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Entries from Gothamist tagged with 'janeausten'

February 3, 2008

We already covered the Super Bowl half time show alternatives, but what if you're not a football fan or your team didn’t make it? What if you don’t want to sit through a football game to watch commercials or if you hate Joe Buck and Troy Aikman? Well, don’t worry, there are some television alternatives for you if you don’t want to watch either the game or the countless hours of pre-game shows. If crime......

Continue Reading "Not Bowled Over By Football? Some Not So Super TV Alternatives"

September 20, 2007

Into the Wild (directed by Sean Penn) Chris McCandless wanted to utterly divorce himself from civilization. He gave away all of his money, abandoned his car, changed his name and cut off all ties with his family. Adventure journalist Jon Krakauer wrote a very moving account of the young man's experiences tramping around the United States for two years and then spending four months living in an abandoned bus in the Alaskan wilds before dying......

Continue Reading "The Cinecultist's Weekly Movie Pick: Roughing It Edition"

August 31, 2006

After seeing Liao Yusheng's beautiful photograph of the Morgan Library's addition, we decided that we should head over to the museum soon. The Morgan has a collection of early books, historical manuscripts, and more. And one exhibit catches our eye: The Morgan has some of its "Masterworks" on display, and we're particularly interested in the literary and historical manuscripts:Manuscript drafts that show works in progress include Oscar Wilde's play An Ideal Husband and Bob Dylan's......

Continue Reading "The Morgan's Masterwork Manuscripts"

April 4, 2006

...this week has got it all. Kick it off tonight at the South Street Seaport Museum (Melville Gallery, 213 Water Street), as the New York Review of Science Fiction Readings presents Robert Freeman Wexler (his latest novel is Circus of the Grand Design) and Gregory Frost (with his latest, Attack of the Jazz Giants). The reading starts at 7PM and the suggested donation is $5. Tomorrow night (4/5), head down to KGB Bar (85 E.......

Continue Reading "Literati Roundup: From Poetry to Science Fiction..."

January 15, 2006

On Sundays, Gothamist runs opinion pieces on issues relevant to life in New York. The views expressed below belong entirely to the author. It wouldn’t have occurred to me to put Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, The Royal Tennenbaums, and Darwin’s Origin of the Species into a Petri dish to see happens. We can be grateful to Galt Niederhoffer for doing just that with her debut novel, A Taxonomy of Barnacles. The novel is set......

Continue Reading "Opinionist: A Taxonomy of Barnacles"

November 13, 2005

On Sundays, Gothamist runs opinion pieces on issues relevant to life in New York. The views expressed below belong entirely to the author. Sunday’s Opinionist columns are meant to be snippets and ideas about New York life, but you’ll permit me a slight diversion from topic to discuss something also fundamental to New York life – reading. Get on any subway or bus at any time of day and you’ll find about twenty people with......

Continue Reading "Opinionist: The Reading Life"

November 10, 2005

Another week, another slew of new releases available for our viewing pressure. If you've been watching TV regularly, you might think that Rent, Walk the Line or Aeon Flux are all coming out tomorrow, but no. Still, there's plenty to see such as the adaptation of Myla Goldberg's novel Bee Season; Kiera Knightly taking on Jane Austen in Pride and Prejudice; and although we might not otherwise be too excited for Zathura, our interest is......

Continue Reading "Weekend Movie Guide"

February 4, 2005

It's a complete cliche but in order for movies like the new romantic comedy opening this weekend with Debra Messing and Dermot Mulroney, The Wedding Date, to do well at the box office chicks have to promise the trade-off. Something along the lines of "my movie with the word Wedding in the title" for "your silly game with sweaty men in tight pants on Sunday." Not that Debra and Dermot's movie looks like it will......

Continue Reading "The Romantic Movie Trade-Off"

January 24, 2005

2005_01_genevieve_small.jpg
Genevieve Field, Sex and Sensibility editor, Nerve.com co-founder...

Continue Reading "Genevieve Field, Sex and Sensibility editor, Nerve.com co-founder"

November 12, 2004

The movie version of the sequel to Bridget Jones's Diary, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason hits theaters today — will this be a further boost to Renée Zellweger's career or just another nail in the coffin of the romantic comedy? She's fat, she's thin, now she's fat again! Gothamist is sick of hearing about it, but it's difficult not to watch. Plus, this time around she's an Oscar winning actress, rather than an ingenue......

Continue Reading "Off The Deep End With Bridget Jones?"

November 4, 2004

Today kicks off the Fourth Annual IAAC Film Festival: The Indian Diaspora being held at Walter Reade theater in Lincoln Center and at Anthology Film Archives running through this weekend. Highlighting films "made by, about or featuring persons of Indian origin," the series celebrates the wealth of experience and cultural contributions made by Indians living outside of India. If you've ever wandered past the Indian delis on Second Avenue glancing at the intriguing posters for......

Continue Reading "Bindis, Samosas and The Indian Diaspora"

April 7, 2004

There’s this woman in my book club. She seemed nice enough at first, but lately she’s gotten really annoying. She flaunts her ivy league MFA and turns every discussion into a lecture on the finer points of Faulkner and Hemmingway. This group started off as just a social meeting of who wanted to talk casually about books, not an English class. What used to be a fun Thursday night gathering has now turned into something......

Continue Reading "That Woman"

September 15, 2003

Though Gothamist is not the exact target, we couldn't resist commenting about self-help meets chick-flick-plotline, Find a Husband After 35 Using What I Learned in Harvard Business School, which was featured in the Post this weekend. Author Rachel Greenwald applies marketing tactics, like direct mail and telemarketing, to dating, for the greatest efficiencies: - Make Thanksgiving cards asking friends to hook you up - Take criticism from pals to revamp your appearance - Embark on......

Continue Reading "How to Find a Husband in 15 Steps"

July 1, 2003

Gothamist Reads The Parker Grey Show
Gothamist takes a much-need break from mindless chick lit for an "anti-it girl" book ....

Continue Reading "Gothamist Reads: The Parker Grey Show"

March 30, 2003

While Britain may have limited television options, the BBC has continued to churn out its high quality television adapatations of novels, both classic and contemporary. The current "go-to man" in giving the adaptations a rich life on screen is Andrew Davies, as profiled in the L.A. Times today, in anticipation of tonight's premiere of his adpatation of George Eliot's Daniel Deronda on PBS tonight and tomorrow. What's fascinating about Davies is that he only turned......

Continue Reading "Drama King"

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