Robert Lanham

The Website of Robert Lanham

  • Portfolio
  • Writing
    • Books
    • Blog
    • Articles
  • Contact Me

Obama’s Silence on “Bruno” Outrages Activists

July 14, 2009 By Robert Lanham

Here’s a taste:

In what many have perceived as a reversal, president Obama upheld the controversial “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy by refusing to state his opinion of the film “Bruno.” The President, who attended a screening in Dupont Circle on Saturday night, was asked his opinion of the film this morning by former presidential correspondent and current member of the White House Press Corps Helen Thomas.
“Don’t ask me that, Helen,” stated an uncharacteristically flustered Obama. “Look, I’m committed to opening up the dialogue about this and, yes, changing my current policy, but now is not the time to address this.” […]
Many activists contend that given the success of “Bruno,” the time is now for the president to speak out in support of non-traditional films such as the ones made by Cohen.

Check it all out on The Huffington Post.

Filed Under: Blog, Writing

Palin Holds Press Conference to Explain Last Press Conference

July 7, 2009 By Robert Lanham


I just posted a piece on Palin’s insane resignation speech over at the Huffington Post. Here a taste

Responding to criticism that many were confused by her resignation speech on Friday, Governor Palin issued another press conference today to explain her reasons in “plain English” and without the use of sports and/or fish metaphors.
“When I last spoke about the issues at hand here on Friday,” stated Palin, “I was addressing hardworking, average Americans who understand what it means to be a leader. Average Americans also understand sports metaphors and the direction a dead fish will move when in a particular body of water that has a current.” […]
Critics say that today’s press conference was even more confusing than the one held on Friday, further muddling the governor’s reasons for departure. Still, Palin did manage to shed some light on her ability to make an eight-minute speech without taking a breath.
“They don’t call me the Barracuda just because I’m tough,” she told reporters referring to her uncanny ability to forgo breathing.
“Sometimes, I prefer making speeches without breathing at all. I’m an avid runner and depriving my brain of oxygen sorta feels like having a runner’s high. Plus, I know the First Dude will catch me should I get too dizzy. He’s a deacon at our family’s Pentecostal church and has lots of practice catching fainters who have had demons exorcised.”
Most scientists say that when the brain is deprived of oxygen it can no longer function properly, and that this could explain the governor’s inability to communicate clearly. But fervent Palin supporter, Dick Kristal, contends that the brain can operate just fine without oxygen.
“Excess carbon emissions cause global warming, too little oxygen can cause decreased brain activity, blah blah blah blah blah,” said a visibly agitated Kristal. “These are clearly just theories, pseudo science promoted by liberals.”

You can read it all on The Huffington Post.

Filed Under: Blog, Writing

Look At This Fucking Hipster Basher

July 1, 2009 By Robert Lanham

I’ve got a new piece over at The Morning News. I’d sworn off writing about hipsters, but got sucked back in by all the rage they still evoke. Here’s a taste.

You get the sense that if Jimi Hendrix were to show up in Echo Park today, he’d be publicly mocked in a style section piece on blipsters for wearing a feathered fedora. Duchamp would have given up as soon as he appeared on dadaist-or-douchebag.com. And Warhol would be demonized as a hipster gentrifier for setting up his factory in a Brooklyn warehouse. Critics continue to complain that we live in an era where all art is derivative and devoid of substance. But if Hendrix, Duchamp, or Warhol were alive today, we’d be doing our damnedest to derail their self-expression, dismissing them as fucking hipsters.

You can read it all here.

Filed Under: Blog, Writing

Gawker Says I’m A Hipster Guru

May 9, 2009 By Robert Lanham

custom_1241896141117_2214208983_1bac3484cb_o.jpg
[image via]
Not sure how I feel about that, but The Assimilated Negro asked me to comment on the hipster casting call that I posted about earlier this week. From Gawker

Let’s assume this thing isn’t a hoax or an art project by a recent Oberlin grad who thinks he’s bohemian because he found bedbugs in his beard.
Do you tap the family trust fund? Do you idolize Dan Deacon? Are you SO not worried about getting swine flu ’cause that shit only happens to poor people?
They’re not looking for hipsters. They’re looking for entitled idiots. And wait, before you say it, I’m well aware. The terms ‘hipster’ and ‘entitled idiot’ have been synonyms for close to a decade now. But come on, isn’t hipster rage about as tired as PBR and trucker caps? Of course there are plenty of ridiculous, pretentious idiots in Williamsburg-and New York as a whole for that matter. But would you rather be living in a stripmall in the exurbs of Richmond where alt culture consists of seeing The String Cheese Incident perform on Friday at that state-run amphitheater next to Applebees? (I’m from VA, so I can make fun). Personally, I’d rather be in a place like Williamsburg where people appreciate film, music, and fashion, even if I do have to put up with people named Unicornicopia and the neighborhood’s other goofy excesses.
I hope the hipsterhood reality series is for real. That way we can pin all our hipster rage on a handful of dipshits and begin recognizing the difference between artists, people who are cool, and entitled morons. We clearly need a few sacrificial lambs and anyone who would answer that casting call is a perfect fit.

Be sure to check out T.A.N.’s hilarious Hipster Sensibility Matrix too.

Filed Under: Blog, Press, Writing

Internet-Age Writing Syllabus and Course Overview

April 21, 2009 By Robert Lanham

mcsweeneys.gif
I have a new piece over at McSweeney’s. HFACTDEWARIUCSMNUWKIASLAMB! Here’s a taste:

Course Description
As print takes its place alongside smoke signals, cuneiform, and hollering, there has emerged a new literary age, one in which writers no longer need to feel encumbered by the paper cuts, reading, and excessive use of words traditionally associated with the writing trade. Writing for Nonreaders in the Postprint Era focuses on the creation of short-form prose that is not intended to be reproduced on pulp fibers.
Instant messaging. Twittering. Facebook updates. These 21st-century literary genres are defining a new “Lost Generation” of minimalists who would much rather watch Lost on their iPhones than toil over long-winded articles and short stories. Students will acquire the tools needed to make their tweets glimmer with a complete lack of forethought, their Facebook updates ring with self-importance, and their blog entries shimmer with literary pithiness. All without the restraints of writing in complete sentences. w00t! w00t! Throughout the course, a further paring down of the Hemingway/Stein school of minimalism will be emphasized, limiting the superfluous use of nouns, verbs, adverbs, adjectives, conjunctions, gerunds, and other literary pitfalls.
Prerequisites
Students must have completed at least two of the following.
ENG: 232WR—Advanced Tweeting: The Elements of Droll
LIT: 223—Early-21st-Century Literature: 140 Characters or Less
ENG: 301—Advanced Blog and Book Skimming
ENG: 231WR—Facebook Wall Alliteration and Assonance
LIT: 202—The Literary Merits of Lolcats
LIT: 209—Internet-Age Surrealistic Narcissism and Self-Absorption
[..]
Week 6:
140 Characters or Less

Students will acquire the tools needed to make their tweets come alive with shallow wit. They’ll learn how to construct Facebook status updates that glitter with irony, absurdity, and dramatic glibness. When tweeting, for instance, that “John is enjoying a buttery English muffin,” why not add a link to an image of a muffin with butter oozing from its nooks and crannies? Or why not exaggerate a tad and say that there’s bacon on that muffin, even if there’s not? It’s called poetic license when writers do it! Students will be encouraged to show honesty and vulnerability in their tweets: “Lydia is lounging about in her underwear at 401 Park Street apartment #2, feeling guilty about telling her boss that her uncle died but enjoying the day off.” There’s no such thing as oversharing when you’re a writer.

Read it all here.

Filed Under: Blog, Writing

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • Next Page »

Other Stuff

  • Blog
    • Me Gusta
    • Music
    • Press
    • Rants
    • Writing
  • Portfolio

Visit my Brooklyn-based culture guide, FREE Williamsburg.

Garrison Keillor discusses my work on The Writer’s Almanac.

Social

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Portfolio
  • Writing
  • Contact Me

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Portfolio Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in