menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Watch: 'The View' Hit Its Lowest Low Ever as Joy Behar Attacks 'Narcissistic' Jesus in Blasphemous On-Air Rant

22 0
17.04.2026

Warning: Most Ivermectin Sold In America Isn't Made In America

S&P 500 Smashed Another Record Wednesday, Signaling the Markets Believe Trump That the Iran Conflict Is Ending

Pentagon Turns to World War II-Era Tactic in Bid to Ramp Up Weapons Production: Report

Breaking: Former Lt. Governor of Virginia and His Wife Found Dead

Senate Candidate James Talarico Reports Eye-Popping Fundraising Haul - But We've Seen This From Democrats Before

Devastating Puerto Rico Revelations About 2 More Dem Lawmakers Surface as Swalwell Sex Cancer Spreads Across Party

Ketanji Brown Jackson Publicly Attacks Her Supreme Court Colleagues for 'Utterly Irrational' Decisions

Watch: 'The View' Hit Its Lowest Low Ever as Joy Behar Attacks 'Narcissistic' Jesus in Blasphemous On-Air Rant

Music nerds who were Very Online™ some 20-odd years ago might recall the strange diss battle between deliberately elitist review outlet Pitchfork and an obscure band called Joan of Arc.

In fact, Joan of Arc and lead singer Tim Kinsella were mostly known for the scathing reviews they drew from every publication that bothered paying attention to them. As they should have been; there was nothing exceptional about them except for the bizarre, tuneless, talent-unimpeded, deliberately painful art-rock that was their calling card.

Another outlet, not wrongly, described the group’s 2000 release “The Gap” as “one of the most unlistenable albums in existence.” (I’ve heard it — once — and you can safely remove two words, “one” and “of,” from that sentence, along with making the noun “albums” singular.)

I was reminded this week of Pitchfork’s notorious review of Joan of Arc’s 2001 anti-masterpiece “How Can Any Thing So Little Be Any More.” In particular, reviewer Brent DiCrescenzo took issue with the group’s “inconceivably horrendous lyrics,” including the couplet “Jesus really was so / g*****n pretentious.”

“Kinsella sounds jealous,” DiCrescenzo quipped.

That, of course, was a joke about the scale of the band’s pretensions, which were not........

© Western Journalism