilarious effect. At…

  • Living Just Enough: New Novels of the City

    Living Just Enough: New Novels of the City

    If you tell a story of the city, rather than merely stage a story there, you lay claim to it, but not always as a fan, a lover, or a life-long insider. Rather, you insist your characters take on the city as a foil or familiar—something powerful with its own memory and will. Recent novels by…