Crash beats Brokeback, author’s rant rings hollow, kids still go hungry


Not a fan of the predictable unrealism of the Best Picture Oscar winner “Crash”, I certainly agree with most of what Annie Proulx says about Crash and its admirers. She wrote the story on which Brokeback Mountain is based and I think she’s suggesting that police racism directed against rich hollywood folks is low on the social priority list of all but the out of touch.

But somehow Proulx’s rant rings hollow as well, failing to note the obvious.  The success of Brokeback also owes much to that same crowd who are so very out of touch with mainstream sensibilities, let alone global sensibilities.

The world is struggling with an overwhelming number of social challenges now. Neither Crash nor Brokeback addressed any of them, as Hollywood only very rarely does. More than 99.9% of the world’s population would place the challenges faced by the sexually conflicted, let along sexually conflicted american cowboys, somewhat lower on their priority list than Annie does.

So, why can’t hollywood produce more REAL films about REAL people facing REAL global challenges? Sometimes they do it but it’s rare. Beyond Borders very nobly tried to tackle hunger and development issues but could not rise above critics and perhaps Angelina Jolie’s screen persona which overshadowed the story. The Killing Fields and Hotel Rwanda brilliantly brought unspeakable tragedies to the big screen. But these films are the total exceptions in a sea of gratuitous sex, violence, and unrealistic stereotypes.

Why can’t all that cleverness, marketing hype, and technology be used in a concerted effort to address the key global challenges of our time – the lack of basic food, water, shelter, health care, and infrastructure in the developing world?

For every Brokeback cowboy there are millions of hungry kids – when are you going to write their story, Annie Proulx?

Don’t overestimate the power of Pizzazz – but don’t UNDERestimate it either!


We are working on a new project at Online Highways – a regional search engine for travel.   It could be great because our former excellent programmer Marvin has already developed Kinosearch and it’s well suited to this task. Vertical search is really hot as a Web 2.0 theme and we should be able to put out a great spam free travel search for the Oregon Coast and should be able to scale it up if it gains traction as a spam free alternative to the increasingly problematic big engine searches for local travel information.

But I’m worried about the name, which currently is “CRSE.com”.   “Cooperative Regional Search Engine”.  Yikes – that sucks.

My partner is right that that people usually have too MUCH enthusiasm for Pizzazz and too little for the substance of a project, but that’s a problem with the wrong emphasis, not a problem with Pizzazz which can be important to the success of a project.