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Medium Cool with BGinCHI – Looking Ahead

Medium Cool

You are here: Home / Archives for Medium Cool

Medium Cool is here once a week on Sundays at 7pm Eastern to offer a thread on culture, mainly film & books, with some TV thrown in.

We wanted to call the series Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We’re Living In, but decided that was a bit too long, so we settled on Medium Cool.

We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.

Remember: Medium Cool is on Sundays at 7 pm.

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Part III

by WaterGirl|  March 26, 20237:00 pm| 151 Comments

This post is in: Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Books, Guest Posts, Medium Cool, Open Threads, Popular Culture, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Part III

by Subaru Diane

Auto Draft 79
British actor Harriet Walter as Harriet Vane, the mystery writer/murder suspect/future Lady Peter Wimsey (BBC, 1987)

It’s still Women’s History Month, so let’s talk about some of the seismic shifts for English women in the early decades of the 20th century. Since Victorian times, women had pushed for the right to a university education and the right to vote, but the first Oxford degrees for women weren’t formally granted until 1920, and the political franchise was limited and restricted until 1928.

The Great War had given women a taste of financial independence; in the immediate post-war years they also experienced a degree of sexual autonomy previously denied them. Younger women in particular enjoyed new social freedoms: the “flapper” of the ‘20s bobbed her hair, shortened her skirts, painted her face, chucked her corsets, and smoked in public — relatively superficial, though powerful, symbols of change.

During this time, Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers were becoming popular, critically acclaimed, and financially secure authors. Yet behind the scenes, both women had troubling secrets: Sayers gave birth in 1924 to an illegitimate son, sent him to be raised by a cousin, and never divulged his existence to her parents for the rest of their lives. (The public at large didn’t know until years after DLS’s own death.)

As for Christie, she famously disappeared for eleven days in December 1926. Was it simply a publicity stunt to sell more books? A way of punishing her adulterous husband by putting him under suspicion of murder? Or did she have a genuine case of amnesia? She never said. Theories abound, and you probably have your own ideas!

Christie and Sayers also both created countless memorable female characters as sleuths, suspects, villains, and victims, including — but certainly not limited to — Christie’s redoubtable Miss Jane Marple, Mrs Ariadne Oliver, and Countess Vera Rossakoff; and Sayers’ Harriet Vane, Miss Katherine Climpson, the amoral Mary Whittaker, and the pathetic Mrs Flora Weldon.

This is the splendid Joan Hickson in her most famous role as Agatha Christie’s elderly sleuth Miss Jane Marple in the BBC television series (1984-92).

I’d love to know who your own favourite female characters are — and why! — in the Christie and Sayers mysteries.

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Part IIIPost + Comments (151)

The Most Important Show on TV Right Now

by WaterGirl|  March 19, 20238:10 pm| 44 Comments

This post is in: Medium Cool, Open Threads, Popular Culture, TV & Movies, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

Every time I watch Station 19 I think to myself this is the most important show on TV.  (TV in a general sense, including streaming)  The show is now in its 6th year, and I  first started thinking that in 2021.

I find the characters compelling.  Many of them are (mostly) good people trying to do the right thing, which I like, but some of you may hate!  There are enough assholes and antagonists to keep it interesting, and lots of strong female characters, which I also appreciate.  Characters fuck up, sometimes badly, and make bad decisions and sometimes hurt people they care about.  But it’s the great writing and the story lines themselves that make me think it’s the most imprortant show on TV.

Since 2021, they have been consistent, relentless almost, about shining their light on racial issues and bad policing and the politics of all of that; they are front and center in the story lines.

We see the characters learning about George Floyd.  We see more than one clueless, otherwise good guy white firefighters (show regulars that we care about) being well-intentioned, but clueless on these issues.  Station 19 firefighters join a George Floyd protest, with consequences.

In one show, the firefighters come into contact with a black woman who is certain that her teenage daughter has been abducted, and she has gone to the house where she believes her daughter is being held.  Police are called, the asshole white police offices take the side of the “nice white man” who lives in the house, and they dismiss the woman and threaten arrest her.  Firefighters take the mothers side and don’t let the cops blow her off… and they find (manufacture) a legitimate reason that allows them to get in the house.  Sure enough, the young woman and her friend have been abducted by “the nice white man”, and the cops still want to arrest the mother for fighting for her daughter.  Firefighters intervene, the black firefighters are arrested by the asshole cops, the white firefighters are not.

One of the firefighters starts a pilot program called Crisis One where specially trained firefighters and trained civilians go out on calls with cops or instead of cops, for certain types of calls.  In a Crisis One call on the show this week, they are called out to sedate a young black man who is hogtied, face down, and in custody, surrounded by white cops.  He’s a young black kid who went out for butter and flour for his mom, ingredients she needed to bake something.  He gets panic attacks and he is nearly hysterical being hogtied.  Firefighters see that he doesn’t need to be sedated; he needs to be untied.  Asshole police won’t back down, escalating this situation as the firefighters try to deescalate.  Cops make more aggressive moves, boy who has been untied panics, starts to run, guns are drawn, tasers are out, and directed even at the firefighters.

Afterwards, white cops want to whitewash what happened, firefighters have to make choices that impact their careers. It’s a multi-faceted show that manages to address the issues without being preachy, and certainly without feeling like a Lifetime movie.

So that’s my nomination for the most important show on TV, and some of the reasons why.

What makes an important show for you?

Is it the content?  Characters?  Acting?  Story lines?  The music?  Ethnicity of actors?  Does the show break new ground in some way?  Or for you is the key to an important show something else entirely?

Any particular show you think fits that bill?  Or a few shows that are in the running?  I’m not talking about excellent shows like The Wire or Hill Street Blues from decades ago.   Something current.  Or at least current-ish.

The Most Important Show on TV Right NowPost + Comments (44)

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Part II

by WaterGirl|  March 12, 20237:00 pm| 75 Comments

This post is in: Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Books, Guest Posts, Medium Cool, Popular Culture, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Part II

by Subaru Diane

Many thanks to everyone for such a thoughtful and lively thread two weeks ago! I hope we’ll keep the energy going tonight as we focus on World War I (aka the “Great War”), its immediate and lingering impacts on English life, and how Dorothy L. Sayers and Agatha Christie portrayed those war-induced social changes in their fiction.

Three-quarters of a million British men died in the Great War; twice as many returned home permanently damaged by battlefield wounds or the effects of poison gas or “shell shock” (PTSD). Sayers’s Lord Peter Wimsey was one of them.

Ian Carmichael as Lord Peter Wimsey. Wimsey’s urbanity masks a psyche damaged by his experiences as an officer in the First World War.

Additionally, about a quarter of a million Belgian refugees fled to Britain during the war — the largest ever single displacement of populations into the U.K. Christie’s Hercule Poirot was one of them.

David Suchet portraying Agatha Christie’s detective Hercule Poirot. Poirot fled to the U.K. as a refugee after Germany invaded his native Belgium, and stayed on through the following sixty years.

The Great War is a lingering presence in every one of the Wimsey novels — sometimes prominently, sometimes more fleetingly. But it is always there.

In most of her books, conversely, Christie seldom mentions the War or invokes it as a cause of the sweeping societal changes taking place.

What are your thoughts about the authors’ different ways of dealing with the Great War in their fiction?

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Part IIPost + Comments (75)

Medium Cool – National Women’s Day – Contributions to Culture and Art

by WaterGirl|  March 5, 20237:00 pm| 95 Comments

This post is in: Medium Cool, Popular Culture, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

Tonight on Medium Cool – in honor of National Women’s Day on March 8 – can we celebrate the creativity of women and their contributions to culture and art?

We can come at this from all sorts of directions.

  • Whether women’s contributions to culture and art are erased in the same way contributions by anyone other than “the right kind of white men” have often been erased, for instance.
  • We can talk about all the women who had to hide behind male pseudonyms, and about how that is changing.
  • We can talk about the various female writers, directors, actors, musicians.  Artists, painters, sculptors.  Performers, singers, dancers, choreographers.  Writers, editors, poets, playwrights. Photographers and designers.  And more the I haven’t named.
  • We can talk about how women connect with other women through fabric art.  Knitting, tatting, crocheting, quilting…
  • We can talk about the role of women in passing down culture and tradition through generations.
  • We can talk about women who teach us about culture.
  • We can post links to interesting discussions of culture by and about women.
  • We can post links to works of art – in any genre – created by women.
  • We have all sorts of incredibly talented women right here on Balloon Juice.  Don’t be shy – link to your own creations!
  • Hell, this is Balloon Juice; we can even fight about the use of the word creatives.

Let’s get started!

Update: If this topic isn’t of interest, feel free to consider this one an open thread for all things culture related.

Medium Cool – National Women’s Day – Contributions to Culture and ArtPost + Comments (95)

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers

by WaterGirl|  February 26, 20237:00 pm| 203 Comments

This post is in: Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, Books, Guest Posts, Medium Cool, Popular Culture, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

Today’s Medium Cool is the beginning of a series on Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers, hosted by our very own SiubhanDuinne.

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers KEEP 1

The first photo of Dorothy L. Sayers (DLS) as a young woman, perhaps in her early 20s? She was born in 1893, so that would make it a WWI-era photo, perhaps taken when she was one of the early female students at Oxford (Somerville College).

The second photo is Agatha Christie (AC), taken around 1925. She was born in 1890, so that would make her about 35 when it was taken.

I’ll let Subaru Diane share the details, so I’ll just say that she is getting ready to teach a course on these talented female writers for an OLLI program, and she graciously agreed share some of her materials out on us.  I figure we’ll be part guinea pigs – in the best possible way – and part inspiration for her class.

So if this is of interest to you, mark your calendars – 6 sessions, including tonight: 2/26, 3/12, 3/26, 4/9, 4/23, and 5/7.

Tonight will be a general discussion of the authors and their books, against the backdrop of a rapidly-changing Britain.

And with that, I’ll turn it over to our beloved Mob Enforcer.

SiubhanDuinne

I’m preparing a course which I hope to teach fairly soon (via Zoom) through Emory University’s OLLI program (Osher Lifelong Learning Institute).

So far, I haven’t come up with a catchy title for the class — suggestions welcome!! — but the subject is SOCIAL CHANGE IN 20TH-CENTURY ENGLAND AS REFLECTED IN THE DETECTIVE FICTION OF AGATHA CHRISTIE (1890-1976) AND DOROTHY L. SAYERS (1893-1957).

As we’ve seen, there are a number of classic mystery fans here among the Medium Cool Jackaltariat.

Water Girl kindly suggested that, over a series of Sunday-evening posts, two or three weeks apart, I could share some of my plans for the OLLI course with you. I hope the idea generates a few lively discussions on these two extraordinary authors and the dizzying times they lived in and chronicled in their fiction. (Narrator: Subaru Dianne is going to shamelessly pick your brains for insights and felicitous phrasing.)

There’s bound to be some overlap among them, but I’d like to explore the following themes that crop up again and again in Sayers’ and Christie’s works — one Medium Cool at a time:

  • General discussion of the authors and their books, against the backdrop of a rapidly-changing Britain (tonight)
  • The Lingering and Pervasive Impact of World War One
  • The Changing Role of Women
  • Profound Shifts in England’s Entrenched Class System
  • Technology, Commerce, and Hedonism
  • Empire, Immigrants, Foreigners, Racism

Sayers and Christie began their careers over a century ago, so let’s not worry about plot spoilers in these threads!

Medium Cool – Agatha Christie & Dorothy SayersPost + Comments (203)

Medium Cool – The Autobiography of Malcolm X

by WaterGirl|  February 19, 20237:00 pm| 47 Comments

This post is in: Books, Medium Cool, Popular Culture, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

In a recent Sunday night Medium Cool post that focused on autobiographies, several people mentioned that The Autobiography of Malcolm X had had a profound effect them.  That was a pivotal book for me, too, and we decided to dedicate a Medium Cool to this.

I don’t want to direct the conversation in any particular way, so let’s just see where this conversation takes us.

Medium Cool – The Autobiography of Malcolm XPost + Comments (47)

Medium Cool – Free-for-all (anything culture-related)

by WaterGirl|  February 12, 20237:00 pm| 178 Comments

This post is in: Medium Cool, Popular Culture, Culture as a Hedge Against This Soul-Sucking Political Miasma We're Living In

Medium Cool is a weekly series related to popular culture, mostly film, TV, and books, with some music and games thrown in.  We hope it’s a welcome break from the anger, hate, and idiocy we see almost daily from the other side in the political sphere.

Arguments welcomed, opinions respected, fools un-suffered.  We’re here every Sunday at 7 pm.

We had planned for the discussion of The Autobiography of Malcolm X tonight, but Steeplejack pointed out that today is the Super Bowl, so the timing could be better!

So we will have that discussion next week on 2/19 instead.

Tonight, since the Super Bowl may be taking up a lot of oxygen, let’s have a free-for-all on Medium Cool.  Talk about anything culture-related.  Feel free to share ideas for future posts.  If you’ve written a book or you write poetry or you make music, tell us about what you’re up to. Talk about the commercials for the Super Bowl, if you want.

Medium Cool – Free-for-all (anything culture-related)Post + Comments (178)

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