Monday, September 20, 2010
Hollywood, Silicon Valley, DC, Wall Street, American Hinterland
Image via CrunchBase
NY Mag, NY Times, All Things D, CNet.
9/11 was Hollywood not doing its job. The Gulf Oil Spill was Hollywood not doing its job. When the political pundits were saying because the Cold War has ended and history has ended, it was Hollywood's job to point out otherwise. America always has had to violently tussle with chunks of autocracies. The fact that most of the Arab world was not democratic should have had alarm bells ringing, but did not.
America as a population should not have had to go through the trauma of a Gulf Oil Spill to start thinking seriously in terms of a zero emissions future. That emotional jolting should instead have and should come from Hollywood.
By that measure this Facebook movie is a stark failure. It does not even begin to fathom what it takes to build an epoch changing company. To say it is just fiction is not a good excuse.
TechCrunch: Zuckerberg, ‘The Social Network’ And The Rise Of The Terror Nerd: With The Social Network, Hollywood has made an artful attempt at taking the inferiority, fear and awe that it feels towards Silicon Valley and projecting it onto the cold, calculating (and fictional) Zuckerberg; “Creation myths need a devil,” spoken by Rashida Jones’ Marylin Delpy, is the most resonant line in the film..... people who understand how to code and build websites have power ..... Sorkin himself told New York Magazine, “I am not a fan of the Internet.” ..... Mark Zuckerberg is the perfect scapegoat for the whole damn thing, being someone who stole Hollywood’s cultural influence and built a half a billion strong distribution network it could only dream of, delivering a brutal blow to its business model as a side note.
NY Mag, NY Times, All Things D, CNet.
9/11 was Hollywood not doing its job. The Gulf Oil Spill was Hollywood not doing its job. When the political pundits were saying because the Cold War has ended and history has ended, it was Hollywood's job to point out otherwise. America always has had to violently tussle with chunks of autocracies. The fact that most of the Arab world was not democratic should have had alarm bells ringing, but did not.
America as a population should not have had to go through the trauma of a Gulf Oil Spill to start thinking seriously in terms of a zero emissions future. That emotional jolting should instead have and should come from Hollywood.
By that measure this Facebook movie is a stark failure. It does not even begin to fathom what it takes to build an epoch changing company. To say it is just fiction is not a good excuse.
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- Zuckerberg, 'The Social Network' And The Rise Of The Terror Nerd (techcrunch.com)
- Ask HN: Do the benefits of the Valley outweigh the costs? (news.ycombinator.com)
- (R)evolution Episode Two: Silicon Valley vs. The World with Sarah Lacy (briansolis.com)
- Jose Antonio Vargas: Mark Zuckerberg opens up. (newyorker.com)
- Mark Zuckerberg: a new take on 'the boy king of Silicon Valley' (guardian.co.uk)
- Being Mark Zuckerberg (spectrum.ieee.org)
- 'Social Network' weaves a complex Web (review) (news.cnet.com)
- The Facebook Movie: Thumbs Up Review (cbsnews.com)
- Oscar Bouquets for "The Social Network," as Zuckerberg Readies for the Brickbats (kara.allthingsd.com)
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