Nathan Rabin: Confessions of a Trash-Culture Connoisseur
Nathan Rabin celebrates The Joy of Trash—and Gen X irony and cynicism—one terrible movie, book, and TV show at a time.
"I am a professional rememberer," writes Nathan Rabin in The Joy of Trash. "It is my duty to remember not just for my own but for society."
Rabin is really taking one for the team here, especially since his new book accurately bills itself as the "definitive guide to the very worst of everything." Among the godawful things he explicates are Academy Award-winning actress Joan Crawford's bizzare and patently false 1971 lifestyle guide, My Way of Life; the misbegotten Brady Bunch Variety Hour, which improbably included numerous "water ballet" routines along with endless dad jokes; cocaine-addicted movie producer Robert Evans' 1981 court-ordered, star-studded, anti-drug TV special Get High on Yourself; and the entirety of billionaire Mike Bloomberg's 2020 presidential candidacy.
Rabin was the headwriter for The A.V. Club for two decades and the inventor of the popular-but-controversial term "Manic Pixie Dreamgirl" to describe a recurring film character who "exists solely in the fevered imaginations of sensitive writer-directors to teach broodingly soulful young men to embrace life and its infinite mysteries and adventures." He now runs his own website, Nathan Rabin's Happy Place, where he sifts through all manner of cultural detritus with endless wit and energy. He also co-hosts Travolta/Cage, a podcast about "the greatest actors in history."
The 45-year-old Rabin talks with Nick Gillespie about how his Gen X roots inform his appreciation for and critique of consumer culture. Kids his age, he explains, learned early on through D.A.R.E. and transparently phony TV shows that adults and other authorities were often lying. Gen X came of age in the 1990s, he says, a time when the belief that technology would make everything perfect was widespread, an optimism severely tested both by the bursting of the tech bubble and the 9/11 attacks. "Irony and satire and comedy," he says, "can bring light to a very dark situation, and it can be very cathartic being able to laugh at things that you're not supposed to laugh about or being able to laugh about things that are incredibly dark."
Rabin also discusses how musician Grimes, who had a widely covered relationship and two children with billionaire Elon Musk, is reclaiming—or perhaps satirizing—the manic pixie dream girl trope and why Weird Al Yankovic, the subject of a good deal of his writing, has had a career far longer than most of the people he parodies.
Interview by Nick Gillespie; edited by Adam Czarnecki.
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Ugh. Boring.
Frank Zappa and John Waters, then?
watermelon in easter hay
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"Irony and satire and comedy," he says, "can bring light to a very dark situation, and it can be very cathartic being able to laugh at things that you're not supposed to laugh about or being able to laugh about things that are incredibly dark."
Rabin better get with the times. All of the above are now considered problematic and subject to censorship from multiple trillion dollar corporations.
Face Off was a fun movie.
"Weird Al Yankovic" is a goddamn national hero! -- said by somebody somewhere.
Not by anyone with a brain.
UHF is a masterpiece.
yes.
I’m not going to claim John Travolta is a great actor, but comparing him to Nick Cage is criminal.
He's too young for Gen-X. Gen X is 50s right now, came of age in the '80s, saw 16 candles in the theaters, had a record collection before they got any CDs, and had to suffer Thirtysomething on television.
45 is to gen-x like someone who graduated high school is to baby boomers. It's a tween generation, not quite millennial but a little too old to have experienced life before everyone had computers. They are only gen-x because they don't fit the pop-cultural demographics like someone how born in 1948 is DEFINITELY a boomer.
In short, his cultural roots may be Gen-X, but he was not the guy founding that culture. He's Gen-X's little tag-along brother.
not quite millennial but a little too old to have experienced life before everyone had computers.
That's not quite right. I'm [arguably] on the older end of Gen X (as much as you can bookmark these social constructs) and I can remember well life before computers.
exactly. You're older end, you remember life before computers.
Folks 50-55 went to school in a time when there might be one Apple II E and a couple of TRS80S in the library computer lab, or had an "intro to computers" class as high school juniors on an acorn network box. But only "nerds" knew anything about computers before 1985.
By 1990 home computers were pretty common. By "the 90s" they were everywhere. It's a very stark difference to "come of age" in the 90s.
He's too young for Gen-X. Gen X is 50s right now, came of age in the '80s, saw 16 candles in the theaters, had a record collection before they got any CDs, and had to suffer Thirtysomething on television.
No, Gen-X is generally considered to have stopped around 1980. There's two distinct halves to them--the Breakfast Club Xers, and the Nirvana/Hip-Hop Xers
The cultural roots of both halves are rooted in 70s-80s cartoons, movies and sitcoms, especially commercial jingles; we did not, in fact, spend money on records but on cassette tapes and THEN transitioned to CDs in the early 90s; and were the first generation to have video game system purchases as childhood milestones (Pong, Atari 2600, NES).
In fact, a 45-year old was really part of the last group of people to have been allowed to run around outside largely unsupervised (the Amber Hagerman case is what really started the helicopter parenting phenomenon), learn how to drive on stick shift, worry about getting nuked by the Soviets, and remember what it was like to not be attached to a computer screen all day.
word. "came of age in the 90s" lol
Many women hate manic pixies because they're so damn cute, and men who maybe should know better fall hard for them. Many women have a toxic case of Manic Pixie Envy Syndrome, and take it out on movie characters. Many men would dump their painfully dull partners for a manic pixie if only they could - or dared. Yes, they are real, and not just characters in a male movie-makers' imagination. If and when you find one, don't hesitate to play along - you'll have the time of your life, for better and, probably, for worse. It's worth it.
I remember when everybody sucked Zach Braff's dick over Garden State, and then about 10 years after it came out all of the revisionist critiques came pouring in, he was slimed as a sexist and possible predator, and Natalie Portman disavowed her participation in the movie. Irony gave way to post-irony 20 fucking years ago. As usual Gillespie believes himself to be at the tip of the spear of the avant-garde when he discovers pop culture phenomena from a generation ago.