Harry Potter was a Good Christian

Turns out Harry Potter isn’t the Antichrist personified after all! At least, according to Yale University professor Danielle Tumminio, who argues that Potter actually exhibits values that any Christian should seek to emulate. From CNN:

“I see him best as a seeker in a world where Christianity is not the vocabulary. I see him best as a seeker trying to live a life of faith in the same way a Christian seeker tries to live a life grace,” Tumminio told CNN. Tumminio said she wrote God and Harry Potter at Yale: Teaching Faith and Fantasy Fiction in an Ivy League Classroom, to explore the contention by conservative Christians that Harry Potter is akin to heresy. “I felt like the conversation about the Harry Potter series among Christians was really narrow,” Tumminio said.

This Makes Me Want To Be an EMT

Chris Jones, on the strange happiness of the emergency medic:

[P]aramedics are a surprisingly sunny bunch. They understand that it’s all so much randomness anyway, a cosmic confluence of vectors. One night, four kids got into a car and raced down the slushy streets until the driver lost control. The car spun like a roulette wheel before it was finally stopped by a streetlight. One kid, unlucky enough to have chosen the seat that ended up with the streetlight in it, suffered massive head injuries. The other three walked away. They knew the out-of-body feeling that follows the cheating of death, the feeling that every day between that day and their last will be a gift that so easily could have gone unopened. Paramedics know that feeling better than anyone, because they walk out of nightmares unscathed again and again. They know what a genuinely bad day really looks like, and they know that day will come for them, too, but today is not that day, and that knowledge alone was reason enough for Suzanne to smile.

New York Times’ Murrow-Stewart Comparison Draws Criticism…Against Walter J. Thompson

The New York Times recently ran a piece that compared Jon Stewart to Edward R. Murrow due to his advocacy of the Zadroga bill, which provided billions in much-needed funding for 9/11 first-responders. I’ve always thought Stewart has had more of an effect on our discourse than he himself will willingly admit, so I read the Times article was interest. Many others did too, but most commentators noted that the piece lacked the journalistic bite that usually accompanies a Times article of this sort. Why? Because Syracuse Professor Walter J. Thompson was quoted prominently.

What’s wrong with that? According to NYTPicker back in October, Thompson has been interviewed by 78 different Times reporters for 150 separate stories:

To these 78 NYT reporters, Thompson has offered a convenient shortcut past that necessary evil of journalism: the expert quote. Thompson’s superior ability to deliver short, pithy comments on a wide spectrum of topics, on deadline — along with his handy “professor” title — has made him indispensable to the hordes of NYT reporters who’ve desperately dialed him for that all-important dollop of hot air.

Referring to the new Times piece, The Observer puts it best: “The man’s brain waste literally becomes New York Times headlines! Oh to be a sophomore at Syracuse looking for a thesis advisor!”

“The Kids Are All Right” Is All Right

The other day, film critic Scott Mendelson released his list of the most overrated films of 2010, which, when tweeted by me, provoked a bit of a firestorm on Twitter. On Scott’s list was The Kids Are All Right, a film which I’ve previously listed as one of my favorite films of the year (although to be honest, it probably won’t make the final cut). Scott also linked to Kim Voynar’s thoughtful piece on the film. It’s this latter piece that I’d like to very briefly respond to today. The following contains spoilers for The Kids Are All Right.

Voynar and others have some pretty serious problems with Lisa Cholodenko’s film. One of the points Voynar makes (that I agree with) is how poorly the actual kids are handled in this film. They are given very little screentime, and their character arcs are handled with the broadest of brush strokes. Voynar continues, though:

Herein lies another problem with the script: It’s younger brother Laser who convinces big sis Joni, who’s just turned 18, to get in contact with their sperm donor/biological father, but the script doesn’t really explore any issues around why a teenage boy raised by two women might be curious about his father or desire a male adult in his life. But once they meet, it’s Joni who’s more drawn to Paul, while Laser is unimpressed; it’s Joni who first suggests getting together with Paul again.

It almost felt to me as though this was a deliberate choice on Cholodenko’s part, to deny that this might be something a boy raised by two women might face as he hits his teen years. If we can accept that in general, boys raised by single moms, or in matriarchal family structures with a grandmother and mother but no father figure might, at some point, benefit from having a male mentor of some sort in their lives (uncle, family friend, Big Brother volunteer, pastor, coach), why wouldn’t the same hold true for a boy raised by two moms?

Voynar doesn’t acknowledge that a) maybe Laser just doesn’t find Ruffalo’s character as interesting as he thought he would, an interaction/dynamic that undoubtedly occurs frequently in real life and b) Laser does indeed take Ruffalo’s advice to heart not to hang out with Laser’s emotionally abusive friend. Sure, the latter is not the most subtle plot development, but it certainly addresses Voynar’s concern about this matter.

Voynar also takes issue with Jules’ implied bi-sexuality:

The relationship that develops between Paul and Jules I found particularly problematic. It’s never said or implied that Jules was previously bisexual, but the script treats her sexual identity as something she can just cast aside. And while I got that she was connecting with Paul emotionally, that he was accepting of her in ways that Jules feels Nic is not, that he “gets” her in a way which perhaps she didn’t even know was lacking in her life, I didn’t buy that this would translate into lesbian Jules suddenly hopping in bed with a guy. Paul and Jules developing a friendship, him becoming her confidant, them maybe talking to each other all the time and shutting Nic out, and that feeling threatening to Nic? That, I would buy…To me, by not explicitly establishing Jules as bi, Cholodenko loses a lot of credibility here.

Jules’ act of adultery was indeed surprising, and the lack of any explicit explanation with regards to bisexuality is a noticeable omission. But did the situation seem inconceivable to me? No. Especially not in this movie, which almost prides itself on treating unconventional sexual situations with nonchalance. In the end, Jules establishes she can’t run away with Paul’s character because she states, emphatically, “I’m a lesbian!” And while she did derive some emotional and sexual satisfaction in being with Paul, this was short-lived and more emblematic of the problems with Jules’ marriage (and the inappropriate seeking behavior it inspired) than with any deep-rooted desire to cast off her sexual identity. I understand the desire for a movie such as this to have a more coherent stance on sexual/gender issues, but that might not have been Cholodenko’s over-arching goal.

Voynar concludes by interpreting the film’s apparently-pat ending:

And then in the end, rather than actually dealing with the underlying issues between Nic and Jules, Cholodenko uses Paul as the scapegoat. The kids more or less forgive Jules for making a choice that threatened their family, while Paul is flatly unforgiven and shunned from the fold. He didn’t ask for any of this to be brought into his life, but it was, and now it’s changed irrevocably who he is and what he wants out of life … but he can’t have it with these children.

I don’t remember who pointed it out first, but it’s interesting that The Kids Are All Right reverses the typical gender roles in films. Usually, it’s the female who serves merely as a plot device to get the male protagonist to realize something about himself and about his future direction. Said females are often discarded or given short shrift (plot/character-wise). But in Kids Are All Right, it’s Ruffalo’s character who gets completely disregarded, both from the perspective of the film and the perspective of its protagonists. In other words, The Kids Are All Right doesn’t shortchange Ruffalo’s character any more than a normal film shortchanges its female side characters. If anything, the film’s crime is that it makes Ruffalo’s character too likable and too fully-formed, which is why his last scene in the film feels so abrupt and unexpected. What’s going to happen to this guy? The audience wants to know.

More to the point, I have a much different take on the ending of this film. Annette Bening does have that brilliant, Oscar-worthy moment towards the end, in which she expounds on the difficulties of marriage (saying that it’s “fucking hard”). But I do not get the sense that the removal of Paul from their lives is going to solve all their problems. Bening’s speech is part-conclusion, part-beginning. They’ve struggled through the horrors of an adulterous affair, and now they’re going to have to go through the painful process of rebuilding their family. It’s not a pat resolution. It’s the acknowledgement that there is still much work ahead. But maybe, just maybe, everything will be okay in the end.

Voynar continues:

They are half his kids in the purely biological sense, but they are all Nic’s and Jules’ in the emotional one. The problem is, I didn’t see anything in his previous interactions with the kids that would convince me that, having wanted to meet their biological father for so long, they would excise him from their lives so readily because their mom decided to have an affair with him.

Really? If anything, the kids’ dismissal of Paul is an affirmation of how good a job Nic and Jules have been at raising them. Faced with an intruder that completely f*cked things up, their reaction is to cast it out of their household. Maybe that’s what the title is all about; that these kids,who have weathered growing up in an unconventional family and an adulterous affair with a sperm donor that they themselves sought out, still understand that in the end, family is the most important thing, and the ties that bind aren’t necessarily biological ones.

The Totally Rad Show’s Media Mash-Up Segment is Brilliant

I always loved The Totally Rad Show, but now that they’ve been making shows on basically a daily basis, I dare say that they’re even better than before. The newer, shorter format allows for even more experimentation with different show types and formats. What results is some truly original content that combines humor, geekery, and media knowledge into something that everyone can enjoy.

In particular, I find their Media Mashup segments to be brilliant. Aside from Jeff Cannata’s clues (which occasionally border on completely non-sensical), these are a blast to watch, and follow the cardinal rule of any good game show: they are fun for the viewer to play as well:

“Tagline Takedown” is also pretty damn good:

P.S. You know I love you, Jeff.

Merry Christmas!

The other day while I was walking through Harvard Square with my friend/roommate Matt, we passed by a homeless person who wanted some money to buy “a cup of soup.” Some people were warmly responsive, while others actually mocked him under their breath. Matt and I decided to get him that cup of soup. I recorded an audio blog of the subsequent encounter:

Listen!

It’s in giving that we truly receive. Here’s hoping everyone does a lot of receiving this year.

If you’re reading this, then please know that I’m grateful for your readership and support. I hope you have a lovely Christmas, and a happy new year.