A country up for grabs
Myanmar’s military toppled the civilian government. Now the country’s diverse population is banding together in protest
Myanmar’s military toppled the civilian government. Now the country’s diverse population is banding together in protest
As police turn to facial recognition technology to identify suspects and solve cases, critics worry about privacy and false accusations
In Los Angeles, “defunding the police” led to disbanding a unit specially designed to help with homelessness
Donald Trump made gains among some Hispanic voters in 2020. Will the GOP continue the trend?
Andrée Seu Peterson / Janie B. Cheaney / Joel Belz / Marvin Olasky / Mindy Belz / The Editors /
Lifestyle / Law / Medicine / History / Religion / Technology / Sports / Health / Education / Business
Dean's List / Metro Minute / Snapshots of China / Sophia's World / Whirled Views /
Music / Q&A / Children's Books / Books / Television / Movies
Quick Takes / Quotables / Human Race / News
(Chris Hornbecker/© IFC)
The little-watched IFC network now has a big hit, Friday night's Portlandia, starring Carrie Brownstein and Fred Armisen. Set in Portland, Ore., where "the dream of the '90s is alive," the show has developed a cult following among many in their 20s and 30s, and dozens of its clips have gone viral on YouTube.
The show sports flannel shirts, funky glasses, and a melancholy coffee shop vibe, but it's mostly about weird people-including clowns on tricked-out tricycles and bikers in star-spangled thongs-and bizarre moral codes. The show mocks everything from liberal sacred chickens (Google "portlandia chicken") to recycling turned freecycling or dumpster-diving.
Sadly, Portlandia sometimes treats reverently the idea of Portland as postmodern utopia. Beneath all the ribbing is a celebration of weirdness, including sexual perversity that occasionally reaches the level of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. YouTubing some of the clips provides an amusing introduction to parts of ultra-blue America that folks in red areas rarely see, but the show relishes destructive behavior too often to recommend regular watching.