All posts by Mike Zonta

The Onion’s Oscar Guide: Best Picture

Synopsis: The story of a black musician and his limo driver overcoming racial barriers in the 1960s, this road movie is a prime example of the antiquated, offensive Italian Savior narrative

Prospects: Like all the nominees for Best Picture, Green Book stands a one in eight chance of winning

Defining Line: “Look at this book, Don. Tell me what color this fucking book is.”


Roma

Synopsis: It’s hard to describe—it’s sort of like—well, you know that feeling when you’re just having a really swell day? And you look over and there’s your best gal Susie. And you turn on the radio and Buddy Holly is playing “Everyday,” and, heck, just then they’re rolling out with your strawberry malt and onion rings? Well, that’s Roma in a nutshell

Prospects: As the objective best film of 2018, Roma will most likely leave the Oscars empty-handed

Defining Line: “Buffering…buffering…buffering…”


Black Panther

Synopsis: The heartbreaking story of a white arms dealer who is tragically killed after getting mixed up in the political struggles of an African nation

Prospects: Shamelessly panders to Academy voters with its heavy-handed, one-sided take on the vibranium mining industry

Defining Line: “You are a good man, with a good heart. And it’s hard for a good man to be a king. And in a truly just society, of course, we wouldn’t have a king, or rich dynastic forces who wield undemocratic, unaccountable power. And anyone who desires and propagates that model of society, like a person such as yourself, is, frankly, immoral, and should not be looked up to in any circumstances. So that’s all pretty fucked up, and certainly nothing to celebrate. But, yeah, anyway, you’ll be good at being a king.”


Vice

Synopsis: Left-leaning hack Adam McKay betrays his ignorance with a biased portrayal of the former vice president and longtime ally of The Onion as some sort of villain, when his generosity towards journalists and, indeed, the world at large, has no bounds

Prospects: Look, they tried, okay? Can you blame a man for trying?

Defining Line: “Wow, 9/11! I can’t believe we actually pulled it off! The heist of the century!”


Bohemian Rhapsody

Synopsis: Follows Queen singer Freddie Mercury as he struggles with the difficult and courageous decision to get AIDS

Prospects: Ah, yes, another singy! We love the singys!

Defining Line: “Hey—hey kids, you like parties? Come on up to my hotel room. I got a few bottles. What of? Ha, you crack me up. Yeah. I’m the guy who directed Bohemian Rhapsody. Pretty cool, huh?”


BlacKkKlansman

Synopsis: BlacKkKlansman is an accurate portrayal of the struggles of many police officers serving on the force and in the KKK at the same time

Prospects: The consensus among Academy members is that Spike Lee should just be happy being nominated

Defining Line: “Hey, Adam Driver here. Just wanted to pop in for a second to let everyone know that this movie is about Trump. Okay, thanks! And now, back to the show!”


A Star Is Born

Synopsis: Same as the first four versions of this movie

Prospects: May be popular among Academy voters who believe rewarding it with Best Picture may be the only way to end the ceaseless deluge of remakes

Defining Line: “Your star! It’s…hatching!”


The Favourite

Synopsis: Starring Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, and Rachel Weisz, The Favouriteis this year’s British one

Prospects: While it did well with critics and audiences alike, it could have a tough time beating out…uh, Green Book? Wow, the films this year were fucking awful

Defining Line: “These 17 rabbits are my 17 children. I married a rabbit, you see, and they all got their father’s genes, which are rabbit genes. This is why I am constantly upset.”

Biography: Paulo Coelho de Souza

Paulo Coelho de Souza (born 24 August 1947) is a Brazilian lyricist and novelist. He is best known for his novel The Alchemist. In 2014, he uploaded his personal papers online to create a virtual Paulo Coelho Foundation.

Biographical details

Paulo Coelho was born in Brazil and attended a Jesuit school. As a teenager, Coelho wanted to become a writer. Upon telling his mother this, she responded, “My dear, your father is an engineer. He’s a logical, reasonable man with a very clear vision of the world. Do you actually know what it means to be a writer?” At 17, Coelho’s introversion and opposition to following a traditional path led to his parents committing him to a mental institution from which he escaped three times before being released at the age of 20.[2][3] Born into a Catholic family, his parents were strict about the religion and faith.[4] Coelho later remarked that “It wasn’t that they wanted to hurt me, but they didn’t know what to do… They did not do that to destroy me, they did that to save me.”[5] At his parents’ wishes, Coelho enrolled in law school and abandoned his dream of becoming a writer. One year later, he dropped out and lived life as a hippie, traveling through South America, North Africa, Mexico, and Europe and started using drugs in the 1960s.[6][7]

Upon his return to Brazil, Coelho worked as a songwriter, composing lyrics for Elis ReginaRita Lee, and Brazilian icon Raul Seixas. Composing with Raul led to Coelho being associated with magic and occultism, due to the content of some songs.[8] In 1974, Coelho was arrested for “subversive” activities by the ruling military government, who had taken power ten years earlier and viewed his lyrics as left-wing and dangerous.[5] Coelho also worked as an actor, journalist, and theatre director before pursuing his writing career.[8]

In 1980 Coelho married artist Christina Oiticica. Together they had previously spent half the year in Rio de Janeiro and the other half in a country house in the Pyrenees Mountains of France, but now the pair reside permanently in Geneva, Switzerland.[9]

In 1986, Coelho walked the 500-plus mile Road of Santiago de Compostela in northwestern Spain, a turning point in his life.[6][10] On the path, Coelho had a spiritual awakening, which he described autobiographically in The Pilgrimage.[11] In an interview, Coelho stated “[In 1986], I was very happy in the things I was doing. I was doing something that gave me food and water – to use the metaphor in The Alchemist, I was working, I had a person whom I loved, I had money, but I was not fulfilling my dream. My dream was, and still is, to be a writer.”[12] Coelho would leave his lucrative career as a songwriter and pursue writing full-time.

In 1996, he founded the Paulo Coelho Institute, which provides support to children and the elderly.[13]

Coelho posts up to three times a week at his blog,[14] and has millions of fans on both Facebook and Twitter. He discussed his relationship with readers through social media platforms with The Wall Street Journal in August 2014.[15] Another development came in November 2014, when he finished uploading around 80,000 documents-manuscripts, diaries, photos, reader letters, press clippings-and created a virtual Paulo Coelho Foundation,[16] together with the physical foundation which is based in Geneva.[17]

Writing career

In 1982, Coelho published his first book, Hell Archives, which failed to make a substantial impact.[8] In 1986 he contributed to the Practical Manual of Vampirism, although he later tried to take it off the shelves since he considered it “of bad quality.”[8] After making the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in 1986, Coelho wrote The Pilgrimage that was published in the year 1987. The following year, Coelho wrote The Alchemist and published it through a small Brazilian publishing house who made an initial print run of 900 copies and decided not to reprint.[18] He subsequently found a bigger publishing house, and with the publication of his next book BridaThe Alchemist took off. HarperCollins decided to publish the book in 1994. Later it became an international bestseller.[18]

While trying to overcome his procrastination of launching his writing career, Coelho said, “If I see a white feather today, that is a sign that God is giving me that I have to write a new book.” Coelho found a white feather in the window of a shop, and began writing that day.[11] Since the publication of The Alchemist, Coelho has generally written at least one novel every two years. Four of them – The PilgrimageHippieThe Valkyries and Aleph – are autobiographical, while the majority of the rest are broadly fictional.[6] Other books, like MaktubThe Manual of the Warrior of Light and Like the Flowing River, are collections of essays, newspaper columns, or selected teachings. His work has been published in more than 170 countries and translated into eighty languages. Together, his books have sold in the hundreds of millions.[19]On 22 December 2016, Coelho was listed by UK-based company Richtopia at number 2 in the list of 200 most influential contemporary authors.[20]

Reaction to his writing has not been without controversy, however. Though he was raised in a Catholic family, and describes himself as of that faith even now, his stance has been described as incompatible with the Catholic faith, because of its New Agepantheist and relativist contents.[21] And whatever his sales, reviews of Coelho’s later work consistently note its superficiality.[22][23][24]

The Pilgrim

The Pilgrim – Story of Paulo Coelho is the international title for the film Não Pare na Pista, a movie about Coelho’s life. A co-production between Brazil’s Dama Filmes, led by Carolina Kotscho and Iôna de Macedo, Angélica Huete’s Babel Films in Spain and directed by Daniel Augusto. Ravel and Júlio Andrade play the young and old Coelho, and other cast members include international names such as Fabiana Gugli, Nancho Novo and Paz Vega. Those working on the film include Pedro Almodovar’s regular art director Antxón Gómez and Oscar-winning make-up artists Montse Ribé and David Marti.

De Macedo told Screen: “The film tells the story of a man who has a dream. It’s a little like Alice in Wonderland – he’s someone who is too big for his house.” The film, shot in Portuguese, had its premiere in Brazilian Theaters on 2014, was internationally distributed by Picture Tree on 2015, according to Variety.[25]

Ava Bogle serves sex without shame

By Lily Janiak 

Ava Bogle in “The Pleasure Project,” which performs at Z Below.Photo: Jeff Lorch

Bolinas native Ava Bogle believes the clitoris can “save humanity,” and that it can also save your Valentine’s Day.

The 32-year-old writer, performer, stand-up comedian and sex blogger, who’s now based in Los Angeles, has been performing her solo show “The Pleasure Project” since 2017. Now she brings the sci-fi celebration of female sexual pleasure and a takedown of sexual shame to Z Below on a date that’s traditionally more about finding reward from a male partner than about finding it from within.

We talked to Bogle, by phone from Los Angeles, about sexual shame and how her mother talked to her about sex.

Q: So two years ago, you started doing a bunch of research on the shame women feel around pleasure.

A: I’d been writing this blog (Diary of a Slutty Feminist). … Women readers would approach me and say, “This is so brave that you’re writing about this embarrassing stuff,” and I really wasn’t embarrassed by it. … So that kind of led me to want to talk to women about shame — because I realized that that was a much bigger problem than I even knew, really. I found that that was kind of a common denominator, that every single woman I talked to about sex and pleasure and masturbation had some kind of pervasive feeling of shame, usually from some instance in childhood.

Ava Bogle is bringing her sci-fi celebration of female sexual pleasure and a takedown of sexual shame to Z Below.Photo: Jeff Lorch

Q: How did you find women to talk to?

A: They were kind of loose interviews — friends and friends of friends, and I tried to talk to women of different ages and backgrounds and religions, different racial and socioeconomic backgrounds — just trying to get a spectrum of voices.

Q: Any stories that especially stood out?

A: I talked to my grandmother. … She was really open with me, which I loved and appreciated. A lot of that material actually ended up in the show. That was interesting just because of the time she grew up in — it wasn’t even talked about at all. Female pleasure is really grossly under-talked about these days, … but back then, it was even worse.

Q: I was ashamed that I even had this question, because I think it partly shows how pervasive shame around female sexuality is, but I wanted to ask if your family had seen the show, what their reaction was and how you felt about them seeing it?

A: My family is very unusual, I think, in that I was raised in kind of a shameless way. I think that’s why I’m drawn to this material. I mean, my mom bought me a vibrator when I was 12. … I’ve written about that for Bust magazine. That’s a foundational story of my childhood; that set me up as the kind of feminist that I am and the kind of subject matter that I’m interested in.

Ava Bogle explores sexual shame in “The Pleasure Project.”Photo: Jeff Lorch

Q: I’m in awe.

A: We bought it from the Good Vibrations catalog, actually. That kind of dates me.

Q: What do you think made your family want to raise you in this way?

A: … (My mom) remembered what it was like to be that age, and I think that’s the missing piece for a lot of women, that, because women still carry this shame, we’re in denial about what it is to be a young person and discovering your body. We still feel ashamed about that, so we pass it on to our kids.

Q: Why does shaming work so well?

A: I think because it’s pervasive — because it’s in every aspect of our culture. We grow up around it, even in the language that we use in talking about sexuality, particularly when it comes to women and girls. With virginity, for example, you “lose” your virginity. You’re losing something; something’s being taken from you. I think boys have shame, too, but there’s this “boys will be boys.” There’s this penis pride in the culture that we just don’t have with vaginas. … Sex education is a big part of it. Even so-called comprehensive sex education rarely mentions female pleasure. It’s like, the male comes, and sex is over.

Q: You use extraterrestrial characters in “The Pleasure Project.” Where did that come from?

A: I had these alien characters that I’d developed years before in these YouTube videos that I’d made, with aliens in a support group for aliens living among us, called Aliens Anonymous. I was interested in filtering this material through their eyes and looking at female sexuality from an outsider’s perspective — from a perspective outside of our Puritan-founded, shame-based culture. I was thinking about these creatures from another planet coming down here and being put into this human female form and going, “Oh my god, these bodies are amazing. They can do so much. There’s this clitoris, which has 5,000 nerve endings. And yet women are ashamed of these bodies that are are incredible from our perspective.” It’s helpful for me to filter the material through the aliens’ eyes, because they’re nonjudgmental and curious about humans — and they’re a lot more open-minded than I am.

Ava Bogle looks at female sexuality through the eyes of aliens in “The Pleasure Project,” which performs at Z Below.Photo: Jeff Lorch

Q: Even more open-minded than you?

A: I get bleak about stuff and feel depressed by it. But the aliens are just interested.

Q: You are performing this show in San Francisco on Valentine’s Day. What do you notice about the way Valentine’s Day is typically framed and celebrated in art?

A: Valentine’s Day is one of these strange Hallmark holidays that just sets up this huge expectation and is often disappointing. Valentine’s Day, traditionally, as a a woman, is all about giving your power away and relying on someone else to bring you happiness and pleasure and chocolate and buy you dinner. My show really encourages women to take their pleasure into their own hands — literally — and realize how powerful they are when they do.

“The Pleasure Project”: One-woman show. Written and performed by Ava Bogle. Directed by Rachel Avery. 8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 14. $15. Z Below, 470 Florida St., S.F. www.zspace.org

Lily JaniakLily Janiak is The San Francisco Chronicle’s theater critic. Email: ljaniak@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @LilyJaniak

How To Become A Masculine King

The Truth About Becoming An Alpha Male


It is true that the common man respects Napoleon more than Freud, General Patton more than Aristotle, King Henry V more than Nietzsche. He does not feel a need for a philosophy or a particular worldview that brings a new perspective to his suffering. He has a natural fear of intellectual thought, a fear as instinctive as his impulse towards pleasure. Those inclined towards the abstract will scoff at the ordinary man, and they will assume superiority simply because they earn a living using a pen, rather than a shovel. But by refusing to involve himself with the realm of metaphysics, the ordinary man remains in touch with his most primal nature. The less you know, the more you wonder. And when confronted with the presence of Caesar, Hannibal or Alexander the Great, the common man cannot help but gaze in awe.

This will be an uncomfortable truth for many people. But it must be understood that the common man is not, upon first sight, interested in the history, terrors and deeds of these men. Rather, he is infatuated with the symbol, the metaphor that these men represent. It is a symbol that resonates with his most primitive and prehistorical nature. For there exists an archetypal structure, an eternal, constant construct in the masculine collective unconscious that is embodied by such leaders as Caesar, Hannibal, Charlemagne and Alexander the Great.

Robert Moore studied the historical expressions of kingship across ancient and medieval cultures and he discovered striking similarities and agreements between many cultures. This consistent portrayal of the king across history and culture reveals the contents within the unconscious of the masculine; the images of kingship allow us to see the characteristics of men that have been most respected since the beginning.

Caspar David Friedrich 013

The mythologies that have resonated most with our emotions and, therefore, the subconscious have survived throughout human history. Each man feels an internal drive towards this symbol of kingship, and it is natural that he examines his life according to whether he is proving the king within him. For the king is the highest expression of the masculine energy — it is man’s most original state of being, his highest orientation to morality.

Our ancestors accessed the archetype of the King through ancient mythology and folklore; they listened to poems and tales of King Arthur, Robin Hood and Beowulf, and there were older men, real men who had witnessed war, plague and horror, who told the youth about the days and traditions of old. They practiced rituals and rites of passage, they celebrated the coming of the summer months and they mourned the winter, they toiled in the dirt and they gave the gift of language, beauty and symphony to the ineffable

Modern man, however, has no time for myth or ritual — he calls himself a man of science; he could never entertain anything that exists beyond the limits of the observable. He laughs at the mention of Jesus walking on water and he will write an entire dissertation on why Noah would not have survived an apocalyptic flood in a wooden ship. All the while, owing to the narrowness of his mind, he fails to see the wisdom that hides within these old stories. And so, he has abandoned religion and mythology, indeed he has turned away from the experience, the wonder, the imagination of life itself.

Men need a purpose, men need to ascend beyond their humanity, but in order to rise, there must be an ideal and a story that each can strive towards. All the religions and the mythologies hold an idea of the divine masculine — Jesus Christ, Krishna, Buddha, Muhammad — but where is our king? Where are our fathers? Where are those who will teach us how to be gentlemen, how to behave in a working men’s club, how to treat women, how to be ruthless… how to be men? The truth is our God and our fathers, the best among all men, have long since died. They were killed in the great wars of the last century — wars that do not seem to really matter anymore. All that was fought for and all that our fathers held dear has slowly faded away. Our country has not been the same since.

We live in a time of great deconstruction, a time when all that was ever valued is now questioned and hated, a time of institutional collapse, spiritual confusion and personal division. But, eventually, a day will come when there will be nothing left to destroy and all the sacrifice and profits of our ancestors will have vanished. On this day, a brave new age will arrive, an age of creation and potential — we are on the cusp, we are the middle children of the world. And this new world will need men, proper men, men who are unashamed of their spontaneity, men of courage and mythology, men who travel by the chariot and live up high in the mountains —the world will need kings.


The Anglo-Saxons believed the king to be a descendant from Odin, a Germanic god most associated with wisdom, healing, death, royalty and battle. The Germanic king was the warrior chief of his realm, the messenger of the gods. His divine ancestry gave him access to the heavens, and through communication with the gods, the king ensured the well-being of his tribe or army. Similarly, the Rajas of India were the embodiment of Dharma, meaning that which upholds, supports, or maintains the order of the universe. The balance within the world was the Raja’s responsibility, and he guaranteed this harmony by drawing the souls of all living things towards the higher spiritual dimensions. Because of his divine powers, he removed himself from the earthly world and communicated to his people only energetically.

According to Christian tradition, Jesus Christ was the only incarnation of king energy. He was the final servant, the final sacrifice of God. However, during the medieval ages, European kings began to imagine themselves alongside the ancient ideal of kingship, believing that they were the chosen orator of God’s word. It was God who gifted the throne to the king and so, it was the king’s responsibility to serve the higher power of God, not the desires of his people. By serving this divine power, the king presents himself as an incarnation of the highest ideal and, as a symbol of the divine, he elevates his people towards the majesty of God.

Christ in the Wilderness — Ivan Kramskoy — Google Cultural Institute

The mortal king himself, as Moore writes, was relatively unimportant. It was the king energy, the sacredness of kingship that scholars valued most. The expressions ‘Your Majesty’ and ‘God Save The King’, as is the tradition here in Britain, are a recognition of the standing monarch, but most importantly of the unchanging symbol that the monarch represents. Indeed, kings in the ancient world were killed if they failed to uphold the sacred archetype of kingship.

Therefore, the monarch sits beyond the earthly quarrels of politics and should restrain from any sentimental indulgences or declarations of opinion. For monarchy is a divine duty sent from God to provide the common man with an ideal to strive towards; the symbol should remain out of reach from the ordinary people in order to preserve its magnificence. The mortal monarch, then, must answer only to God, not the ordinary people.

The function of the king is to embody the peace, prosperity and order of his realm. It is not his duty to take to his people and demand principle and law, but rather to live law and order in his own life; he should only enforce order when necessary. Therefore, the focus of the king is the maintenance of harmony in the spiritual world, or rather the depths of his own unconscious.

This is a painting of King George VI. He lifted the entire British nation during the Blitz in 1940 by walking around the bombed streets of London and greeting his people. The presence of the king was enough; he did not have to dig the rubble or prove that he was part of the war effort. This is the power of the king energy when it is embodied in fullness.

If the king energy is not present within the mortal king, if the standing king is too weak or absent, then the world will give over to chaos and sickness. The mortal king is the middle way between heaven and earth. And as he brings the two, an explicit duality, together, he creates the third, an implicit unity — the harmony and balance of his kingdom. The kingdom is a reflection of the king’s inner world, and if his mind is troubled, then his people will be troubled also. It is the king’s responsibility to live according to the divine will of God, the ‘right order’ of nature — known as the Ma’at, meaning truth and balance, in ancient Egypt, or the Dharma, understood as the cosmic law and order, in Hinduism and Buddhism, or the Tao, which symbolises the ‘the way’ or ‘the path’ of the universe in China.

This image of the king can be found in most of the ancient scriptures across the world. To illustrate one example, in the New Testament, the disciples tell the story of when they saw Jesus walking across the sea towards their boat. In this story, water is the symbol of the unconscious, of the emotions that rise when one confronts the unknown. But by remaining still and calm, by having faith in the water, the stream of nature, by not allowing his emotions to overthrow his balance, Jesus was able to float and guide his disciples to safety. Here, the Bible shows Jesus as the king of the world, as the son of God who remains peaceful in a place of chaos so that he can negotiate the storm with reason and care.


Now, if one wishes to access the king energy, it must first be understood that it is a matter of conviction. A beast is led by his impulses, but a king is led by reason. And reason is the balance between the excesses. There are two extremes of men in this world: tyrants and cowards. In this age, cowards outnumber the tyrants, but they are also the most dangerous. A harmless man, as Dr Jordan Peterson writes, is one who has the devil within him under loose control, but once the rope snaps, and it will snap one day, the world turns upside down. A tyrant can be thrown in jail, but a coward is he who commits violence against himself — the greatest of all crimes. The thread that unites the two is fear — both the tyrant and the coward fear who they truly are.

The king, however, is not moved by fear. He is not carried by his emotions, he remains firm against the persuasion of the world. Nor does he waver or tremble in the presence of the feminine. For the masculine king is the consciousness, the presence of all that thrives and blossoms around him. To rise above emotions does not mean to repress them. Rather, it requires that one rotate through and confront all that rises to the surface — a king takes himself lightly, even though he may feel heavy, and he does not allow his heart to be overwhelmed by the quicksand of passion.

The king holds a deep, grounded sexuality; his masculine vitality is married with the earth — he does not bury his energy in apathy, nor does he allow it to soar into the sky and be taken by the wind. He is in firm control of his prehistorical nature and he gives his gift only when there is an opportunity for total and honest expression. True strength is never hysterical, destructive or uncontrollable — it is humble and forgiving. A man may feel desire for women other than his wife, but if he pursues this attraction, if he seeks fulfillment through the feminine, then the gift of his sexual energy will be partitioned and detached, rather than full and conscious. Acting upon the impulses turns man not into an animal, but a slave of desire and attachment.

Titian — Allegorie der Zeit

The ideal of kingship maintains that the king is able to create order from mayhem and harmony from chaos. And this creative power is born from the king’s energetic balance between the masculine and the feminine, of the mind and the body, of consciousness and emotion — the fullness of the entire universe. The character of the king, then, is also a balance between the poles of the extreme. He carries an aggressive tenderness, a grounded enthusiasm and an unspoken intelligence. This balance is the source of creation; it is the force that pulls together the two elements in order to create the whole. And so, the king rises above the duality of the senses — he represents the union, the oneness of all existence.

The force of kingship does not move or even flinch under pressure, it remains still and watchful, like the Sun round which the planets of our Solar System orbits. The king simply allows himself to ‘be’, to exist without conflict, to be one with God, to flow with the Tao or the Dharma — to live alongside that which moves the moon and the stars. He understands himself to be whole and undivided and he has learnt that there is nothing he must do, nor anything — women, money, fame — that he needs in order to feel full. It must be noted, however, that it is the archetype of the king that serves as the Sun, the true centre of the system, not the mortal king. When the ego becomes its own priority and identifies itself with the king energy, the tyrant arises. Instead, men need to think of themselves as a ‘steward’ of the king energy. This creates a psychological distance from the king archetype.

Only a tyrant, a warrior, a real troublemaker tries to submit the world to his will. The king’s world is within, he does not need to reach out into the world, the world comes to him — he is the centre of the kingdom. And if he keeps himself present and stable, as the air and the water does, then the world around him will become orderly and peaceful too. For the king is the creator of the universe, he is the oxygen that breathes life, the magnetic force field that repels the immoral and attracts the moral. The king’s responsibility, then, is to trust a higher power, rather than his mind, which can only create problems. And by becoming a divine channel of goodness between heaven and earth, he in turn provides stewardship and order for his people.


Thank you, Harry J. Stead

Jordan Peterson – If you aren’t willing to be a fool you can’t be a master (Circumambulation)


Pragmatic Entertainment
Published on Dec 26, 2017
Dr Jordan Peterson talks more in depth about the Jungian concept of the Circumambulation of the Self.

C.G. Jung: “There is no linear evolution; there is only a circumambulation of the self…”

Original source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7V8e…

(Contributed by HughJohn Malanaphy, HW, m. with apologies to Gwyllm Llwydd.)

Your Horoscopes — Week Of February 19, 2019 (theonion.com)

Pisces | Feb. 19 to March 20

There will be nothing you can do to avert the disaster of next week, although there will be plenty that a reasonably bright and competent person could do.

Aries | March 21 to April 19

Your last hope of finding true and unconditional love ends this week when your ideal mate is executed by the State of Texas for unspeakable crimes against humanity.

Taurus | April 20 to May 20

Try listening to your body this week. It’s got a bunch of really great stories about hanging out with Jimmy Page.

Gemini | May 21 to June 20

Sure, they might blame you now, but how were you supposed to know the waters were unsafe at Everyone Always Gets Killed Beach.

Cancer | June 21 to July 22

After days of searching, you’ll finally find comfort this week. Just above “comforter” and right below “confit.”

Leo | July 23 to Aug. 22

Just as you’ve always suspected, it is in fact a felony to use your particular method of “getting girls.”

Virgo | Aug. 23 to Sept. 22

Next week will be a time of magical romance and unending joy for you thanks to your boundless talent for self-delusion.

Libra | Sept. 23 to Oct. 22

You’re going to need a lot of Epsom salts and lip balm this week. No, honestly, you can trust us. This isn’t like the time with the horse laxatives.

Scorpio | Oct. 23 to Nov. 21

Someday, you might learn that it is indeed possible to take a fun thing too far, but not before next week’s experimentation with autoerotic asphyxiation.

Sagittarius | Nov. 22 to Dec. 21

Your proclivities towards paranoia and depression combine when you start to think a race of alien lizard-people are controlling life’s lowest echelons from behind the scenes.

Capricorn | Dec. 22 to Jan. 19

In a wacky horoscopic mixup, you’ll encounter a mysterious stranger who takes you on a journey over water just as you’re trying to start new projects at work.

Aquarius | Jan. 20 to Feb. 18

Keep extra apples and bandages around the house next week as your lover seems to be going through a William Tell phase.

VICE explores the Bentinho Massaro phenomenon


VICE
Published on Feb 13, 2019

Bentinho Massaro has hundreds of thousands of followers on social media, supporters the spiritual guru gained through his teachings about “self-realization,” “enlightenment,” and the idea of “upgrading civilization.” While some of his ideas are pretty standard, like the importance of silent meditation, others are controversial: he’s said that 9/11 was an inside job, that he can change the weather, and that humans might one day join forces with aliens.

To his devout followers, he’s an inspiration—but his critics have accused him of “cult-like” practices and peddling conspiracy theories during his retreats, which run up to $2,000 a pop. For an inside look at Massaro’s teachings, we went to one of his retreats in the Netherlands, speaking with his colleagues, his followers, and Massaro himself to try to understand exactly what the appeal is—and what he makes of the accusations against him.

Click here to subscribe to VICE: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE

A critique of Jordan Peterson

A scholar of ancient history explains how right-wing ‘intellectuals’ hijack academic respectability to bolster MAGA talking points

A scholar of ancient history explains how right-wing ‘intellectuals’ hijack academic respectability to bolster MAGA talking points

Last week during a rally in the border city of El Paso, Texas, before thousands of his most adoring fans, Donald Trump showed America and the world–again–who he really is.…

Last week during a rally in the border city of El Paso, Texas, before thousands of his most adoring fans, Donald Trump showed America and the world–again–who he really is. Trump worked his audience up into a fever pitch as he lambasted and threatened the news media and free press. For Trump and his movement, they are the “enemy of the people.” This is a fundamental principle of authoritarianism. One of Trump’s MAGA hat-wearing supporters responded to the president’s incitement by physically attacking a BBC cameraman named Ron Skeans.

During the same speech, Donald Trump lied about his imaginary wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and about “illegal immigrants” who come to America in order to commit crimes against white people. He spun vainglorious stories out of whole cloth about his “accomplishments” and “greatness.”

Donald Trump’s values and beliefs may appear incoherent, but they are not a buffet or à la carte meal from which a person can pick and choose from. Rather, they are a nasty, incestuous knot that cannot be easily untangled. Ultimately, to wear Donald Trump’s MAGA hats or his other regalia is to share and endorse his racism, sexism, nativism, bigotry and anti-social behavior. To utter the words “Make America Great Again” with no sense of irony or foreboding is to announce one’s betrayal of human decency and distrust of democracy.

How do Trump’s MAGA hats and other clothing and slogans help to create a sense of political community for his followers? Is “Make America Great Again” an implicit threat against nonwhites, Muslims and others that he and his followers deem to be a type of enemy Other? Does Trumpism represent larger cultural battles in America about the role of academics, teachers, intellectuals and other experts in public life? Should Trump’s supporters be held morally accountable for their political decision-making and the harm that they are causing to American society?

In an effort to answer these questions I spoke with Matthew A. Sears, an associate professor of classics and ancient history at the University of New Brunswick. Sears’ essays have also been featured by the Washington Post and the History News Network. His most recent column for the Washington Post is “Why the decision to wear MAGA hats matters.”

This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

Professors and other educators who speak out about the threat to democracy embodied by Donald Trump and his movement have been victims of a coordinated campaign of threats and violence — including being fired from their jobs. Trumpism and the American right have birthed a type of new McCarthyism and anti-intellectualism in America. As a professor who studies literature and history, and also writes for a popular audience, how has that impacted you?

I don’t know if it is “anti-intellectual” per se, in the spirit of what we saw in fascist Italy or with the Khmer Rouge, the latter being an obvious and odious example. But there is certainly a kind of battle royale taking place between different kinds of intellectuals in America and the West.

There are people like [white nationalist leader] Richard Spencer who try to give themselves an air of academic respectability. These types try to claim that their positions are actually well-thought out, well-researched and well-sourced. They are trying to piggy-back on academic prestige.

There is the so-called “intellectual dark web.” These are all academics or academic-adjacent people. Jordan Peterson and Brett Weinstein, even Steven Pinker increasingly, and people like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris can be included in that group.

This is a battle for the soul of public discourse and who gets to claim expertise on certain areas. Given my expertise and public voice, I am part of a public debate and fight over keeping or getting rid of “traditional” ideas of Western civilization and arguments and beliefs such as “The West is Best.”

As a classics professor who talks about, writes about and teaches about the Greeks and the Romans, for many of the “alt-right” or “alt-lite” I am often seen as a traitor. Why? Because I research and show how those societies were complex, problematic and different from our own. Studying ancient Greece and Rome can show us ways of how not to act and how not to organize a society. These “alt-right” and “alt-lite” types say I am “ruining” Western civilization and I’m “ruining” the classics because I don’t engage in hero worship where I say things like, “Look at these great founders of democracy, and look at these heroes like Achilles and Julius Caesar and these great men.”

Why is Jordan Peterson so compelling for a certain type of man with a very particular political and social worldview?

I think Peterson is actually anti-intellectual in many ways because he actively advocates the shutting down of entire disciplines that he does not like. In that sense Peterson is literally anti-intellectual. Peterson is appealing to a certain type of person because he is a professor. And because he is a professor he is even more appealing because he is seen to be standing against — supposedly out of sheer bravery and determination and grit — the cultural and social movements that are supposedly associated with academia.

He’s arguing for very traditional conservative ideas. For example, traditional ideas about the family and gender relations and power dynamics. Peterson loves to talk about  “dominance hierarchies” and how he believes there are always going to be these hierarchies, even in nature, and therefore they are inevitable in human society.

In that way Jordan Peterson is giving intellectual and academic backing or respectability to the kinds of positions which a certain type of person already believes. In addition, Peterson is a man who is a full professor at the University of Toronto. He speaks with such certainty, conviction and vitriol.

I have compared Jordan Peterson to Don Quixote — the fact that you have this knight who is centuries too late for chivalry, but still kind of rides around as if he’s one of the Knights of the Round Table while everybody just kind of rolls their eyes at him. I see Peterson as like almost being in the Old West, challenging someone to pistols at dawn — Twitter pistols.

Maybe some people are challenged by what Peterson says, but I think at the end of the day those who read him are just happy to finally have a “respectable” academic reinforcing traditional values.” For example, Jordan Peterson has made claims about gender roles and the problematic nature of women wearing makeup in the workplace and this kind of thing. In this moment with the MeToo movement and a backlash to women’s rights there is an eager audience for that.

Both Jordan Peterson and Steve King, the Republican congressman from Iowa, are, in their own way, telling stories about “Western civilization.” They are both trying to create a usable past to advance and justify their political beliefs in the present. Do you see them as connected?

Peterson will make claims about dominance hierarchies and allude to classical myths and stories where he concludes that some people are heroes and some people are not. By implication this is taken by him and his followers to mean that trying to make a workplace more equitable and trying to avoid the cutthroat, backstabbing nature of the corporate world is just fighting against universal archetypes and human nature.

Other than that Peterson does not really appear to talk about the classics as more than just a source for him to find myths. Whereas Steve King is just, “Western Civilization is the best. I learned about the Greeks and Romans and the Enlightenment and modern Europe in school, and I learned how they’re the best. Why is it that they say that they’re the best anymore?” Steve King also says things such as, “Why is it bad to be proud of one’s heritage — including one’s white heritage? Look what white people have done for the world.”

The problem with approaches like that is they completely whitewash the fact that the ancient world had slaves, and a lot of Enlightenment-era values were used to undergird and justify scientific racism and antebellum slavery in the United States, for example.

Monet as modernist: Impressionist master changes style in final years

“Weeping Willow” (1918–19) in “Monet: The Late Years,” loaned from Kimbell Art Museum in Texas, displays Monet’s ability to conjure emotion. (Photo courtesy Robert LaPrelle)

By  on February 16, 2019 (SFExaminer.com)

Having helped change how artists depicted the world in the late 1800s, premier French impressionist Claude Monet began pushing boundaries again, in the new century. His increasingly expressive and abstract canvases, painted in old age, are on view in “Monet: The Late Years,” at the de Young Museum through May 27.

Showcasing late-career Monet as a pioneering modernist, the exhibition of 48 paintings is presented by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Fort Worth-based Kimbell Art Museum. Kimbell deputy director George T. M. Shackelford, who curated 2017’s “Monet: The Early Years” at the Legion of Honor in 2017, organized this exhibit.

It follows Monet’s career from 1913, when the artist, dealing with personal loss and failing eyesight, launched his new style of painting, to 1926, the year he died, at age 86.

The featured works, depicting Monet’s consistently evolving garden at Giverny, come from Fine Arts Museums and Kimbell holdings and from international collections. A “staggering array of loans” is how new Fine Arts Museums director Thomas P. Campbell, at last week’s press preview, described the latter selections.

First up is an introductory gallery with late-1890s and early-1900s paintings. These feature a representational style and detailed imagery — in contrast to the broader and more abstract fare in the galleries that follow.

“Water Lily Pond” (“Japanese Footbridge”) (1899), one of many featured paintings from Monet’s “Water Lilies” series, exemplifies Monet’s earlier work.

The later Monet works aren’t without impressionist aspects — a fascination with the reflection of light on surfaces, for example. But primarily, they take viewers into the 1910s and 1920s, when Monet was operating on modern ground, with a new fervor.

Some pieces, such as the mural-like “Water Lilies” (1915-1926), from the “Agapanthus” triptych at the Saint Louis Art Museum, are grand in scale. The pink and white flowers and their reflections in the pond water beautifully illustrate Monet’s gift for color juxtaposition.

Smaller-scale garden-series paintings also demonstrate the artist’s modern-era style and dynamism.

A show highlight is “Weeping Willow” (1918-1919), a serial painting that rivals van Gogh’s mulberry and cypress trees for arboreal evocativeness. The series honored French soldiers who died in World War I, and many believe it additionally reflected the artist’s feelings surrounding the death of his wife and oldest son. With its twisted branches and descending greenery, the foregrounded tree conveys anguish and sorrow.

Monet’s radical and modernist sensibilities are particularly evident in “The House Seen From the Rose Garden” (1922-24), part of a series in which Monet painted the same scene repeatedly to capture changes in light. It features the artist’s technique of layering paint intensely; using this process, it sometimes took him years to complete a work.

Monet’s modernist leanings are evident in “The Artist’s House Seen from the Rose Garden” (1922-24), on loan from Musée Marmotan Monet in Paris. (Photo courtesy Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco)

Color and form seem to overshadow objects. The barely representational title abode almost merges with the masses of swirling, gestural red and green brushwork. We can see how, decades later, such works would inspire the abstract expressionists.


IF YOU GO 

Monet: The Late Years
Where: de Young Museum, Golden Gate Park, 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive, S.F.
When: 9:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. Tuesdays-Sundays; closes May 27
Admission: $20 to $35; free for ages 5 and younger
Contact: (415) 750-3600, www.famsf.org

Consciousness, sexuality, androgyny, futurism, space, the arts, science, astrology, democracy, humor, books, movies and more