Media Diary (November 2021)

Some stuff I’ve experienced lately (and not necessarily only new releases):

Midnight Mass (TV): Totally captivated by this

The Shrink Next Door (TV): Loved the podcast, loving the show

The French Dispatch (Movie): Fantastic, though I’d watch Wes Anderson shoot paint drying

Hooked (Podcast): A harrowing story of bank robberies and OxyContin

Joe Pera Talks With You (TV): Still one of my favorites

Last Night in Soho (Movie): Great vibes, cool story

Operator (Podcast): A fascinating look at the ’90s phone sex industry

How To With John Wilson (TV): Back, and still so, so good

The Great (TV): Huzzah!

Ghostbusters: Afterlife (Movie): Enjoyed this

One Year: 1995 (Podcast): Already off to a gripping start with a crazy Oklahoma City bombing story

The Beatles: Get Back (TV): Have only finished part one, but it’s fascinating to watch the tensions rise

The Wheel of Time (TV): Just started, but pretty solid so far, and didn’t expect there to be sweet beasts

Eternals (Movie): Was generally into it, but think I liked Shang-Chi a bit more

Dr. Brain (TV): Once he brain-synced with a dead cat, I was in

Slow Burn (Podcast): All about the L.A. riots this season, history sure does rhyme

Love Life (TV): A really great new season, better than the first one

The Curse of Von Dutch (TV): A wild ride

The Informant: Fear and Faith In The Heartland (Movie): This guy is insanely brave

This Is Critical (Podcast): Some fresh air after Trumpcast

Hawkeye (TV): Off to a great start!

Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road (Movie): Enjoyed the Comedians in Cars vibe

The World According To Jeff Goldblum (TV): Delightful as always

Doctor Who (TV): Not gonna lie, this new mini-season has been a bit rough

Tiger King (TV): More of a “check-in” than a new season, but I’ll take what I can get

The Elephant in The Pews

My wife and I (through our new church) have been taking a weekly Zoom class called “Be The Bridge,” which is an open forum for listening and sharing about the devastating effects of institutional racism, and how to be better equipped to have hard conversations about the topic with others.

It’s run by some great people, and aside from not having many personal anecdotes to share (as a white guy), overall it’s been pretty valuable, and the stories have been heartbreaking and powerful.

The problem, however, is with one of the core rules of the class: no politics allowed.

In a different era, this would have been completely reasonable, as politics should absolutely not have a place in the church. In 2021 though? It means that outreach attempts remain impotent as we dance around the gigantic elephant in the room:

Over the past several decades (with a massive acceleration over the past five years), the American evangelical church has tightly fused with the modern Republican party.

What effect does this have? It means that attempts to have good-faith conversations about any number of issues (institutional racism in this case) are met with closed ears and a dismissive “let’s not bring politics into it” stock answer. In other words, the message of the class sounds like foolishness for those unwilling to hear.

Am I saying that the church should try to convert people into Democrats? Of course not. Am I saying that the church should call out what modern Republicanism has become, by name, as racist, xenophobic and jingoistic? 100%.

Will membership go down? Almost certainly. Will this hurt financially as tithes stop coming in? Yeah, probably a great deal. But aside from being the right thing to do, it may (over time) even win back some of the younger people that have walked away, alienated by the church’s tacit embrace of Trumpism in recent years. Taking a strong moral stand is never easy, but it always pays off in the end.