海角大神

2024
March
29
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 29, 2024
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

It鈥檚 Friday again. Let鈥檚 start with the arts.

If you like documentaries, you might know about the new Apple TV+ two-parter on Steve Martin, who launched from Saturday Night Live silliness into comedy albums and more than 40 films. Newer fans know him from Hulu鈥檚 acclaimed 鈥淥nly Murders in the Building,鈥 with Selena Gomez and Martin Short, an old friend he seems to keep as close as his beloved banjo.

Mr. Martin鈥檚 early career included the vicissitudes that come with finding fame. He doubted his own talent, he notes in the new show. What this energetic introvert knew he had, he says: a deep love of show business. Love is what documentaries showcase best.

Peter Rainer, a reviewer with some great career stories of his own, offers his take today聽on this 鈥渨ildly versatile鈥 comic artist and this story of self-reinvention.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The network of roads in the U.S. is expansive 鈥 but it was built decades ago.聽Same for other areas of America鈥檚 infrastructure that citizens rely on. The U.S. is making a huge investment in improvements. What can citizens expect?

Today鈥檚 news briefs

鈥 Israel strikes Syria: The strikes reportedly hit missile depots for Lebanon鈥檚 militant Hezbollah group in and around Aleppo鈥檚 southern suburb of Jibreen. Syria says the strikes killed and wounded several people.
鈥 Moscow hits Ukraine鈥檚 energy network: Ukraine鈥檚 armed forces say Russia launched the large-scale attack Friday, with a barrage of 99 drones and missiles hitting regions across the country.聽
鈥 Haiti gang violence rises: The country needs between 4,000 and 5,000 international police to help tackle 鈥渃atastrophic鈥 violence, says the United Nations rights expert for the conflict-wracked nation.聽
鈥 U.S. changes how race is categorized: For the first time in 27 years, the government changes how it categorizes people by race and ethnicity. The goal is to more accurately count residents, including those who identify as Hispanic and of Middle Eastern and North African heritage.
鈥 Baltimore recovery continues: The largest crane on the Eastern Seaboard arrives by barge so that crews can begin removing the wreckage from the deadly bridge collapse. Four workers remain missing.

Read these news briefs.

LM Otero/AP
Francisco Castillo, age 1, smiles as his mother, Liliana Mendoza, helps him stand as they enjoy a warm day at the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden in Dallas, Feb. 27, 2024.

After a century in which the global population grew almost fourfold, a turning point awaits. This story is the third in a series about falling birthrates.聽The first聽looks at why U.S. parents are having fewer children.聽The second聽shows how immigrants are powering a population boom in rural Iowa.

Rodrigo Abd/AP
Demonstrators protest food scarcity and economic reforms in Argentina. President Javier Milei devalued the national currency by 50%, but that has not brought inflation under control.

How long are Argentines willing to wait for President Javier Milei to create economic change? Despite growing poverty, many say they鈥檙e behind him for the long haul.聽

Podcast

What a reporter learned about listening to Trump

Former President Donald Trump often speaks in impassioned tones, using words that can thrill some supporters while angering detractors who see in them the potential for causing harm. Our senior White House correspondent talks about keeping context and fairness at the fore in her coverage.聽

When Trump Speaks, What鈥檚 Heard?

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Lennox McLendon/AP/File
Comedian Steve Martin holds the Grammy he won for the album 鈥淎 Wild and Crazy Guy鈥 in February 1979. Martin is the subject of a new Apple TV+ documentary, 鈥淪teve! (Martin): A Documentary in 2 Pieces.鈥

Steve Martin is known for turning high-style goofiness into an art form, the Monitor鈥檚 film critic writes. A new documentary offers the notoriously private entertainer an opportunity to consider what it takes for a funnyman to find happiness.


The Monitor's View

AP
Beyonce, right, poses for a photograph in the audience during the Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles, Feb. 4, 2024.

The country music industry felt a bit of an earthquake when Beyonc茅, who hails from Texas, dropped her long-anticipated album 鈥淐owboy Carter鈥 on March 29. (Her full name is Beyonc茅 Giselle Knowles-Carter.) While not all the songs are country music, the album nonetheless marks the formal entry of a prominent Black songwriter into a genre that has long depicted mainly white rural life.

Some fans of country have accused her of cultural appropriation. The album itself will serve as a response. It includes guest appearances by Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton, both country royalty. And the first notes Beyonc茅 shared with the public from "Cowboy Carter" signaled she isn鈥檛 dabbling in the genre鈥檚 traditions. The single 鈥淭EXAS HOLD 鈥橢M,鈥 released last month, opens with unadorned notes on a fretless banjo by Rhiannon Giddens, a prolific modern reclaimer of Black string band music.

That signals a deeper intention. Her album fits into a wider project of African Americans artists reclaiming stories once told by others or erased from history 鈥 through food, film, art, and literature. At a time when more societies are grappling with cultural diversities, such storytelling asserts that dignity is inherent to the individual expressing the story.

Art installations such as the Harlem Renaissance exhibit at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art and Netflix documentaries about recovering Black Southern cuisine have caught the restorative and unifying effect of tenderness and empathy.

In his newly published collection of portraits across the South, for example, photographer Rahim Fortune includes an image of a man holding a broad-rimmed Stetson hat across his heart. Entitled 鈥淧raying Cowboy,鈥 the photo is one of several capturing Black rodeo and horsemanship that neatly encapsulate an extraordinary turn underway in the telling of the American story.

鈥淭hese images amplify the sense of communal love that can be found in rural southern communities,鈥 Mr. Fortune told Vogue when he first published 鈥淧raying Cowboy鈥 following the police killing of George Floyd in 2020. 鈥淲e want these images to be a form of visual healing.鈥

Storytelling is the essential element of country, a genre that sprang from Scottish, Irish, and English musical traditions. Yet some of its core elements 鈥 the musical structure of the blues, lyrical narration, the banjo 鈥 can be traced back to enslaved Africans.

鈥淢ost of that history has been erased, some has been hidden and precious little has been acknowledged,鈥 said Alice Randall, the first Black woman to write a song that reached No. 1 on the country music charts and author of a forthcoming book entitled 鈥淢y Black Country.鈥 The restoration of that history, she said in a 2020 interview with the Public Relations Society of America, involves 鈥渁n essential aspect of being human and becoming humane.鈥

That reach for the universal aspects of music resides in the renaissance of Black storytelling to which Beyonc茅 has tuned her voice. As Eric Weisbard, a music historian, told The Economist, by turning her talents to a host of genres, Beyonc茅 shows she has 鈥渘o limit artistically.鈥


A 海角大神 Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Karl Hendon/Moment/Getty Images

As we increasingly understand the example of Christ Jesus, we experience the reality of everlasting Life that his resurrection proved for us.


Viewfinder

Rodrigo Abd/AP
Pilgrims play sikus,聽or traditional Andean panpipes, as they accompany a religious procession during Holy Week festivities ahead of Easter, in Tilcara, Argentina, March 27.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for ending your week with us. Come back next week. We鈥檙e loading up with illuminating reads, including a聽profile of Marwan Barghouti, the long-jailed Palestinian leader who commands the support of many Palestinians and the respect of many in Israel. And we鈥檒l take a deeper look, during NATO鈥檚 anniversary week, at how Russia鈥檚 war in Ukraine is further testing that alliance.

More issues

2024
March
29
Friday

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