Being a self described "egalitarian" myself, I've always been amused at the cult of personality that has developed around the "bearded one". The fact that Karl Marx has an "affectionate" nickname reinforces that amusement. Honestly, eminem is not my taste in music, but his manifest motivations are obvious and the latent ones are pure speculation.
On a similar note: In R&R circles, the MC5 are very popular, years after their heyday... In a sense, they have become a sub-cultural force that has surpassed their original function as the "musical wing" of John Sinclair's White Panther Party. Often, the kids don't know that when I point it out, and it creates a cross-generational opening for discussion of current issues... such as the draft and the MilIndTechEdu complex.
"If you see the Budda in the road, kill him."
Leigh Meyers leighcmeyers at yahoo.com
----- Original Message ----- From: Wojtek Sokolowski To: lbo-talk at lbo-talk.org Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2004 7:19 AM Subject: RE: [lbo-talk] Eminem and fascism??
Kelley divulged:
> 'uh, I think you're over reacting. I'm the person who brought it up and I
> love MM for this so much that I personally service him with a lifetime
> supply of hummers. sheesh. not that he'd actually _want_ them but you get
> my point, yah?
Why do people who proudly espouse an ideology whose hallmarks are rationalism, historical materialism, and egalitarianism engage in celebrity cults?
This is a bone fide question. Many people I've met love talking about celebrity figures, from movie stars to sports champions to famous literary and intellectual figures. In fact, discussing celebrities occupies most of their conversations. Just a few minutes ago a co-worker of mine came to my office all excited that Red Sox just won the world series.
I am genuinely nonplussed. Frankly, I find such conversations and excitement over artificially staged events and personae extremely boring. Not only their outcome but even their taking or not taking place at all have zero effect on the lives of most people, except perhaps those who either work for those events or bet money on them. Whether red Sox won or lost, what Hitchens said or did not say, or what Eminem sings about the US elections does not change even the smallest thing in how I, or people I know live their everyday lives. Therefore, I genuinely do not understand why people find these staged events and personae so exiting.
The Bearded One was talking about the opium of the people - but the folks I am talking about are not downtrodden masses toiling endlessly under the yoke of factory regime. Can anyone who likes discussing celebrities on this list tell me what I am missing? Again, it is a bone fide question, not sarcasm. I would appreciate some bona fide opinions on the subject.
Wojtek
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