Praxiteles, or How Famous Can You Get?

Andy Warhol was famous for saying that in the future, everyone would be famous for fifteen minutes. It’s interesting that he’s famous for saying that, but he didn’t say it. Fame is like that sometimes. Fame is like barnacles you pick up on your hull as you pass through the shallow waters of notoriety, into the lakes of celebrity, and finally make it to the sea of fame. It’s unimportant if you “deserve” it. It just is.

Some people transcend their fifteen minutes and turn it into years, decades, and even centuries. How far back can the average person go, and do more than recognize a few names? Go back to 350 BC, and you could trot out Alexander the Great, and be pretty sure of your ground knowing that he wasn’t a haberdasher or a groundskeeper or something. Who else do you know from back then? In general, every century you go back is like drinking six more beers, and then taking the SATs over and over. It gets sketchy, fast:

So ancient Greece is still a thing for some folks, and they can probably at least name Aristotle and Plato, even if they couldn’t pick them out of a police lineup. Demosthenes perhaps, if you mumble or stutter, or if you’re well read. You know Pythagoras, if you’re acute [The management cannot vouch for this pun, and disavows any responsibility for it]. But one name that really gets overlooked is Praxiteles. But he’s got the kind of fame that seems larger than any emperor, really, even if you don’t know his name off the top of your head.

Praxiteles wasn’t a king, a general, or even a philosopher with a toga full of theories. He was a sculptor. Small beer, you might say. Yet his name has outlived empires. Why? Because he dared to do something nobody had done before: he carved a goddess naked. The world gasped, gossiped, and lined up to see it. The statue is gone, but the scandal — and the fame — never wore off. That’s the funny thing about immortality: sometimes it’s built on marble, sometimes on whispers.

The Romans knew who Praxiteles was, and made copies of his statues, so we know what it looked like. Here’s Aphrodite of Knidos, the world’s first static OnlyFans account:

Alas, we’ll never know if she was a butterface, or suffered from man hands, but I suspect not. You see, unlike the Romans, who treated stuff like this like garden gnomes, the reason this was groundbreaking was that while it was a naked chick, it was still supposed to be an object of veneration. It didn’t stop there. The pose is contrapposto. It’s a relaxed, naturalistic pose with one leg bearing weight, with the body twisting slightly. The anatomy is spot on, too. The copies we see are pitted from exposure, but the original was smooth, white marble, and would have looked astounding to a contemporary Mediterranean.

So this approach was kinda lost for a very long time. After Rome fell, the Middle Ages favored more symbolic and less natural-looking cigar store Indians. The Renaissance expanded on the techniques, but was based on an explicit revival of Praxiteles’ approach. Even the painters mimicked the pose:

Not just another girl with big feet. Venus is the Roman version of the goddess Aphrodite. To the modern person, The Birth of Venus (1480s) is ancient, but the statue of Aphrodite is about 1800 years older than that.

Fame has never been fair. It doesn’t reward the good or the wise so much as the strivers and the plain bastards. Alexander the Great ran roughshod over half the world, and entered the pantheon of nearly universal notoriety where guys like Elvis and Hitler live. Warhol painted soup cans and made the art world adapt itself to him, instead of the other way around. Social media virality puts afterburners on the fifteen minutes of fame, and usually boils it down to about fifteen seconds on TikTok.

Lots of people these days forgo the only real kind of intergenerational notoriety available to regular humans: having children. We’re all the latest in a line of ancestors who struggled and fought and worked to keep body and soul alive long enough to have a descendant or two. Throwing away that kind of effort for a “career” is absurd. There are only a few thousand people in any generation who have anything like a true career, i.e., a constantly growing necessity for the rest of the human race. What almost everyone has is a mundane job. Admit it, you can’t name Grover Cleveland’s cabinet members, and they were big wheels.

The Irish say that you never die, as long as there’s someone left in the world that speaks your name. As of this date, my father and Praxiteles are still immortal. I doubt I’ll have the staying power of either of them. Then again, I’m OK with that, when I remember that everyone knows who Hitler is.

And When It Rains, the Rain Falls Down

We re-watched Dog Day Afternoon the other day. I don’t want to talk about the movie. I want to talk about the opening credits.

The movie came out in 1975. It’s depicting a real robbery that happened in 1972. The opening credits use an Elton John song released in 1970. If it’s not the most effective use of music in opening credits in a movie, it’s got to be close to the top. I’ll explain.

No one goes to the movies anymore, really. People still did in 1975, and the movies were still being produced to be seen by crowds of people in a darkened theater on a large screen. You had to stand in line, and buy tickets, have them torn in half fourteen feet later by a nonagenarian usher for some reason, and then fight for seats in the middle rows, halfway back. The lights would dim, the movie would play, and the opening music would produce a mood, transporting the audience from a tattered seat and a sticky floor to the time and place where the story begins. If it were done properly, which wasn’t a given, it became a shared, out of body experience.

Movies aren’t like that anymore. Movies were real competition for teevee back then. Now they’re indistinguishable milieus. Netflix makes movies, and shows them on your home screen. It’s like hiring the projectionist to direct the movies, because he’s watched so many. What the hell does Netflix know about making movies?

Sidney Lumet directed this movie. He made lots of movies, many of them really good, in addition to the various demands made by being P.J. O’Rourke’s father-in-law. He never won an Oscar for direction, but they gave him an honorary one for hanging around so long and putting so much money in the till over the years. Here are some:

  • 12 Angry Men
  • The Pawnbroker
  • Fail Safe
  • Serpico
  • Dog Day Afternoon
  • Network
  • Prince of the City
  • The Verdict

One thing I’ve noticed about good directors. They don’t look gift horses in the mouth. Some guys are loosey-goosey anyway, and let things happen all the time. Others are pretty strict about sticking to the script. But all good ones of both kinds know when they’ve stepped in something good, instead of that stuff you see on the sidewalk in those opening credits.

There’s a lot of these happy accidents, as it were, in Dog Day Afternoon. The reply to the question of where Sal wants to go when they escape was left blank on the script. Cazale ad-libbed “Wyoming,” and Lumet had to clamp his hand over his mouth to keep from laughing and ruining the shot. The “Attica” speech by Sonny (Pacino) was entirely ad-libbed, after the assistant director whispered the topic to Al as he was about to exit the bank to address the crowd. They hired hundreds of extras for the crowd scenes, but passersby started joining the crowd, and after a while, the whole bunch of them starting acting on cue like professionals. Lumet egged them on, and used all of it.

But maybe the happiest accident is the opening credits. Lumet was driven around New York in a station wagon, filming this and that, and it added up to a perfect encapsulation of the time and place that was New York in the seventies. Dirty, rundown, disintegrating, with people trying to live their lives in the disassembling city.

But that was just the visuals. It’s funny, but there is no music in Dog Day Afternoon, just random diegetic sounds, except the opening credits. Lumet originally didn’t intend to have any music score in the movie, but the editor was playing Amoreena by Elton John in the editing room, and Lumet decided to use it, soaring over the opening scenes of the city, eventually coming out of the getaway car’s radio to tie the whole thing together.

I don’t know why a strange song by a flamboyant London singer, who was trying and failing brilliantly to write his idea of American country songs, was the perfect fit to encapsulate that time and place, and set the scene for the audience, reminding them that they weren’t home on their couch anymore, but plunged into some nether world of Stockholm Syndrome and low IQ, fuddled robbers with an eclectic tastes in wives. But it was.

Month: September 2025

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