At the blog newcritics, Chuck Tryon points out something I would have missed otherwise, given the need to avoid national news magazines in the interest of anger management:

Newsweek, of all places, has a fascinating intellectual exercise
in which they ask several of their film and media writers to name one
popular culture text that “exemplifies what it was like to be alive in
the age of George W. Bush.” Obviously, the idea of capturing the
zeitgeist of eight often turbulent years with a divided electorate and
a fractured media landscape is an impossibility. No single text can
encompass the tragedy of September 11, the war in Iraq, the devastation
of Hurricane Katrina, the housing bubble and collapse, and our news
media’s often vacuous response to all of these events. But the Newsweek writers offer some interesting choices, ones that collectively seem to move toward capturing some sense of Bush-era culture.

I tend to think Battlestar Galactica wins, hand’s down. (Per earlier item.) See the rest of Chuck T’s entry here.

(Crossposted at CT)