Friday, October 29, 2010
Our Hand in the Next Guy's Pocket
The economic recovery could not be going better. The government reports that real wage and salary income during the first quarter of 2010 shot up by a massive 20 percent. It’s simply a great time to be a worker—if, that is, you’re a financial “worker” in Manhattan.
Most financial institutions pay their bonuses in the first quarter of the year, and those numbers recently became available. The average financial industry employee in Manhattan made $100,000 in the first
Friday, October 22, 2010
The Nation: Perlstein's golden words on the polyester decade
Nearly lost at the end of a massive, witty, high speed tour in The Nation that must include a drive-by look at every book on the seventies written since the dawn of the new era, is Perlstein's take on Stayin' Alive. I'm humbled by it. After screeching through the historical landscape, he manages to pull the sticky tranny of his supercharged Hunter S. Thompson word machine out of overdrive and pull over for a minute to say simply: read the damn thing.
Here are the pull quotes:
"I've struggled so long trying to figure out a way to summarize Cowie's new book, Stayin' Alive: The 1970s and the Last Days of the Working Class, that I started worrying I was losing my critical mojo. I've summarized dozens of books in my literary career; it's become rather second nature. Some books, however, are not easy to encapsulate. Often that means the author doesn't know what he or she is doing.
Here are the pull quotes:
"I've struggled so long trying to figure out a way to summarize Cowie's new book, Stayin' Alive: The 1970s and the Last Days of the Working Class, that I started worrying I was losing my critical mojo. I've summarized dozens of books in my literary career; it's become rather second nature. Some books, however, are not easy to encapsulate. Often that means the author doesn't know what he or she is doing.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Stayin' Alive in the Wall (Pink Floyd-Bee Gees Mash Up)
My friend and colleague Rob Vanderlan sent this video mash up of Pink Floyd and the Bee Gees to me, which I dismissed immediately in a way that I now see rooted in being a smart-ass adolescent in the 1970s. Perhaps the 70s recovery process is longer than I thought. Back then it was easy to make a name for oneself as "smart" by being contemptuous and dismissive. Clearly, though, smart ass is different than
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
History for the Future--radio show
With the mainstream media beyond repair--choked with money and dammed (and damned) with slobbering hyperbole--hope can be found in the smaller streams of the media wilderness. One hopeful streamlet is Kevin Brown's show on WRCT-Pittsburgh 88.3 called History for the Future. We had a lovely chat for half of an hour on his show. You can list it to it here: History for the Future - Jefferson Cowie on the 1970s and the Working Class. He's also on iTunes (for free) if you want to get it on the iPod. I really admire Kevin's undertaking here.
Thursday, October 14, 2010
great cover story with Rochester's City Paper
I had no expectations when artist and journalist Ron Netsky asked for an interview for the remarkably high quality alternative weekly, the Rochester City Paper. By the time we were finished with the interview, my faith in journalism, rustbelt cities, independent media, and public intellectual life had all been renewed. Ron read--and absorbed--the book quite deeply. I didn't want the interview to end. Moreover, his journalism is clearly a labor of love. He didn't phone it in but motored down to Ithaca from the Flower City for an in-person chat. But when did I start speaking in the present tense about past events? And talking like my children? Ugh.
Check the piece out here: Labor's love lost Rochester City Newspaper.
Check the piece out here: Labor's love lost Rochester City Newspaper.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
and all I gotta do is act naturally.....
as Ringo would put it about fools hitting the big time. I think I blew this opportunity on CSPAN a bit. I was interested in getting at some of the writing (which I worked hard on), exploring some of the interiority of working-class psychology, and getting away from the big arguments, so I read more than I should have. I'm usually animated to a fault but ended up subdued. Audience was pretty quiet in response. Oh well.
Here's a link to a tiny, oddly distorted, but playable version of the C-span book talk here.
Here's a link to a tiny, oddly distorted, but playable version of the C-span book talk here.
Monday, October 4, 2010
CSPAN broadcast this weekend
See CSPAN's page for the BookTV broadcast on Stayin' Alive here.
Times are:
- Saturday, October 9th at 4pm (ET)
- Sunday, October 10th at 2:45am (ET)
- Sunday, October 10th at 6pm (ET)
- Monday, October 11th at 7am (ET)
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