About Andrew Hearst

I'm Andrew Hearst, a New York-based writer, editor, designer, musician, and gadabout. You can learn a bit more about me here.

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What is a panopticist?

Some insight is here.

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hearst [at] nyc.rr.com

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Best of Panopticist
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The Pound of Flesh
Lingua Franca

Such Exquisite Dumbness
The New York Sun

Blue Laws and Black Markets
The New York Sun

The Unimaginative Imaginatist
The New York Sun

One Man's Machines
The Village Voice

David Granger Has Something Stuck Between His Teeth
Mediabistro.com

Tucker's World
Mediabistro.com

Can the Paperless Magazine Make It?
Columbia Journalism Review

Jim Romenesko
James Wolcott
Gawker
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Media Matters
Dan Kennedy
Veiled Conceit
Bob Somerby
Roger Ailes
FishbowlNY
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Clive Thompson
Rob Harrell
Maura Johnston
Peter Dizikes
Terri Senft
Tom Igoe
Carrie McLaren
Randall Rothenberg
Chris Allbritton
David Callahan
Rebecca Skloot
Julian Rubinstein
Rob Warner
Daniel Radosh
Mike Daisey
Caleb Crain
Heath Row
Jami Attenberg
Emily Votruba
Chris Millward
David Feige
Emily Gordon
Maud Newton
J. Edward Keyes
Jod Kaftan
Lindsay Robertson
Jen Bekman
Elizabeth Spiers
Lockhart Steele

Talking Points Memo
Jason Kottke
Gothamist
Curbed
Triple Mint
whatevs.org
Low Culture
pullquote
Old Hag
Kung Fu Monkey
Cool Hunting
Cult of Mac
design*sponge
Apartment Therapy
Rake's Progress
Beatrice
The Elegant Variation
Maccers
MemeFirst
Andrew Krucoff
Catherine's Pita
Cityrag
The Fold Drop
escapegrace
Filmoculous
Death May Be Your Santa Claus
Can't Stop the Bleeding
Encyclopedia Hanasiana
Rick's Cafe Americain
Men's Vogue Daily
Heaneyland!
The PreCogs
Jim Affinito
All the Little Live Things
Language Log
Design Observer
Drawn!
music (for robots)
Donkey Rising
Daily Kos
Atrios
Tapped

The Manhattan Project
Watergate-era
conspiracy thrillers

Joe Frank
Don DeLillo
détournement
analog filters
looping devices
Doonesbury
Swiffer
The Beatles
William Orbit
Roth-era Van Halen

Rolf Harris
Steve Garvey
Land of the Lost
my right thumb
Enid Blyton
Roald Dahl
Asterix
Tintin

Erlend Øye, DJ-Kicks

Grandaddy, Sumday

Röyksopp, Melody A.M.

Phoenix, Alphabetical

Van Halen, Van Halen

Fountains of Wayne, Utopia Parkway

Freaks and Geeks
Arrested Development
The Office
The Daily Show
Curb Your Enthusiasm


August 5, 2007
Hearst vs. Bobby Fischer

Last month I went to Tucson, Arizona, to help my father, Eliot Hearst, celebrate his 75th birthday. After retiring from his job as a distinguished professor of psychology at Indiana University, he moved to New York for three years and then re-retired to Arizona in 1998. He was born in Manhattan and grew up in Chelsea, long before the neighborhood’s gentrification.

During my Tucson visit, I spent an afternoon making scans of some highlights from his photo collection, and I was finally able to digitize the most treasured image from the Hearst family archive: a photograph of my father playing a casual game of chess with Bobby Fischer in August 1962. This is no novelty shot; my father was one of the top players in the United States in the 1950s and early 1960s, eventually earning the title of Life Senior Master. Both he and Fischer spent time at the Marshall Chess Club, which is still located on West 10th Street between 5th and 6th Avenues, as it was back then.

My dad’s on the right:

Eliot Hearst and Bobby Fischer, August 1962

At the time the photo was taken, my father was about to serve as the captain of the 1962 U.S. Olympic chess team; Bobby was the squad’s star player. It would be ten more years before Bobby’s cold-war proxy battle with Boris Spassky in Rejkjavik made him the most famous chess player in the world.

My father was a columnist for Chess Life for several years in the 1960s. After the 1962 Olympiad, which took place in Varna, Bulgaria, he wrote a column about the tournament, and his column was accompanied by this illustration of the team. My dad’s in the center, Bobby’s at upper right:

Eliot Hearst and Bobby Fischer in Chess Life

Here’s a list of all the chess luminaries in the illo, from left to right: Larry Evans, Pal Benko, Edmar Mednis, Eliot Hearst, Robert Byrne (the chess columnist for The New York Times from 1972 to 2006), Bobby Fischer, Donald Byrne.

My father beat Fischer in a tournament game in 1956, a mere three rounds after young Fischer defeated Donald Byrne in what became known as The Game of the Century. At chessgames.com, you can play through the game where my father defeated Fischer.

For many years my father and a co-author have been writing a huge book about the history and psychology of blindfold chess. At this point he’s clearly one of the world’s top experts on the subject. He recently completed work on all but the smallest details, and the book is scheduled to be published sometime next year. I’ll definitely be posting more info when the time comes.

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July 23, 2006
A Panopticist Cover That’s Good Enough to Eat

My good friends Greg and Frankie are getting married next Saturday in Brooklyn. A couple of months ago, they asked me to design their wedding invitation. They came up with the concept, wrote all the copy, and provided the photos, and I designed it and laid it out as four 8” by 10.5” pages (front and back covers with an inside spread). Greg and Frankie are both Canadian, which explains the green card joke, and our pal Clive got a pastor’s license so he can perform the ceremony, which explains the line at the top of the cover. (For the “good enough to eat” part, see the end of this post.)

Us Weekly: Greg and Frankie's wedding invitation

Us Weekly: Greg and Frankie's wedding invitation

Us Weekly: Greg and Frankie's wedding invitation

The back cover was an intentionally cheesy photo of Greg and Frankie with the wedding details underneath it. New York photos by Melissa Hribar; Paris photo by Michel Bourque. The main font used throughout is Relay Comp Black, which you can buy here for $40.

Wait, there’s more! Earlier this month one of Frankie’s co-workers asked me for a high-res graphic of the cover, because people at work wanted to print it onto marzipan for a party for Frankie. Who was I to refuse? Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the first-ever edible Panopticist cover:

Greg and Frankie's wedding invitation

(The cake was made by Regina at Grandma’s Secrets in Harlem.)

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categories: Magazines, Miscellany

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June 26, 2006
Panopticist in Entertainment Weekly

I’m a few days late with this: Last week’s issue of Entertainment Weekly contained a list called “100 Sites to Bookmark Now,” and Panopticist made the cut. To compile the list, the E.W. editors chose 25 of their favorite sites and then asked each of their choices to supply three choices of their own. This site made it in thanks to literary blogger par excellence (and Panopticist friend) Maud Newton, who chose Panopticist as one of her three. Other fine sites on the list: Fametracker, Defamer, WFMU’s Beware of the Blog, and my pal Clive Thompson’s science and technology blog, Collision Detection. Here’s a scan:

Panopticist in Entertainment Weekly's 100 Sites to Bookmark Now

E.W. has apparently stopped using Bureau Grotesque, except in its logo.

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March 14, 2006
Something Cool Comes From Cancer

Rob HarrellMy old pal Rob Harrell—whom I wrote about in this post and this post and this post—is scheduled to be featured in a CBS Evening News segment tomorrow or Thursday, and it’s not just because he’s talented.

Rob and I have been friends since we met in the sixth grade at Binford Middle School in Bloomington, Indiana, our hometown. Even in the sixth grade, he was a precocious illustrator and artist, and he went on to get two or three art degrees. These days he is, among other things, the creator, writer, and illustrator of Big Top, a daily comic strip from Universal Press Syndicate—the company that distributes Doonesbury, The Boondocks, and many other nationally prominent strips. Big Top appears in about 40 papers around the country, including the Boston Herald and the Detroit Free Press. In 2004, The Onion’s culture section had this to say about Big Top: “Rob Harrell possesses a classicist’s sense of comic timing … using panel space as well as any comics-page humorist since, yes, Berkeley Breathed.”

Rob moved with his wife, Amber, to Austin last year, after having lived in Indianapolis since college. A few months ago, he was experiencing constant headaches and some unusual pain behind his right eye, so he went with Amber to have some tests done. Eventually the doctors determined that he had a malignant tumor behind his right eye. Did I mention he’s only 37?

[Continue reading "Something Cool Comes From Cancer"...]

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categories: Art and Design, Miscellany

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January 9, 2006
Location, Location, Location

Happy new year, and apologies for the extended break. I was both busy and lazy during the holidays, and now I’m waist-deep in my first-ever New York apartment search. I’ve lived in New York since 1987, but this is the first time I’ve ever actually had to look for a place. After a decade in a rent-stabilized 400-square-foot studio on a great Upper West Side block a few yards from Riverside Park, I’m planning to move downtown in the next month or two, probably to the East Village. I spent most of the weekend racing around looking at apartments in a few downtown neighborhoods, and I actually found a couple of places that I’d be happy to live in. I’m hoping to score one of those places in the next few days.

I have a big backlog of cool links and other material that I’ve been meaning to post. I’m going to be swamped this week, too, but I’m planning to get back to a more regular posting schedule by next weekend.

I’ve got apartments on the brain, so for now I’ll leave you with a link to Architecture of Density, an amazing series of Hong Kong images by the photographer Michael Wolf. Here’s a brief description of the project from Wolf’s site:

One of the most densely populated metropolitan areas in the world, Hong Kong has an overall density of nearly 6,700 people per square kilometer. The majority of its citizens live in flats in high-rise buildings. In Architecture of Density, Wolf investigates these vibrant city blocks, finding a mesmerizing abstraction in the buildings’ facades.

The photographs are on display through February 26 at Robert Koch Gallery in San Francisco.

Architecture of Density

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categories: Art and Design, Miscellany

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December 13, 2005
Fun With Google Ads

While putting together the item I posted last night about Ravi Jain’s videoblog DriveTime, I googled my friend Dennis Crowley’s name to find an appropriate link or two to include. And I noticed that Dens has set up a little joke for himself on Google. This is one of the text ads that appears in the upper-right-hand corner of the results page when you google his name:

Welcome stalkers

It was probably easy for Dens to set up this joke ad, because he works for Google.

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November 17, 2005
What the World Needs: More Lying to Kids

Too busy or uncreative to come up with a truly memorable Christmas experience for your child? Eager to lay the groundwork for your tot’s inevitable realization that adults lie all the time, despite your constant nagging that it’s always best to tell the truth? Then head to santamail.org, where you can spend $9.95 to buy your snot-nosed bundle of joy a personalized letter from Santa Claus, lovingly typeset with unconvincing computer-generated handwriting.

The best thing on the site is the $19.95 “Santa Was Here!” kit, a veritable Christmas stocking full of ways to take advantage of the fact that your gullible child’s critical faculties are not yet fully formed. According to the company, the kit contains “complete instructions on how to stage your room to convince your child that Santa really did come”:

'Santa Was Here!' Kit

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November 5, 2005
Screw Gravity, Let’s Play Some Soccer

This picture exists in several places on the web. I don’t know where or when it was taken.

hillside soccer field

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August 29, 2005
The Real Panopticist Redesign

About two months ago I did a minor overhaul of this site’s design. I called it a redesign, but it didn’t really involve much more than moving some elements from one place to another.

But this, this, my friends, is a redesign. I’ll still be tweaking some things, but it’s mostly done. Everything appears to be working fine on my end. If you notice anything that seems to be broken, you might drop me a line: hearst [at] nyc.rr.com.

More soon. If you recognize the quote that’s currently running underneath the main header, you are cool and I like you.

UPDATE, 10:15 a.m.: Everything looked fine when I tested the redesign in four or five browsers in Mac OS X last night. I’m now at work and looking at the site in Mozilla for Mac OS 9, and a handful of elements are off by a few pixels. Not sure if I’ll bother to try to figure out how to fix these minor issues so the layout completely works in Mozilla/Netscape. It looks fine in Internet Explorer 5.1 for OS 9. For those of you keeping score at home.

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July 3, 2005
Welcome to the Panopticist Redesign

Your browser isn’t playing tricks on you: I’ve juggled some page elements, added a few new graphics, and tweaked some other things to make the site’s design a little more attractive and versatile. I had been feeling limited by the original design, in which the main column was flanked by two thinner sidebars. This new format, with the main column on the left and the two thinner columns on the right, will free up some page space for me to highlight older posts and call attention to various other things. The old design also wasn’t very conducive to quick, short posts; now, in the right-hand column, there’s a box called “Five Quick Links” that I’ll update regularly with one-line links to cool stuff I find.

I’m not totally done with the overhaul; I’ll still be adding a few little features here and there. But most of the elements are in place. If anything seems totally out of whack, you might drop me a line—I’ve checked everything in Safari, Explorer, Firefox, and Omniweb (all for the Mac), and everything seems groovy…

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June 26, 2005
Panopticist Makes The New York Post’s Hot List

two fonts and a dream

A little shameless self-promotion: My Us Weekly-as-Harper’s cover from February is featured today in The New York Post’s weekly Hot List, coming in at number five. (The cover graphic appears in the paper’s print edition but not the online edition.) Also on this week’s Hot List, which is compiled and written by Maureen Callahan: The Daily Show: Indecision 2004, the first-ever DVD from that great show, and Superstud: Or How I Became a 24-Year-Old Virgin, the latest book by Freaks and Geeks co-creator Paul Feig.

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categories: Magazines, Miscellany

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Playing Dress-Up With Natalie Portman, Lindsay Lohan, 50 Cent ... and Camilla Parker-Bowles

Paperdoll Heaven is “an online celebrity dress up game for girls (and boys) of all ages. The original idea was to provide an entertaining game for girls which wouldn’t contain any of the contents that is usually associated with games directed to boys. There just weren’t too many games for girls. We want to offer a clean and good enviroment for girls to spend time with. … We get visitors from all around the world, most of them are of course girls of ages between 5-20.”

There are individual pages for dozens of celebrities, everyone from Eminem and Bjork to Ashton Kutcher, Kelly Osbourne, and the Olsen Twins. At the beginning of each “game,” the celebrity is wearing nothing more than skimpy underwear or negligee; you play by dragging clothes from the hangers and placing them on the appropriate part of the celebrity’s anatomy. That’s the concept, anyway.

Here is my favorite, Camilla Parker-Bowles. Hubba hubba!

Camilla Parker-Bowles

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May 12, 2005
What the Hell Is a Panopticist?

By the way: If you’re wondering what the name of this site means, or what the word’s origins are, you might be interested in reading the first item I ever posted, way back in mid-January…

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April 25, 2005
Google Sightseeing, Unintentionally Sexual Comic Book Covers, Etc.

Randomness:

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April 19, 2005
Unrealized Moscow, Mr. T Loves His Mommy, etc.

Got back from L.A. on Sunday night. I’ll be posting a few things from the trip soon. In the meantime, here are a bunch of fabulous links you should follow:

Okay, more soon…

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April 10, 2005
In L.A. for the Week

I’m in L.A. for vacation this week, so posting will probably be a bit light until about April 18.

I tend not to get too excited by celebrity sightings, because I’m, y’know, cool and stuff, but last night I had a good one: I was sitting at the counter at Fred 62, a cool diner in Los Feliz, and a few seats away from me were two of the young actresses from Arrested Development: Alia Shawkat, who plays Maeby Fünke, and Mae Whitman, who plays Ann, George Michael Bluth’s girlfriend. Arrested Development is so much better than almost anything on television these days, so I’m still a little giddy about this sighting. I love that show.

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April 7, 2005
Haircut Fetish

I really don’t know what to make of this. It’s a site devoted to user-submitted haircut stories. There seems to be a mild fetish aspect to most of the stories, but hardly any of them are overtly sexual. All I can say is: People are weird. Here’s an excerpt:

haircut attack

Curt picked up a comb and tried combing my hair. “Damn! What did you do to it? It is a tangled mess.” I told Curt I hadn’t done anything out of the ordinary. I asked Curt, “Can’t you do something so these darn curls won’t be bothering me?” Curt smiled and said, “I can take care of the curls so they won’t be a problem for over a month or more if that is what you want.” Now that sounded good to me. I immediately thought of some kind of hair straightener/conditioner that would be applied and have nice straight hair. I couldn’t wait. I didn’t see that Gary was sitting over in the waiting area motioning to Curt. Later I was to find out that Gary was rubbing his chin and motioning to Curt. After Curt was able to untangle the curls so he could get a comb through, the clippers came to life. I figured he was going to shorten my sideburns since they were so long that they had begun to curl as well. I was shocked when I felt the clippers moving across the top of my head. I jerked away and said, “Curt! What do you think you are doing?” Curt dropped a big pile of curls onto the cape and said, “I am freeing you of these curls. As I said, they won’t bother you for a month or more….trust me.” I jumped out of the chair and walked to the mirror so I could get a close look. I almost fainted when I saw that Curt had taken his 00000 blade and made a nice, smooth, wide path across the top of my head. I looked at him and he was grinning! I said, “Curt! I could kill you for that. What has gotten into you? What is my boss going to say? Honestly! You have gone too far!” Gary and Curt both said, “Wait until it is finished - it is going to look great.”

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March 28, 2005
Container Store Cosmology

This weekend I had to go to The Container Store in Chelsea to return something, and it reminded me of my favorite thing about that establishment: The store itself is a container for all the containers. Not only that: The building contains the store.

Did I just blow your mind?

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March 22, 2005
Mike Daisey’s All Stories Are Fiction

Last night I went to P.S. 122 in the East Village to see All Stories Are Fiction, my friend Mike Daisey’s latest series of monologues. The show was FANTASTIC. He’s one hell of a talented storyteller. Here is a description of the format Mike is using for these shows:

Last spring monologuist Mike Daisey created 13 new shows in 13 weeks in a daring new series at P.S. 122 called All Stories Are Fiction. Plucking from events that befell him in the years, days, and sometimes minutes before he walked onstage, Daisey weaved together brand-new shows, creating one-of-a-kind, never-to-be-seen-again monologues before the eyes of the audience each and every time. Mike Daisey Now the creator of 21 Dog Years and the monologuist The New York Times has dubbed “the master storyteller” and The Seattle Times calls “a cross between Noam Chomsky and Jack Black” is back at P.S. 122, this time taking aim at nothing less than happiness itself. The rules are deceptively simple: 45 minutes before show time, Mike goes into his dressing room with a legal pad and a Sharpie and creates an outline. At 7:30 sharp, Mike emerges and tells his tale for the assembled audience for the first and only time. Over two months these monologues will address the essential question of happiness: what role does it play—or should it play—in our lives?

Mike’s doing a new show at 7:30 p.m. every Monday through May 9. I will definitely be going back for more. Tickets and other details are here.

Mike also has a blog.

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March 11, 2005
Category Era

Regular visitors to this site will have noticed various little design tweaks here and there recently. I’ve been going under the hood a bit to streamline the site’s design and code. And now I’ve added some category archives (see the right side of the main page, about one screen down), which should make the site a bit easier to navigate. Whee…

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March 10, 2005
I Spy With My Little Eye...

I’ve been falling into the trap of not posting until I have the time and energy to post something substantial, which means I’m often not posting about various excellent things I come across. I’m going to try to start posting a handful of quick links at least once or twice a week. Efficiency! And so:

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March 1, 2005
Appellation Animation

This is really cool: an applet that animates the popularity of baby names over the past century. Plug in your name and watch what happens. My name jumped from the 38th most popular in the 1960s to the fifth most popular in 2003. Who knew?

Baby Name Wizard

[Via a friend on Echo.]

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February 8, 2005
Unfortunately, It Didn’t Include the Words “This Is a Prank,” Which Would Have Been Helpful

From today’s Washington Post:

A Feb. 5 Names & Faces item on an Evite to Michael Saylor’s birthday party was based on a copy of the invitation that had been partially forged before it was sent to The Post. The original Evite from MicroStrategy’s CEO said the party will be “exotic, mysterious and ebullient,” but it did not say “erotic.” It said “Think ‘Alias’ (the TV show), but sexier,” but did not include “much sexier,” as was reported. The original also specified “cocktail dresses,” but did not say “the shorter the better.” And, the original did not end with — or even contain — the words “no one leaves alone.” Nor was there anything in the original invitation unfit for a family newspaper. The birthday celebration involved dinner and dancing at the Ortanique restaurant for about 200 guests.

[Via Romenesko.]

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January 12, 2005
Early Rich

I love how the Times has started posting Frank Rich’s columns on the paper’s website four or five days before they appear in the Sunday print edition. I don’t remember them ever posting anything more than a day or two in advance before.

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January 11, 2005
Entry Points

In case you’re wondering, some giant media conglomerate beat me to the domain name hearst.com, so that wasn’t a possibility.

The name of this site is derived from panopticon, a word the British utilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) used for the name of an ingenious new kind of prison he spent years devising in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The word comes from the Greek words for “all” and “sight.” As Bentham conceived it, the panopticon would be a kind of ultimate surveillance machine: Prison cells would be arrayed around the inside of a huge circular space, and a hidden sentry would observe from inside a single tower in the center of the space. The sentry would be able to see all the prisoners without being seen himself; the prisoners would never know if or when they were being monitored. Thus the prisoners would have to be on their best behavior at all times. The prisoners would be forced to internalize their own subjugation, and the sentry would be rendered more or less unnecessary. Bentham tried to get a panopticon built, but he was never quite successful. His ideas eventually influenced the design of prisons such as Philadelphia’s Eastern State Penitentiary, which was built in 1829. The concepts behind the panopticon also influenced the architecture of other kinds of institutional buildings, including some hospitals, which obviously have a similar need for efficient ways to monitor large numbers of people simultaneously.

Bentham conceived of the panopticon as a benign system that would result in prisons that were more humane, but of course its implications are hugely disturbing. Today the panopticon is famous mainly because of its analysis by the French philosopher Michel Foucault, who saw it as an utterly diabolical concept and a metaphor for “the oppressive use of information in a modern disciplinary society,” as David Engberg puts it on a website called The Virtual Panopticon. For Foucault, whose analysis appears in his 1975 book Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, the panopticon concept also signaled a historical shift from “punishment” that targeted the body to “discipline” that targeted the mind and soul. I’ve oversimplified things here; you can read more about these ideas and their influence on this page.

Anyway, I’m interested in all these ideas, but they aren’t going to be the focus of this site. In the 19th century the word panopticon also came to be used as the name for a kind of hands-on museum where a wide variety of objects were on display, and that’s a suitably vague description of what this site will be. I’m very interested in the media in general and magazines in particular, so there will be a lot about that sort of thing here. I’m kind of a pack rat when it comes to magazines, so I’ll regularly be sharing things from my collection, including a number of inadvertently hilarious guitar magazines from the hair-metal era. Yngwie!

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Join Rolf Harris Singing The Court of King Caractacus and Other Fun Songs
Boards of Canada, The Campfire Headphase
Fountains of Wayne, Utopia Parkway
The Postal Service, Give Up
Royksopp, The Understanding
Van Halen I
Don DeLillo, White Noise
Richard Rhodes, The Making of the Atomic Bomb
Robert Caro, The Power Broker
The Portable Nietzsche, edited by Walter Kaufmann
Sidney Cohen, The Beyond Within
Tibor Kalman, Perverse Optimist
Vanity Fair
Book Magazine
Lingua Franca
Civilization magazine
Columbia Journalism Review
American Gentrifier