Mes: mayo 2024

  • Make your own kind of music

    Cass Elliot’s Death Spawned a Horrible Myth. She Deserves Better, un artículo de Lindsay Zoladz en el New York Times.

    La canción que quiero que pongáis en mi funeral es la del vídeo del final. Hoy ha salido un artículo en el New York Times que tendríais que leer sobre la muerte de la cantante. Por supuesto, por estar gorda.

    A woman in a baggy pink top and matching pants sings into a microphone, standing on a small stage in front of a large pattern that resembles a red butterfly.
    Cass Elliot performing on her television special “Don’t Call Me Mama Anymore” in September 1973. After she went solo, she found it hard to shake her nickname.Credit…CBS Photo Archive, via Getty Images

    Half a century after her death, her underdog appeal continues to inspire. Last year, “Make Your Own Kind of Music” — a relatively minor 1969 solo hit that has nonetheless had cultural staying power — became such a sensation on TikTok that “Saturday Night Live” spoofed it, in a hilariously over-the-top sketch in which the host Emma Stone plays a strangely clairvoyant record producer. “This song is gonna be everywhere, Mama,” she tells Elliot, played by Chloe Troast. “Then everybody’s gonna forget about it for a long, long time, but in about 40, 50 years, I think it’s gonna start showing up in a bunch of movies, because it’s a perfect song to go under a slow-mo montage where the main character snaps and goes on a rampage.”

    “S.N.L.” didn’t make a single joke about Elliot’s weight — something that was unthinkable half a century ago. During the height of her fame, Elliot seemed to co-sign some of the jabs at her expense with a shrugging grin.

    “No one’s getting fat except Mama Cass,” the Mamas & the Papas sang in tight harmony on the self-mythologizing 1967 hit “Creeque Alley.” After the infamously tumultuous group broke up a year later, Elliot was a frequent guest on “The Carol Burnett Show,” where she occasionally went for the cheap laugh. In an otherwise uproarious sketch about two prudish women browsing a store’s “dirty books” section, Elliot holds up a book titled “Eat and Lose Weight” and says, “I got as far as ‘Eat’ and then I didn’t understand the rest.”

    “As she had learned early on, the best way to deal with an uncomfortable situation is with humor,” Elliot-Kugell, who has her mother’s cascading hair and dry wit, writes in her new memoir, “My Mama, Cass.” But, as she said over lunch, that doesn’t mean her mother was always laughing on the inside. “That pain had to go somewhere,” Elliot-Kugell told me. “When I think about some of the things that had allegedly been said to her during her lifetime, you can’t hear that over and over and not let it hurt.”

    But of course, the most enduring joke at her expense was the one she didn’t live to tell, or to rebut. Have you heard the one about the ham sandwich?

  • Competition

    Competition

  • Las chicas de oro no han envejecido tanto

    No puedo creer que esté partiéndome con «Las chicas de oro». Hoy he visto la primera temporada casi entera y, aunque visualmente ha envejecido, hay muchos temas que no lo han hecho. Fue una serie que desafió los estereotipos de género en una época en la que la mayoría de nosotros ni pensábamos en eso. Trataba asuntos como la sexualidad, la edad o el trabajo de las mujeres de más de 50 años y los personajes cuestionaban las expectativas sobre cómo debían comportarse. Y además es que estoy encanado de la risa con algunas escenas.

    Tenéis que volver a verla.

  • Se ha observado por primera vez a un orangután tratándose una herida con una planta medicinal. No solo nos ayuda a comprender la etología de esta especie, sino el origen del comportamiento humano. Scientific Reports.

  • Entrada sin título 9020

    Que todavía haya gente que no lo ha entendido es una cosa que me alucina. El acceso constante a los teléfonos móviles durante la infancia y la adolescencia deteriora la salud mental, la autoestima y la salud física de los chavales. El acceso constante a las redes sociales durante la infancia puede afectar el sueño, la concentración y las relaciones interpersonales. Además, la exposición a contenido inapropiado o dañino en línea puede tener consecuencias duraderas en su desarrollo. Este efecto, según Twenge y Campbell (2018, ver abajo), es mucho más acusado durante la adolescencia que durante la infancia.

    Among 14- to 17-year-olds, high users of screens (7+ h/day vs. low users of 1 h/day) were more than twice as likely to ever have been diagnosed with depression (RR 2.39, 95% CI 1.54, 3.70), ever diagnosed with anxiety (RR 2.26, CI 1.59, 3.22), treated by a mental health professional (RR 2.22, CI 1.62, 3.03) or have taken medication for a psychological or behavioral issue (RR 2.99, CI 1.94, 4.62) in the last 12 months. Moderate use of screens (4 h/day) was also associated with lower psychological well-being. Non-users and low users of screens generally did not differ in well-being. Associations between screen time and lower psychological well-being were larger among adolescents than younger children.
    Twenge, J. M., & Campbell, W. K. (2018). "Associations between screen time and lower psychological well-being among children and adolescents: Evidence from a population-based study." En Preventive medicine reports, 12, 271–283. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pmedr.2018.10.003