Sunday, February 8, 2009

5-1 Vintage Pee Spikes Today's Punch


Another one bites the dust. Another punch in the gut to fans of baseball. The results of a steroid test from a six year old sample of urine and a couple of well placed questions by some sports reporters have forever tarnished the reputation of yet another iconic baseball legend, Alex Rodriguez.
The tainted sample was taken along with many others in a random sampling and was to be used only to determine the extent of steroid use back in 2003. At that time, the MLA did not penalize a player for using the performance enhancing drug. And yet, six years later, we see the result, another athlete switch hits from hero status to that of villain in the fickle classifications of popular culture.
Because of the dating of the test, it is thought that the positive results will not affect A-Rod's current active status in baseball. The question is, how will he handle the controversy? Will he fess up, apologise, and get it behind him as did Michael Phelps when a telling photo of him toking on a bong was revealed last week, or will he deny and defer to his lawyers and draw it out with spring training only a few days away (Mueller, 2009)?
Time will tell. Popular Culture has a short memory and taking the high road will certainly work in his favor over the long haul.

References
Mueller, G. (Feb 8, 2009). ...Talk to the union. [Online version]. WTMJ 620 AM website.
http://www.620wtmj.com/shows/genemueller/39284652.html
Image
Lo-res fair use
http://dugoutdiary.mlblogs.com/dugout_diary_by_joe_boesc/images/arod.jpg

Sunday, February 1, 2009

4-1 Man Bites Dog


Ever wonder how tabloids like The National Enquirer can stay viable over the years as top selling newspapers? These icons of popular culture may be found at any supermarket as the most prominent of the impulse items found at checkout lines. A leading ad writer claims it’s the compelling nature of the headlines (Lok, 2004). He writes,

The writers for The Enquirer are among the best anywhere in the world. Their headlines and articles are clean, concise, interesting and most importantly, easy to understand! That's what sells the magazines week after week. And that's why more people read ANY single issue of The Enquirer than have read the Bible since it was first printed! (No joke. It's true.) (Lok, 2004, p. 1.)

Some of the most popular headlines from these tabloids that might appeal to UFO fans include:

01 “Attack by Space Robots”
02 “Eisenhower met Space Aliens”
03 “Skeleton Found on Beach May Be Space Alien Child”
04 “Russians say they found live Alien Baby”
05 “Damaged Alien Spacecraft Orbits Earth”
06 “Housewife says she visited Alien Planets”
07 “Aliens Beamed To Earth”
08 “Brazilian Says He’s Father of Alien’s Baby”
09 “Vampires From Space“
10 “Did Space Aliens Teach the Chinese Acupuncture?”
11 “Vietnam Vet Meets Invisible Alien” (Koi, 2008, p. 1

In recent years, however, tabloids have become more and more reliable sources, indeed as reliable as the phone book due to an army of fact-checkers and a focus turned to reporting mostly on celebrities(Shafer, 2004) claims a leading editor of a popular online news magazine. He states, as a result of recent false stories reported by several leading news agencies that,

... say whatever ugly things you will about the modern National
Enquirer, it hasn't staged the filming of an exploding pickup truck
like NBC News; it hasn't been taken by a serial liar, as was the New York Times; and it's avoided running preposterous stories about the U.S. government using nerve gas in Vietnam, as CNN did. (Shafer, 2004, p. 1.)

As long as there are celebrities to report on, these pop culture tabloids will continue to attract avid readers looking for entertainment and escape.

References
Koi, I.- WitnessFromAfar. (2008). Best cases - National Enquirer panel: WitnessFromAfar [Electronic version]. AboveTopSecret.com, Aliens & UFOs section, 1. Retrieved January 31, 2009, from http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread345955/pg1/#pid4185356

Lok, D. (2004). The lazy writer’s way to creating killer headlines! [Electronic version]. 4hb, Communicate 1. Retrieved January 31, 2009, http://www.4hb.com/20040616064255.html

Shafer, J. (2004). I believe the National Enquirer [Electronic version]. Slate, Press box: Media criticism, 1. Retrieved January 31, 2009, http://www.slate.com/id/2102303/

Image
http://wizbangblue.com/images/2008/09/National%20Enquirer.jpg

Sunday, January 25, 2009

3-1 Dont Bug Me

Don’t Bug Me
What has four forward gears, less horsepower than most motorcycles, higher gas mileage than a hybrid, was designed by Porsche, promoted by Adolf Hitler, endorsed by 4 out of 5 hippies, and has achieved iconic status? The classic Volkswagen Bug! The Beetle, as it was also called, was designed to be used by volks “the people” prior to the advent of WWII in Germany. The cars became popular in this country during the ‘60s and into the ‘70s. Volkswagen offered other variations on the same platform, but none proved nearly as successful as the Bug. The 1956 model pictured here is a collector’s dream! I have never owned a Beetle but have always had close encounters with them. In 1971 I ran a small VW repair shop at a friend’s garage in a residential neighborhood just north of the OSU campus, a hotbed of Beetle owners surrounding me. A steady girlfriend owned a Bug and allowed me to drive it whenever we were together. I think she got the idea that I was using her for her car when I would repeatedly offer to change the oil on Friday nights instead of spending money on a date! These cars were loud, polluting, hot in the summer, and cold in the winter…no air conditioning and a joke of a heater, and came standard without the AM radio, but captured the hearts and minds of many in this country and around the world until the end came. Like most icons, when the thing became mainstreamed into the American psyche, it’s popularity began to wane. Also, a little competition in the form of Honda, Datsun, and Toyota came along, not to mention new pollution standards that the pancake engine could never live up to. By the early 1980’s you would hardly see one on the road unless the Grateful Dead was jamming nearby. I’ll always have a soft spot in my heart for the beloved Bug.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

2-1 Dew you believe?


Dew you Believe?
Mountain Dew is a bonafied pop culture icon. In the building of an icon, marketers compete for culture share. The competition is fierce in this “lifestyle” form of advertising in their efforts to create the appropriate symbol of what the product stands for (Holt, 2003). In order to keep up with ever changing cultural movements, the symbol must adapt and evolve to stay ahead of the curve in order to retain loyalty to the brand and to increase market share.
Over the years, Mountain Dew has undergone several re-births in its cultural myth symbolism. From its introduction in 1954 to the early 60’s, the hillbilly image was used in Dew ads. This figure identified the relief needed by most men during the tensions of this highly technical period of our cultural past. The wild man was loosed against the button-down establishment. As America was beginning to be seen as losing status on the global scene, the culture changed and the hillbilly became meaningless and sales plummeted (Holt, 2003).
Enter the Reagan epoch and the rise of the suburban cowboy exuding rugged individualism. The masses did not see this new breed as heroes, however, but as money grubbing yuppies. In recognizing this phenomenon, Mountain Dew’s advertisers replaced the hillbilly with the athletic redneck, an image that did not totally abandon the former symbol. The new symbol promoted identification with a figure that takes risks, wins women, and does not work in a cubicle. During the early 90’s, the culture shifted again due to a weakening economy, “in your face” sports figures, and a workforce that tackles huge problems during the week, and whitewater on the weekends (Holt, 2003).
To settle these anxieties, the Mountain Dew redneck symbol was changed once more to that of the generation X slacker. Representing extreme sports and a never grow up attitude, this new symbol was quickly adopted by a new generation of Dew drinkers and, like its predecessors, did not abandon the loyalists (Holt, 2003).
The Mountain Dew wild man symbols have changed over time to successfully compete for a share of the culture. What’s next? Perhaps wild tattooed ex-finance bailout recipients?

References
Holt, D. (2003, March). What becomes an icon most?. Harvard Business Review, 81(3), 43-49. Retrieved January 17, 2009, from Business Source Complete database
Image http://mciccolo.tripod.com/mtdew/mtdew.html

Friday, January 16, 2009

2-2 three icons

As any child growing up in the 50’s and early 60’s can tell you, the airing of The Wizard of Oz every Christmas season was an event to look forward to. In the days before cable TV and movies that seem to have no sense of shame, images of tornados ravaging the landscape, the evil Miss Gulch and her counterparts, the wicked witch sisters and of course, hordes of merciless flying monkeys were about the biggest thrills one could get.
Superman was every boy’s hero,
the epitome of truth, justice and the American way. He fought evil; evil looking gangsters with twisted features and mad scientists with plans to dominate the world. We wore capes, and argued about the extent of his powers.
The Ouija board was taboo, the equivalent of inviting the devil into your heart and mind. Such things were for the depraved and lost. No hope then for redemption ever.
I miss the times when there was no question about right and wrong. There was black and there was white. What happened to us? Whose mother first introduced their children to the satanic Ouija board? What would have happened if that tiny rocket carrying the only survivor of the doomed planet Krypton crash landed into Hitler’s back yard instead of that Kansas cornfield...if Dorothy’s house landed on Glinda? Where will we land? I'll take flying monkeys any day.

Images:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wizard_oz_movieposter.jpg
http://www.comics.org/details.lasso?id=3110
http://www.greatdreams.com/ouija.htm

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

1-3 Ink Spots


Illustration Nation: A Critical Analysis
I have chosen to analyze Mary Kosut’s peer reviewed article from a scholarly source, The Journal of Popular Culture entitled “An Ironic Fad: The Commodification and Consumption of Tattoos”. This article discourses on the mainstreaming of tattoos into our cultural society.

Authorship
Upon researching the author’s credentials, it was found in the biographical section of this article that Mary Kosut is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Purchase College, State University of New York. She has published previous studies in the areas of her interest which include research on visual arts, the body, popular and alternative cultures, and ethnographic fieldwork (Kosut, 2006, December, p. 1048). Some of her published work is regarding tattoo art, body modification, and academic culture in journals such as Deviant Behavior, Visual Sociology, and Cultural Studies-Critical Methodologies (Kosut). Upon further internet searches, the author was found to have had spoken at the Manhattan College (Harris, 2005) at an art symposium on subject matter related to tattooing and body suspension. An unpublished manuscript in the form of a conference paper submitted to the American Sociological Association annual meeting in 2006 entitled "”Feels like flying”: Contemporary flesh hook suspension narratives" (Kosut, 2006, August) reveals the reactions and motivations of individuals behind a modern day revival of hanging by flesh piercing hooks, a practice of some primitive cultures. The content of the article being analyzed in this paper, however, deals mainly with the spreading popularity and normalization of tattoos.
A review of the literature cited from the author’s article and specific terminology employed therein suggests that the audience intended to digest her research would be predominately fellow sociologists, perhaps psychologists, educators, and students of social sciences. For example, the term “commodification” is found at various intervals throughout the text as well as in the title. Commodification, in sociological terms, refers to the process of the transformation of non-commercial relationships into commercial relationships such as buying and selling. This supports one premise put forth in the article, that tattoos perform a dual role commercially, by being used increasingly to advertise products and by being sold as a commodity. Other terms used include “mediation” in the sense of linking one relationship with another. In this case, the author finds that the boundaries, both socioeconomic and cultural, which separated traditional tattooees from modern tattooees is becoming blurred. Although written almost 3 years ago, the article under scrutiny has identified trends which, to date, shows no signs of letting up. Indeed, the overall premise of the article speaks to the normalization of tattoos in our current popular culture.

Article Summary
The United States has accepted tattoos into normal society. Tattooed actors, athletes, and musicians have presented their tattooed bodies through America’s mass media to where the practice has spread to suburban households. This burgeoning trend has spread from the formerly backstreet and largely underground counterculture to all facets of the population. Age, ethnic background, every economic class, men, women, teens, blue and white collar, and college educated have jumped on the bandwagon. It is estimated that twenty percent of the population has received a tattoo. Demographically speaking, tattoos are cool.
How does coolness become mainstreamed? The most powerful conduit has been through the entertainment industry. As previously mentioned, the stars display tattoos and thus their audiences, over time, have come to adopt the practice. There is some literature cited whose research shows that at some point in this process, like most fads, the practice will wane as it is not seen to be cool, or provocative anymore. But this is where the author disagrees. She claims that the practice of tattoos differs from the life cycle of normal sartorial or behavioral fads in that the act of consuming a tattoo is a permanent affair. She categorizes this trend therefore as an ironic fad, which cannot be easily thrown away, as a pair of designer jeans. Even more than that, the mere act of receiving a tattoo, from the process of choosing a unique design, the painful process of application, the several weeks following of caring for the wound, and the permanent nature of the tattoo, tends to contribute to their lasting allure and meaning. This process cannot be related to buying a pair of fashionable footwear.

Criticism
The article is well written, easy to read and flows well with meaningful ideas linked by fluid transitions.
Mary Kosut contends that as a lifelong participant in this process, a tattooee is spun into a unique relationship with the artist which is a complicated mix of ritualism, consumerism, and individualism. The tattoo itself invites engagement because it is a permanent addition or modification of one’s own body or self. After reviewing the body of literature, I was unable to link the author’s claims regarding this complicated relationship with tattooing with any of the research offered. Kosut then goes on to offer that tattoos are also used to sell other commodities in the sense of advertising a specific product. No direct evidence of this was cited within the article either. It seems as though there may be an agenda at work with this part of the article.
What is heavily supported through the literature, and true to the title, is the fact that the practice of tattooing is experiencing exponential growth in this country across all demographic bounds, and that it is no longer relegated to the socially excluded subcultures. Some articles go further to equate tattoo as high art because skin can be equated to canvas. Indeed some reputable museums, in recognizing the increased aesthetics of tattoos, have offered exhibitions on tattoo as art. At some point, we may expect that tattoos will make the jump from popular to elite culture.

References
Harris, L. (2005, April 20). Sociology core symposium gets inked, suspended and acquires sexist iPods [Electronic Edition]. Manhattan College Quadrangle, Features Section. Retrieved January 12, 2009 from http://media.www.mcquadrangle.org/media/storage/paper663/news/2005/04/20/Features/Sociology.Core.Symposium.Gets.Inked.Suspended.And.Acquires.Sexist.Ipods-931657.shtml

Kosut, M. (2006, August). "”Feels like flying”: Contemporary flesh hook suspension narratives" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Montreal Convention Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Online . Retrieved January 11, 2009 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p103516_index.html

Kosut, M. (2006, December). An ironic fad: The commodification and consumption of tattoos. Journal of Popular Culture, 39(6), 1035-1048. Retrieved January 12, 2009, doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2006.00333.x

Monday, January 12, 2009

1-4 The Electric Bike


The Electric Bike
Make way for the latest craze from Europe, the electric bike. As cultural icons go, it's day may have arrived. With rising gas prices and a scarcity of loans, let alone a general malaise when it comes to purchasing a new car, the electric scooter just may be the thing.Like it's near relative, the motorized scooter, both have seen sharp rises in sales due mainly to China's cornering the market on manufacture and sales. Prices are typically one-half that of traditional European and Japanese models (Vandore, 2008). Unlike the smoke belching gasoline powered scooter, the electric model can catch the "green" bandwagon and tout itself as eco friendly. It will be interesting to see the scooter take over as America's most popular form of transportation. Still competing for road space with semi tractor trailers and tour buses, we may actually see an end of car pooling lanes and park and ride lots, as well as many gas stations. Take that OPEC!
But wait, what's that on the horizon? Oh yes, winter is coming, or is it just a good old fashioned midwestern thunderstorm? Oh well, back to the garage and dust off the old SUV. There's nothing like good old Detroit iron to get you to your destination.

References
Vandore, E. (2008). Europe's latest craze: electric bikes. Retrieved January 12, 2009, from http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/20080815/ap_tr_ge/travel_dispatches_electric_bikes_test_drive