
The Guardian

“What makes them want to see it again? What would make them go home and talk about it? Even if it was just’ ‘I just saw the weirdest thing - a comedian who thinks he’s funny and…isn’t.’ I thought, ‘there’s something there.’ the
The rise of “microcelebrities” and the proliferation of online content means that connections become deeper. We feel new levels of affinity for digitally-native stars—we feel that we grew up with them and that we’re privy to the most intimate parts of their lives.
Rex Woodbury • The Business of Fame: 1920-2020
However, as most anthropologists will attest, humans are wired to live in curated collectives, as opposed to mass societies. So people formed new tribes within a larger society in order to find a “place” where they belonged. The French sociologist Michel Maffesoli referred to these new tribes as “neotribes.” The behavioral patterns within these neo
... See moreMarcus Collins • For the Culture
Yet the two versions seemed to be fundamentally different movies. In the first version I saw, much of the discussion explored the way that pop musicians such as Eno and many of his collaborators — like David Bowie and Talking Heads — create and project an identity when they perform, making that persona part of their medium. In essence, it became a ... See more