If it proves nothing else, it shows people at Ivy League schools are still dumb enough to spend $3.95 on a bowl of cereal*

Posted by Lizzie on 12/10/04

We once had a friend with the crazy idea to start an all-cereal restaurant. In her vision, mommies, drunks and commuters avoiding morning meetings would all gather for a crunchy, hand-chosen return to childhood. Now Cereality, a venue at the University of Pennsylvania, has made that dream a reality:

David Roth, who founded Cereality a year and a half ago when he opened a cereal kiosk in the student union at Arizona State University, has big plans. Think Starbucks of cereal. In fact, Tim Casey, who spent the past decade with Starbucks, joined the Cereality team last week as chief operating officer. “There’s a lot of opportunity here,” says Casey, looking around as students and faculty members pour in. “People are passionate about cereal.”

* P.S, we would totally go.

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If you break out “Jingle Bell Rock,” we’re going to start tithing 30% immediately

Posted by Lizzie on 12/09/04

Monday, we had “Cat’s in the Cradle” running through our head. Tuesday, it was “Witchy Woman.” Wednesday, it was “Walkin’ in a Winter Wonderland,” and today, it is the theme song from Splash (of “One fine day, love came for me…” fame). We have only one thing to say. God, whatever we did, WE’RE SORRY.

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THANKS BOOG!

Posted by Lizzie on 12/08/04

Pressing work issues prevent us from writing anything fun about the world of literature today, but in the spirit of rewarding nothing, please note the new buttons at the bottom left. Now you can add us to Kinja in ONE CLICK, get an RSS or XML feed (whatever these things may be), or look at Slower really fast, which is cool and oxymoronic. We are looking into a button that will allow you to immediately give us one million dollars and/or multiple orgasms. We’ll keep you posted.

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WHAT’S THE FREQUENCY, TAVIS?

Posted by Lizzie on 12/06/04

The host of National Public Radio’s three-year-old Tavis Smiley Show said last week that he will be quitting on Dec. 16, criticizing NPR for not doing enough to reach minority listeners. In his first interview since his announcement, Smiley, 40, whose show drew nearly 900,000 listeners a week but alienated some longtime subscribers, spoke to TIME’s Christopher John Farley.

There are many questions to ask on the occasion of Tavis’ Smiley’s quitting NPR, like, Why are you such a blowhard?, and, How did you get so far when you’re such a pain in the ass?, but perhaps most important is WHY TIME MAGAZINE IS WRITING ALL ITS QUESTIONS IN CAPS.

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We don’t know what’s up with all the asterisks lately. We apologize.

Posted by Lizzie on

If you have not visited The Rake in a while, go see his new head *. Not only is his site funny and informational **, he has totally*** amped up the hotness.

* Not dirty.
** Sorely lacking in this venue.
*** = More importantly.

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The Book Bloggers…REVEALED!*

Posted by Lizzie on

For a bunch of page-flippers, over-the-keyboard-hunchers and whiskey-swillers, lit bloggers look surprisingly normal in the harsh light of a fan’s camera. We would even go so far as to say that Dennis Loy Johnson, aka Moby Lives aka Melville House’s publisher, is SUPER-HOT.**

* TM Uncle Grambons, all rights reserved.
** Obligatory “for a blogger” insert negified by cool-small-press-publisher status.

Filed under: Lit-ish | Comments (2)

If they would try Depressive, Escapist, Obsessive, Bored and Know-it-All, this thing might really have legs

Posted by Lizzie on

In a bold move to isolate actual book-lovers everywhere, Borders has launched an interactive marketing tool, GiftMixer3000, which allows shoppers to choose gifts by blending five personality traits: Romantic, Adventurous, Brainy, Imaginative and Funny.

UPDATE: In a optimistically self-loving gesture *, we tried “Brainy” and “Funny” to the max. Quite accordingly, we were punished with this.

* Not dirty.

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We didn’t know whether to go “faulty wiring” or “cigarette left burning” anyway

Posted by Lizzie on

We were about to torch Dan Wickett’s house for not including us in the first blogger’s e-panel when we received a kind email asking us to respond to some questions about our chosen digital medium. Read all about it here.

Filed under: Lit-ish | Comments (0)

Anyone with bridges to sell or fantastic real-estate opportunities in Florida is advised to call A.O. Scott

Posted by Lizzie on 12/03/04

It would be easy to suspect this new collection, with its dour brown endpapers and plain black cover (with an ingenious elastic bookmark sown in), of false modesty, or of the kind of attention-getting, passive-aggressive self-effacement that has been one of its author’s strategies for dealing with his fame, but it would also be unfair. The modesty is genuine, and appears to be quite deliberate.

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Two Men, Short and Tall

Posted by Lizzie on 12/02/04

Who knows why, but there is NO BETTER WAY to spend an article than harshing on Dave Eggers — though you’re supposed to throw in Heidi Julavits and Jonathan Franzen too. William Georgiades jumps on the pile:

A few weeks after that, Dave Eggers wrote the cover story for the New York Press—4,000 words on how he hated the use of the word “fuck.” I thought it was clearly a killed piece from the soon-to-be-defunct Might. I read it and gloated because the writing was so poor, the point so labored, the thought so unoriginal, the presentation so hackneyed. It is a beautiful thing when a bad piece of writing gets a platform.

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If we didn’t have the BOOG’s office party to attend, we would SO be there. Drunk.

Posted by Lizzie on

This has been linked everywhere else, we do believe, but we’d like to inform the last Gotham stragglers what they will be doing Friday night at 7. Housing Works Cafe will be taking the following literary bloggers out of their digital habitat and requiring them to SPEAK, goddamnit, at their “What the Blog? The Terrifying World of Literary Web sites” panel. (If you ask us, it’s the PANELS that are terrifying, but whatever.) Go tell us what MobyLives, Maud Newton, Beatrice, Bookslut, Bookninja and MoorishGirl sound like when they are not completely drunk.

* Dave Lull informs us that Jessa Crispin’s replacement is BARKEEP M.A. Orthofer, otherwise known to you as the proprietor of The Literary Saloon. A) We can’t believe that “Saloon” reference is REALITY, b) BRING ON THE DRINKS, and c) if we’d known he had ready access to liquor, we’d have linked to him every day.

Filed under: Lit-ish | Comments (5)

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