timeeurope.com

TIME Europe Home
  Europe
  Middle East
  Africa
  World
  Digital Europe
  Business
  Travel & Arts
  Photo Essays
  TIME Trails
  Magazine
  Archive
  Fast Forward

Special Features
  Fast Forward
  Forecast 2001
  E-Europe
Search TIME Europe
 
Subscribe to TIME
Subscriber Services
About Us

TIME Daily
TIME Asia
TIME Canada
TIME Pacific
TIME Digital
Latest CNN News

FREE NEWSLETTER!
Sign up now for TIME's WorldWatch email newsletter.
[ preview ]

 


Other News
spacer gif
spacer gif
Check the New 2000
FORTUNE 500 Today!

FORTUNE.com

spacer gif
Sivy On Stocks,
By E-Mail

MONEY.com

spacer gif
The 'X-Men' Cometh
And EW's Got 'Em!

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

spacer gif



TIME EUROPE
July 24, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 4


Irony Is Dead. Long Live Irony (on the Web)
The snide tradition of disrespecting media and movie stars is thriving on delightfully sardonic sites
By JAMES PONIEWOZIK

If irony really is dead, you might mark its toe tag May 10, 2000, launch date of Inside.com. Years before co-founding that high-profile media-news website, editor Kurt Andersen co-founded the satiric Spy, a magazine that in the '80s and '90s treated the media and entertainment businesses as sardonically as Inside treats them earnestly. Writing about the new venture in New York magazine, media columnist Michael Wolff argued that you couldn't pull off a Spy online if you wanted to, for the Web is an "irony-resistant environment."

But is it really? Spy's rarefied, Manhattan-centric humor wouldn't be likely to find a mass audience online, but the cheap, egalitarian Web has long been a haven for wisenheimers: the cutting commentary of Suck (www.suck.com), the deadpan fake-newspaper Onion (www.theonion.com) and the esoteric wit of McSweeney's (www.mcsweeneys.net). More recently, old media have tried to get Blair Witch-y with sites like Time Warner's Entertaindom (www.entertaindom.com), whose flashy but lame Hollywood spoofs prove the rule that online humor is funny in inverse proportion to its budget. And even in the Web's grownup days of corporate sites and e-commerce, a pair of scrappy newcomers is continuing the tradition of wicked pop-culture satire online.

The addictively mean Fametracker (www.fametracker.com) — "The Farmer's Almanac of Celebrity Worth" — is dedicated to exposing the overexposed and meting out punishment for hubris. Its signature feature, the "Fame Audit," dissects superstars' careers and publicity binges with surgical detail. On Ben Affleck: "[He] has had a Counting Crows kind of career — too much, too fast, too soon. This isn't his fault, but it is his problem." Each audit tots the star's assets and liabilities (Affleck's: "Easygoing, cocksure charm"/ "Consistently refers to his acting as 'the work'") and judges the celeb's "actual" and "deserved" level of fame (for Affleck, respectively: "Johnny Depp" and "Omar Epps"). The site's "2 Stars, 1 Slot" compares eerily similar niche actors (Vicki Lewis vs. Kathy Griffin in "Battle of the Redheaded Flibbertigibbets"), while the forthcoming "Media Hog" will be a celebrity fantasy league where readers "adopt" stars, who score points for hogging press coverage.

When Fametracker disses the famous, they stay dissed. Yet its nastiness is informed by a genuine love of show biz. "If we thought everything was crap," says editor Tara Ariano, "we wouldn't go see four movies a week." Fametracker simply wants justice: "Do you know," says Giancarlo Esposito's audit, "how many underappreciated, underrecognized and underutilized actors — like Giancarlo Esposito — could be made famous simply by stripping Whoopi Goldberg of her fame and dispensing it to the deserving?" Preach it!

The wildly inventive Modern Humorist (www.modernhumorist.com), founded by Harvard Lampoon alums John Aboud and Michael Colton, has a broader satiric scope, which has led some to call it the National Lampoon of the Web. But its richest targets have been pop culture and the media. When US Weekly retracted a claim that Tom Cruise had fallen out with the Church of Scientology, MH fired off "Corrections the Scientologists Made Us Run," including "Tom Cruise does not stand on a phone book whenever he and Nicole Kidman are photographed together. Instead she stands in a hole." It greeted Oprah Winfrey's O magazine with J: the Jerry [Springer] Magazine and has also posted Misfortune, a post-market-crash version of a certain Time Inc. publication ("Rightsizing your family: Does your household have more mouths than food?"). It has even parodied parodies, spoofing how Budweiser's "Wassup?" ads have been overspoofed with a version that ends, "We're sick of this joke too."

Colton and Aboud plan to broaden their readership by cutting back on media jokes, but such stunts earn MH attention from a vain press — the Misfortune parody was published in Fortune too — which is pure gold for a Web start-up. In an exception to the aforementioned Entertaindom rule, MH has scored backing from venture capitalists, who hope its brand can be slapped on books, video games and movies. ("We tell them, 'Think Modern Humorist's Scuba School with Corey Haim,'" cracks Colton.) The money has been used to hire a staff of 10 and add multimedia. MH's "Summer Movie eView" includes audio files like a fake Aerosmith ballad for The Patriot.

Of course, Mad used to do the same thing by publishing lyrics with the tag "Sung to the tune of ..." But be honest: Were you aware that Mad still exists? Satire in print may have its problems — Spy folded in 1998 — but irony online seems safe as long as obsessive jokesters have modems. "Most of America doesn't read," says Aboud. "But they do like glowing pictures."

This edition's table of contents
TIME Europe home


More stories from TIME Europe and related links

E-mail us at mail@timeatlantic.com

COPYRIGHT © 2000 TIME INC.



More Stories

July 24, 2000

COVER
One Is 100
Famous and beloved for her entire adult life, the Queen Mother notches up a century on August 4 — and the celebrations are already in full swing

EUROPE
Crackdown
Moscow's powerful oligarchs feel the heat as Vladimir Putin's tax police and prosecutors continue to make life uncomfortable for Russia's big business

The Hit List
Russia's ruble rousers

The Tax Break Man
By squeezing through sweeping reforms, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder has stolen a march on his critics

BUSINESS
Third Generation Gap
Lower-than-expected bidding for mobile licenses is bad news for governments but good news for consumers

Names in Waiting
The trial is over — now judgment day looms for Lloyd's and investors

HEALTH
The New Science of Alzheimer's
Racing against time — and one another — researchers close in on the aging brain's most heartbreaking disorder

SOCIETY
The French Disease
In France, a best seller exposes a nationwide problem of emotional abuse in the workplace

THE ARTS
In Praise of Flattery
How the rampant sucking up to the famous has undermined the language of private praise

You Look Marvelous!
Tips for kissing up

Irony Is Dead. Long Live Irony (on the Web)
The snide tradition of disrespecting media and movie stars is thriving on delightfully sardonic sites

DEPARTMENTS
Essay

Olympic Monitor

World Watch