warning Hi, we've moved to USCANNENBERGMEDIA.COM. Visit us there!

Neon Tommy - Annenberg digital news

Best Of The Decade

Hillel Aron |
December 17, 2009 | 4:03 p.m. PST

Senior Editor
Best Album: Bob Dylan, Love and Theft
Released on 9-11, Love and Theft is largely forgotten. It's a completely sui generis, enigmatic album. Cribbed from an obscure Japanese book called Confessions of a Yakuza, the lyrics overflow with southern place names and one-liners. It's easily Dylan's best album since Blood on the Tracks.
#2: Modest Mouse, Good News For People Who Love Bad News
It's too bad that hipsters deserted Modest Mouse after Float On became a hit and they showed up on The O.C since this album carries the banner of irony and emotional distance. Well, suck it hipsters! Good News is as thematically cohesive  as any novel, and has a greater emotional range than any other Modest Mouse album, or any other indie rock album in recent memory.
 

#3 The Deadly Snakes, Porcella
The Deadly Snakes were a rough around the edges garage rock band on LA's very own In the Red Records. Then came Porcella, a blend of blues, folk, garage, and pop. Sadly, the band never  found commercial success, and broke up in 2006.
Best Film: There Will Be Blood
One of the great stories of the oughts is how Paul Thomas Anderson stopped making pretentious, bombastic ensemble movies and started making great films. Maybe it was the name change. There Will Be Blood is the counter-argument to the Horatio Alger myth that told of young men going west, working hard, and becoming successful. Daniel Plainview's success owns only to his hatred, his spite. 

 

#2 The Man Who Wasn't There
The Coen Brothers are the only 1980s indie directors that are still making amazing films, as exemplified by this years' A Serious Man and 2001's The Man Who Wasn't There. Largely forgotten now, the film manages to be more emotionally resonant than most Coen Brother films, while still retaining that ironic playfulness we've come to love.
#3: Eternal Sunshine of a Spotless Mind 
Charlie Kauffman is a genius screenwriter who needs a genius director. Michel Gondry is a genius director who needs a genius screenwriter. Eternal Sunshine combines Kauffman's wacky plot devices with Gondry's beautiful visuals, and an honest to god good performance by Jim Carrey.
TV Show: The Sopranos
Not only was The Sopranos the best TV show of the decade, I'm willing to call it the best work of fiction of the decade, the best TV show of all time, and the best depiction of the Mafia of all time. It was as close to perfect as a TV show can get. Tony Soprano will go down as one of the most indelible fictional characters ever created. The artful direction forever disproved the notion that TV is a second-class medium. And the ending was sublime.
#2: The Wire
Despite a mediocre second season and resoundingly bad last season, The Wire was an incredible series. I never understood why people were always comparing it to Dickens - Dickens told stories about people victimized by cruel systems. The Wire tells the story of people trying to change systems (both civic systems and the systems that criminals have set up) and failing, not because of evil men, but because the system is so unwieldy. 

 

#3: The West Wing
The West Wing was to Clintonism as Rambo II was to Vietnam. Liberals got to do it all over again, but they got to win this time. We got to intervene in Rwanda, assassinate a terrorist, bring peace to the Middle East, and watch a Bush-esque character get destroyed in the general election for being too dumb. Was it an idealistic fantasy? Of course. But in episode after episode, real issues were debated in an intellectually honest and engaging way. And it was funny too!
Best Book: Charlie Wilson's War
Those who saw the depressingly mediocre movie, adapted from George Crile's book, know that this is the unbelievable story of how a drunken Texas congressman and an outcast CIA agent engineered the funding of a guerilla war that brought the USSR to their knees. What they don't know is that the book reads like a cross between Catch-22 and John Le Carre, depicting government bureaucracy and international affairs at its most bizarre. 
#2: Columbine
Columbine, by former Newsweek writer Dave Cullen, may be a revisionist history of the event, but it's also a beautifully told portrait of the people involved, as well as an exploration of how these tragedies happen, and how we deal with them as a society. The lessons of Columbine have as much to do with how tragedies should be reported than with how we can avoid them.
#3: Under the Banner of Heaven
Jon Krakauer's scathing book cuts back and forth between early Mormon history and modern-day fundamentalist Mormon stories. Along the way, it can't help but make you wonder, is this so different than other religions? After all, Mormonism is not the only faith that encourages its disciples to communicate directly with god. Krakaur shows how this door, once open, can lead to catastrophe.
Best Blog: Kottke.org
Kottke.org is essentially just an aggregate. No political commentary, no rants, no revelatory diary entries. Just a pointer to other things on the web. It shouldn't be this good, and yet it is. Jason Kottke, a web designer who's been blogging since 1998, has a knack for finding the best needles in the haystack that is the internet.
Best non-blog content site: Bloggingheads.tv
There's really no category for Bloggingheads.tv, because there's nothing like it on the internet. An answer to cable TV's talking heads, Bloggingheads takes two bloggers, gives them webcams, and has them talk for about an hour. Editing is strictly verboten. Often times so is good sound quality. Nevertheless, Bloggingheads is a venue for engaging debate, rife with nuance and exploration. Two must-see episodes are Will Wilkinson v. Tyler Cowen and Robert Wright v. Christopher Hitchens.
Best Gadget: iPhone
If Apple had only invented the iPod, which changed forever the way we listen to music, that would have been enough. But Apple went one step further and created the world's most aesthetically pleasing and user friendly PDA. Reading articles, getting directions, looking up facts have never been easier. Oh and apparently it makes phone calls too.  


 

Buzz

Craig Gillespie directed this true story about "the most daring rescue mission in the history of the U.S. Coast Guard.”

Watch USC Annenberg Media's live State of the Union recap and analysis here.

 
ntrandomness