Chuck is so fun. Great interview. Great insights. One of my favorite things about aging is seeing change and reflecting. And then, trying to guess what comes next!
Great meditation to start the day CBGB may be an important part of the discussion on "subculture" bridging counterculture, and new music creativity to the scene since 1973. One could almost do a study on the correlations of counter culture and subculture of the 60's, 70's, 80's, and 90's and fringe ideologies of distinct "imagined communities." I would also argue that Metallica's "Black Album" is tantamount to the Beatles "White Album" in terms of an 80's Metal Band having a metamorphosis and preserving Metal in a time of Grunge. I also feel that we need more record labels like "Putumayo" (which they sell at the headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva) that can preserve the heterogeneity of cultures, in what Amartya Sen calls a global convergence of cultures towards one unifying global mindset.
Thank you for your work Ryan, is giving me a purpose. Can I ask you if and when you will update the Robin Waterfield interview? His version was the first I read of Meditations Thanks
technical death metal 1 millions note vs 2 note 4 bar pop ironicly metal is more intense than ever but yea.. pop everywhere.. 99% of cellphone zombie in bus and metro, letting me read their personal info and their song list by thinking no one can see thier screen
What a great podcast! Chuck you are my favorite writer f modern times. Thank you for your unique perpective.
Chuck has an amazing perception on culture! Great podcast! Thank you!
I've been reading Klosterman since I found Fargo Rock City when I was in 10th grade. Loved this
Chuck is so fun. Great interview. Great insights. One of my favorite things about aging is seeing change and reflecting. And then, trying to guess what comes next!
Listening to Chuck Klosterman is like lighting a bowl without lighting a bowl
The highlight of my weekends during the 2000s was buying old issues of Spin Magazine to read Chuck's articles.
Completely relate to the 6-7 cassettes as an 8th grader versus 60K songs on demand portion & potentially being a different person!
This was my favorite so far
I'm was in my 20s in the 90s
The 70s and 80s were the best times of my life
For me dere the 80's and the early nineties.
@@mb8kr yes how wonderful those times will never be compared
Love Chuck this is great.
This guy is Quinton Tarantinos and Adam Savages love child 🤣😎👌
If that’s the case, Brian Posehn must have watching in the corner or something😂
He sounds exactly like Norm Macdonald's Tarantino
Beautiful and perfect analogy
Hahaha I had to memorize Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening in high school and I have randomly busted it out a few times in life since
I still love The X Factor.
That 80’s snare…..
Great meditation to start the day CBGB may be an important part of the discussion on "subculture" bridging counterculture, and new music creativity to the scene since 1973. One could almost do a study on the correlations of counter culture and subculture of the 60's, 70's, 80's, and 90's and fringe ideologies of distinct "imagined communities." I would also argue that Metallica's "Black Album" is tantamount to the Beatles "White Album" in terms of an 80's Metal Band having a metamorphosis and preserving Metal in a time of Grunge. I also feel that we need more record labels like "Putumayo" (which they sell at the headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva) that can preserve the heterogeneity of cultures, in what Amartya Sen calls a global convergence of cultures towards one unifying global mindset.
One of my favorite podcasts in awhile. Beevis and Butthead meets….
You got Chuck!!!!!!
I love But What If We’re Wrong. I think of it almost daily, the world is so upside down I’m certain we’re wrong.
Love to hear the love for Iron Maiden 🙂
he is an interesting dude
Thank you for your work Ryan, is giving me a purpose. Can I ask you if and when you will update the Robin Waterfield interview? His version was the first I read of Meditations Thanks
Ed Sherran has let himself go
This is absolute perspicacity
Hip Hop peaked in 1999.
Good timimg
technical death metal 1 millions note vs 2 note 4 bar pop
ironicly metal is more intense than ever but yea.. pop everywhere..
99% of cellphone zombie in bus and metro, letting me read their personal info and their song list by thinking no one can see thier screen