30 Rock: Season Three

30 Rock: Season Three

For a comedy about comedy writers written by a comedy writer...  read more

Found in: Movies, Reviews

Don't Fake the Folk: A Q&A With Conor Oberst, Jim James, M. Ward and Mike Mogis

Don't Fake the Folk: A Q&A With Conor Oberst, Jim James, M. Ward and Mike Mogis

In 2004, Conor Oberst, M. Ward and My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James opened a string of East Coast dates for Oberst’s band Bright Eyes...  read more

Found in: Music, Features

Bloom Where You're Planted: Grey Gardens' Timeless Style

Bloom Where You're Planted: <i>Grey Gardens</i>' Timeless Style

HBO's Emmy-winning Grey Gardens revisits the lives of Big Edie and Little Edie Bouvier Beale...  read more

Found in: Movies, Features

David Byrne: Bicycle Diaries

David Byrne: <em>Bicycle Diaries</em>

David Byrne admits early on in his Bicycle Diaries that...  read more

Found in: Books, Reviews

Pearl Jam: Backspacer

Pearl Jam: <em>Backspacer</em>

Babies born the year Pearl Jam formed are hopefully...  read more

Found in: Music, Reviews

Down by the River: Dust-to-Digital's Latest Small Miracle

Down by the River: Dust-to-Digital's Latest Small Miracle

They’re dunked in wide rivers and lazy farm ponds. Some are dropped down holes sawed through winter ice, the better to cool—as Memphis preacher E.D. Campbell once sermonized—that “fire burning in my soul...”  read more

Found in: Music, Features

Baaba Maal (Featuring Brazilian Girls): Television

Baaba Maal (Featuring Brazilian Girls): <em>Television</em>

On his first studio album in eight years, Senegalese star...  read more

Found in: Music, Reviews

Tom Russell: Blood and Candle Smoke

Tom Russell: <em>Blood and Candle Smoke</em>

The halls of Americana are crowded to capacity with...  read more

Found in: Music, Reviews

An Interview With Karen O of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs

An Interview With Karen O of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Read Paste's full issue 56 cover story on Where the Wild Things Are here.--Paste: What’s the magic in the story Where The Wild Things Are? Why do you think children and their parents open this book again and again to read about Max and the wild things?O: I think Maurice struck on some winning formula. So much of the magic is in his voice as an illustrator and writer. The book is brimming with both darker and lighter sides of imagination—there is something bittersweet about the story, and maybe there is some hidden depth in that bittersweetness that kids connect...  read more

Found in: Books, Features

The Call of the Wild Things

The Call of the Wild Things

Maurice Sendak’s 1963 children’s classic Where the Wild Things Are first struck critics and teachers as too dark for little darlings...  read more

Found in: Books, Features

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