TikTok and Suburban Gothic
Will the literature of the suburbs be written on TikTok?
Will the literature of the suburbs be written on TikTok?
Daisy Alioto Dirt Mar 2021 20min Permalink
How a once idyllic postwar town fell under the sway of a teen-age gang.
Joan Didion New Yorker Jul 1993 55min Permalink
The real-time intersection of race, crime, reality, and entertainment.
Sarah Shun-lien Bynum New Yorker Apr 2016 25min Permalink
A diagram of gossip concerning an affair.
"He called it love, said Ellen. He said he was in love, that's the word he used when he finally admitted it. I mean you expect the I-made-a-mistake speech, said Connie, the she-came-on-to-me speech, the it-was-meaningless speech. You expect him to say that it was just the one time, knowing that it was more, but you can ignore that. You expect him to say it was protected sex and that you don't have to go to the clinic to get some sort of test for chlamydia, said Ellen. But you will, anyway, said Sonya, and make him do it too just to rub his nose in it. But no, said Grace. He tells you that he's a new person, in love for the first time ever. What do you do with that? She told Sonya that as soon as he'd said it, as soon as the words were out of his mouth, she'd felt the room swaying."
Michelle Seaton The Collagist Mar 2014 20min Permalink
A celebrity moves into the neighborhood, subtly disrupting the habits of the other residents.
"We watched the actress command and coordinate the movers like a veteran general. She was dressed in clothes geared for comfort: charity t-shirt, pink sweatpants. She wasn't wearing any makeup and her hair was tied in a loose braid. Chudley was panting heavily."
How a town of 29,000 on the Hudson River came to be “one of the most dangerous four-mile stretches in the northeastern United States.”
Patrick Radden Keefe New York Sep 2011 20min Permalink