In another thread, someone asserted that Neil Gaiman was part of “pop culture.” In order to get some feeling for whether this is the case, I’ve established the following poll, with the understanding that the SDMB isn’t necessarily representative of culture at large. I put it in Cafe Society because to me pop culture is defined by the media.
Please select any and all options that apply to you.
I dunno about these two being bellwethers for pop culture awareness. I consider myself mostly out of touch with current pop culture, but I’m a fan of Neil Gaiman (and Sandman is 15-20 years ago now) and I’ve at least seen and heard a few Lady Gaga videos/songs.
Hmm…I’m stuck on Gaiman. I know he’s a writer that lots of nerdy people like. Couldn’t tell you what titles he has written or what he’s written about. Not sure if I would check option 1 or 2.
I know that Lady Gaga isn’t her real name (duh). I also know that she dresses strangely, she’s not known for her looks, she’s a supporter of same-sex marriage, and she recently was caught in the locker room of some sports team. But I wasn’t sure whether she was a singer or actor or whatever.
I’m probably not a great data point since I generally stay out of pop culture.
I’ve only known who Lady Gaga is and what she does for a handful of months, but only because I saw her getting made fun of randomly in some places (like failblog and South Park) so I looked her up just so I knew what the hell they were talking about.
I have no idea who Neil Gaiman is. I even looked him up before responding and I don’t recognize any of his most notable works except for Coraline. And even with Coraline, I only recognize as a movie that I didn’t see, and I had no idea it was a book first.
And I feel like an idiot. :smack: I looked up his bibliography, and I actually have bought and read at least one of his books (co-authored with Terry Pratchett): Good Omens.
I know who both of them are and what they do. I’m a fan of Gaiman’s. Lady Gaga is not my generation or musical taste, but it’s all but impossible to not have any idea who she is.
I think I once saw Neil Gaiman at the Barnes & Noble in Roseville (he is a Twin Cities resident), but I wasn’t sure and I didn’t want to ask and look stupid. He had a British accent, though (I heard him talking to a store employee), so I’m pretty sure it was him.
American Gods is very good, but I personally would place Sandman–the whole series considered as a single work for the same reason I would consider Lord of the Rings a single book–in the top ten of 20th century literature. I can easily see being unimpressed by a single issue of the comic taken out of context.