Paul Levinson
writes science fiction, sf/mystery and popular and scholarly non-fiction.
The Silk Code won the Locus award for Best First Novel of 1999. His novel
The Consciousness Plague won the 2003 Mary Shelley Award for outstanding
Fictional Work. He has published 29 science fiction stories, some of which
are now available on fictionwise.com. His novella "Loose Ends" was a 1998
Hugo Award finalist, a finalist for the 1998 Sturgeon Award, and a finalist
for the 1997 Nebula Award. The radioplay of his novelette "The Chronology
Protection Case" was nominated for an Edgar Award for Best Mystery Play of
2002. Digital McLuhan won the 2000 Lewis Mumford Award for Outstanding
Scholarship. His work has been translated into twelve languages.
Paul Levinson has published seven non-fiction books.
Digital McLuhan: A Guide to the Information Millennium, was published
worldwide in hardcover by Routledge in 1999; trade paperback edition 2001.
Digital McLuhan won the 2000 Lewis Mumford Award for Outstanding
Scholarship. WIRED's Kevin Kelly said about Digital McLuhan, "Paul Levinson
completes McLuhan's pioneering work. Read this book if you want to decipher
life on the screen." The New York Times said "Levinson performs a useful
service ... [he] applies McLuhan's work to almost every facet of modern
communications" and in another article "Digital McLuhan presents McLuhan in
a new light, [for] a generation grappling with the transforming effects of
cyberspace, cell phones and virtual reality." Digital McLuhan is included on
Robert Anton Wilson's " Recommended Reading List," of "the bare minimum of
what everybody really needs to chew and digest before they can converse
intelligently about the 21st Century." Professors in graduate and
undergraduate classes around the world use this book to help their students
put the Internet into perspective. The book has been published in Japanese
and Chinese and translations are underway in Croatian, Romanian, and Korean.
The Soft Edge: A Natural History and Future of the Information Revolution (Routledge
hardcover 1997, trade paperback 1998) received major critical acclaim --
ranging from WIRED ("Remarkable in both scholarly sweep and rhetorical
lyricism...") and The Financial Times of London ("a book that is both full
of insights and provocative") to Amazon.com's Cyberculture editor ("Levinson
has a knack for making his reader feel intelligent and respected") and
Analog ("...defies the critics of technology") -- and the book was the
subject of a 90-minute talk he gave at Borders at New York City's World
Trade Center, which aired on C-SPAN's "About Books" on February 28, 1998. It
is used in university classes around the world with its comprehensive view
of where our communications technologies have been and where they are going.
Translations of The Soft Edge are available in Portuguese, Polish, Turkish,
and Chinese.
Here's the news about Paul's latest novel - The
Plot to Save Socrates - and his first, The Silk Code...
The February 2006 first edition of The Plot
to Save Socrates went into three hardcover printings and
the hardcover
gift edition is still available... And now, a handsome new trade
paperback edition is here....
order your copy now!
Listen to Paul read the first chapter - your own private reading in
your living room, or download it to your iPod or CD and take it with
you!
Entertainment Weekly magazine calls it
"challenging fun"... EW is the leading
entertainment magazine in the US with over 2 million copies in
circulation each week!
A thoughtful new review by Colin Harvey on
StrangeHorizons.com says "There's a delightfully
old-fashioned feel to The Plot to Save Socrates... Levinson's
cool, spare style reminded me of the writing of Isaac Asimov... The
Plot to Save Socrates is a book that will bear repeated rereading."
A STARRED review in Library Journal says...
"...Levinson spins a fascinating tale that spans the centuries from 400
B.C.E. to 2061 C.E. and ranges from ancient Greece and Egypt to
Victorian London and future New York. An intriguing premise with
believable characters and attention to period detail make this an
outstanding choice... Highly recommended."
Brian Charles Clark's detailed and enjoyable review (be aware, a few
surprise plot points are revealed!) on
Curled
Up With a Good Book says The Plot to Save Socrates
"resonates with the current political climate" and he finds "a bite to
Levinson's wit"... and he notes that "heroine Sierra Waters is sexy as
hell"...
John Joseph Adams, writing in
Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show calls The
Plot to Save Socrates "...an elaborately- reasoned temporal tale - a
novelized thought experiment whose logic and ideas Socrates would have
approved of..."
Pamela Sargent's
SciFi Weekly review calls it "highly original,"
"conscientiously researched and well rendered," "emotionally satisfying
and extremely moving." She concludes, "The Plot to Save Socrates
will provoke thought long after readers have finished the book, at which
point many may want to pick it up and read it again, to savor its twists
and turns."
Tom Easton, writing in
Analog magazine, calls The Plot to Save Socrates "very
satisfying... a tour de force..." and he says "Watch for it on
award ballots."
Kristin Gray, in the Davis, California,
Enterprise says the book is "fast-paced and full of plot
twists"...
And this from Gavin Grant in
Bookpage: "It's obvious that Levinson had a lot of fun and
did a lot of research to write this book, and readers are sure to enjoy
his take on the paradoxes of time travel."
Fantasybookspot calls it "a philosophically rich, engaging time
travel story... a charming portrayal of Socrates"...
Thomas M. Wagner, writing on
sfreviews.net, raves about "this yummy little pretzel of a
story" ... calling it "deliriously mind-boggling time travel... Paul
Levinson's The Plot to Save Socrates is a rare example of
a novel actually thriving on paradoxes... daring with both its ideas and
its approach to narrative structure... It's an absolute treat to sit
back and be wrapped up in a story that gives a retro SF premise like
time travel such a brilliant new kick, and it's doubly delightful to
find the story as fun and entertaining as it is thought-provoking. Brain
candy and brain vegetables, all in one serving. ... I just have to
recommend the book to any and every SF reader looking for something
truly original for a change."
Book.of.the.moment says "I've never read anything like this
before... The Plot to Save Socrates is highly original,
creative, and engaging. I enjoyed it from the first page."
Publisher's Weekly calls it a "light, engaging time travel
yarn" and says "...by the surprise end, Levinson succeeds in tying the
main narrative together in a way that neatly satisfies the circularity
inherent in time travel, whose paradoxes he links to Greek
philosophy..."
Booklist says "The plot twists across itself, filling the book
with paradoxes and potential paradoxes in total disregard for linear
time, betrayal, and plotting. In the end, Socrates' fate and Andros'
motivations and identity conclude a quick-to-read, entertaining
treatment of the problems inherent in time travel with style and flair."
And
Meme Therapy joins Far Sector
andSciFi
Wire with feature interviews with Paul about time travel
and the writing of The Plot to Save Socrates...
The Plot to Save Socrates... political intrigue... ancient
mysteries... time travel... past and future locales... deception and
subterfuge... watch here for more!
Now available in bookstores everywhere...
in hardcover or
order your trade paperback copy now!
Listen to the new podiobook serial of Paul's 1999
award-winning first novel...
The Silk Code - read by Shaun Farrell - now available
for your listening pleasure!
Click here
for more about the weekly installments of this podiobook -
introduced by famed authors such as Joe Haldeman who said The Silk
Code was "an impressive debut". The podiobook is now available for
free subscription to download to your computer or iPod.
And take a look at what the
critics
had to say about this Locus Award winning novel... The Silk Code...
still available in bookstores and for
online order today!
Have you listened to Paul's podcasts?
Paul has been
blogging for a while - about television, writing, politics, and all
sorts of popular culture topics. Check it out... add your comments....
And now he's also podcasting... his signature show is
Light On
Light Through... a short, more-or-less weekly commentary on
technological, media, and popular culture issues ranging from Wikipedia
to Battlestar Galactica to the First Amendment... available free of
charge through
iTunes, or by
RSS
subscription, or here:
Episode 1: "Prius and the Reunion of Talking and Walking: On the
Road to Teleportation"
Episode 2: "Kidnapped and Battlestar Galactica:
Leading the TV Pack at Quartertime"
Episode 3: "Wikipedia: The Open Gates of Knowledge"
Episode 4: "A Cranky Look at Eastern Standard Time"
From July 2006 to January 2008 Paul had a weekly
interview spot on Los Angeles radio KNX (CBS all news radio) on
Sunday mornings....
Larry Van Nuys interviewing (2006):
July 9: humans in space
July 16: social impact of cellphones
July 23: respect the First Amendment (part 1)
July 30: respect the First Amendment (part 2)
August 6: only idiots don't watch tv
August 13: terrorism in a media age
August 20: media coverage of sensational news stories
August 27: the Emmys!
September 3: Fall television season
September 10: media aftermath, 5 years after September 11
September 17: are the media too aggressive?
September 24: outer space tourism
October 1: Clinton vs. Wallace on Fox News Sunday
October 8: Bob Woodward's books on Bush and the war
October 15: the benefits of strong opinions on cable news
October 22: YouTube's impact on politics
October 29: 'tis the season for political ads
November 5: Bluetooth technology: the intelligent earring
November 12: viral marketing
November 19: swarming cellphones
November 26: the new James Bond
December 3: another look at Fall tv
December 10: John Lennon's continuing influence
December 17: Golden Globes!
December 24: Time's Person of the Year is You, the YouTube
producer
Todd Leitz interviewing (2006-7):
December 31: intelligent advertising: you determine the ads
January 7, 2007: Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth": the media on global
warming
January 14: how we watch Presidential speeches
January 21: Keith Olbermann and 24
January 28: Foxing Obama
February 4: Super Bowl ads
February 11: Blockbuster, Netflix, the Web: The Future of Watching
Movies
February 18: the FCC - at it again
February 25: Oscars!
March 4: the RIAA and fair use
March 11: free Josh Wolf: we need a Federal Shield Law
March 18: blogger journalism
March 25: media drop the ball on reporting John Edwards news
April 1: media coverage of British-Iranian hostage story
April 8: the ethics of hostages selling their stories
April 15: don't let Imus off the hook by blaming the culture
April 22: how the media handled the Virginia Tech tragedy
April 29: demonstrating violence in the classroom May 6: the first
Presidential debates and the LA police riot
May 13: mistreatment of online Ron Paul support
May 20: Fox's spin on after-debate poll reporting (Bob Brill
interviewing)
May 27: Star Wars celebration!
June 3: Ward Churchill and sockpuppetry
June 10: the media and Paris Hilton
June 17: The Sopranos finale
June 24: Hillary Soprano and Obama-girl videos
Bob Brill interviewing (2007):
July 1: Elizabeth Edwards vs. Ann Coulter
July 8: the iPhone
July 15: Harry Potter movie
July 22: You Tube-CNN Presidential debate
July 29: Chinese censorship of the Internet
August 5: teens are getting their news from Digg not The New York Times
August 12: the lack of media coverage of Ron Paul
August 19: Big Brother satellites in the sky
August 26: in praise of George Lotz, the kid who cracked the iPhone
September 2: NBC and iTunes split
September 9: celebrity endorsements of political candidates
September 16: the Emmys!
September 23: OJ Media coverage; Moveon.org "Betray us" ad
September 30: Sputnik's 50th anniversary
October 7: FCC auctions off new bandwidth
October 28: fake FEMA press conference
November 4: Writers Guild of America strike
November 11: WGA strike continues
November 18: Obama: Better at speeches than debating?
November 25: impact of the WGA strike
December 2: how important are polls in elections?
December 9: how important are celebrity endorsements in politics?
December 16: newspaper endorsements of Clinton and Obama
December 23: FCC relaxes concentration rules: Good!
December 30: dirty tricks in presidential campaign
Mark Austin Thomas interviewing (2008):
January 6, 2008: Iowa, New Hampshire primaries and the media
January 13: the dangers of a national ID card
Paul Levinson is proud to be included once again in the
Freedom Forum's
prestigious 2007 First Amendment Desk Calendar.
He is quoted on the May 8, 2007 page:
"What begins as a seemingly innocent campaign against indecency...
always segues in short order into political censorship."
-from his Keynote Address at the 2004 Media Ecology Conference in
New York City
Paul talked about the extraordinary social impact of the cellphone on
Discovery Channel's new series The Inside Story of... the
Cellphone which premiered on December 27... check your local
listings for replays and set your TiVo!
Want to read more about the impact of cellphones? Take a look at Paul's
recent book Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobile
Medium, and How it Has Transformed Everything! - the book that
Sir Arthur C. Clarke called "A superb and often amusing account
of one of the greatest revolutions in human history, in which we are now
living. The wristwatch phone of the old science fiction stories is now a
reality! What more can we expect? Direct brain to brain communication?
Stay tuned...." Available in bookstores and for
online order today!
Paul's latest op-ed for Newsday is titled "TV's
New Golden Age." Published on July 23, 2006, this piece develops his
argument that "only idiots don't watch tv," finding groundbreaking
excellence in programming ranging from "Battlestar Galactica" and "Da
Ali G Show" to "Rome" and "24". Paul has been an outspoken defender of
tv at least since his 1980 article "The Benefits of Watching
Television."
Non-fiction book news... Digital McLuhan
trade paperback has gone into another printing! Continually
in print since its original hardcover publication in 1999, Digital
McLuhan has been translated into five languages and is used
around the world as a clear, instructive guide to the 21st century
relevance of Marshall McLuhan's brilliant and prescient explorations.
Recent major television appearances....
Tuesday January 31, Paul's debut on
PBS' NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, talking about departing
Federal Reserve Board chair Alan Greenspan as pop culture icon...
earlier that evening Paul appeared on New York City's WCBS-TV Channel 2
News on the same story.... watch here for more!
Paul Levinson has long been a vocal critic of
government attacks on the First Amendment -- from the FCC's threats
to freedom of speech... to the assault on freedom of the press in meting
out jailtime to reporters who must protect their sources... and other
incursions on our freedoms.
...on October 18 Judith Miller, the New York Times
reporter who was jailed for 85 days for refusing to reveal a source,
quoted Paul's comments in her
testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on why we need a
Federal shield law...
...and on November 9, Paul was interviewed on CNN Radio about Judith
Miller's departure from The New York Times ...
Paul is presently writing a book on the threat to
our Constitutional freedoms, The Flouting of the First Amendment,
and is always available to
talk to the
press and to
groups
about these important issues.
Paul has praise for reinvigorated media advocacy
in their reporting on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina:
Major quotes in
AP piece on Sunday September 25 about Fox News Shepard Smith's
extraordinary coverage of the plight of evacuated New Orleans
residents who seemed to have been abandoned by the government - this
piece picked up by media outlets around the US and abroad...
Writing an op-ed for the Sunday "Opinions" section of Newsday
on September 11, 2005,
"The Media's Righteous Outrage" -- the piece was reprinted in
numerous newspapers around the world. An
excerpt from this piece was featured by Bill O'Reilly on Fox
News' The O'Reilly Factor on September 12...
Quoted in
USA Todayon September 5, "...the beginning of the
media's reassertion of aggressive, in-your-face reporting"...
Referenced in
Dan Froomkin's Washington Post column-blog, "The media
rose to the occasion, shone their light on the desolation and the
needy, and kept it focused there until the cavalry finally began to
arrive"...
Interviewed by
Canadian Press for newspapers around Canada saying
"Hurricane Katrina has reawakened the sleeping giant, and I believe
we'll now see a return to the Watergate era of hard-hitting
reporting in the United States"...
In the St. Petersburg [Florida] Times on October 5,
talking about how cellphones are getting smaller and, smarter
he predicts, "We're going to wind up in essence with
'intelligent earrings'"...
A spot on NPR's WBUR (Boston)"On
Point" program, talking about cellphones in airplanes (preview:
unsurprisingly, Paul is in favor... ), also on March 24...
Quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle on February 27 and
the Scripps- Howard News Service on March 6, on the
culture of cellphones...
Extensively quoted in a piece on
cellphones in the office in the British web publication,
PersonnelToday.com, August, 2005...
Cited by Clarence Page in a PBS-TV essay about cellphones on
The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on August 24...
listen here to the RealAudio!
Paul was invited to pen an op-ed piece about cellphones,
published as
"When the call comes, ignore it" in the August 7 edition of
Newsday, the well- respected, high-circulation newspaper of Long
Island and New York and reprinted in many newspapers around the
world.
And The Week magazine - a weekly survey of "The Best
of the U.S and International Media" - selected Paul's Newsday
piece as a "Best Column" in their August 14th issue.
Paul is quoted on the front page of The New York Times
Thursday "Style" section on July 7 in a story about
cellphone etiquette in the office...
and he gave an hour-long radio interview on June 16, 2005, about
cellphone "addiction" and cellphone benefits - on the Ben Merens
Show on Wisconsin Public Radio.
Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobile
Medium and How it Has Transformed Everything!...
check it out!
Paul Levinson is speaking out on the ongoing threat
to freedom of the press and all of our First Amendment freedoms...
In
USA Today on July 1, Paul criticizes the decision of
Time magazine to turn over reporter Matt Cooper's notes and
email about the Valerie Plame CIA leak to a Federal judge, while
Cooper is facing jail for refusing to name his sources.
Paul is quoted as saying, "How is some local paper in a rural
state going to find the courage to stand up to this kind of thing if
Time doesn't have the courage?"
This quote was picked up by Montana'sGreat Falls Tribune on July 2 as their Quote of the
Week...
In an interview on Detroit's WJR Radio by Mitch Albom on July 1,
Paul discusses the first amendment implications of Time's
decision...
In two interviews on AP Radio, on July 5 and July 6, Paul
attacks Federal prosecutors for the decision to jail New York
Times reporter Judith Miller, and for seeking jail for Matt
Cooper, for refusing to name their sources in this case...
On ABC News Now "Guilt or Innocence" segment on July 11,
discussing the culpability of Karl Rove vs. Judith Miller and other
reporters...
And Paul discusses the history and continuing incursions on our
First Amendment rights in "The Flouting of the First Amendment,"
... his Keynote Address at the 6th Annual Media Ecology
Association Convention at
Fordham University in New York City on June 23...
request a transcript here...
Click
here for earlier quotes on First Amendment issues... and
here...
and here...
Appearing on television, radio, and widely quoted in
print, Paul weighs in on the acquittal of Michael Jackson and the
positive impact it could have on Jackson's career:
interviewed on Newsworld International, the international news
service of CBC television in Canada,
and on the
AP Wire, in an article picked up by 100 major news outlets
around the world...
In his comments on Newsweek's retraction
of their reporting of alleged Koran desecration at Guantanamo, Paul
points out the damage that can be done when top journalists appear to
forget the basic rules of Journalism 101: check your sources. He
appeared on May 16 and 17th on New York City television news programs on
WNBC-TV's "Live at Five", WB- 11 and UPN-9, Toronto area 570NEWS
radio, Vancouver's CKNW radio Stirling Faux Show, and was quoted
in articles in
Newsday,USA Today, and in
Toronto's The Globe and Mail.
And Paul greets the release of Star Wars Episode
III: The Revenge of the Sith with observations to the
New York Daily News,Reuters News
Agency (widely reprinted), ABC- Network radio and CNN-radio, seeing
the Star Wars phenomenon as achieving in two generations what it
took the Iliad and Odyssey millennia to accomplish, and
discussing the political lessons we can learn from the saga.
Available as of June 2005... Levinson novel on CD
...
Stage actor Mark Shanahan has produced and narrates an 8 hour, 7 CD
abridged
audio-book of Paul's Phil D'Amato novel
The
Consciousness Plague, with music and sound effects, now also
available for download on audible.com. And The Consciousness
Plague audiobook was a finalist in the
2005 "Audie" awards known as the "Oscars" of audiobooks. As they
say, it would have been great to win, but it was an honor to be
nominated! Watch for announcements of more audiobooks of Paul's
novels... pick up a copy of the
print version...
And we're happy to announce that Palgrave/Macmillan recently
rushed a second printing of Cellphone. See
below for
details about the book...
In another wave of appearances, Paul continued to
discuss the
book and comment on issues regarding cellphones, including the
recent decision by the FCC to review the ban on cellphones in airplanes.
Unlike many media critics, Paul is against banning cellphones
on planes, provided there is no safety issue regarding the plane's
navigation, and was quoted on this story in the
Los Angeles Times and
Chicago Tribuneon December 16, 2004.
On February 13, 2005 the Sacramento Bee ran a story about the
feelings people have about their cellphones, quoting him and mentioning
Cellphone.
He was interviewed about the book for Bloomberg Radio, in a feature
story that aired all day on February 26, 2005.
Paul started 2005 speaking out about the FCC and its
threat to the First Amendment, and the chilling effect of fear of
government censorship:
Quoted in AP and
Scripps-Howard articles about Kevin Martin's appointment as new
FCC Chair: "a step in the worst possible direction... the Bush
Administration had a chance to finally stand up and respect the
First Amendment. Instead, it has signaled dark and dangerous days
ahead for those who share the Jeffersonian ideal of freedom of
expression", March 16-18;
Interviewed by Kelly Wallace on CNN's American Morning
Monday February 7;
an op-ed piece
published in Westchester's Gannett newspaper, the
Journal-News, Sunday February 6;
quoted in February 3
AP article that was widely reprinted throughout the country ...
In related stories, Paul appeared on MSNBC's
Scarborough Country two weeks in succession: on
February 7, sparring with Joe Scarborough and Ann Coulter about
academic freedom, tenure, and the state of the university in America...
and again on
February 16, debating with Joe and Bob Kohn about the lessons
learned from the Dan Rather- CBS memo controversy... read the
transcripts...
And Paul returned to MSNBC's Scarborough Country
on April 12
(read the transcript) to explain and justify the differences in
media coverage of allegations against current House Majority Leader Tom
DeLay and former Clinton official Sandy Berger, pointing out that
DeLay's powerful governmental position demands media attention and
scrutiny...
Paul is frequently called by the media to comment on
the popular culture and on stories in the news about celebrity
personalities, prominent events and the news and entertainment
industries. Recent people and topics include Katie Couric and Meredith
Vieira, Amy Fisher (picked up on 12/21/05 by
gawker.com!), Arnold Schwarzenegger, Johnny Carson, Michael Jackson,
Liz Smith and Martha Stewart; media coverage of the Schiavo case, the
death of Pope John Paul II, the Star Wars phenomenon, the
popularity of "reality tv", and the proliferation of awards shows. On
the occasion of Arthur Miller's death, he told Reuters that "Arthur
Miller stole Marilyn Monroe from Joe DiMaggio, providing hope to all the
nerds and intellectuals of the world that the jock athlete doesn't
always get the girl." This quote appeared in publications around the
world, and was listed as the top "quote of the week" in London's
Daily Mail Sunday edition, on February 13, 2005.
In January 2005, Paul headed South, sidestepping a
blizzard in New York, to be a Guest of Honor alongside author
Larry Niven at a Southern literary science fiction convention:
Chattacon 30in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Read a con report by John Snider of Scifi Dimensions...
Paul Levinson was on television, radio and in
print this past Fall, talking about the major media stories of the
year: discussing the rise of cable news and the decline in popularity of
network news, looking at media bias and choices made in reporting,
talking about media coverage of the Presidential debates and the
election, commenting on the dangerous climate of fear of governmental
censorship, defending the First Amendment, and more...
In an hour-long interview on Tampa, Florida's WMNF community radio
program "Critical Times", on December 17, Paul took a look back at a
year of unprecedented attacks on American media by the FCC, in
blatant violation of the First Amendment...
On the departures of Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather from the
nightly evening network news programs, Paul has been widely quoted on
his view that this signals the beginning of the end of the network news
anchor as we know it, while he speculates on ways that their successors
could be successful. He had several
interviews with Reuters that were picked up by newspapers across the
country and
around the world, as well as interviews with the
Miami Herald, the
Denver Post, on CBS national radio, AP and
Bloomberg radio (one picked up on the Howard Stern radio program),
in
The New York Post, and... he was
cited by
Keith Olbermann on MSNBC's Countdown on November 30.
Appearing two more times on CNBC's Bullseye decrying
potential government censorship of videogames - on December 16, Paul
talked about the dangers of making sale of some videogames to minors
illegal, preferring that parents, not government, decide what is in
their children's best interests and on November 22, he suggested that
the best response to offensive media such as a new video game about the
JFK assassination is for the public, parents, consumers to denounce and
boycott it, but warning against government interference...
Back on MSNBC's Scarborough CountryNovember 18 with
guest host Pat Buchanan and guest Bob Kohn, talking about media bias and
who decides what stories we get to see...
read the transcript...
watch the videoclip...
Returning to
The O'Reilly Factoron November 16, Paul spars with Bill
and guest Mark Bowden about whether the media should edit or curtail
their broadcasts of real footage of war horrors such as Abu
Ghraib...
Read the transcript...
watch the videoclip... This is Paul's
third
appearance this year on this top-rated Fox News Channel cable tv
show, and he also appeared on The Radio Factor this summer...
On the decision of some ABC affiliates to pull the Veteran's Day 2004
broadcast of Saving Private Ryan, fearing possible FCC
imposition of fines for "indecent" language, on CNBC (national cable
tv), Bullseye, November 11. This appearance continues Paul's
outspoken
defense of the First Amendment in the face of real and potential
governmental censorship of the media.
On the Presidential debates and campaign coverage:
on MSNBC (national cable tv), Scarborough Country, Paul
defends The New York Times' publication of the story about
missing ammunition in Iraq, against guest host Pat Buchanan and
author Bob Kohn, October 27...
read the transcript...
quoted in
the Rocky Mountain News, Paul slams Sinclair
Broadcasting's plans to compel their stations to air an anti-Kerry
documentary before the election. While cautioning against government
censorship of Sinclair, he warns about "the dangers of media
concentration that allows one company to control the programming and
thought process of numerous outlets. I don't think any one company
should be programming politically oriented material for 62 TV
stations" ...
on CBS Radio Network News (nationally broadcast), live
commentary immediately following final Presidential debate, October
13; excerpts from subsequent interview broadcast October 14...
on Fox News Channel (national cable TV), The Big Story with
John Gibson, commenting on bias in news coverage of the
campaign, October 11...
on CBS Radio Network News (nationally broadcast), live
commentary immediately following second Presidential debate October
8; excerpts from subsequent interview broadcast October 9...
quoted in the
Dallas Morning- Newsand picked up by Knight-Ridder News
Service newspapers around the country about debate timing, October
8...
on KTSA Radio (San Antonio, Texas) about the first debate,
October 1...
on AP Radio (nationally broadcast) about the first debate,
October 1...
on Fox News Live with Alan Colmes, Fox Radio (nationally
broadcast) about the first debate, October 1...
On the Dan Rather-Bush document controversy,
putting the story into perspective:
on WNBC-TV (New York City), Weekend Today in New York
September 26...
on WB-11 (New York City WPIX-TV), News Close-up with Marvin
Scott, September 26...
on Fox News Channel (national cable TV), The Big Story with
John Gibson, September 22...
on Bloomberg Radio (nationally syndicated), September 20...
interviewed by David Diaz, Channel 2, WCBS-TV News (NYC),
September 16 ...
And commenting on censorship of political ads,
Paul has an op- ed piece
"A Modest Suggestion on Political Ads" in The Journal- News,
Westchester Gannett newspaper, September 5, 2004.
Paul brings the perspective of a media historian to
the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather on October 6 with his
comments on Howard Stern's announced move from restrictive, regulated
broadcast radio to unfettered Sirius Satellite radio. And he is
quoted on the same story in the Newark Star-Ledger, also on
October 6.
Summertime 2004 media appearances... Paul live
on MSNBC July 7, talking about the New York Post's "exclusive"
front page story erroneously announcing Kerry's VP choice as Gephardt...
On July 4th weekend Paul talked about the indictment and upcoming trial
of Saddam Hussein... on Bill O'Reilly's
The Radio
Factor with guest host Judge Andrew Napolitano on July 2...
and on July 4th on CNN's Sunday Live with Fredricka
Whitfield...
And Paul spoke with Kelly Wallace on CNN's American Morning,on
June 24, about Bill Clinton's new book, My Life, and its
anticipated impact as a news-rich summer begins.
Special New York City summer event... Reading
from The Pixel Eye in beautiful
Bryant Park's
outdoor Reading Room next to the New York Public Library at 42nd Street
between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, on Monday June 28, 2004 as part of the
park's
"Word for Word" lunchtime series. For those who haven't read the
book yet: after a daring escape from the Grace Building on 42nd Street,
Paul's forensic detective Dr. Phil D'Amato catches his breath in Bryant
Park, looks at the Library, and ponders his next move. What could be a
better location for this reading!
Paul was on NPR's nationally-broadcast "Talk of
the Nation" on Wednesday May 12, talking about his book
Cellphone. If you missed it, you can
listen on the web...
And he talked about
Cellphone on several local public radio, commercial
broadcast, and satellite radio shows and on cable television:
WXXI
- Rochester, NY NPR "What the Tech?" - July 17
Time Warner Cable Television - New York City - Conversations
with Harold Channer, September 29
Sirius Satellite radio - national - The John McMullen Show
- October 7
Voice of
America - international - Rosanne Skirble reporting - January
19, 2005
And.... Paul was quoted in The New York Times,
"Area Codes Divorced from their Access," - October 1
watch for
more....
Paul Levinson is speaking out on government
attacks on the First Amendment... about the FCC, Congressional
hearings, and the acquiescence of media organizations such as Clear
Channel to the government's pressure to censor what goes out on the
airwaves, cautioning that first amendment rights to free speech are
under attack when the government interferes with the content of radio
and television shows and attempts to censor on-air personalities such as
Howard Stern. In February, March and April 2004, Paul was on radio,
television, online and in print speaking out on this crucial topic:
Appearing on the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather on
February 26...
quoted in the March 6 issue of Billboard in commentary by
Keith Girard, picked up by
MSNBC,
Reuters, Yahoo News and other news outlets...
defending the First Amendment on National Public Radio station
WBUR's
"On Point" in an hour-long program on March 10...
on CNN's Financial Network, where Paul said, "The government
roared, and the media are beginning to run away like scared little
mice.... I think Thomas Jefferson would turn over in his grave if he
were seeing what [Clear Channel] was saying today." (February 26)...
on Bloomberg Radio, where he said "The Bush administration
couldn't find the weapons of mass destruction, so they are going
after an easier target," speaking about Clear Channel's decision to
suspend Howard Stern's radio show (February 26)...
He also has an
op-ed piece in the Sunday February 15 Atlanta Journal-
Constitution taking on the FCC and Congress as they investigate
"indecency" in media... and more to come.
Paul was back in the "No Spin Zone" on April 12,
2004, sparring again with Bill O'Reilly on the number one national
cable-tv news program - Fox News'The O'Reilly Factor -
speaking up for the media against Bill's accusations that they
deliberately lie to the public. His earlier appearance this year, on
January 23, was about whether
public people can have private lives ...
Head-to-head for a half-hour with Jesse Ventura
on the Governor's MSNBC program, Jesse Ventura's America, on
Saturday October 18, 2003... Paul defends the news media against Jesse's
attacks on their excesses ...read the
transcript...see the
videoclips!
Cellphone is available! Published in April 2004 by
Palgrave Macmillan, Paul Levinson's newest non-fiction book is on
bookstore shelves and available to purchase online...
Sir Arthur C. Clarke, author of 2001: A Space Odyssey, calls
it "a superb and often amusing account." Douglas Rushkoff, writing a
major review essay in TheFeature.com, says Cellphone
makes "an excellent case for the cell phone's ability to reinstate the
supremacy of the written word." And Pamir Gelenbe calls the book "a
thought-provoking analysis" in MediaWeek.
Paul gave a preview to receiver online magazine of
Cellphone, in
"Cellphone: The Jangling Saviour." And the book has just been
published in Chinese translation in the People's Republic of China. More
to come... watch this space for
more news
about Cellphone!
Gerald Jonas, writing in the Sunday October 12 New York Times Book
Review says "The nuttiness of the premise and the grittiness of the
near-future New York ambience are equally appealing." The New York
Times also excerpted a section ofThe Pixel Eye-- a
"New York" book -- on Sunday August 17 in The City section's "NY
Bookshelf: Tales of Detectives, Art, and Mysterious Squirrels."
Tom Easton in Analog says this "Phil D'Amato romp... is nicely
straightforward and an interesting take on the real world of the
moment."
Publisher's Weekly calls this science fiction thriller
"breezily chilling ... enough to send a shiver down most readers'
spines."
SF Weekly says "The Pixel Eye is a thoroughly
enjoyable book, extremely readable, and brave in confronting the
consequences of September 11."
Watch here for
excerpts from other reviews. The Pixel Eye was a
finalist for the 2004
Prometheus Award, given by The Libertarian Futurist Society.
Pick up a copy!
Levinson's 2004 rolling book tour continues...
with appearances across the Northeast at conventions, bookstores, and
special events. Stop by and see Paul as he visits your area reading from
and speaking about Cellphone and The Pixel Eye
and as he previews The Plot to Save Socrates...
with stops
scheduled for Philadelphia, New York and Boston with more to come...
Now available in a
handsome trade paperback edition, The Consciousness Plague
wins award ... Levinson's novel
The
Consciousness Plague won the 2003 Mary Shelley Award for
Outstanding Fictional Work presented by the Media Ecology
Association.
The MEA is a scholarly organization devoted to studying the impact of
media and information technology on human life. The Mary Shelley Award
-- given for the first time this year -- honors a book, movie, or other
work of fiction in which information technology and communication theory
play a major role. The Consciousness Plague explores the
possibility that our consciousness and mentality may be the result, in
part, of a symbiotic micro-organism that has been living in our brains
for millennia. It is the second Levinson novel that features NYPD
forensic detective Dr. Phil D'Amato, who is back for another appearance
in The Pixel Eye.
Paul Levinson's "The Chronology Protection Case"
radioplay nominated for Edgar award for Best Play of 2002! The
Edgar Allan
Poe Awards of 2003, given by the Mystery Writers of America, honor
the "best in mystery fiction, non-fiction, television, film and theatre
published or produced in 2002". The radioplay of Paul Levinson's
novelette "The Chronology Protection Case," adapted by Mark
Shanahan with Paul Levinson and Jay Kensinger, was nominated for this
coveted award in the Best Play category. Although they didn't win, the
three writers were honored by the nomination and delighted to attend the
formal Mystery Writers of America annual banquet in New York City on May
1 - posing for posterity the next day in their normal clothes...
This story has legs! First published in Analog in September
1995, reprinted in several anthologies including Jack Dann's 1998Nebula Awards 32, and available in electronic edition on
fictionwise.com, this time travel story was a Nebula and Sturgeon
Award nominee in 1996, and marked the first appearance of Dr. Phil
D'Amato, NYPD forensic detective whose exploits are further detailed in
The
Silk Code,
The
Consciousness Plague, and in Paul's latest novel,
The
Pixel Eye. In 2001, filmmaker Jay Kensinger made a 40-minute
movie of this novelette which is on a screening tour - see more below.
In 2002, Mark Shanahan, with Paul Levinson and Jay Kensinger, adapted
Paul's story into a radioplay. The
Stage Shadows
production of this radioplay premiered before a standing-room-only
audience at the Mark Goodson Theater, Museum of Television and Radio, in
New York City in September 2002, where it was taped for subsequent radio
broadcast. The CD of this performance, complete with music and sound
effects, was enjoyed at science fiction conventions in 2002 and 2003.
The script of this radioplay was a nominee for the Edgar Award
for Best Play of 2002.
Levinson on cable and video ... Paul is
extensively interviewed in Fantastic Voyage: Evolution of Science
Fiction, a two-hour History Channel cable television documentary
which had its debut broadcast in September 2002, and is regularly
re-broadcast in the US and around the world.
Here's what the History Channel says about this program: "For
centuries, we've been hypnotized by tales of scientific speculation,
alien invasion, and future fantasy. From the pioneers of science fiction
to the dime novels of the 1930s, from the atomic age and its B-movies to
the age of Trekkies, our Fantastic Voyage combines surprising
stories, visionary personalities, provocative ideas, and colorful
visuals to salute the history of an enduring and important genre." Don't
miss this exciting look at what Paul calls the "quintessential
literature of the human species."
Videotapes are available from historychannel.com if you missed the
show which also interviewed such notables as Greg Bear, Stanley Schmidt,
Chip Delaney, William Shatner, Majel Barrett, Nalo Hopkinson, David
Kyle, Roger Corman, Robert Wise, Paul Verhoeven and Forrie Ackerman.
Levinson novelette on film ... More about
"The Chronology Protection Case" ... Filmmaker Jay Kensinger's
40-minute movie of Paul Levinson's first Phil D'Amato story continues to
make the rounds on its screening tour ...
Kensinger and Levinson were on hand for the well- received debut
screening of the film at I-Con in April 2002, as was Ernest Lilley,
editor of SFRevu, who
chronicled the event and reviews the film in his May 2002 issue.
Paul spoke at 2002 screenings for the Philadelphia Science Fiction
Society, at Balticon, Readercon, and Albacon. More screenings are
planned for 2003 science fiction conventions.
And ... the film is now showing on the Web at Timelinks
-- the foremost Internet site devoted to the consideration of time
travel in science, theory, and science fiction -- no charge,
just click here and enjoy!
Paul's newest non-fiction book is
Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobile Medium and How It
Has Transformed Everything! ... published by Palgrave/Macmillan
in April 2004 and available in bookstores and
for online order.
Sir Arthur C. Clarke said about Cellphone, "A superb
and often amusing account of one of the greatest revolutions in human
history, in which we are now living. The wristwatch phone of the old
science fiction stories is now a reality! What more can we expect?
Direct brain to brain communication? Stay tuned...." Douglas Rushkoff,
writing in TheFeature.com,calls Paul Levinson "a worthy
appraiser of the function of this most ubiquitous wireless media tool in
human affairs." And he says Cellphone makes "an excellent
case for the cell phone's ability to reinstate the supremacy of the
written word." Pamir Gelenbe calls the book "a thought-provoking
analysis" that is "certainly worth a read," in the British publication,
MediaWeek. Watch for more reviews...
A Chinese translation of Cellphone is now available.
And ... The Pixel Eyetrade paperback edition in
bookstores in June 2004, and available
for online order ... Paul's fourth novel from Tor is a gritty Phil
D'Amato mystery with sf overtones.
The Pixel Eye, where holograms, cellphones and
squirrels are used for surveillance in near-future New York City --
published in hardcover in 2003.
Connie Willis says "Forensic detective Phil D'Amato is one of my
favorite characters".
The New York Times Book Review says "The nuttiness of the
premise and the grittiness of the near-future New York ambience are
equally appealing" and they selected and reprinted several paragraphs
from The Pixel Eye in the August 17, 2003 "NY Bookshelf:
Novels: Tales of Detectives, Art and Squirrels" feature in The City
section -- one of four new "New York" books.
Tom Easton, writing in Analog, says "Paul Levinson's latest
Phil D'Amato romp ... is nicely straightforward and an interesting take
on the real world of the moment."
Publisher's Weekly calls The Pixel Eye a
"breezily chilling story" and says it is "enough to send a shiver down
most readers' spines."
Library Journal says "Levinson's latest novel featuring the
resourceful and wise-cracking D'Amato delivers another satisfying mix of
hard sf intrigue and detective story set against a 21st-century New York
City" that is "a fast-moving story that belongs in most libraries."
SF Weekly says "The Pixel Eye is a thoroughly
enjoyable book, extremely readable, and brave in confronting the
consequences of September 11."
Cinescape magazine says "D'Amato is a charming narrator, and
an intriguing character, which also contributes to Pixel's
successes."
SFRevu says "Long time readers of science fiction should
consider him [Levinson] their first choice when it comes to spreading
the word of sf..."
What's Up Ahead
Paul's acclaimed fifth novel from Tor is a blend of
historical mystery and science fiction -- a tale of time travel and
ancient intrigue -- The Plot to Save Socrates... trade
paperback released in February 2007.
Get your copy now! Hardcover
gift edition also available...
Coming soon... the sequel... Unburning Alexandria...
Paul Levinson writes science fiction, sf/mystery
and popular and scholarly non-fiction.
The Silk Code won the Locus award for Best
First Novel of 1999. His novel
The Consciousness Plague won the 2003 Mary Shelley
Award for outstanding Fictional Work. He has published 29
science
fiction stories, some of which are now available on
fictionwise.com. His novella "Loose Ends" was a 1998 Hugo
Award finalist, a finalist for the 1998 Sturgeon Award, and a finalist
for the 1997 Nebula Award. The radioplay of his novelette "The
Chronology Protection Case" was nominated for an Edgar Award for
Best Mystery Play of 2002. Digital McLuhan won the 2000
Lewis Mumford Award for Outstanding Scholarship. His work has been
translated into twelve languages.
The Silk Code, winner of the Locus Award for Best
First Novel of 1999, features NYPD forensic detective
Dr. Phil D'Amato
- hero of three of Paul Levinson's earlier award-nominated novelettes -
and was published by Tor Books (David Hartwell, editor) in 1999 in
hardcover;
mass-market paperback in 2000. It reached #8 on the Locus
Paperback Best Seller List in February 2001. Gerald Jonas in The New
York Times Book Review said "As a genre- bending blend of police
procedural and science fiction, The Silk Code delivers on
its promises..."; Booklist called it "cerebral but gripping";
Locus picked it as
New and Notable in November 1999 and called it an "exceptional first
novel." In a separate Locus review, Gary K. Wolfe said "It's a
rare thriller that actually achieves its goals as a detective tale and a
work of boldly speculative sf." WIRED called the mystery in The Silk Code "as twisted as a double helix." The Silk
Code also was a runner-up in Barnes & Noble's Explorations
"Maiden Voyages" contest for best first sf or fantasy novel of 1999. A
Polish translation is underway. Along with Greg Bear's acclaimedDarwin's
Radio,The Silk Code was highlighted in the 2002
History Channel documentary Fantastic Voyage: Evolution of Science
Fiction, as indicative of the direction science fiction is
taking in the 21st century, examining biological themes.
His second novel,
Borrowed Tides, was published by Tor Books in
hardcover in March 2001,
mass-market paperback in January 2002, and tells the story of the
first mission to Alpha Centauri led by a philosopher of science, and a
specialist in Native American mythology, two old friends from the Bronx
in their seventies. From the reviews: Library Journal said
Borrowed Tides is "...packed with layers of meaning that blend
ancient legends and modern science and provides an intriguing glimpse
into the mysteries of time and space"; Gerald Jonas in The New York
Times Book Review said that Borrowed Tides is
"....bizarre enough to satisfy readers..."; Booklist called it a
"to-the-last-page spellbinder"; Publishers' Weekly said "Politics
blends neatly with spirituality in Levinson's second novel ... an
ingenious narrative that loops back on itself like a Moebius strip"; and
Gary K. Wolfe, writing in Locus, said "Levinson does a terrific
job .... [reminiscent] of the philosophic space fiction of James Blish
or the reality- testing scenarios of Philip K. Dick"; Locus also
picked it as
New and Notable in April 2001. It was a May 2001 Science Fiction
Book Club (SFBC) Selection.
Dr. Phil D'Amato returns in a gripping New York
City sf mystery, as this NYPD forensics detective faces a strange series
of murders and memory losses in
The Consciousness Plague, Levinson's third novel for
Tor, published in hard cover in 2002;
trade paperback in August 2003. This novel won the 2003 Mary Shelley
Award for Outstanding Fictional Work. Roland Green, writing in
Booklist, said The Consciousness Plague "more nearly
reaches the heights of Isaac Asimov's classic sf mysteries than those of
most other genre hands who attempt them manage to do these days"; Tom
Easton said in the November 2002 issue of Analog that "This is
Levinson's best to date"; Library Journal said "Levinson's
intelligent blend of police procedural and speculative fiction should
appeal to fans of mystery and sf"; Locus' Gary K. Wolfe called it
"a pretty crisp murder mystery"; and Paul Di Filippo says in SFWeekly
that "D'Amato [is] ... an earnest Everyman, operating on a shoeshine and
a hunch". Locus picked The Consciousness Plague as
"New and Notable" in April 2002. And it was selected as a Spring
2002 Science Fiction Book Club (SFBC) Featured Alternate and a
Spring Editor's Pick of the Mystery Guild. A Polish translation
is underway.
Two of Paul Levinson's novelettes have been
reprinted in major anthologies: "The Mendelian Lamp Case" in
David Hartwell's 1998Year's
Best SF3 and "The Chronology Protection Case" in Jack
Dann's 1998Nebula
Awards 32. "The Mendelian Lamp Case" is also reprinted as
one of five stories - alongside Kevin J. Anderson, Gregory Benford,
David Brin, and Marc Zicree - in the 1999 anthologyScience Fiction Theater (Quadrillion/MGM) and appears in
David Hartwell and Kathryn Cramer's anthology
The Hard SF Renaissance(Tor, 2002). His short fiction has
been translated into French, Italian, and Czech.
The book explores the need for real face-to-face interaction and
physical movement in an age of cyberspace... the destiny of humanity to
reach beyond this planet and explore outer space... and how these themes
play in our 21st century world.
Publisher's Weekly says "Fans of Levinson's previous works, as
well as those interested in the relations between cyberspace, 'real
space' and outer space, should relish this challenging and mind-opening
read."
The Midwest Book Review says "Realspace is an
essential, thought-provoking purchase".
And Edward Tenner, author of Why Things Bite Back, called Realspace "a rich, original, and sophisticated work that will
be rewarding reading both for science fiction enthusiasts and for
professionals in the history and sociology of science and technology".
The Christian Science Monitorpublished an in-depth interview
with Paul and said Realspace "offers an irresistible
perspective". And Paul's Realspacemedia
appearances included an interview on national network overnight
television -- ABC World News Nownow
available on the Web... and on BBC Radio 4 on Thinking
Allowed -- now also
available on the web -- in a conversation with Brian Stableford.
Digital McLuhan: A Guide to the Information Millennium,
was published worldwide in hardcover by Routledge in 1999;
trade paperback edition 2001. Digital McLuhan won the
2000 Lewis Mumford Award for Outstanding Scholarship. WIRED's
Kevin Kelly said about Digital McLuhan, "Paul Levinson
completes McLuhan's pioneering work. Read this book if you want to
decipher life on the screen." The New York Times said "Levinson
performs a useful service ... [he] applies McLuhan's work to almost
every facet of modern communications" and in another article "Digital
McLuhan presents McLuhan in a new light, [for] a generation
grappling with the transforming effects of cyberspace, cell phones and
virtual reality." Digital McLuhan is included on Robert
Anton Wilson's "
Recommended Reading List," of "the bare minimum of what everybody
really needs to chew and digest before they can converse intelligently
about the 21st Century." Professors in graduate and undergraduate
classes around the world use this book to help their students put the
Internet into perspective. The book has been published in Japanese and
Chinese and translations are underway in Croatian, Romanian, and Korean.
The Soft Edge: A Natural History and Future of the Information
Revolution (Routledge hardcover 1997,
trade paperback 1998) received major critical acclaim -- ranging
from
WIRED ("Remarkable in both scholarly sweep and rhetorical
lyricism...") and The Financial Times of London ("a book that is
both full of insights and provocative") to
Amazon.com's Cyberculture editor ("Levinson has a knack for making
his reader feel intelligent and respected") and Analog
("...defies the critics of technology") -- and the book was the subject
of a 90-minute talk he gave at Borders at New York City's World Trade
Center, which aired on C-SPAN's "About Books" on February 28, 1998. It
is used in university classes around the world with its comprehensive
view of where our communications technologies have been and where they
are going. Translations of The Soft Edge are available in
Portuguese, Polish, Turkish, and Chinese.
Paul Levinson has been interviewed more than 500
times on radio and television in the United States, Canada, England,
Italy and Australia including ABC's "NightLine", "CBS Evening News with
Dan Rather", PBS' "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer", "The O'Reilly Factor",
"Scarborough Country", "Jesse Ventura's America", "The Big Story with
John Gibson", ABC's "World News Now", "Daybreak", "Your World with Neil
Cavuto", PBS, CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, CNBC, Discovery Channel, the History
Channel, "Today in New York", "Good Day New York", WNBC-TV, WCBS-TV,
WB-11, "Inside Edition", AP Radio, CBS Radio Network News, Bloomberg
Radio, CNN Radio, NPR's "Talk of the Nation", "Morning Edition", "The
Diane Rehm Show", "On the Media", "The Connection","on Point", "Public
Interest (The Kojo Nnamdi Show)", "Odyssey", "Tech Nation", "New York
and Company", and many local NPR affiliates and local radio and tv, and
the BBC's "NewsNight" and "Thinking Allowed" and he has been quoted
frequently in the New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Los
Angeles Times, Wall Street Journal, Smithsonian Magazine, U.S. News and
World Report, Forbes, Christian Science Monitor, New York Daily News,
New York Post, Newsday, Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, Hollywood
Reporter, Daily Variety, Billboard, Toronto Star, Montreal Gazette,
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Houston Chronicle, Philadelphia Inquirer,
Miami Herald, Newark Star-Ledger, Orlando Sentinel, Cleveland
Plain-Dealer, Detroit News, Dallas Morning News, the Cape Cod Times,
Associated Press, Reuters, UPI, Scripps-Howard, and dozens of other
major newspapers, magazines, and news services.
He has published more than 100 scholarly articles on the history
and philosophy of communication and technology, and his
essays have appeared in The Village Voice, Shift,
The Industry Standard, Omni, The Chronicle of
Higher Education, Analog, and eight times in
WIRED. He was editor-in-chief of the Journal of Social and
Evolutionary Systems from 1990-2000; he was Associate Editor of
et cetera from 1977-1979.
In the late 1960s to early 1970s Paul was a songwriter, singer and
record producer. He worked with music business greats ranging from
Ellie Greenwich to
Murray the K. His songwriting career featured recordings by the
Vogues and other 1960s groups. He wrote lyrics and sometimes music,
often in collaboration with other songwriters such as noted composer
Jimmy Krondes and a then unknown young songwriter named
Linda Kaplan who years later wrote the Toys 'r' Us jingle.
One of Paul's songs, "Hung Up On Love," written by Paul Levinson &
Mikie Harris, and recorded by Paul's group The Other Voices for Atlantic
Records in 1968 (produced by Ellie Greenwich and Mike Rashkow), was
released by b>Rhino Handmade in February 2004 in a compilation CD album
called
Come To The Sunshine: Soft Pop Nuggets, and in 2005 in
the UK as A Whole Lot of Rainbows: Soft Pop Nuggets.
Entertainment Weekly gave the CD an "A-" review, calling it
"inspired and strange." Steven Rosen, reviewing the compilation for
Los Angeles City Beat, notices Paul's trademark internal
rhyming, citing "the Other Voices� cheerfully sincere 'Hung Up on
Love,' with its couplet rhyming sunshine and lunchtime."
David Bash in
Shindig Magazine says the compilation "may be the best
compendium of soft pop the world has yet to hear" and he calls "Hung Up
On Love" one of the "absolute best of the lot." Patrick Rands, writing
in
Gullbuy, also raves about the compilation, and then says this
recording of "Hung Up On Love" is "a really exciting pop masterpiece ...
which has a 5th Dimension/Tokens sound to it, really upbeat and chipper
in a harmony pop kind of way." That "Tokens sound" is Paul, doing his
infamous falsetto harmony, with Stu Nitekman and Ira Margolis making the
magical three-part sound that The Other Voices (originally called The
New Outlook) were known for.
Paul's LP record album, Twice Upon a Rhyme, was released
in 1972 and appears from time to time on cult collectors' lists. The
July 2002 issue of Japan's Record Collectors' Magazine featured
Twice Upon a Rhyme in its roundup of American 1960s
"Psychedelic Movements". The reviewer, Taro Miyasugi, said, "It's human
mystical pop music... wonderful songs." Vinyl copies are
still available for purchase, and a CD version is in preparation.
Paul Levinson was President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy
Writers of America (SFWA)
from December 1998 through June 2001. He previously served as the
organization's Vice President. Paul is a member of SFWA and of Mystery
Writers of America.
He holds a PhD in Media Theory from New York University and is
founder of Connected Education, Inc., which offered graduate courses on
the Internet for over a dozen years, starting in 1985. His 30-year
teaching career has included positions at the New School for Social
Research, Hofstra University, Fairleigh Dickinson University,
Polytechnic University of New York, Audrey Cohen College, St. John's
University, and the Western Behavioral Sciences Institute. He is now
Professor and Department Chair of Communication and Media Studies at
Fordham University, New York City, where he teaches undergraduate
classes and graduate students in the Masters of Arts in Public
Communications program. He was named the "2004 Teacher of the Year" by
the Graduate Students Association.
Paul lives near New York City with his family. His wife, Tina Vozick,
is his publicist -- coordinating booksignings, appearances, interviews
and other publicity matters --
contact her if you'd like to arrange a booking, or for more
information.
Listen to Jason Rennie's interview with Paul on the
Sci Phi
Show about Robert Heinlein vs. Barack Obama: the meaning of
voting, March 10, 2008
Hear Maia Whitaker interview Paul about social networking as a
promotional tool for writers on
The Knitwitch
Zone, February 26, 2008
Stephen Euin Cobb's
February 6, 2008 episode of The Future And You featured an
interview with Paul about science and what Paul calls "The New New
Media" ... listen to the interview
here
The December 14, 2006
Sci Phi Show featured an "outcast" of Paul interviewed by Jason
Rennie about the fascinating intersection of philosophy and science
fiction...
hear it here
Paul was interviewed
here by Shaun Farrell for the March 28, 2007 podcast of Shaun's
Adventures in Scifi Publishing- talking about science fiction
and academia
Carl Zeigler interviewed Paul for more than an hour on his
brand-new
Rendered Artist show, September 2, 2006, about a century of
science fiction movies, novels, and stories... and about Paul's
writing career
Music critics Jim DeRogatis and Greg Kot interviewed Paul on
Chicago Public Radio's
Sound Opinions, August 5, 2006, about MTV's 25th anniversary -
listen here
interview with Patrick Rands on June 30, 2006 on Boston's WZBC
radio about
Paul's
music career - with recordings of many of his songs and
including a live performance of his new song, "Lime Streets"
Voice of America, internationally broadcast report with Rosanne
Skirble - discussion about personalized ringtones for cellphones,
January 19, 2005
Local NPR's "What the Tech?" (WXXI-AM, 1370 Radio, Rochester,
New York)- discussion about Cellphone, July 17, 2004,
Stephen Jacobs, host
Boston NPR affiliate's "On Point" (WBUR-FM, 90.9, Boston,
Massachusetts) - discussion about Howard Stern and the First
Amendment, March 10, 2004, Tom Ashbrook, host
Local
NPR's "What the Tech?" (WXXI-AM, 1370 Radio, Rochester, New
York)- discussion about Realspace, September 6, 2003,
Stephen Jacobs, host
Local NPR's "Focus 580," (WILL-AM 580 Radio, Urbana, Illinois) -
discussion about Realspace, July 18, 2003, Jack
Brighton, host
NPR's The Connection - featured guest on "Revisiting Marshall
McLuhan" -a discussion about the importance of Marshall McLuhan's
work in understanding the 21st century, August 27, 2002
SciFi Dimensions - interview about The Consciousness
Plague, the past and future of science fiction, and his
non-fiction work on communications media, McLuhan, and space
exploration, May 2002
Odyssey - panel discussion, "Marshall McLuhan Revisited", on
WBEZ radio (NPR), Chicago, November 13, 2001
Hour 25 - interview about Digital McLuhan and
science fiction, June 2001
Seeing Ear Theater, "Digital Plato", readings from The
Silk Code (novel) and The Soft Edge
(information theory) plus interview, a 40-minute video taped at
Fordham University, June 2000
AnnOnline,
interview and reading of excerpt from The Silk Code
Infoculture, Canadian Broadcasting Company's Online Arts
and Culture Magazine, an interview on Digital McLuhan,
"McLuhan and Me"
AnnOnline interview and reading of excerpt from Digital
McLuhan
Infoculture, Canadian Broadcasting Company's Online Arts
and Culture Magazine, an interview on "Intellectual Property and the
Net"
Friday, March 14 - Sunday March 16, Lunacon, Rye, New
York - check con schedule for specific times
Friday, January 25, talk at Philadelphia Science Fiction
Society about "Science Fiction in the Current Golden Age of
Television", Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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credits: Cape Cod photo1 2002 MV-L; Cape Cod photo2 2004 TV
Pages written and updated by
Tina Vozick.
As a commentator on
media,
popular culture, and
science fiction he has been interviewed over 500 times on many local,
national and international television and radio shows. He is frequently
quoted in newspapers and magazines around the world and his
op-eds have appeared in such major papers as the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, New York's Newsday,
and the
New York Sun. He is interviewed in a short weekly spot early Sunday
mornings on
KNX-AM Radio in Los Angeles, on media-related news events and popular
culture. He hosts four podcasts and maintains several blogs.
The central character of The Silk Code,
NYPD
forensic detective Dr.
Phil D'Amato, made his first appearance in Levinson's novelette, "The
Chronology Protection Case", (published in
Analog magazine, September 1995). D'Amato returned in "The Copyright
Notice Case" novelette (Analog,
April 1996), "The Mendelian Lamp Case" novelette (Analog,
April 1997), and in subsequent novels The Consciousness Plague
(2002), and The Pixel Eye (2003). An adaptation of Levinson's "The
Chronology Protection Case" (radioplay by Mark Shanahan with Paul Levinson &
Jay Kensinger) was nominated by the
Mystery Writers of America for the
Edgar
Award for Best Play of 2002.
In Pursuit of Truth: Essays on the Philosophy of Karl Popper on
the Occasion of his 80th Birthday (editor and contributor) with
Forewords by
Isaac Asimov and
Helmut Schmidt (1982) Humanities Press
ISBN 0-391-02609-7
Mind at Large: Knowing in the Technological Age (1988) JAI
Press
ISBN 0-89232-816-9
Electronic Chronicles: Columns of the Changes in our Time
(1992) Anamnesis Press
ISBN 0-9631203-3-6
Learning Cyberspace: Essays on the Evolution of Media and the New
Education (1995) Anamnesis Press
ISBN 0-9631203-9-5
The Soft Edge: A Natural History and Future of the Information
Revolution (1997) Routledge
ISBN 0-415-15785-4
Bestseller: Wired, Analog, and Digital Writings (1999)
Pulpless
ISBN 1-58445-033-9 [includes fiction and non-fiction]
Digital McLuhan: A Guide to the Information Millennium (1999)
Routledge
ISBN 0-415-19251-X
Realspace: The Fate of Physical Presence in the Digital Age, On
and Off Planet (2003) Routledge
ISBN 0-415-27743-4
Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobile Medium and How It
Has Transformed Everything! (2004) Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN 1-4039-6041-0
Paul Levinson is a frequent guest on local, national, and international
cable and network television and public, commercial, and satellite radio
programs.
reviewing ... 24, Battlestar Galactica,
Brotherhood, Californication, Dexter, Heroes, In
Treatment, Journeyman, Lost, Mad Men, Tell Me You Love
Me, The L Word, The Sarah Connor Chronicles, The Tudors,
The Wire, Weeds ... and the Presidential campaigns
... InfiniteRegress.tv
George Santayana had an irrational faith in reason
... I have irrational faith in television.
A beautiful, bittersweet episode of
Lost
tonight, featuring Sun in a flashforward, about
seven months into the future, giving birth to
her baby. She is definitely one of the Oceanic
Six.
Jin is rushing to the hospital with a big
stuffed panda bear baby present. Sun calls out
for him in the delivery room...
But Jin is not among the Oceanic Six. What we're
seeing here is not Sun and Jin in the same
flashforward. Not Jin in a flashforward at all.
Jin's in a flashback, from before he and Sun
wound up on the island, and the stuffed panda he
is bringing is a present from his boss to the
ambassador, whose wife is having a baby.
This flashback mimicking a flashforward is
deftly done - Jin pays a lot of money for the
stuffed panda he brings to the hospital, and we
think Jin has this money because he's one of the
Oceanic Six. But it's his boss's money he's
waving around...
Jin never got off the island. Sun, accompanied
by Hurley, takes her newborn baby to Jin's
gravesite. The date of the death on the
tombstone is 22 September 2004. But this isn't
true either. Jin of course is alive later than
that - we know this is true, and of course
that's when Jin fathered Sun's baby. So the date
of death is a lie - likely Jin is one of the
people that Kate couldn't save, in the lie Jack
told about their time on the island at Kate's
trial.
But Jin's death is likely not a lie. Though,
perhaps, just perhaps, Jin lives on the island,
if the island's recuperative powers work their
magic on whatever the injury that killed him.
The island, as we know, is not only a powerful
restorative for some people, but is a powerful
adhesive that keeps its inhabitants close at
hand. It certainly kept Michael nearby - or, any
rate, Ben did, for we find out tonight that
Ben's agent on the boat is Michael - which was
the obvious choice (especially since Harold
Perrineau's name has been in the credits from
the beginning of this season).
And the big question now is: who is the last of
the Oceanic Six? Not Jin, not Claire (since Kate
is now Aaron's mother) ... not likely Locke, who
of all the original Losties is the most attached
to the island...
Paul continues to be the most effective -
offering just right the blend of insight, keen
questions, and protecting compassion - to
Sophie. This is evidenced by her smashing one of
Paul's model boats on his floor, as he probes
the likelihood that she was abused. Unlike
Paul's unprofessional reaction to hostile
actions by Alex, he takes his boat on the floor
as an indication that he is finally reaching
Sophie.
The difference between the professionalism of
Paul's responses to Sophie and Laura also
continues to be pronounced and powerful in Week
6 of In
Treatment. Paul tells Laura he loves her,
and stops a micro-inch short of passionately
kissing her. We might have expected Paul not
even to admit his feelings for Laura - how can
that possibly help her as a patient - but he is
too far gone, too much in love with Laura, to
not express his feelings, at least, verbally.
And, besides, this gives us a chance to see
Laura's reaction, which may be instructive: she
at first doubts what Paul is telling her, and
then lets herself believe it, apparently. For
some reason, this made me think that once Laura
is sure Paul loves her, and certainly if they
sleep together, she'll soon realize that she
doesn't really love him at all... A rough sea
for Paul to sail.
Meanwhile, Alex, whom Laura quickly moved on
from, is making genuine progress with Paul. In
his most productive session yet, Alex admits
that what he wants from life, and from Paul, are
the means to not "feel shitty". This is by far
the most truth we've heard from Alex.
We didn't get much truth from Amy this past
week. She showed up without Jake, told Paul
she's a terrible person and wants his permission
to have an affair. As I've said in my previous
reviews, I think the Amy and Jake sessions are
the weakest, and have the most interest as
parallels to Paul and Kate seeing Gina.
I've got to say Michelle Forbes is doing a great
job portraying Paul's wife, Kate, whose anguish
at Paul's love of Laura is ringing a little
hollow: Kate, after all, went off with her lover
for a week. Does the fact that that didn't work
out, and Kate had no strong feelings for him,
give Kate a moral high ground over Paul, who at
least has refrained from having sex with Laura,
as Gina correctly points out?
I admire Paul - if only because of his excellent
work with Sophie - and this makes me think that
maybe he'd be better off without Kate and with
Laura. But the problem with that is Laura may
not be likely to want him once that happens... A
dangerous sea indeed.
Jason Rennie interviews me on his
SciPhi
Show about Robert Heinlein's novel
Starship Troopers (also made into a fine
movie), and how its concept of "The
Franchise" - that only people with military or
other "Federal" service should have the right to
vote - would work in American democracy today
...
Although I admire the social daring of
Heinlein's insertion of such a radical concept
into a science fiction novel, I strongly
disagree with it. In this interview, I outline
the progress that America has made in giving
greater segments of our population the vote -
the middle class in Andrew Jackson's time,
African-Americans after the Civil War, and women
in the Suffraget movement that did not succeed
until after the First World War - and I urge
that people far younger than 18 get the vote
now.
I conclude by citing the success of Barack Obama
thus far as an indication of what an open,
inclusive voting system can accomplish...
Jason Rennie interviews Paul Levinson on
The SciPhi Show
.David Gregory, NBC News' Chief White House
Correspondent, will anchor Race for the
White House, a new daily show airing from
6-7pm
.NBC News' Andrea Mitchell will anchor MSNBC
each weekday afternoon from 1-2pm
.Countdown with Keith Olbermann, on at 8pm,
will now re-air a second time at 10pm, in
addition to a third time at 2am.
.MSNBC's "doc block" will now air weeknights
from 11pm-2am.
.Live with Dan Abrams will re-launch as
Verdict with Dan Abrams, from 9-10pm.
.Tucker Carlson's show is out, but he will
continue on MSNBC as Senior Campaign
Correspondent.
These all look like excellent moves. With the
strength of NBC regulars Brian Williams and Tim
Russert, along with Tom Brokaw on election
nights, MSNBC has the best election coverage in
the business. David Gregory joining the
weeknight lineup of Chris Matthews, Keith
Olbermann, and Dan Abrams makes a lot of sense.
And when you add to that the stature and savvy
of political commentators like Patrick Buchanan
and Joe Scarborough, MSNBC is unbeatable.
But there's one thing I've never understood
about MSNBC, and still don't get in the new
lineup: why is MSNBC alienating the audience for
its political coverage with its "doc block"? I
know that I have dialed away from MSNBC many
times when I wanted to see politics, and MSNBC
had yet another show about life behind some
prison bars....
Moving the doc-block to 11pm is a step in the
right direction. My suggestion: move it to three
o'clock in the morning, or off the network
altogether.
Especially in an election year, the "Doc Block"
is not the way to go...
I hate to make light of this (actually, I enjoy
it), but when I heard today about NY Gov Spitzer
being involved in a prostitution ring, in
Washington, DC no less, I couldn't help thinking
that Lester Freamon became "police" again, and
that's what he moved on to...
That's what I thought when I saw the first
report on CNN online. But when I further heard
that Spitzer got nabbed for this on a
wiretap...
This may the real life coda - epilogue - of
The Wire.
The ultimate spill-over into reality...
Thanks, HBO, for this extra episode (maybe even
a new season)...
(Ok, I admit to not liking Spitzer, ever since
his
unconstitutional payola witch hunt a few
years ago ... Ever notice how government
officials who yelp the most loudly about
morality and
victimless crime seem to always be involved
in some themselves?)
I
sometimes, often, in fact, think
The Wire
is the best show ever to have been on
television. It's hard to compare to
The Sopranos,
which was just about one person, really, Tony.
The Wire
was an ensemble show par excellence, with at
least 15 to 20 centrally important players over
the past five seasons. You can't compare it at
all to Lost,
which is in another - fantastic - universe,
entirely.
The Wire
is certainly the best cop show, ever. My
previously favorite was
Homicide: Life
on the Street. David Simon was the brains
behind that Baltimore masterpiece, too. And
there were lots of other connections - including
Clark Johnson, Meldrick in
Homicide,
Gus in this last season of
The Wire.
But The Wire
was much more than a cop show - in fact, the
cops were less than half the story. There was
the dock, in Season 2; politics in Season 3 and
after; the school in Season 4; and the paper,
the media, in this final Season 5. All of these
were done superbly - though perhaps the cynical
ending to the paper story this season, with
fraud rewarded with the highest honor, was a
little too much, though I suppose not
unrealistic.
But the real star of
The Wire,
season after season, in addition to cops, was
the street. I can't recall ever getting such a
clear picture of life in the street - or, the
corner, real and metaphoric, on which drugs are
sold and life is lived - as we got, season after
season, in The
Wire. Not in any movie, or book. First
the Barksdale crew, then Marlo's, were as vivid
a tableau of intelligent, brutal, sensitive,
savvy, focused characters as ever presented. One
of the shows this season was called "The
Dickensian Aspect" - and, the truth is, that
could easily apply to the whole series. David
Simon, just by virtue of
The Wire,
could be called the Charles Dickens of
television.
If you'd like a look at the characters and cast
of The Wire
in all five seasons, HBO has put up a fine
page
of photos. My favorite is still the
extraordinary
Stringer Bell, second-in-command in the
Barksdale crew,
The Wealth of
Nations on his bookshelf, played to
perfection by Idris Elba, but that takes nothing
away from the dozens of other razor-sharp
performances in
The Wire.
And how did it all end?
The Wire did something exceptional and
original here, too. Totally unlike the
brilliantly ambiguous ending of
The Sopranos,
the ending of
The Wire had complete closure, and was
brilliant, too. And against all expectations, it
was happy. McNulty is stretched out on a table
for his wake - but it's only a mock wake - he's
leaving the police, not life at all. Carcetti is
elected governor; Rawls gets an appointment as a
high state cop; Daniels looks happy as a lawyer;
Rhonda Pearlman is a judge ... well, you get the
picture.
The street does as well as can be expected, too.
Marlo's free, rich, and likely out of the game
(though you never know). Bubbles is eating
upstairs with his sister. Michael may be a
stick-up man, not good, but maybe he's just
doing this once. Dukie is, sadly, in the worst
shape ... going doing the road to addiction that
Bubbles just left.
My guess is we won't see a series like this
again for a very long time. Even the music was
perfect, from the different versions of Tom
Waits' "Way Down in the Hole" that opened shows
for each of the five seasons (Steve Earle did
the honors for Season 5, as well a good
performance as Bubbles' sponsor at Narcotics
Anonymous), to the great music that ended every
episode, to the special version of "Way Down in
the Hole" that accompanied the montage near the
end of tonight show.
~When you walk through the garden ...~
That's a walk I bet viewers will relish for
decades to come.
I usually post about the fascinating people I've
interviewed on my
Light
On Light Through podcast, but here's a short
list of the some of the interviews conducted
with me by brave and erudite podcasters in the
past few years ...
.Jason Rennie interviewed me on December 16,
2006 about science fiction and philosophy on
The
SciPhi Show ... and again on March 10, 2008
on The SciPhi Show about
Robert Heinlein and Barack Obama
.Shaun Farrell interviewed me on March 28, 2007
about science fiction and the academic world on
Adventures in Scifi Publishing
.Stephen Euin Cobb interviewed me on February 6,
2008 about nanotechnology, SETI, the Fermi
Paradox, the probability and impact of our
finding another Earth, and more on
The Future and You
.Maia Whitaker interviewed me on Feburary 26,
2008 about how to promote your writing on the
Web, plus we talked a little about Barack Obama
on The
Knitwitch Zone ...
Hillary Clinton slammed Barack Obama before the
Texas primary for being "all hat and no cattle"
- or, all talk and no action, someone who put on
a good show, talked a good case, but didn't have
the goods.
It was an empty critique of Obama, and the
people of Texas agreed, at least in part, since
Obama actually won more delegates in Texas than
did Clinton, even though she won the popular
vote.
But, as an Obama supporter, I don't want my
irritation at Hillary's use of this phrase to
dilute or distract from what I think is one of
the best insults to come down the pike in a long
time. Actually, it's been around for a while -
there are quotes in the
Wiktionary going back to 1980 - but I heard
for the first time just a few weeks ago, so I've
got to thank Hillary Clinton for that.
Now, what I really like about the phrase is how
sheer, audacious rhyme makes it shine.
After all, although Texans wear big hats and
herd cattle, the two don't have much else in
common other than their rhyme.
But put together in a rhyming insult, the phrase
invites further analysis and deeper insult. A
hat is worn on the head, cattle are forces of
nature that we tame and eat, so all hat and no
cattle reinforces the distinction between
thinking and empty talking, which we do with our
heads, and changing, taming the world and
rendering it fit for our human consumption and
life.
Ok, enough professor-of-metaphoring ... Does
anyone recall if anyone ever used this insult
against J. R. Ewing in
Dallas?
Wyoming is the least populated state in the
nation, but Obama's sweep of Hillary Clinton
there - 61% to 38% - carries a big lesson:
Obama continues to lead in the delegate count by
a nearly unbeatable margin. He actually won more
delegates in Texas, and Hillary's victories in
Ohio and Rhode Island resulted in a negligible
increase in her delegates.
So, if we're thinking a dream ticket - who
should be in first and who in second place?
Shouldn't first place go to the candidate with
the largest number of delegates?
By what anti-democratic logic would or could the
super delegates be induced to support Hillary
Clinton instead of Barack Obama? Why support
someone who came in second?
=============
Plus: One of my best students at Fordham, Mike
Plugh, has put up an online petition to the
super delegates - do the right, democratic
thing, and suppport Obama. Read it, sign it,
right
here.
Americans were treated to a very constructive
comparison between the campaigns of Barack Obama
and Hillary Clinton in the past two days, and
perhaps some insight into differences in the
character of the candidates.
Obama aide Samantha Power called Hillary Clinton
a "monster" in an interview with
The Scotsman - she apologized to Clinton,
Obama, and resigned.
Clinton spokesman Howard Wolfson likened Barack
Obama to special prosecutor
Kenneth Starr (who obsessively hounded the
Clintons in the 1990s), saying "I for one do not
believe that imitating Ken Starr is the way to
win a Democratic primary election for president"
- not only has he not apologized, but Hillary
Clinton first said she had no comment, and later
added at a
press conference in Hattiesburg,
Mississippi, "Well, I think that is a true
statement."
A classic piece of Clintonian word splicing - I
suppose the statement could be interpreted as
not saying Obama was like Starr and unfit to be
President, but simply saying anyone who was like
Starr did not deserve to be President - but it's
surely not an apology or in any sense whatsoever
disapproving of Wolfson's statement.
If ever America needed an example of new versus
old politics, of political decency versus win at
any cost, of grace in politics versus throw
everything you can at your opponent whether
true, false, or nonsensical, I think the
difference between the Obama and Clinton
campaigns in their responses to Power and
Wolfson amply provides it.
The Democratic National Committee has really
made a mess of things. Its response to Michigan
and Florida moving their primaries up to dates
that threatened a stampede of states all moving
their primaries to earlier and earlier dates - a
real concern - was to punish the people of
Michigan and Florida, the Democratic Party, and
indeed the democratic process itself by refusing
to count the results of those primaries. The DNC
announced the punishment, the candidates didn't
campaign in Florida, Barack Obama's name wasn't
even on the ballot in Michigan, and the results
of those primaries became indeed invalid.
I said back in January, before the Michigan
primary, that the DNC's response was
stupid, and, now, with the nomination still
hotly contested, what the DNC did looks
outrightly crazy. Fortunately, both the DNC and
the two states are saying they would like to do
the primaries over - acceptable under DNC rules
- but now there's another problem:
Money. Neither the DNC nor Michigan and Florida
want to bear the cost of new primaries - which
apparently would come to $30 million.
So, the good idea of fixing this mess with new
primaries may founder for a lack of money - or,
a willingness to spend it for such a crucial
purpose.
Here's my suggestion: a billionaire, with an
interest in democracy, and doing it right,
should step up and cover the cost of the
primaries. Fifty million dollars is chicken feed
to a billionaire.
In fact, I can think of a billionaire with a
great love for democracy: Mayor Mike Bloomberg
of New York City.
How about it, Mayor Mike - with a stroke of your
pen and small dip into your private finances,
you could bail the Democratic party out of this
mess, and maybe even save the country.
Although the primary character in tonight's
episode 4.6 of
Lost was Juliet, the person we really
learn most about is ... Ben.
Ever since Ben was introduced to
Lost in
Season 2, his goodness and badness - his truest
motives - have been in doubt. For the most part,
he has seemed no good. He gassed all the Dharma
people to death, and killed his father - who may
have been a lousy, uncaring, brutal father -
but, even so, young Ben killed him pretty
coldly. And if Ben hasn't since then outrightly
murdered too many other people, he has certainly
all too often goaded and played games with their
minds, to his benefit and their detriment.
Just a few weeks ago, in the powerful Sayid
episode, we see Ben at the end perhaps standing
up to and coordinating the fight against the
real bad guys. Perhaps.
And tonight, although all uncertainties are by
no means cleared up, we see Ben being pretty
despicable.
Jealous of Juliet's love for Goodwin, Ben
assigns him to infiltrate the Tailees after the
crash, knowing the danger that posed to Goodwin.
And, after Ana Lucia kills Goodwin, and Juliet
asks Ben why he put Goodwin in such danger, Ben
responds to Juliet that she belongs to Ben.
But that's in the past, and by no means the
worst of Ben we see tonight. Because it seems
that someone wants poison gas to be released all
over the island. Dan and Charlotte rush to the
facility - we think, at first, to release the
gas. That's what we think, because Goodwin's
wife comes to Juliet (in the present, on the
island) and tells her Ben needs her to kill Dan
and Charlotte before they release the gas.
But when Juliet gets to the facility, both swear
they are trying to stop the gas from being
released, not release it, and the equipment
indeed seems about to release gas. Should we
trust those two, especially after Charlotte has
knocked Kate out cold with the back of a gun a
little earlier in the jungle?
Well ... turns out we can. Because Dan completes
his work, and no poison gas is released.
And just to make matters worse, Locke has
released Ben back at the barracks, because Ben
has revealed to Locke the identity of Ben's man
on the boat. (We don't find this out. But it has
to be either Michael, or a much older Walt.)
So ... Ben looks much more evil than he has in a
while....
Assuming, of course, that the whole gas
contraption wasn't some sort of ruse...
You've no doubt already heard about this, but
just in case you haven't, here is what Hillary
Clinton's spokesman
Howard Wolfson had to say about Barack Obama
today: "I for one do not believe that imitating
Ken Starr is the way to win a Democratic primary
election for president."
Hillary Clinton had no comment about her
spokesman's remark.
Wolfson's comment is supposed to suggest, what,
that Barack Obama's rather mild criticism of
Hillary Clinton - certainly milder than Hillary
Clinton's criticism of him - is analogous or in
some sense similar to Special Prosecutor's
Kenneth Starr's brutal investigation and
hounding of Bill Clinton for the Monica Lewinsky
escapade?
The only thing the two situations have in common
- the current primary campaigns and the Lewinsky
scandal - is that they both concern a Clinton.
Indeed, I said back when the Lewinsky scandal
broke that what Bill Clinton did in his private
activities was nobody's business, and he should
not have been obligated to answer any questions
about that - including, especially, from a
vicious special prosecutor.
And Hillary Clinton's spokesman compares Obama
and/or his campaign to that prosecutor now?
Perhaps it's not surprising. Wolfson was the
same smear merchant who claimed Obama was
"plagiarizing" when he used words in a speech
that someone else had voluntarily given to him.
You know what? If anyone in the current campaign
is like Kenneth Starr, it is Howard Wolfson.
Hillary Clinton would do well to fire him.
I'm quoted twice in this savvy
Hollywood Reporter article by Paul Gough,
which just went live - along with CNN political
analyst Bill Schneider and John Edwards campaign
manager Joe Trippi.
Well, Hillary Clinton won Ohio and Rhode Island
tonight, Barack Obama won Vermont, and Hillary
Clinton won by small margin in Texas. It is
nonetheless clear that (a) Obama still has a
substantial, likely insurmountable lead in
elected delegates and (b) Clinton will redouble
her efforts in the race.
The speeches given by the two candidates to
their supporters were as expected: Obama's was
far more inspiring, but Clinton's was fine.
Two things I did not like in the Clinton speech
were (1) her inclusion of Michigan and Florida
in the tally of states she had won (especially
egregious in the case of Michigan, where Obama's
name wasn't even on the ballot), and (2) her
reference to the 3 o'clock in the morning ad, of
which her campaign is apparently very proud.
From my perspective, having studied the history
of propaganda, that ad ranks as one of worst
panderings to public fears (right up there with
Tony Schwartz's atom bomb ad on behalf of
LBJ in 1964).
And Obama again offered his view that kids would
be better off with books than video games - at
least he didn't include television along with
video games this time. But children can benefit
from both books and video games - it need not be
one or the other.
So, two good speeches, one inspiring (Obama's),
one nonetheless effective (Clinton's), two
things wrong with Clinton's and one thing wrong
with Obama's - at least, according to my tally.
With John McCain now the unofficial offical
Republican nominee, what can the Democrats do to
unite their party in the face of two so equally
matched candidates?
Here is my proposal: Obama and Clinton agree to
the following: 1. Whoever has the greatest
number of elected delegates at the end of
primaries gets the Presidential nomination. 2.
The other candidate gets the VP nomination.
(Florida and Michigan do not count - unless the
primaries are done over in those two states.)
Hey, I'm still supporting Obama, and I'm sure my
proposal won't fly (I doubt that either campaign
would agree to it) - but, think about it, it
could be the best way to proceed - one which
most respects the democratic process.
Have David Palmer and Wayne Palmer - two
powerful, admirable, African-American Presidents
on Fox's 24
- contributed to Barack Obama's success as the
first African-American candidate with a real
chance to win the White House?
Win, lose, or draw in the important primaries
tonight, Obama has a already made an undeniably
extraordinary impact. I happen to think (and
hope) he is the next President, but even if he
doesn't get there, his candidacy has already
changed American Presidential politics forever,
and for the better.
As a professor and
author of books about popular culture and
its impact, I take a keen interest in the way of
our media fiction influences our real politics.
I've already
blogged here about the importance of the
Obama Girl videos in the early days of Barack
Obama's campaign.
As I also
reported here last July, Obama Girl producer
Ben Relles told my class at Fordham University
that the original "I've Got a Crush on Obama"
song was "I've Got a Crush on Jack Bauer". So
Obama's candidacy and
24 were
linked from the start.
More important, I'd say, was the image of
African-American Presidents conveyed by David
Palmer (superbly played by Dennis Haysbert) and
his brother Wayne Palmer (superbly played by D.
B. Woodside). Although David was assassinated
and Wayne wound up in a coma, their behavior as
Presidents always showed a highly intelligent
Commander-in-Chief will to take on acutely
difficult and internationally threatening
issues, and handle these crises with grace and
aplomb.
That had to have some kind of positive,
educational effect on
24's
millions of viewers.
Keith Olbermann on MSNBC's Countdown is fond
of citing 24
for stirring up fears of nuclear terror (at one
point even absurdly implying that
24's
producers were in league with the Bush
administration). But the far greater truth - or
only truth - about
24's
impact on real American politics may be the role
it played in making all Americans more
comfortable with the prospect of an
African-American President.
A woman in the White House was powerfully
presented in the excellent
Commander in
Chief on ABC, with Geena Davis just
outstanding as President Mackenzie Allen. But
that series didn't even survive one complete
season...
The two-hour season (and I hope not series)
finale of The
Sarah Connor Chronicles on Fox tonight
was about as offbeat yet compelling an ending as
ever I recall seeing on television. I could
speculate about why the producers did it that
way - but I think what happened on the
television screen, which was pretty
extraordinary in a low key way, is much more
important than why it was made that way.
Agent James Ellison finally gets the FBI to take
out Cromartie. Unsurprisingly, the terminator
totally devastates the team - but lets Ellison
live. Why? Because Ellison will play some future
part in the emergence and success of Skynet...
Cameron turns out to be good, through and
through. She kept the terminator part because it
contained information that could help save John.
She risks her own cyber brain so it can be
plugged into the city's traffic control system.
As Derek rightly remarks, she could certainly
have used that access to do something bad - but
she does not.
But she is apparently blown to bits in a car
rigged to explode in the very last scene - with
Derek nowhere to be seen.
Was that his doing, somehow?
Now, I don't believe that Cameron's really gone.
The Arnold and other terminators have gotten up
and walked away and put themselves back together
from much worse. Not to mention that Fox, if it
does continue this fine series, would be crazy
to do it without the hottest character on the
show - who even has virtues of adding a little
humor.
Ok, I did talk there about the producers'
motives. Which brings to the question: will Fox
executives renew the series?
I hope they do. These Chronicles add a
thoughtful, even leisurely piece to the
Terminator stories - which is just what
television should do in comparison to movies.
Philosophic issues were raised and explored.
Strong relationships were developed.
The Sarah
Connor Chronicles have soul.
And there's a lot more to be told of John and
Sarah's story - and now Cameron's, and Derek's,
and Ellison's. I hope to see it next year.
But, whatever happens, here's a round of
applause for what we saw this year.
And
now there's just one - one episode left in this
fine, fine finale season of what in many many
ways is the finest series ever to be on
television. One of the brightest parts of our
new golden age of television.
This was Michael's show. He has heart, but he's
also learned a lot about the way of killing. He
had good instructors in the bloody craft. Chris
Partlow and Snoop. You wouldn't want to run into
them angry at you, or on some business
concerning you, in any alley. For that matter,
you wouldn't want to run into them if they were
looking for you on any grand boulevard in broad
daylight.
I don't know who has been more deadly- yeah, I
do, it would be Snoop. She had no fear, no
connection to anyone or anything except her
deadly job. (Chris at least has a family.) These
two, Marlo's muscle, were somehow more deadly
than the worst that the Barksdale crew could
muster.
But they weren't enough to get Omar - for the
first time in their story, they faltered. It
took a boy to kill Omar, as we saw last week.
And this week ...
Michael
knows he's in danger. Marlo doesn't know about
the new, improved wire, and he thinks that
someone on the inside is ratting him out. It
could be Snoop, who escaped the police roundup
(Chris is behind bars with Marlo). It could be
Michael, who was called in for questioning a few
weeks back. We know he didn't say a thing. Marlo
doesn't know that.
Who knows who put a hit on whom. Snoop was
certainly on the way to killing Michael. He just
got there first. A little ahead of her. You
always taught to me be "early," he tells Snoop,
as he gets the drop on her.
She knows there's no talking her way out of
this. She asks Michael how her hair looks. The
actress said everyone thinks Snoop's a cold
killer, but she (the actress) is really a
sweetheart. At this last moment, facing her
death, a little of the sweetheart finally comes
through. She cares about her hair. She's a
killer, but also a woman.
And Michael kills Snoop. I think she will go
down as one of the best, most fascinating,
colorful, chilling killers in television and
movie history. Great job, Felicia Pearson (the
name of the actress, and real name of the
character - I love it).
And so we're left with just one show. And even
as the good guys are smashing the drug business,
due to McNulty's ingenious charade about the
serial killer, these same good guys are closing
in on McNulty.
I'll tell you one thing - they won't look to
good to me if they punish McNulty for his
charade. But it's hard to see how McNulty's
going to bend his way out of this...
A great week 5 of
In Treatment
on HBO, with things getting worse for almost
everyone - but that's what makes a serial
therapy story top-notch...
Laura's as beautiful and manipulative and needy
and insightful - about herself and Paul - as
ever, and, yeah, she says she's leaving
treatment. This of course would be just what
Paul should want, if he didn't love her. But of
course he does love her, and that's precisely
why he desperately doesn't want her out of his
life, professional or otherwise, even though he
should want her out of his life, because as Gina
has made crystal clear and Paul knows full well,
he can never sleep with Laura, let alone be
romantically involved, at least according to the
applicable canon of ethics...
But, not to worry too much about this vicious
circle, we all know Laura will not be out of
Paul's life.
Laura says she's through with Alex, but he may
not be through with her, and Alex has one of his
best episodes (I can't recall which one wasn't
his best) as he goads and taunts Paul, to the
point of calling Laura a slut, which elicits
from Paul not only a "you prick" but an actual
shoving of Alex against the wall. Interestingly,
Alex seems a little chastised by this - he
doesn't react violently - which suggests that
that shove may be just the thing he needed.
My favorite session of this past week was
Sophie's, superbly portrayed by Mia Wasikowska.
I can't recall if I said this before - but if I
did, it's worth repeating - which is, I think
that Paul's clearly at his best when Sophie's in
his therapy. He's not in love her (Paul's
problem with Laura), threatened by her (Paul's
problem with Alex), reminded of his own marital
problems (Paul's problem with Jake and Amy), so
Paul can make use of his full, non-conflicted,
considerable talents as a therapist.
The other salient point about Sophie is her case
is really, literally, a matter of life and
death, with suicide never too far from the
surface. And Paul has been dealing with this
masterfully. On Wednesday's episode, he handles
Sophie's mother, who accompanies her to the
session, very well, and, even more impressively,
extracts a commitment from Sophie not to use the
threat of suicide as weapon in their sessions.
Powerful and perfectly rendered.
Jake shows some humanity, finally, in his
session with Amy - as a songwriter, he should
have at least a little sensitivity (I've been
known to write a few myself - see my
MySpace music page, and
my Wikipedia entry). And the Friday session
with Gina was one of the best between these two,
enhanced by Paul's wife joining the treatment.
In Treatment
is one of the best shows ever on HBO, and, for
that matter, on television. There's been nothing
else like it, and I'm looking forward to more.
MySpace poet Lance Strate has written verses for
time traveller Sierra Waters ...
I sent it to one of her listening posts in 2042,
and who knows if it will get through, but you
can read it any time at
A River Song for Sierra Waters...
Sierra is really taking on a life of her own,
with a
Facebook group, a
MySpace page, a Second Life life (see
picture below), an appearance in an 18th century
painting (see below), and now this poem...
e-mail received from a reader:
Dear Paul, I just dreamed of airships flying between
raindrops. I just returned from 2042 CE, where I
sold my hardcover copy of The Plot to Save
Socrates for seventy million Neo-Euros, because
it had your response to this e-mail from way back in
2007 scotch-taped onto the inside of the cover. A
Paul Levinson collector paid top Neo-Euro, because
of the authentic archaic e-mail printout from you.
It turns out that not many of your e-mails from
before your tenure as CEO of HBO/Cinemax and terms
as United Nations Secretary General will survive
that far into the future. So, please respond to this
e-mail, to help found my great-grandchildren's
fortune. My Will will stipulate that they must share
with your great grandchidren. Thanks! Tom
free sci-fi podiobooks...
powered by ODEO The Plot to Save Socrates ch 1
"challenging fun"
-Entertainment Weekly
powered by ODEO The Chronology Protection Case
Edgar nominee 2002
best radioplay
powered by ODEO The Silk Code, ch 1
winner, Locus Award
Best First Novel, 1999
President, Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of
America, 1998-2001
I’m proud to be on the May 8 page of this calendar,
with the following quote: "What begins as a
seemingly innocent campaign against indecency …
always segues in short order into political
censorship."
my podcasts:
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