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#goncharov cookbook
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A Little Goncharov for Thanksgiving
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I learned about Goncharov the way I learn about most memes and pop culture, from my teenagers. In the days leading up to Thanksgiving, we had a group chat spring up on Discord that included two family friends who were going to be joining us for the holiday from out of town. One of the topics of conversation turned to Goncharov, the imaginary film around which an active Tumblr fan community had sprung up, as if it had been a real, little-known cult classic from 1973 made by Martin Scorsese. 
It became a fun creative exercise—in the middle of the day, one of the kids would send a question about Goncharov: “What do you think about the relationship between Katya and Sofia?” or “What did you make of the clock tower imagery?” or “Goncharov… iphone or android guy?” To which someone else would playfully answer. 
This same kind of thing was happening on a massive scale on Tumblr, where artists created movie posters and promotional materials, composers posted songs and soundtracks, people posted deleted scenes and script fragments. There are reviews and academic papers, fictitious Wikipedia and IMDb listings, and A LOT of fan art.
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Lynda Carter posted a photo on her Tumblr with Henry Winkler that she captioned, “Me and ‘The Fonz’ at the premiere of Goncharov (1973) at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre.”
Discussions popped up about the characters and who would play them in the reboot. Posts were shared hundreds, then thousands of times. A Goncharov (1973) Lore Google Doc and Discord server were created to help keep the content organized.
Our family’s fan-favorite character was Ice-Pick Joe, so I wrote “Musings on Ice-Pick Joe” in between chopping veggies for stuffing and waiting for the sweet potatoes to roast, complete with some AI-generated art. That was four days ago, and the post has been liked and shared more than I anticipated, and I keep thinking about why that is.
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Conversations around Goncharov have continued, and I find myself wondering what it is about this moment in time and this type of activity that continues to capture so many people’s imagination and engagement?
Tumblr is a hub for public fandom culture and community in a way that the other social media platforms are not. It’s where you can find discourse and fanfiction/fanart for almost anything.
Still, this is a little different and on a much larger scale. At a time when people are looking for Twitter alternatives, with the stress and joy of holidays approaching, what is drawing so many people in?
We talked about this over Thanksgiving: the way Goncharov allowed people low-stakes permission to create, to play to their particular strengths, to connect with other people, to escape reality for a moment, to build a new community. We talked about the shortcomings and challenges we saw: power dynamics, issues of race, etc.
It’s an evolving experiment, and as such, it has been shaped by the many variables involved and course-corrected each time someone notices a gap or opportunity: What would a musical look like? What if some of the actors had gone on Sesame Street or the Muppet Show? What if Gonzo played Goncharov and Miss Piggy played Katya? What would the remake look like set in 1980s NYC? What recipes might be created for the Goncharov cookbook? (I remember how much fun we had making the Forking Good cookbook.) There really is no end to what people can come up with. I’m waiting to see if Goncharov gets a Tom Gauld comic or a mention on Saturday Night Live. 
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It seems relevant that role-playing games, both online and tabletop, have recently increased in popularity. Dungeons and Dragons was the cornerstone of Stranger Things, and 50,000 people attended Gen Con (tabletop game convention) in 2022. It’s not my world, although I’ve watched the joy my kids take in it. My energy goes into writing, but I can absolutely appreciate the fun of playing together. 
As a writer, I walk around with worlds in my head, but I don’t get to share them until they get published. Something like Goncharov, which was not an intellectual property “owned” by anyone, gives people permission to imagine and play.
I think it speaks to a need we have an human beings to experience connection, joy, wonder, and hope. We've always had those needs. People have been gathering around fires or tables, telling stories, for thousands of years.
Today, the hearth may be a computer or a phone, but the desire is not that different. My November began with the publication of Mother Christmas, my graphic novel, the secret origin of the Santa Claus story which is rooted in the ancient Muses, whose gifts inspire humanity. One of the questions my story attempts to answer is: Where does inspiration come from?
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If we look at Goncharov we can see that inspiration comes from so many places. So much is possible when people given themselves permission to play, to shrug off the inner critics and outer trolls, and to imagine for a moment a different world that they have a part in creating. That is such a powerful and compelling idea.
Stories remind us that we are not alone, that we share struggles, and that we can overcome obstacles. There are so many challenges in the world right now.
Maybe Goncharov is a lens through which people are seeing themselves and each other, reminding us how much fun it is to make-believe and how powerful it can be to have a shared image of the world.
The first step in creation is imagining. Exercising that muscle, allowing ourselves to play and tell stories and make art is a worthwhile one, and I think it's one that we need to survive.  The Goncharov phenomenon gives me hope, because if we can have this many people put their energy into creating a whole world around Goncharov, just imagine what else is possible?
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cxtnd · 1 year
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hey I want to put together a goncharov themed fan cookbook! pls send your best recipes inspired by goncharov (e.g. the borscht in the kgb scene or katya's sardine risotto) and I'll compile them in a pdf :)
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otto-von-stirlitz · 1 year
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The food (history) of Goncharov
So im not a movie buff (just an amateur food historian), but with Tumblr fandom renaissance of the mafia classic Goncharov (1973), i just had to mention something. The short scene where Katya is cooking, and why its interesting from a modern food history angle.
It’s obvious from the tense dinner scene, that Katya Goncharova is serving her husband, among other dishes (run-off-the-mill italian classics, not much to talk about), a red sauce pasta dish. What is interesting is that in the earlier cooking scene she is shown adding a hefty glug of Russian vodka to a pan. Obviously it’s to show how she has ~a Russian soul~ all the way through, movie-language wise. For food history it’s interesting because it is the first recorded appearance of “red-sauce with vodka pasta” in culture, a whole year before Ugo Tognazzi cookbook recipe for “pasta all'infuriata” (in which he calls for Polish, not Russian vodka). IMO the sauce in the scene is too vibrant-red to look like modern penne alla vodka sauce where cream is essential (and the long pasta is not penne) , but i would still call it a likely predecessor to the 1980s discotheque (yes, it was a popular disco dish!) classic. Also, with penne alla vodka being popular both in Italy and the States, I wonder if its presence in the film comes from (Italian-)American influence of the producer, actors and one screenwriter, or from Old World Italian-raised director. So there are still questions about the exact origin of the dish that only the crew can answer, but Goncharov is still an interesting lead in the history of one popular recipe.
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also, enjoy photos of penne alla vodka (the modern creamy version) i cooked a while ago, I deserve a cooking humblebrag.
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potterpasta · 1 year
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was rewatching goncharov with my gf the other night (she hadn’t seen it before but i swear the only pre-2000 movies she’s seen are like. evil dead and evil dead 2) and i noticed a something i hadn’t really picked up on the first time
did anyone notice that cookbook that’s in like. almost every major scene? it’s usually off to the side or in the bg, never in the main focus area. is that some kind of symbolism? i’ve never really been good at this analysis stuff but it feels like it’s supposed to mean something. it was in the poker scene, the anchovy scene, they even managed to throw it into the boat scene somehow! i’ve been thinking about this probably minor detail way too much, probably gonna rewatch again tonight so i can try to find every scene it’s in
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