Friday, May 30, 2008

Sex and the City & M-C-M

So I read Jezebel fairly regularly and was psyched to see Moe (or her sister, actually) delve into a lil' bit of lit/film theory today. A drunken Marxist read of the new Sex and the City movie, actually. Which is an excellent idea. But so many people seem to think capitalism=consumerism. It is disheartening. And it makes the analysis of the movie not make much sense. Commodities aren't 'bad' because they're material! Quite the opposite actually! Marxism is into materialism, not so down with idealism. And commodity fetishism has to do with production not consumption. Or, rather, it refers to the obscuring of the labor power that produced the commodity such that value appears to inhere in the commodity itself. If you buy some cheap food or whatever, that is just as much a commodity as Carrie's shoes. The misinformed bourgeois idea that Marxism is an anti-consumerist thing, anti-materialist, anti-ownership thing--ugh, just totally wrong and harmful. Anti-materialism is a particular kind of bourgeois hippie thing itself. Not Marxist. Things that matter in Marxist thought are who owns the means of production and who gets the surplus value produced by the worker.

Though I still am most pleased this is being discussed on Jezebel. And, since I usually see boy movies and end up analyzing dude-rubrics, I am now totally going to see Sex and the City for similar kicks. I absolutely hate that shit, but I now feel dissociated enough to be curious how it functions.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Where Does One Eat in the Detroit-Metro Area?

I asked myself over and over again when I moved here. So, nearly a year later, I know some places. My suggestions, should they interest you:

Breakfast:

Toast. Ferndale. Absolutely luscious breakfasts, very rich, kind of overfilling but it's worth it. The menu is genuinely creative (beets in an omelet? so good!) as well as delicious. And, as you might expect, the toast (or any breaded thing) is really, really good. Lots of veggie options. (Also, they do lunch too--I've just never had it before.) Most of the entrees I've ordered have been around $10. My favorite breakfast place of all-time. Way way crowded most all the time but terribly so on the weekends (over an hour's wait the times I've inquired).

The Flytrap. Ferndale. Also a fantastic breakfast. Diner-style but a more upscale and way hipper. They have lunch/dinner too; the fried rice is my favorite thing. Also the flying salmon burger. Their whole pasta menu is great (if sometimes too rich), and they have vegetarian biscuits and gravy on Sundays. Also killer milkshakes. This place is ridiculously crowded on weekends too; go during the week to avoid a wait.

Lunch/Dinner

Slow's. Detroit, in Corktown. Barbecue. Has vegetarian options, plus all sorts of meat (including really good fish). Pretty fantastic, good bar atmosphere too. And it's a beer bar. They have a great beer menu, many many things on tap.

Inn Season. Royal Oak. All vegetarian. This one I've only been to once, but I had amazing curry there the other night.

Tripti/Gandhi. Hamtramck. These are two Indian/Bangladeshi restaurants located side by side with a shared kitchen. The Tripti side is more run down and, judging by the spiciness, I suspect the food is more 'authentic.' Gandhi is a way 'better' atmosphere, but perhaps less interesting. Also, Tripti is CHEAP. Like, unbelievably cheap for some of the best food I've ever had. You should go there. Gandhi is a bit less cheap, but still the prices are fine. Do the okra masala, a mango lassi, and one of these awesome pink doughnutty things.

Tokyo Sushi. Royal Oak. Good sushi, affordable prices, and way more authentic and better than any other sushi I've had in this area. (I.e., not designed for people to go there strictly as some sort of conspicuous consumption and where stupid clothing and want stupid giant rolls are named after American cities).



Cafe-Style

MOCAD. Cafe inside the museum. Detroit, midtown. Simple sandwiches and soups, but really good. And they have yerba mate. And you can sit there and read, in the sun, with art right nearby.

Goldfish Tea. Royal Oak. By far the best (and only) real tea place around. Chinese tea only, so you miss out on Gen Mai Cha and the like--but the tea is really good, so, no matter. Wu Yi Yan Cha, Lapsang Souchong. Or anything really, they're all good. Or go for the Ki Dong if you're feeling adventurous.

Bean & Leaf. Royal Oak. Lots of laptops. Good enough tea. It's pretty much the atmosphere that sells it, I guess.

Avalon. Detroit. A bakery mostly, of really really good bread. You can also get sticky buns, cherry bars, all sorts of pastries. And tea, maybe coffee (?). Not really a place to study, but a place you should pass through all the time.

Pinwheel Bakery. Ferndale. It's a bit of a toss-up between here and Avalon, but nonetheless the fare ends up being a bit different. Pinwheel is full of cookies and cupcakes (though lots else too). Cheddar and dill popover is my favorite, along with rosemary shortbread and chocolate chip cookies.

A classic

in case you haven't seen it. Also, this version contextualizes it. Perhaps should get a tv. Tv is good.

The Weirdest Sport



Making a horse dance--should perhaps be done ON a Nintendo game, in one's undies, while stoned and eating Fritos. But, I'm really into doing it in a top hat, in real life, too.