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The Mensch and the Hollow Men
Overtime

The Mensch and the Hollow Men

Plus: the real story about how Kevin McCarthy lost power.

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Jim Swift
Oct 04, 2023
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Recently in The Bulwark:

  • CHARLIE SYKES: The Fall of Kevin McCarthy

  • JVL: Imagine If Democrats Had Done It 🔐

  • JUST BETWEEN US: Kudos to John Kelly 🔐

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PHIL CHRISTMAN: The Mensch, the Bastard, Lou Reed.

Lou Reed, Dranouter Festival, Dranouter, Belgium, 05/08/2000. (Photo by Gie Knaeps/Getty Images)

IS LOU REED’S METAL MACHINE MUSIC (1975) a real album or a put-on? 

Reed’s notorious fifth solo album—roughly an hour of guitar feedback, with no vocals, no songs, no clear edges or boundaries beyond the seemingly arbitrary division into four “tracks” of roughly equal length, arguably no melody or rhythm (though to my ear it does at least remain somewhere in the neighborhood of E-major)—makes that question inescapable, along with several others. Does intention matter in art, and if it doesn’t matter there, where does it matter? Is there such a thing as “formlessness,” or must our minds always find forms, impose shapes, for perception to occur at all? If, occasionally, an artist decides to trust wholly to those formalizing processes of the mind to make all the decisions that we would normally expect artists themselves to make, is that a legitimate move in the game of art, or is it, as Pauline Kael once said of Last Year at Marienbad, “like making a mess and asking others to clean it up”? If I enjoy the record, does any of this matter? Why, when I do enjoy it, is my enjoyment lessened by the feeling that Lou Reed’s ghost is snickering at me?

Many of the people who know about Metal Machine Music—it’s not the world’s biggest club—would already consider those sorts of questions too naïve to ask. I’m not sure that Reed would, though. The naïve questions are the ones that matter most: Why are we here? Is there a God? Does the trick-mirror resemblance between my speech and the output of a large language model mean that I am just a robot? Is everything just dirt? And indeed, those are just the sorts of questions that Lou Reed himself asked, insistently, both through the voices of the narrators of his songs—the various Lisas and Stephanies and Candys who want to know why they hate their bodies, or how to walk away from themselves—and through the wised-up, disaffected, sometimes tender Sprechstimme that he seemed to want us to regard as, or to confuse with, Lou Reed himself. Sophisticated as he was, cynical and decadent and cruel as he could be, Reed never stopped asking the questions that nag, often with a disarming middle-of-the-night artlessness that could make you forget that he was supposed to be rock music’s great transgressor.

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🚨OVERTIME🚨

Happy Wednesday! I suspect Patrick McHenry will be temporary Speaker longer than one might expect. While the House is away until Tuesday, that isn’t stopping Republicans from evicting Democrats from their hideaways.

The Menendez Scandal… Now has a mysterious car-related death / potential cover up involving his now-wife from 2018 that’s part of it.

They Studied Dishonesty… Was Their Work a Lie?

Republicans in disarray! Molly Jong-Fast on the end of #MyKevin’s craven Speakership.

How Ohio fell behind… WaPo takes a look at three neighboring counties: one in Ohio, one in Pennsylvania, and one in New York and how their governments’ decisions impact life expectancy.

It really is about the lectern… John Brummett at the Arkansas Democrat Gazette: “I predict its photograph will wind up on front page of the Sunday New York Times.”

The Mercy Workers… “For three decades, a little-known group of “mitigation specialists” has helped save death-penalty defendants by documenting their childhood traumas. A rare look inside one case.”

Who Killed the Fudge King? How Tom Donaghy (possibly) solved a cold case on his summer vacation.

Assembly candidate spread fecal matter on daycare center doors… He was, uh, really angry about Barack Obama winning.

David Chang… On the best ramen noodles.

The many lies… Of Olive Oil.

Meet Mr. Dressup… Canada’s Mister Rogers.

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