Tomorrow my friend and I are embarking on a 13-day road trip to Montana, Yellowstone, Utah, and the Grand Canyon, visiting family in the Bay Area, and then going to see the redwoods and the Oregon Coast on Highway 101.
I’ve only gone “camping” twice before, once with my friends at the Sasquatch Music Festival in 2010 (where I saw LCD Soundsystem for the first and last time) and one night a long time ago with my mom back when I was briefly a Cub Scout.
So we’ll see what happens.
FUCK COMMITTEES
(I believe in lunatics)It’s about the struggle between individuals with jagged passion in their work and today’s faceless corporate committees, which claim to understand the needs of the mass audience, and are removing the idiosyncrasies, polishing the jags, creating a thought-free, passion-free, cultural mush that will not be hated nor loved by anyone. By now, virtually all media, architecture, product and graphic design have been freed from ideas, individual passion, and have been relegated to a role of corporate servitude, carrying out corporate strategies and increasing stock prices. Creative people are now working for the bottom line.
Magazine editors have lost their editorial independence, and work for committees of publishers (who work for committees of advertisers). TV scripts are vetted by producers, advertisers, lawyers, research specialists, layers and layers of paid executives who determine whether the scripts are dumb enough to amuse what they call the ‘lowest common denominator’. Film studios out films in front of focus groups to determine whether an ending will please target audiences. All cars look the same. Architectural decisions are made by accountants. Ads are stupid. Theater is dead.
Corporations have become the sole arbiters of cultural ideas and taste in America. Our culture is corporate culture.
Culture used to be the opposite of commerce, not a fast track to ‘content’- derived riches. Not so long ago captains of industry (no angels in the way they acquired wealth) thought that part of their responsibility was to use their millions to support culture. Carnegie built libraries, Rockefeller built art museums, Ford created his global foundation. What do we now get from our billionaires? Gates? Or Eisner? Or Redstone? Sales pitches. Junk mail. Meanwhile, creative people have their work reduced to ‘content’ or ‘intellectual property’. Magazines and films become ‘delivery systems’ for product messages.
But to be fair, the above is only 99 percent true.
I offer a modest solution: Find the cracks in the wall. There are a very few lunatic entrepreneurs who will understand that culture and design are not about fatter wallets, but about creating a future. They will understand that wealth is means, not an end. Under other circumstances they may have turned out to be like you, creative lunatics. Believe me, they’re there and when you find them, treat them well and use their money to change the world.
Tibor Kalman
New York, June 1998
Road trip fast food. And $1 drip coffees from McDonald’s. We should be fine.
12 Years of DFA: Too Old To Be New, Too New To Be Classic
Pete Holmes talking to Vikram Gandhi, the filmmaker ‘behind’ Kumare. (If you haven’t seen it yet, the film is on Netflix and I recommend it.)
Ryan O’Neal on making Barry Lyndon with Stanley Kubrick