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MOODY RUES
Apr 13th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

book cover I’ve avoided reviewing Fred Moody’s personal-essay book Seattle and the Demons of Ambition: A Love Story in the half-year it’s been out.

Perhaps I didn’t want to potentially hurt the feelings of Moody, a former acquaintance (and a fellow member, with me, of the dwindling breed of humans who still remember how to run a CompuGraphic phototypesetter).

Of course, Moody would cite that reluctance to criticize as part of the Old Seattle mindset, a zeitgeist marked by reflection, introversion, and near-fanatical politeness. To that, he contrasts a New Seattle, both dominated and demonized by rambunctious corporate go-getters out to unwittingly fulfill the city’s original name of “New York-Alki” (“…Pretty Soon”).

To his credit, Moody acknowledges the superficiality of this dichotomy. He also acknowledges his contradictory affections toward each side of this divided ideal. Too bad he doesn’t acknowledge some of the other holes in his narrative, and in the image he constructs of himself as your near-perfect Mr. Progressive Seattle.

Throughout the book, Moody tries to psychoanalyze his former home as if the city was one collective entity. He may have learned this limited perspective as an early staff writer at Seattle Weekly. He spends a lot of his book’s verbiage waxing about Weekly founder David Brewster, a benevolent dictator who’d imposed a singular ideological vision on what was, for a decade, the town’s only major “alternative” rag. Brewster’s vision of Seattle, to which Moody writes about eagerly agreeing, was of a town in which white, upscale, professional-caste baby boomers (such as Brewster and Moody) were the only people in sight, or at least the only people who mattered. Moody admits the paper’s myopia caused it to miss out on Seattle’s biggest arts story, the rise of the local rock scene—even though the Weekly and Sub Pop Records were housed in the same office building, and future Pearl Jam member Stone Gossard worked as a barista in the ground-floor cafe!

All these little prejudices were fundamental to the “Old Seattle” Moody nostalgizes about; or rather to the transitional Seattle of Moody’s local-journalism heyday, between the Boeing-dominated past and the Microsoft-dominated present. And squarely in that middle era, as big as the shoulder pads on an old Nordstrom office dress, lie the roots of the ambitious Seattle Moody rues.

Moody writes, with no little degree of self-congratulation, how he spotted the Microsoft phenom almost from the start, and got plenty of work from it for his typesetting enterprise in the pre-laser-printer years. Imagine, right there in Seattle’s prefab Eastside suburbs, an outfit not just surviving but getting rich and huge, all from this ephemeral “software” stuff, stuff made by writers, and employing writers to document it all! Ex-English majors were making enough money to buy houses, and even move to Bainbridge! How cool! So what if this home-computer technology would make phototypesetting obsolete; Moody would simply bounce back by writing a couple of books about the whole e-revolution.

But soon enough, it got out of hand. Dot-com hustlers raised millions in venture capital based on faulty or nonexistent premises, went bust, and left behind hordes of overmortgaged, overqualified ex-employees. The bad old days of the 1970 Boeing crash returned, only this time the food-bank lines were filled by NPR listeners and Weekly readers.

Moody sees the high-tech depression and the jobless recovery a well-deserved comeuppance for Seattle, a collective spanking for the city’s previous lusts for wealth and glory. He even sees the 1999 WTO riots (in which mostly out-of-town protesters ranted about out-of-town conventioneers) as a rebuke to Seattle’s will to “world class” status.

But that’s a silly overgeneralization, one of many in Moody’s book. He chides the city’s political/business nabobs for trying to artificially inflate their own importance, as he artificially inflates the importance of his statements about them.

He frequently admits, in a doth-protest-too-much type of confessing, how he, as a dutiful member of the Seattle establishment’s favorite constituency (upscale boomers), got caught up in the hype he was supposed to be covering. But even his mea culpa moments seem hyped-up, in that smug Big Chill-generation way.

I know Moody; I’ve read his prior books. I know he’s capable of better stuff than this.

Which is what I’d say to Seattle as well. The city doesn’t have to be World Class. But it can still be the best darned regional gathering place it can be.

And that’s not putting anybody down. That’s criticism meant to instruct, to improve. It’s something Moody, Seattle, and I need.

WALL ST. LOVES REPUBLICANS, but…
Apr 12th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

…the Christian Science Monitor notes that “the economy has done better under Democratic presidents than Republican ones since the 1940s.”

TIRED OF FUNDAMENTALIST BUREAUCRATS…
Apr 10th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

…chopping away at our (and broadcasters’) rights? Sign the Stop FCC petition.

I'M ALREADY RESEARCHING my next novel,…
Apr 9th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

…as previously posted here. Along the way, I’ll post some tidbits about its milieu, the world of television production.

The first thing word people forget about TV is how word-dependent TV really is. No scripted program works without a decent script. And that includes the news. Evidence: The official BBC Style Guide. In 92 brisk pages, it gently instructs how to write copy with the authoritative yet understandable BBC house style:

“It is our job to communicate clearly and effectively, to be understood without difficulty, and to offer viewers and listeners an intelligent use of language which they can enjoy. Good writing is not a luxury; it is an obligation. Our use, or perceived misuse, of English produces a greater response from our audiences than anything else.

“It is in nobody’s interest to confuse, annoy, dismay, alienate or exasperate them.”

ALISTAIR COOKE RIP
Mar 31st, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

TOM RUNNACLES offers up a fine li’l tribute to Alistair Cooke. Some email respondents to him then go and spoil the proceedings by noting that Cooke’s BBC Radio essays had become steadily more reactionary over the past two decades. (Cooke, like Sinatra, had apparently fallen in love with the Reagan crowd as saviors of a more genteel past.)

HOW LOW?
Mar 30th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

PAUL KRUGMAN asks the rhetorical questions of how low the Bush sleaze machine will go to hold onto power. Yet even Krugman dares not ponder the worst-case-scenario answers.

EBONY MAGAZINE ADS from the '80s
Mar 26th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

Symbols of empowerment or retro-kitsch?

WELL, DUH! DEPT.
Mar 24th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

(via the Guardian): “MTV is no longer the home of ‘cool music.'”

THE WHINE IN SPAINE, CONTINUED
Mar 18th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

Here’s some more detailed refutation of the US right-wing smear campaign against the new Spanish government. No, Fox News, Limbaugh, WSJ, et al., Francisco Franco is still dead.

THE BUSHIES HAVE GOTTEN CAUGHT…
Mar 16th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

…disseminating faked pro-Bush TV news reports under the guise of “electronic press releases.” Why didn’t they just let Fox do it like they always do?

BUSH'S MOST VOCAL OPPONENT
Mar 14th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

Howard Stern?

THOSE CHEEKY BRITS…
Mar 3rd, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

…at The Guardian have got a Passion of the Christ review in Aramaic!

STERN WARNING
Feb 26th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

SEE IF YOU CAN TELL whether Minneapolis columnist, conservative blogger, and retro-kitsch art-book compiler James Lileks is sincere or not as he comments on Howard Stern’s latest dirty-words controversy.

BASEBALL BLOGS
Feb 24th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

THE SPORTS PAGES have long been newspapers’ last bastions of passionate writing, so it’s a natural that there’d be a new wave of lively, provocative baseball blogs.

SCANDAL SHEETING
Feb 18th, 2004 by Clark Humphrey

MICHELANGELO SIGNORILE at the New York Press suggests last week’s Drudge Report attempt to jump-start a Kerry sex scandal just might have been a Republican smear attempt. If so, it was a particularly pathetic such attempt. But don’t worry. I’m sure the GOP Sleaze Machine will try far worse things as it gets ever more desperate–up to and including some of the shticks of its role models Pinochet and Marcos.

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