Werewolf Edition 26 Now Available! - Pre-Election Edition #1
Tuesday, 13 September 2011, 11:02 am
Article: Werewolf
Werewolf Edition 26 Now Available! -
Pre-Election Edition No. 1
From Werewolf Editor
Gordon Campbell
http://werewolf.co.nz/Hi and welcome to
the 26th edition of Werewolf, which focuses this month on
the government’s plans for partial asset sales, an issue
which is likely to dominate this year’s election campaign
– or at least those aspects of the campaign not already
dominated by John Key’s remarkable personality, his fond
memories of his first pet and favourite colour. Werewolf
concludes that selling off shares in our energy companies and buying Air New
Zealand for the third time does not make any social or
economic sense.
Elsewhere in this month’s Werewolf,
we consider the surprising links between top-drawer
international cricket and depression. More than other
competitive sports, cricket appears to make its top players
more liable to mental illness, and hitherto, the game’s
administrators have been slow to recognise and respond to
the incidence of depression. In her Left Coasting column
Rosalea Barkerreports on the free speech implications of
San Francisco’s BART transport system throwing a digital
blanket over cellphone coverage in order to block a
political protest by its customers. Also, we analyse the ethical and practical issues
involved as young people facing major challenges continue to
be denied the vote, while baby boomers head towards
senility in potentially large numbers without any discussion
of the implications for the integrity of our voting system.
In his satirical column From the Hood, Lyndon Hoodtakes on the troubled persona of a
Department of Labour safety inspector, post Pike
River.
Advertisement - scroll to continue reading
In film coverage this month, Philip Matthews analyses the sense and
sensibility behind Lars von Trier’s latest film
Melancholia, while Brannavan Gnanalingham uses his Milestone Movies column to explore
the documentary career of Werner Herzog, with a special
emphasis on the recent Cave of Forgotten Dreams. In our
children’s classics column this month, Grace C. Russell reveals how dog movies like Lady and
the Tramp and Benjieducate/indoctrinate children about the
perils and attractions of life on the streets, before
telling kids that hey, home is always best. The Complicatist
music column examines the Retromania ‘death of pop”
non-issue, and especially how Gen X’s signature repugnance
for nostalgia fits in with the 90s revival. Answer : it
doesn’t. Also, in his issue, Mark P. Williams analyses the ethical and
stylistic challenges involved in using real life war and
conflict as the raw material for contemporary fiction.
And in Cartoon Alley this month, we have new work by the team of Mike Brown
and Mat Tait.
Thanks again, to Alastair Thompson and
David McLellan for helping me post this online. Werewolf is
a thank you to Scoop readers and is intended as an outlet
for local writers and artists. If you want to be involved,
contact me at gordon@scoop.co.nz and let's talk story
ideas.
Gordon Campbell
Editor, Werewolf.
gordon@werewolf.co.nz
The contents of this
edition
are:
************
FEATURES:
***********Ten Myths About Asset Sales
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/ten-myths-about-asset-sales/
Selling down the public’s stake in
energy companies and Air NZ makes little sense, socially or
economically
by Gordon Campbell
Cricket and Depression
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/cricket-and-depression/
Is there something about cricket that
puts its top players at greater risk of mental
illness?
by Gordon Campbell
Too Old To Vote?
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/too-old-to-vote/
As the population ages, will senile
voters decide the election outcome in future?
by Gordon
Campbell
Imagining War
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/imagining-war/
The ethical and stylistic issues in
using real-life war zones as a basis for contemporary
fiction
by Mark P. Williams
and from last
edition...
Train Wreck at Kiwirail
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/08/train-wreck-at-kiwirail/"
Behind the job losses at Hillside and
Woburn…
by Gordon Campbell
Losing Student Media
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/08/losing-student-media/"
Tracing one likely effect of voluntary
student membership
by Sarah
Robson
************
COLUMNS:
***********Classics : Lady and the Tramp (1955)
and Benji (1974)
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/classics-lady-and-the-tramp-1955-and-benji-1974/
How Disney (and others) teach children
that living in a nice suburban home beats living free in the
city
by Grace C. Russell
Left Coasting : Barricading the
Information Superplaza
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/left-coasting-barricading-the-information-superplaza/
BART starts a free speech
firestorm
by Rosalea Barker
Touching the Void
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/touching-the-void/
In Melancholia Lars von Trier
hives off serenely into the cosmos
by Philip
Matthews
From the Hood: The Inspector
Protector
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/from-the-hood-the-inspector-protector/
Inspection is my life
by By Lyndon
Hood
Milestone Movies : Cave of Forgotten
Dreams ( 2010)
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/milestone-movies-cave-of-forgotten-dreams-2010/
This time, Werner Herzog’s process of
turning obsession into art begins with art
by Brannavan
Gnanalingham
The Complicatist : Retromania ( yet
again)
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/the-complicatist-retromania-yet-again/
We’re all busy making plans for the
past
by Gordon Campbell
Cartoon Alley : Mat Tait & Mike
Brown
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/cartoon-alley-mike-brown-mat-tait/
Mat Tait is a South Island based
cartoonist and illustrator. Mike Brown lives in
Wellington and is currently writing a PhD thesis on New
Zealand vernacular musics.
by Mike Brown & Mat
Tait
* * * * * WEREWOLF ISSUE 25,
August 2011 * * * * *
http://werewolf.co.nz/2011/09/werewolf-issue-25-august-2011/
The August 2011 Edition of
Werewolf
by
Werewolf
*********THE IMPORTANT BIT
- WHY WEREWOLF?
from Scoop General Manager Alastair
Thompson
Werewolf is all about finding a new way to enable
quality journalism to thrive in an online environment and a
key part of that effort is soliciting support from our
readers.
Our estimate is that for every 300 monthly
subscribers we gain we will be able to afford to employ one
professional journalist. We have a way to go - but it is not
such a high mountain to climb.
Already several Scoop
readers have decided to subscribe on a recurring monthly
basis. We thank them greatly. But more are needed.
The
links to use to make donations via credit card are.
$10
Per Month Sustaining Subscription
http://scoop.co.nz/go/subscribe10.html
$15
Per Month Sustaining Subscription
http://scoop.co.nz/go/subscribe15.html
$25
Per Month Sustaining Subscription
http://scoop.co.nz/go/subscribe25.html
Or
if you prefer you can set up an automatic payment to our
bank account"
Automatic payment to our bank
account:
Westpac - Scoop Media Ltd.
03-0502-0254668-000
We would also encourage you to
consider approaching your friends to also become Scoop
Sustaining Subscribers.
Become a Scoop Sustaining
Subscriber - join the alternative to the mainstream media
mind-set!
In the meantime we would be very keen to
hear any feedback you have on the publication or this
subscription project - please reply to this email or email
werewolf@scoop.co.nz with suggestions, bouquets or
brickbats. This is very much a work in progress and we are
very keen to understand the subscriber perspective on
this.
Best Regards
Alastair Thompson
Scoop.co.nz
General
Manager
© Scoop Media
Are you licensed for Scoop?
Scoop is free for personal use, but you’ll need a licence for work use. This is part of our Ethical Paywall and how we fund Scoop without a regular paywall. Join today with plans starting from just $11 per month, and start using Scoop like a Pro.
Join Pro Individual
Find out more