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TEN SECOND BUZZ
- Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25March 31, 202543 Comments
- Open Mic for the week of 3/24/25March 24, 2025182 Comments
- Report: Trump to Sign Department of Education Elimination Executive OrderMarch 19, 20253 Comments
- Open Mic for the week of 3/17/25March 17, 2025238 Comments
- From The New York Times Editorial Board: The Authoritarian Endgame on Higher EducationMarch 15, 202550 Comments
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Jaybird in reply to Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Yeah, looks like the Three Groups of Voters have different takes on him. 1. AUGH I HATE HIM! I HATE…
Dark Matter in reply to David TC on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25It's in NY. State will be fortunate to get life. I'd call it more a political assassination than a c…
Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Judge Crawford easily wins in Wisconsin despite or because of Musk’s 25 million spent on her opponen…
LeeEsq in reply to Dark Matter on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Yes, but everybody knows that Israel is held to the standard of perfection while other countries are…
Saul Degraw in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/2554 at final count but an easy 9 point lead
Dark Matter in reply to David TC on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25The most important stat is civilian:military ratios. My link is to a listing of estimates. The vario…
Jaybird in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Did you hear about New York University cancelling Dr. Joanne Liu's speech? Just happened earlier tod…
Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25It’s being widely reported that Facebook is taking down recent posts by historian Heather Cox Richar…
Philip H in reply to Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Worth noting that the Wisconsin Supreme Court went to the Democrat by 57%.
Philip H in reply to Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25He alone among his colleagues has finally grown some back bone. I can’t wait for the speech to be pu…

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The Greatest Strike in History
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They’re Acting Queer in Cleveland
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Burt Likko in reply to Dark Matter on A Grudging Concession About Something Trump Did
David TC in reply to LeeEsq on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
David TC in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
LeeEsq on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Jaybird in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
InMD in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
InMD in reply to Marchmaine on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Dark Matter in reply to David TC on Trump’s Most Insidious Scheme (So Far)
Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Jaybird in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Is there a term for an unreliable narrator, but on a moral dimension? That is, an author telling a story from a point of view where that point of view is the ‘hero’ of the story, but he’s actually not – and that’s exactly the author’s intent (as opposed to accident, or mistake)?
I happened to be thinking about that today, reading Ursula LeGuin’s Left Hand of Darkeness, with respect to gender fluidity and the outside observers in the story making comments on it – which by today’s standards could be ‘problematic’. But I’m wondering if that was Le Guin’s point, even in 1969. (though the newer intro, written about 10 years later, doesn’t really lend itself to that interpertation)
Anyway, thinking about that again, with this one, which again, has the dude flying off the handle at his wife due to the frustations of his day. Is it at all possible that Briggs is making this guy ‘the bad guy’? Or is it just straight up an embrace of the 1920s version of toxc masculinty?
(weirdly enough, Cosmo Kramer would wear that same coat 70 years later, but fully own the look – and yet fly off the handle very inappropriately for a complete different reason)Report
I read it as being somewhere in between the two. The guy doing this isn’t Good, though is kind of too easily forgiven.
The analogy I would use is the doofus dad in a family sitcom who spends the entire episode trying to cover for having forgotten his anniversary. There is, I think, a consensus around the idea that forgetting the anniversary is bad. That, if we’re thinking about it, it reflects badly on him that he did. That if she’s mad, she’s pretty justified in being mad. Maybe we’re hoping he gets caught or maybe we’re hoping he gets away with it because, even though he did this thing he shouldn’t have, we’re sympathetic to the character in the overall and this particular thing doesn’t persuade us not to be. (And even if we want justice to prevail and him to get caught, we are likely to hope he doesn’t get into too much trouble.)
That’s sort of where I see this, except with the bond to the male character being weaker since the characters in these don’t repeat and we have no relationship. The guy in this comic is portrayed as kind of a loser-for-a-day and I think verbally ripping into his wife actually furthers that portrayal. It goes from a bad day to a worse day, because now he’s dragging other people and yelling at women is something you’re Not Supposed To Do. There is a sort of “This type of behavior is inevitable because men will be men” aspect, but the men doing it are not enviable and are (at least for the day) losing at life.Report