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Your daily cup of WTF?
Nerve@SXSW 2006.
Blogging the Roman Orgy of Indie-music Festivals.
Coming Soon!
Coming Soon!
Coming Soon!
The Daily Siege
An intimate and provocative look at Siege's life, work and loves.
Kate & Camilla
two best friends pursue business and pleasure in NYC.
Naughty James
The lustful, frantic diary of a young London photographer.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: kid_play
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Super_C
The Nerve Blog-a-log: ILoveYourMom
A bundle of sass who's trying to stop the same mistakes.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: The_Sentimental
Our newest Blog-a-logger.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Marking_Up
Gay man in the Big Apple, full of apt metaphors and dry wit.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: SJ1000
Naughty and philosophical dispatches from the life of a writer-comedian who loves bathtubs and hates wearing underpants.
The Nerve Video Blog
Deep, deep inside the world of online video.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: charlotte_web
A Demi in search of her Ashton.
The Prowl, with Ryan Pfluger
Nerve @ Cannes Film Festival
May 16 - May 25
ScreenGrab
The Nerve Film Blog
Autumn
A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
The Modern Materialist
Almost everything you want.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: that_darn_cat
A sassy Canadian who will school you at Tetris.
Rose & Olive
Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other's lives.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: funkybrownchick
The name says it all.
merkley???
A former Mormon goes wild, and shoots nudes, in San Francisco.
chase
The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
The Remote Island
Nerve's TV blog.
Brandonland
A California boy capturing beach parties, sunsets and plenty of skin.
61 Frames Per Second
Smarter gaming.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Charlotte_Web
A Demi in search of her Ashton.
The Nerve Blog-a-log: Zeitgeisty
A Manhattan pip in search of his pipette.

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  • New on Nerve, 4.28.08: New York’s Finest, Q&A with “The Wire” writer Richard Price



    I admit: I was incredibly jealous when Nerve editor Will Doig told me he was going to interview Richard Price. I just recently discovered the joys of HBO’s The Wire (I know, I’m only a few years’ behind the times) and to sit and speak with one of the geniuses behind the scripts sounded like a dream come true…

    Read More...


  • Lessons from The Biggest Loser Season Finale, by Will Doig



    There are a few lessons one can take from last night’s season finale of The Biggest Loser.

    1. It’s possible for a woman to win this show, even though men are predisposed to quicker weight loss.
    2. It’s possible for some people to lose 50 pounds and still look basically the same.

    3. Live TV – especially live TV starring people who have no professional TV training – is awesome.


    Ali, the former competitive swimmer who’d let herself go, won the final weigh-in and, for this, a quarter of a million dollars. She’d lost 112 pounds and looked as diesel as an angry Mac truck. The other two finalists were Roger, a former football player from
    Alabama, and Kelly, a shy working-class woman from Florida. I was rooting for Kelly, because she’s older and divorced. She’s also had three miscarriages and talked a lot about how she’d always been huge and asexual and how now, at 38, she finally felt like a girl for the first time in her life.

    It’s this kind of shit that gets me sobbing like a mental patient...

    Read More...


  • Check It: Brett Graham and His Fruit Mystery



    Who is Brett Graham? What is the “Fruit Mystery” game, and why did he have to make it for his “parents/the police and the Zoo”? What the hell am I talking about?


    You really need to see this….

    Read More...


  • New on Nerve, 4.2.08: Yesterday’s Paper



    Every few years, I’ve noticed, we get slammed with some article or other about how we’re moving into a kind of post-literate society, where books become obsolete and we’re all going to get our learning in capsule form or whatever. But I love my books, and I’m not giving them up without a fight. I grew up a bookish little one, preferring to spend my days devouring The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe rather than play house or whatever the other kids were up to. Since then, I’ve worked as a librarian, a conservator, a writer, and a book artist (printing and binding books by hand). Even working here at Nerve has caused me considerable anxiety, as it’s meant swapping my ink and paper comforts for the cold, tech-y embrace of the internets. Imagine my abject horror when Nerve editor Will Doig passed along a book called The Solitary Vice: Against Reading. I’m pretty sure I gasped audibly.

    So I sat down with author Mikita Brottman for a quick Q&A about the hidden dangers of books, the joys of tabloids, and librarian sex appeal.

    People assume that if you're not actually sitting with a book in your lap, you're not really reading. Whereas most of what people are doing online is reading. Sending text messages or sitting with a magazine or a comic is reading. There are all kinds of reading, and I think book-boostering campaigns are a reaction against these things that compete for our attention. People feel anxious about the demise of reading, but those anxieties are groundless, and perhaps rooted in snobbery.

    Read more…


  • New on Nerve, 3.25.08: Crowd Control



    Being born in 1984, my childhood seemed to develop right alongside the rise of the personal computer, along with the ever-elusive World Wide Web. I was in fourth grade when, unbeknownst to my parents, I first signed on to AOL 1.0 and began chatting with sleazy perverts inquiring about my bra size. I thought it was spectacular. Almost 15 years later, they may have developed parental controls to try and prevent nine year olds from being asked their bra size, but the internet is far from being controlled…

    Nerve sat down for a compelling Q&A with Clay Shirky, whose new book Here Comes Everybody explores the twisted dichotomy of good and evil that cyberspace continues to inflict on our society, and what that may mean for the future of media, social change and politics….


    I realized that everything I've been talking about all these years — how much easier it is for groups to get things done — all of that is the same thing that's allowing the Pro-Ana girls to thrive. Because now, society doesn't get to say which groups get to form or not, and who gets to talk to each other, because it's easy and free. That's a big, big social change, and one that, it seems to me, we're manifestly unready to take on.


    Read the entire interview here.


    — Alexandra Godfrey



  • New on Nerve, 3.24.08: You Look Scrabulous



    Are you a Scrabulous addict? (Or have you not yet plated the online tête-à-tête version of Scrabble?). Will Doig dives deep into the world of S.E.X.Y. Scrabulous, and uncovers new rules for the old game:

    There are two types of Scrabulous come-ons: the fizzy, giggly, coquettish flirtations Jack, Annie and Shaina are talking about, and the kind Alicia (who becomes so horny she has to touch herself) is talking about. And the kind that Barry is seeking. His open table solicited "bi married men" to challenge him to a game, and in response to my request for an interview, he'd only persistently ask, "How big is your c*ck?" He continued to press me for details about my personal dimensions and what I might like to do with him if we were in the same room, even while continuing the game at hand, laying down words like "thermal" and "bisque."


    Wanna play? Check out the entire article here.


  • About Last Night: Lit 'n' Porn at the Sienese Shredder Issue Release Party


    “Like a child looking through The Joy of Sex for the first time” — Emily Farris  [photo courtesy Daniel Krieger]


    We love literature and we love smut…so naturally we had to check out the Sienese Shredder’s release party last night, as they found a way to combine both in their second annual issue. The journal “brings together poetry, critical writing, visual arts, unpublished rarities, oddball ephemera” and, you know, a bit o’ porn.

    Nerve editor Will Doig got his culture on, and met photographer
    Susan Unterberg (far right) who showed him her photographs of human thumbs that look like penises, and goldfish mouths that look like vaginas.

    See the human thumb penis photos and more, after the jump! (Now how often do you receive an offer for that?)

    Read More...


  • New on Nerve, 3.14.08: In Plain View, Photography by Jackson Eaton



    It's always nice to see a guy rocking the funny underpants. Increasingly, purveyors of popular apparel for the modern man have started carrying weird undies, a welcome end to the fascist white-and-powder-blue Fruit of the Loom regime. And she's not doing so bad herself — turquoise thigh-highs spread-eagled on a hamper never go out of style, no matter what the season. But what we love most about photographer Jackson Eaton's photographs is the feeling of subtle chaos, a sense that something ridiculous just occurred, and will occur again before long. It makes us wonder whether something as unpredictably lovely might occur in our own lives. We'd better change into our best unmentionables, just in case. — Will Doig

     


  • New on Nerve, 2.25.08: Recession Fears



    When I was growing up, my parents had a friend named Gary, a jeweler from Denver. Gary was almost totally bald, and he would visit us in Massachusetts once a year. He would constantly make jokes about his bald head to amuse my brother and me, making a big show of applying sunscreen to his scalp before we went to the beach. He'd have us rub it for luck, and once even let us draw a face up there with a Sharpie.

    Today, if you're a balding man with some disposable income, you have to make a choice: Will I be like
    Gary, admirably self-deprecating and at ease with the completely natural aging process occurring on top of my head? Or will I be desperately vain and narcissistic and try to halt the loss? This essay is about how I chose the latter path and, most of the time, feel pretty damn lame about it.

    The worst thing about going bald is not that it indicates aging, or a decline in sexual virility or anything as silly and New Age as that. It's that it's part of the Big Competition. High salary? Add four points. Lame job? Minus one. Big dick? Add two. Going bald? Minus three. Today, the center-front of my hairline remains intact, but the two sides have been ebbing like a beach approaching low tide for nearly a decade.


    Read the rest here
    .


    — Will Doig


  • IM This: Science Fair Pictures To Get You Through the Afternoon

    Sometimes my fellow Nerve writers instant message me pictures of their (very cute) dogs, links to blogs dedicated entirely to pretty girls drinking tea, or other such mildly entertaining, LOL-style comedy. But sometimes, just sometimes, they IM pure, nostalgic, comic gold: check out these hilarious, painful, and presumably oh-so-real pictures from children’s science fairs.


    [Thanks to Gawker and Will Doig for the afternoon fun.]

    Check out more awkward joy after the jump…

     

    Read More...


  • Scanner's Stories of Love and Hate: A Pre-Valentine's Day Reading of Sorts



    Scanner Emily (yes, the literary goddess/casserole maven who’s also venturing into burlesque) reminds us about tomorrow night’s fab reading:

    Hey New Yorkers, don't forget to join your Scanner bloggers and special guests (see below) for a pre-Valentine's Day reading and after-party at Rififi Tuesday night.

    Scanner's Stories of Love and Hate
    : A Pre-Valentine's Day Reading of Sorts

    Featuring Nerve.com's Scanner Bloggers and Special Guests
    Tuesday, February 12, 8 p.m.
    Rififi, 332 East 11th Street, NYC
    $5

    Read More...


  • New on Nerve, 11.19.2007: Q&A with NPR host and author Peter Sagal

     

    Peter Sagal is the last person you would expect to be an expert on being bad. According to Will Doig, Sagal, host of the NPR news-quiz Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me, sounds like “a precise, well-informed newspaper reader with an enviable vocabulary who doesn't do much of anything wrong.” Nonetheless Sagal has written a book called The Book of Vice: Very Naughty Things and How to Do Them. Will Doig spoke to him about traveling to the dark side.

    If you listen to Wait, Wait, reading this piece will be particularly fun because you can imagine exactly how Sagal sounds when he says things like “I had this, if you will, body of knowledge about the porn industry that I found interesting, and it left me, if you will, wanting more.”

    After the jump more details on Sagal’s involvement in the making of Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights and how Harvey Weinstein figures in the story.

    Read More...


  • In Memory of Norman Mailer

     

    Norman Mailer passed away this weekend. To remember him we've reposted an interview from with Mailer and his son John from March, 2006. Read an excerpt below, or go here for the full text.

    Isn't that boredom [that comes from marriage] antithetical to sexual passion?
    Of course. But that's also part of it. When you're driving a car that has five hundred horsepower, you need some kind of brakes. All right, that's a crude image [laughs]. All I'm getting at is that very often, highly sexed people get married in order to have an outlet. [pause] Let me see, I can say something better than that. What a way to end up, huh? You could hang yourself with a sentence like that. [long pause, throat clearing] People, whether highly sexed or not, often need a machine like a relationship, something like an accelerator and a brake. Marriage allows you to do that very well. It's the soft machine of society.


  • New on Nerve 11.12.2007: Tom Perrotta discusses his new book, “The Abstinence Teacher”

     

    Will Doig has a great Q&A with Tom Perrotta today. They discuss Perrotta’s latest novel, The Abstinence Teacher in which an atheist sex-ed teacher clashes with the Christian fundamentalist minority in her suburban community. Below is an excerpt from the interview.

    Perrotta: Every now and then, I meet a couple who met in high school who have been married twenty-five years, and clearly they're still in love. They've experienced their entire sexual lives together.

    Nerve: I feel about that the same way I feel about people who spend their whole lives living in the tiny town they grew up in. It's sort of romantic and fanciful, but horrifying at the same time.

    Perrotta: I agree. One of the things that struck me about this whole abstinence thing is the total fear of experience. Even something as simple as getting your heart broken. I've had my heart broken two or three times, and it's taught me a few things about relationships. It makes you smarter. It makes you kinder to other people. There are all sorts of ways to talk about getting your heart broken that aren't the end of the world. But if you go to an abstinence rally, the metaphor they love is: "Your heart is this pure thing, and every time somebody comes, they rip a chunk out of it! They take a chainsaw to it, and then you have this jagged, awful thing that doesn't look like a sweet Valentine heart anymore. Is that the way you want to go through life? With a damaged heart?"


  • "The second you don't look like Sam Riley anymore, the easier it is to convince yourself you're Ian Curtis."

     

     
    Will Doig interviews Sam Riley, who plays Ian Curtis in the New Joy Division biopic, Control . According to Will, Riley "has a great voice, and not just cause he's british. It's a nice smoky baritone. and his cadence was great. For instance, when he talked about Deborah and that whole part about portraying a man in front of that man's widow, he got very quiet and contemplative."

    What was it like meeting the widow of the man you were portraying?
    I was embarrassed, to be honest. I think we both thought it was fairly surreal. I was in their house, I had to sleep upstairs, I was wearing his clothes, and I'd be walking around their house and I'd bump into Debbie, and I almost wanted to say sorry.

    Sorry for portraying Ian?
    Yeah. For being an imposter or something. [Playing Ian in front of her] was like saying something about someone when they're standing right behind you - it was that kind of feeling. I could see she was nervous, but she was lovely.

    Visit the film's official site

    After the jump watch a video of Joy Division performing "Love Will Tear Us Apart."

    Read More...


  • “He's not weird for the sake of being weird; he's just weird because he's weird.”

    Two terrific pieces from the film issue that I missed while I was out: 

     
    This is a great, long interview with Joseph Lanza, whose book Phallic Frenzy “spends as many pages describing [Ken] Russell's onscreen pageantry as its symbolic underpinnings: exaggerated phallic imagery, abrasive anti-religious scenes, nude male wrestling, incontinence, rape and forced enemas.”

    Says Lanza, “Some people will look at the book and say, "Phallic Frenzy? This must be pornography." Well, it's about penises, but it's often about how terrifying they can be, and what the penis might have represented to Ken Russell at various times of his life.”

     
    In Will Doig’s charming piece, “Hollywood Square,” Will talks about his love for mediocre Hollywood comedies. Many of them feature John Candy. None of them are good date movies.

    Made in America is not a film you want anyone to know you've seen, least of all a philosophy major from the University of Maryland whom you're trying to have sex with. I knew, even as I was walking the box to the Blockbuster counter, that I was torpedoing the date. I could have rented a Cassavetes or a Schlesinger, but I couldn't stop myself. I was going to make him watch this, dammit.”


  • New on Nerve, 9.27.07: "Baby, it's Dumpsville, population you."


    Our favorite piece of advice came from Matthew, 26, who gave a few phrases to avoid when breaking up with someone:

    "It's not you, it's me."
    "Baby, it's Dumpsville, population you."
    "The force was not with us."
    "There's not enough space in this universe, real or made-up, for both of us."


     

     
     


    Posted Sep 27 2007, 11:43 AM by Sarah with | with no comments
  • TMI: Will's L Face

    This here is Will Doig, associate editor, losing at slots in Atlantic City. Will has never made this face in the office.


     


  • New on Nerve, 9.19.07: Weirdo Laureate, an interview with George Saunders

     

    Today Will Doig interviews George Saunders. According to Will’s introduction, “it's with no small amount of fanfare than The Braindead Megaphone, Saunders' first collection of nonfiction, arrives on the scene. Happily, his incisive wit survived the transition intact. The book opens with the titular essay, a commentary on the twenty-four-hour news cycle in which Saunders manages a fresh take on a topic that's been rehashed a million times before. Other stories depict the insane concentration of wealth in Dubai and the total minimalism of a Nepalese boy who's been meditating under a tree for six months. But the central theme of media coverage — its ridiculous relentlessness, its relentless ridiculousness — recurs as an amplified squawk that gives the collection its name.”

    “I honestly wasn't super familiar with his work,” Will told us. “I'd read some of his magazine articles, but to prepare for the interview I had to go out and buy three of his books and read all three in a week. (For the record, I loved them). I basically just wanted to get him talking about media, since that's what his new collection of essays is largely about, and I'm really into TV news (though not because I think it's good).

    He talked really fast, and went off on lots of tangents. He's a professor at Syracuse, so I could see him being one of those professors who's all exuberant and hyper and tells lots of stories. About halfway through the interview he apologized for acting so crazy and said he'd had "like, seven pots of coffee." This was a late-afternoon interview, so that seemed reasonable.”

    Interview outtake after the jump.

    Read More...


  • New on Nerve, 9.11.07: Nerve Editors Give Great Oral

    From an oral history of Nerve, interviews with current Nerve editors 

    "Working at Nerve is like being perpetually two drinks into a really, really fun night on the town." - Ada Calhoun, Consulting Editor, Editor-in-Chief of Babble 

     
     



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About the Blogger

The Insider is your guide to the best of Nerve. Here you'll find the inside scoop on the latest features, photography, interviews and video, direct from Nerve editors. (Plus a glimpse at what goes on when the lights go out...Nerve events and parties, and more!)