DML wrote:Darren72 wrote:DML wrote:What I found annoying about the Chicago Mag. thing was the overall snide attitude. I like food. I like talking about food. But I'm really tired of people who think they are witty with the little half-line insults.
Are you talking about "Fuck Chicago Magazine"?
No, that was not meant to be witty. It was not meant to be snide. It was not meant to show how important GEB is. That was meant to be an insult. It was very effective as such.
DML wrote:She makes a living ripping people like him.
Dmnkly wrote:Maybe I'm an insensitive lout, but I never would have given that slideshow a second thought if I'd read it without context.
David Hammond wrote:DML wrote:She makes a living ripping people like him.
I met Cassie Walker once a few years ago; I did not recognize her at the event; I've read several articles by her in Chicago Mag, and I do not feel this is in any sense a fair characterization of what she does for "a living." As I mentioned, I disagreed with much of what she said about the food, but please let's not get carried away with the invective.
Darren72 wrote:Dmnkly wrote:Maybe I'm an insensitive lout, but I never would have given that slideshow a second thought if I'd read it without context.
I agree. Had I read that Chicago Mag piece by itself, I would have thought it was basically a puff piece.
art wrote:Wow. Lollapalooza cuisine has come a long way since I saw Eddie Vedder drink a "bile beer" from "The Tube" of Jim Rose's Side Circus. http://www.twofeetthick.com/2007/07/lol ... ospective/ Would Chicago Mag go so far as to critique a bile beer? That would be hard core. That would be rock and roll journalism!
DML wrote:I don't think there is any invective there at all. She's a critic. That's what she does. Buy the ticket, take the ride.
eatchicago wrote:Darren72 wrote:Dmnkly wrote:Maybe I'm an insensitive lout, but I never would have given that slideshow a second thought if I'd read it without context.
I agree. Had I read that Chicago Mag piece by itself, I would have thought it was basically a puff piece.
I've read it three or four times and I can't even find the part that he's pissed about. 80% of it is glowingly positive. The other 20% seems only slightly less positive. Is this really all about the fact she called one dish "too rich" or because she said a bun fell apart in her hands?
Honestly. What am I missing?
David Hammond wrote:DML wrote:I don't think there is any invective there at all. She's a critic. That's what she does. Buy the ticket, take the ride.
So, you believe "criticism" is only negative, a "ripping" of someone or something. We disagree. Is film criticism always ripping a movie? Does Roger Ebert never give a thumbs up?
ChefGEB wrote:What was supposed to be a fun gathering of Chefs, foodies, bloggers, writers and musicians celebrating the fact that our town now sports the best food offerings of any music fest in the country, ....
Kennyz wrote:ChefGEB wrote:What was supposed to be a fun gathering of Chefs, foodies, bloggers, writers and musicians celebrating the fact that our town now sports the best food offerings of any music fest in the country, ....
I should let it go, but I can't. The quote above is ridiculously disingenuous, and either the writer is a fool or he's making us all out to be fools. Either way, I am calling big, giant, runny, smelly, BULLSHIT on that quote, GEB. It's insulting for you to make this event out to be a "celebration" rather than a (poorly?) calculated public relations investment.
Darren72 wrote:DML - what did she write that qualifies as an insult?
David Hammond wrote:Kenny, I think your focus on "celebration," is an example of the kind of rigorous reading that earns us the reputation for being tough (and as a student of New Criticism, which now seems like kind of Old School Criticism, this obsessive attention to individual words is almost second nature to me). That said, it seems a false choice to have to pick between a foolish writer or the writer taking us as fools, and there seems no reason why an event like this cannot be both "celebration" and a PR event.
because we're a tough crowd, which I took as a kind of complement
Katie wrote:because we're a tough crowd, which I took as a kind of complement
A more philosophical point, when you spell it that way, but possibly just as true ...
eatchicago wrote:Darren72 wrote:DML - what did she write that qualifies as an insult?
DML, I'm with Darren72. Still looking for the insult. Can you quote it for me?
Big Star: "Taste: 2 ½. On the bland side."
Ge: "Taste: 3. Meaty, but, with the sauce slathered on, too rich."
Kuma's: "Fest friendliness: 2. Abundant toppings make it hard to eat, and do you really want egg yolk dripping down your chin?"
The Southern: "Fest friendliness: 2. It’s portable, but shellfish in the hot sun? Nah."
Sunda: "Fest friendliness: 2. The flimsy Bao bun fell apart almost immediately."
DML wrote:eatchicago wrote:Darren72 wrote:DML - what did she write that qualifies as an insult?
DML, I'm with Darren72. Still looking for the insult. Can you quote it for me?
Tough to answer. No single statement standing alone is outrageous. However, taken together, they have a condescending air.
jbw wrote:Big Star: "Taste: 2 ½. On the bland side."
Ge: "Taste: 3. Meaty, but, with the sauce slathered on, too rich."
Kuma's: "Fest friendliness: 2. Abundant toppings make it hard to eat, and do you really want egg yolk dripping down your chin?"
The Southern: "Fest friendliness: 2. It’s portable, but shellfish in the hot sun? Nah."
Sunda: "Fest friendliness: 2. The flimsy Bao bun fell apart almost immediately."
Does anyone else sense a more than vague resemblance here to the critiques one customarily hears at the Top Chef Judge's Table?
They're usually much politer in the Master's version but perhaps an exposed nerve was sratched?
DML wrote:What suspicion is that?
DML wrote:Anybody else see the irony that Chicago Mag is apparently allowed to critique GEB, but GEB is not allowed to offer hs view of Chicago Magazine?