A brief interlude

This post is by way of an apology. I am no stranger to the idea that any good blog should get new content up regularly, and I had a little hiccup this past week and did not get a new post up. It's not lack of inspiration; like most people I currently have things bombarding my brain at a frightening rate.

Nor is it a lack of words; just at the moment they are flitting around my mind like a range of goodies in a lovely chocolate shop.

Rather, at this precise moment, it's a matter of time. Rarely should this be an excuse, but I am moving house in two days time and whilst this will be my third move this year, and I am becoming somewhat of a packing ninja, some things just take time.

Therefore, please take this post as my way of saying, you've not heard the last of me yet.

Popular culture can pack quite a personal punch

Girls HBO show feminismI was recently rereading Bridget Jones' Diary (for the fourth time: yes, it's my guilty pleasure and I offer no apologies for it). I was enjoying March’s flirtatious back-and-forth with Daniel Cleaver, when I noticed a few passages that really dated the book. It made me wonder what heroine-led tale would encapsulate our present decade.Then it hit me: there are no leading women in the tales of popular culture any more, only girls. I quickly complied a mental list of today’s leading literary ladies who could take Bridget’s place: Katniss Everdeen, Bella Swan and Ana Steele. I started to panic. These characters are all barely more than children, and need or want guidance and control from a man. Maybe TV could step in and calm my nerves. The Sex and the City of this generation turns out to be: Girls. No luck there. I was astounded. My identity had just been robbed of any cultural representation. It felt like I was suddenly invisible.

As the week progressed, this thought continued to buzz through my brain like the electric cables that run through London’s Underground. Then I heard that the Pussy Riot verdict had been delivered. In the media storm that followed I stumbled across an article, which reported that the American press had avoided using the word ‘pussy’ in any print headlines.

Pussy Riot were making a statement, but in the land of the free the very identity from which they spoke had to be censored. I heaved a tired sigh. I was too sad to be angry. The buzzing fell silent and I felt a little less sure of myself.

As it turned out, my mind did not stay quiet for long. This bruising week ended as I watched Green Day’s new music video for ‘Oh Love’. I already liked the song and I watched with smiling anticipation. As it played my gaze gradually hardened.  What appeared before me was a hyper-sexualized, hackneyed objectification of a group of (very) young women.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IWwMqa-_210?rel=0]

One of my favourite bands, a band that had previously earned the descriptives of alternative, punk, and rebellious had undermined all that they stood for by making women passive targets. Their lead singer, Bille-Joe, stated that the song is about "shooting a little bit more from the crotch area". I wanted to track him down and scream: “but Billie-Joe, I have a crotch too, and I can shoot just as well as you.”

That week drew to a close and my encounters with these little pieces of popular culture coalesced around a much bigger idea. I had woken up to find that popular culture is not waging a war against women: it’s admonishing unruly little girls, who can’t fight back. But I’m not a little girl.

It’s time to grow up.

Ready, fire, aim

Having recently read Getting Real by 37Signals, I realised there's no point worrying about writing the perfect first blog post because all that will happen is that there will never be one.  So, following my own principal that you should never keep your mouth shut about things that make you feel excited and loud, I am finally typing in my notebook. I did something very exciting this week.  I acted on impulse.  For the past few months I have been finding my entire music collection has become utterly boring to me. I use music to get excited, stop myself dwelling too long and of course to dance around to. Everyone does, don't pretend otherwise. But despite trawling through my iTunes library and even combing my real, hard copy CD collection, I could find only one or two songs that did anything for me.

Then - I had a bad morning. Tuesday morning came with a value-added headache and a serious case of inanimate objects conspiring to hit me. I was not in the mood to work. Anything I wrote would have sounded exactly like I felt, so I had a little YouTube wonder and I came across Fun. . (How on earth do you punctuate the end of that sentence?)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7yCLn-O-Y0&w=560&h=315] I absolutely fell in love. Nate Reuss has the most phenomenally crisp and uplifting voice and the mixture of indie, somehow hip hop and irish folk is just brilliant.

I have downloaded their album, and that same morning I bought two tickets for their gig in London next April. I am still reeling from the buzz and it is a fantastic catalyst to make sure I have an absolute deadline for living in London.