ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

Today's Stories

Kennedy Center’s First Programming Announcement: Celebrating Christ!

“How crazy is it to think that we’re going to celebrate Christ at Christmas with a big traditional production, to celebrate what we are all celebrating in the world during Christmastime, which is the birth of Christ?” Mr. Grenell said at the Conservative Political Action Conference. - The New York Times

Sorry, There Will Be No 45-Foot Naked Woman In San Francisco’s Union Square

“R-Evolution” by sculptor Marco Cochrane had been scheduled to open the evening of Feb. 6 at a public party in the square, but the event was postponed and the installation ultimately canceled due to “unforeseen engineering complexities on site” — to wit, the statue is too damn heavy. - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

This Is What It Looks Like When Local News Dies

While some politicians no doubt celebrated the disappearance of pesky journalists, others are lamenting their absence, because municipalities must now work harder and spend more to keep people informed. - The Walrus

FCC Trains Its Sights On PBS, NPR

Since taking over as chairman, FCC Chair Brendan Carr has revived bias complaints against CBS, ABC and NBC over their 2024 presidential campaign coverage after the Biden administration dismissed them. - Los Angeles Times

This Broadway Musical Is Based On A Real-Life Story So Crazy That Audiences Wouldn’t Believe It All

Operation Mincemeat, about a plot to convince the Nazis that the Allies were about to invade Greece instead of Sicily, recently arrived on Broadway after winning an Olivier in London. The creators say that, in development, they had to cut some actually true details so improbable that viewers wouldn’t accept them. - Variety

Couldn’t We Use AI Music Generators To Express A More Perfect Music?

All of these songs have really strong sentiments, but they aren’t quite the same as expressing your unique thoughts and feelings for your intended yourself. But if, like my 10CC-loving friend, you lack the skill, AI could help you craft something a bit more specific for your intended. - The Conversation

These Literary Criticism Debates Are Not So Fun Anymore

Debates about the value and function of literary criticism today are, it seems to me, both constant and evergreen—always seeming new, urgent, specific to some particular contemporary crisis, but also far more continuous and universal than you’d think. - The Point

The Oscars Are More International Than Ever. So Why Is The “Best Foreign Film” Category So Broken?

The Academy Awards’ marquee category for international cinema, best international film, has been continually criticized as unjust, outdated and subject to political interference. - Seattle Times

Adobe Architecture May Be The Key To Rebuilding A Fireproof Los Angeles

Since the latest wildfires, interest in natural buildings has spiked, particularly after a widely-shared photo showed a backyard SuperAdobe that emerged from the Eaton fire intact. Well-designed adobes resist earthquakes as well as fires, and they’re quicker and less expensive to build than conventional modern homes. - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

Report: Live Nation Booked $23 Billion In Revenue In 2024

Some 151 million people attended nearly 55,000 Live Nation events in 2024, an increase of 4% year-on-year, the events and ticketing company said in its full-year earnings report on Thursday (February 20). - Music Business Worldwide

Cambodia’s National Museum Is Overflowing With Treasure

Foreign institutions and collectors are returning artifacts with deep spiritual meaning for Cambodians. Where and how to display them remain open questions. - The New York Times

In Praise Of Self-Publishing

I have made a beautiful book, but to complete my book biz journey, I will go on the road again, a box of books in the trunk of my car, and drive from bookstore to bookstore, seeing old friends and making new ones. - LitHub

How To Solve The Problem Of The Kimmel Center’s Plaza?

The glass-domed plaza between the Philadelphia arts center's venues was intended to be a welcoming public space. Yet it tends to be desolate during the day, despite years of efforts to liven it up. The design of the new café there doesn't help, but the space still has potential. - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

Expand Copyright To AI? Not A Great Idea. Here’s A Better One

AI is a category of general-purpose tools with myriad beneficial uses. Requiring developers to license the materials needed to create this technology threatens the development of more innovative and inclusive AI models, as well as important uses of AI as a tool for expression and scientific research.  - Electronic Frontier Foundation

Brooklyn Academy Of Music Chief Steps Down After Only Three Years

Gina Duncan was the first person of color to lead the academy, which operates several stages and a cinema, and has an annual operating budget of $56 million. She had previously served as BAM’s first vice president of film and strategic programming but had not held the top job at an arts institution. - The New...

Point Park University In Pittsburgh Hives Off A Separate School Of Dance

“The new school, which became official at the start of 2025, now hosts a commercial dance department as well as a concert dance department, and students have the opportunity to earn their BFA in dance with a concentration in ballet, jazz, modern dance, or — for the first time — hip hop.” - Dance Teacher

MoMA Signs Partnership Agreement With M+ Museum In Hong Kong

“After a year of discussions, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and M+, a contemporary art museum in Hong Kong’s West Kowloon arts district, have formalized an agreement that could soon see them share shows, research, and donor development resources.” - ARTnews

Panels Of El Greco Altarpiece Are Reunited For First Time In Two Centuries

An exhibition at the Prado in Madrid has gathered together panels of the altarpiece Doménikos Theotokópoulos painted for the Monastery of Santo Domingo el Antiguo in Toledo. The central panel belongs to the Art Institute of Chicago; the others are at the monastery or in private collections. - Artnet

Iowa Lawmakers Present New Bills To Punish Public Libraries For “Obscenity”

“House File 274 would repeal a section of the Iowa Code that addresses obscenity exemptions for public libraries and educational institutions, while Senate File 347 aims to control the selection and purchase of books and materials with alleged sexual content and proposes steep fines for sharing such work with minors.” - Publishers Weekly

Salman Rushdie Stabbing Trial: Defense Rests Without Presenting Evidence

“(Hadi Matar,) the New Jersey man on trial (for) the 2022 stabbing of author Salman Rushdie, declined to testify in his defense Thursday as his lawyers rested their case without calling any witnesses. … Earlier Thursday, prosecutors called a forensics expert as their final witness, wrapping up seven days of testimony.” - AP

By Topic

Cooperation Versus Competition – A Biological, Philosophical Perspective

The evolution of cooperation has been of interest to biologists, philosophers and anthropologists for centuries. If natural selection favours self-interest, why would we cooperate at an apparent cost to ourselves? - Aeon

We Need To Define What Smart Is

If we could stop bickering about which creatures do or don’t deserve to be called smart, an emerging movement of scientists and philosophers argue that we might discover fundamental elements of intelligence that are common to all life. - Noema

Contemplating The Mortality Of All Things

Only recently has the human collective begun accepting the fact it is itself mortal. We now appreciate that events unfolded for aeons before us and that our species can disappear, never to return. One day, the cosmos will persist without human witness, nor any inherent tendency to manifest things we cherish. - Aeon

Turns Out There Isn’t Actually A More Neighborly Recent Past

“The first half of the 20th century … was ‘extraordinarily social.’ Shared spaces—libraries, theaters, and playgrounds—were rapidly built across the U.S. People were gathering regularly in public, and participating in clubs and organizations with their peers.” Then things changed, drastically, and not because of cell phones. - The Atlantic (Yahoo)

Gilda Radner Was SNL’s First Cast Member, And One Of Its All-Time Best

“Radner’s particular charisma came from this blend of bigheartedness and fearlessness. She always went for it.” - The Atlantic

How Severance Shows Off The Linguistics Behind The Special Language Of Work

“This unifying means of speaking is as likely to create division between insiders and outsiders as it is to foster workplace cohesion.”  - Salon

Kennedy Center’s First Programming Announcement: Celebrating Christ!

“How crazy is it to think that we’re going to celebrate Christ at Christmas with a big traditional production, to celebrate what we are all celebrating in the world during Christmastime, which is the birth of Christ?” Mr. Grenell said at the Conservative Political Action Conference. - The New York Times

How To Solve The Problem Of The Kimmel Center’s Plaza?

The glass-domed plaza between the Philadelphia arts center's venues was intended to be a welcoming public space. Yet it tends to be desolate during the day, despite years of efforts to liven it up. The design of the new café there doesn't help, but the space still has potential. - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

Expand Copyright To AI? Not A Great Idea. Here’s A Better One

AI is a category of general-purpose tools with myriad beneficial uses. Requiring developers to license the materials needed to create this technology threatens the development of more innovative and inclusive AI models, as well as important uses of AI as a tool for expression and scientific research.  - Electronic Frontier Foundation

Brooklyn Academy Of Music Chief Steps Down After Only Three Years

Gina Duncan was the first person of color to lead the academy, which operates several stages and a cinema, and has an annual operating budget of $56 million. She had previously served as BAM’s first vice president of film and strategic programming but had not held the top job at an arts institution. -...

The Dirty Secret Behind College Tuitions

 “We can’t stand the fact that the sticker price is so high despite the fact that nobody pays it.” This pricing strategy took hold in the early 1980s. - The Atlantic

How Should Artists Respond In The Trump Era

With each day bringing new troubles and concerns, how should we proceed? Ideally, with boldness, though that quality seems to be in short supply, especially in the arts world. What a far cry from 2016 when, within hours of the shock Election Day result, Toni Morrison’s quote that “this is precisely the time when...

Couldn’t We Use AI Music Generators To Express A More Perfect Music?

All of these songs have really strong sentiments, but they aren’t quite the same as expressing your unique thoughts and feelings for your intended yourself. But if, like my 10CC-loving friend, you lack the skill, AI could help you craft something a bit more specific for your intended. - The Conversation

Report: Live Nation Booked $23 Billion In Revenue In 2024

Some 151 million people attended nearly 55,000 Live Nation events in 2024, an increase of 4% year-on-year, the events and ticketing company said in its full-year earnings report on Thursday (February 20). - Music Business Worldwide

Does Opera On A Screen Really Work?

Seeing the seams is part of live performance’s charm—it asks the audience to actively participate in the suspension of reality, as opposed to having it ready-made for them. Broadcast opera retains some of that immediacy, but without the magic of a live performance, it’s harder to forgive its failings. - The Atlantic

Edmonton Symphony Names Jean-Marie Zeitouni As Music Director

“He made his ESO debut in 2006 and has conducted more than 35 performances with the orchestra and Edmonton Opera since then.” - CTV

Metropolitan Opera To Change Some Scheduling And Casting Practices

Next season the company will experiment with scheduling consecutive performances of the same opera with different casts, this to save money by not moving sets in and out of the theater. There will be more performances of the most popular repertory staples and fewer performances of contemporary works on weekends. - AP

How The Synthesizer Went From Oversized, Clumsy, Expensive Novelty To Tool For Genuine Creativity

"(Starting in) the late twentieth century, a family of technologies moved from the fringes of novelty attraction and the avant-­garde to the heart of mainstream culture. … The main character in this story is a device named for its ability to fabricate music artificially, producing sounds that are, by definition, synthetic." - Literary Hub

Sorry, There Will Be No 45-Foot Naked Woman In San Francisco’s Union Square

“R-Evolution” by sculptor Marco Cochrane had been scheduled to open the evening of Feb. 6 at a public party in the square, but the event was postponed and the installation ultimately canceled due to “unforeseen engineering complexities on site” — to wit, the statue is too damn heavy. - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

Adobe Architecture May Be The Key To Rebuilding A Fireproof Los Angeles

Since the latest wildfires, interest in natural buildings has spiked, particularly after a widely-shared photo showed a backyard SuperAdobe that emerged from the Eaton fire intact. Well-designed adobes resist earthquakes as well as fires, and they’re quicker and less expensive to build than conventional modern homes. - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

Cambodia’s National Museum Is Overflowing With Treasure

Foreign institutions and collectors are returning artifacts with deep spiritual meaning for Cambodians. Where and how to display them remain open questions. - The New York Times

MoMA Signs Partnership Agreement With M+ Museum In Hong Kong

“After a year of discussions, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and M+, a contemporary art museum in Hong Kong’s West Kowloon arts district, have formalized an agreement that could soon see them share shows, research, and donor development resources.” - ARTnews

Panels Of El Greco Altarpiece Are Reunited For First Time In Two Centuries

An exhibition at the Prado in Madrid has gathered together panels of the altarpiece Doménikos Theotokópoulos painted for the Monastery of Santo Domingo el Antiguo in Toledo. The central panel belongs to the Art Institute of Chicago; the others are at the monastery or in private collections. - Artnet

Italian Police Shut Down Major Art-Forgery Workshop In Rome

Police seized 71 paintings, including fake Rembrandts, Picassos, Warhols, and Banksys, some completed and others half-finished, along with a plethora of painting materials, forged certificates of authenticity, and bogus catalogues. Authorities say evidence suggests that an art restorer is at the center of the racket. - The Guardian

These Literary Criticism Debates Are Not So Fun Anymore

Debates about the value and function of literary criticism today are, it seems to me, both constant and evergreen—always seeming new, urgent, specific to some particular contemporary crisis, but also far more continuous and universal than you’d think. - The Point

In Praise Of Self-Publishing

I have made a beautiful book, but to complete my book biz journey, I will go on the road again, a box of books in the trunk of my car, and drive from bookstore to bookstore, seeing old friends and making new ones. - LitHub

Iowa Lawmakers Present New Bills To Punish Public Libraries For “Obscenity”

“House File 274 would repeal a section of the Iowa Code that addresses obscenity exemptions for public libraries and educational institutions, while Senate File 347 aims to control the selection and purchase of books and materials with alleged sexual content and proposes steep fines for sharing such work with minors.” - Publishers Weekly

Indian Police Confiscate Hundreds Of Titles From Bookstores In Kashmir

"Police in Kashmir have raided dozens of bookstores and seized more than 650 books as part of crackdowns on dissent in the Indian-administered region. Most of the titles were written by Abul A’la Maududi, a prominent 20th-century Islamic scholar who founded Jamaat-e-Islami, an Islamic organisation banned in Kashmir." - The Guardian

Study: How Australians Read

This report represents the first time the Australian book industry has been granted a detailed level of insight into recreational readers and also offers ideas on how to motivate more Australians to read. - ArtsHub

Trump And The Corruption Of What Words Mean

Trump has already hit language very strongly, and not just because of his own idiosyncratic manner of speech. As the Times has noted, his administration has developed a confounding but effective bizarro-world stylebook, in which phrases like “free speech” are deployed to quash exactly that. - New York Magazine (MSN)

This Is What It Looks Like When Local News Dies

While some politicians no doubt celebrated the disappearance of pesky journalists, others are lamenting their absence, because municipalities must now work harder and spend more to keep people informed. - The Walrus

FCC Trains Its Sights On PBS, NPR

Since taking over as chairman, FCC Chair Brendan Carr has revived bias complaints against CBS, ABC and NBC over their 2024 presidential campaign coverage after the Biden administration dismissed them. - Los Angeles Times

The Oscars Are More International Than Ever. So Why Is The “Best Foreign Film” Category So Broken?

The Academy Awards’ marquee category for international cinema, best international film, has been continually criticized as unjust, outdated and subject to political interference. - Seattle Times

Amazon Has Been Given Creative Control Over Entire James Bond Franchise

“The Broccoli family’s feud with Amazon MGM Studios over the (property) appears to have reached a resolution. Barbara Broccoli and her stepbrother Michael Wilson, who have long controlled the 007 franchise, (have) reached an agreement to hand over creative control to a joint venture with the studio.” - The Wall Street Journal (MSN)

How Screenwriters Work Authentic-Sounding Dialects And Foreign-Language Dialogue Into Their Scripts

The movie industry has gotten much more careful in the past few decades about authenticity (Emilia Pérez notwithstanding). Yet screenwriters won't write out foreign-language dialogue, or phonetically spell dialects or regional accents, in the formal screenplay itself, and there are good reasons for that. - The Conversation

You Thought Movie Theatres Were In Trouble? Cinemark Chain Posts Record Fourth Quarter Revenue

Exhibition giant Cinemark reported record fourth-quarter revenue of $814 million, up 27 percent year-over-year and 3 percent above the pre-COVID pandemic fourth quarter of 2019. - The Hollywood Reporter

Point Park University In Pittsburgh Hives Off A Separate School Of Dance

“The new school, which became official at the start of 2025, now hosts a commercial dance department as well as a concert dance department, and students have the opportunity to earn their BFA in dance with a concentration in ballet, jazz, modern dance, or — for the first time — hip hop.” - Dance...

After 30 Years, Richmond Ballet Returns To The Museum

The company danced at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in the 1990s but hasn't been back since. But starting next month, following a $5.3 million renovation, Richmond Ballet will be performing its Moving Art series of classical and contemporary work at the VMFA's Leslie Cheek Theater. - WRIC (Richmond, VA)

Inside London’s New Dance Hot Spot, Sadler’s Wells East

"'You are welcome,' beams a neon sign above the biscuity brick entrance. Theatres, like vampires, gravitate to dark spaces, but inside the impression is of light: high ceilings, generous windows, terraces overlooking the Olympic Park. … There’s even a window behind the auditorium, so technicians don’t beaver in the shadows." - The Standard (London)

Dancers Perform Protest Outside Kennedy Center

Thirty-four dancers performed The Nelken Line, a piece by choreographer Pina Bausch that pays homage to the seasons. It's been performed widely since Bausch created it in 1982. There's even a tutorial. In the piece, dancers walk in a single-file line and make synchronized movements. - NPR

Parents Jailed For Starving 17-Year-Old Child For Ballet Lessons

She weighed just 60 pounds (27.3 kilograms) – about the same size as a 9-year-old. Last month her parents, an Australian couple in their mid-40s, were sentenced to prison in Perth’s District Court of Western Australia for neglecting their only child, even as they ferried her to and from piano and ballet lessons. -...

Royal Winnipeg Ballet’s Indigenous Advisors Quit En Masse

The advisory circle, formed in 2018, was intended to make Canada's oldest ballet company "a more equitable, diverse and inclusive organization," the ballet's website says. But that goal was at odds with the advisory circle's experience with the ballet's management and board of directors, said Morrison, the advisory circle's co-founder. - CBC

This Broadway Musical Is Based On A Real-Life Story So Crazy That Audiences Wouldn’t Believe It All

Operation Mincemeat, about a plot to convince the Nazis that the Allies were about to invade Greece instead of Sicily, recently arrived on Broadway after winning an Olivier in London. The creators say that, in development, they had to cut some actually true details so improbable that viewers wouldn’t accept them. - Variety

How Has Manhattan’s Congestion Pricing For Cars Affected Broadway?

“Broadway has seen more foot traffic and bigger audiences in the first month since the curtain went up on the congestion pricing era — though it’s too early for some to say whether the Manhattan tolls played a starring or a cameo role in such success.“ - amNY

For These Successful Playwrights, It Was A Hard Journey Just To Reach Midcareer Status

"They constitute an unusual cohort, bucking the bad news of the American theater by having made it past emerging to emerged. Granted, pretty much all of them did so with the help of other industries. … These nontheater jobs are how playwrights make real money and get health insurance." - The New York Times

Making Theatre For Liberation — And For After Liberation: South African Actor-Playwright John Kani

During apartheid, in addition to being Athol Fugard's leading actor, he co-wrote and co-starred in the seminal plays Sizwe Bandi Is Dead and The Island. Since majority rule began in 1994, Kani has written what's now a trilogy looking at the triumphs and troubles of post-apartheid South Africa. - The Washington Post (MSN)

Minnesota Theatre Says It Will Decline NEA Funding, Double Down On DEI

A Minneapolis theater organization says it will decline federal funding in order to preserve its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. - Bring Me the News

Kharkiv’s Puppetry Tradition Thrives During War

But Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 dealt Kharkiv’s puppetry a heavy blow, as much of the city’s population of 1.4 million evacuated in the face of the Russian onslaught. The puppet theater closed its doors. Yet, as it turned out, not for long. - Christian Science Monitor

Salman Rushdie Stabbing Trial: Defense Rests Without Presenting Evidence

“(Hadi Matar,) the New Jersey man on trial (for) the 2022 stabbing of author Salman Rushdie, declined to testify in his defense Thursday as his lawyers rested their case without calling any witnesses. … Earlier Thursday, prosecutors called a forensics expert as their final witness, wrapping up seven days of testimony.” - AP

Souleymane Cissé, Pioneering African Filmmaker, Has Died At 84

Over a 50-year career, the Malian writer-director did much to establish sub-Saharan African film as an internationally recognized industry in terms of art as well as commerce. He was the first Black African filmmaker to win a feature film award at Cannes: a Special Jury Prize in 1987 for Yeelen. - AP

In Addition To Prison Sentence, Ozy Founder Carlos Watson Gets Ordered To Pay $96 Million

"(A Federal judge) ordered Watson and his company to pay over $36 million in restitution and nearly $60 million in forfeiture … for his involvement in a fraud scheme in which he conspired to impersonate a YouTube executive and repeatedly lied to investors about the now-defunct media company’s finances." - Courthouse News Service

High Society Art Adviser, Convicted Of Felony Embezzlement, Explains Herself

"'You become the lie,' (Lisa) Schiff said. … By the time it all came crashing down in 2023, she had stolen some $6.4 million. ... But out of all her transgressions, she seemed most ashamed of the glamour that gilded her crimes. 'I was miserable in that helicopter.'" - The New York Times

Mel Bochner, Conceptual Artist Who Played With Language And Imagery, Is Dead At 84

"Bochner was one of the key artists associated with the Conceptualist movement during the 1960s and ’70s. In legendary pieces that hardly looked much like art at all, he offered measurements, numbers, words, and others’ photocopied drawings within galleries. There was often little to admire, and that was intentional." - ARTnews

Boston Conducting Legend Benjamin Zander, Still Going Strong At 85

Zander has been educating musicians and audiences about classical music for five decades. During his master class, Zander interacts with both the audience and aspiring cellists who have signed up to seek guidance from Zander. - WBUR

AJ Premium Classifieds

Chief Financial Officer – La Jolla Playhouse

The Playhouse’s brilliant and innovative productions of classics, immersive projects, new plays and musicals have merited over 300 major honors and 42 Tony Awards.

Charlottesville Symphony Society seeks Executive Director

The Charlottesville Symphony Society invites applications and nominations for the position of Executive Director, available in the late spring of 2025.

Artistic Director- Court Theatre

Court Theatre is currently seeking its next Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director. Winner of the 2022 Regional Theatre Tony Award, Court Theatre reimagines classic theatre.

Chief Development Officer- Arena Stage

Arena Stage is seeking a talented fundraising leader driven by ambition and creativity to serve as its Chief Development Officer.

AJClassifieds

Artis–Naples seeks Vice President, Marketing & Sales

The Vice President, Marketing and Sales (VP-MS) leads all...

Executive Director – The Knights

The Knights seek a strategic and entrepreneurial leader to be Executive Director of this ambitious and creative New York City-based orchestral collective.

Filoli seeks Chief Development Officer

The CDO manages Filoli’s annual fund, major gifts, corporate and foundation giving, planned giving, and fundraising events, and will oversee all aspects of donor engagement and stewardship.

The Barbican Centre seeks Head of Cinema

The Head of Cinema will lead the development and delivery of a dynamic cinema strategy that reflects the Barbican’s strategic framework with core principles to inspire, connect, and provoke debate.

Baltimore Museum of Art seeks Chief of External Affairs

The CEA will be the primary staff liaison for the External Affairs Board Committee and will be engaged with other Board Committees such as Governance/Nominating.

Executive Director, The Shaker Museum

The Opportunity The Shaker Museum seeks a dynamic, forward-thinking, and...

Chamber Music Society Seeks Director of Marketing and Communications

The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center seeks a Director of Marketing and Communications, a pivotal leadership position at a premiere institution.

DIRECTOR OF FINANCE

Manhattan Theatre Club (MTC), a Tony Award-winning nonprofit theatre dedicated to the production of contemporary plays and musicals, seeks a Director of Finance.

Director Of Development

BroadStage, a leading performing arts presenter in Santa Monica, seeks a Director of Development to lead fundraising efforts and expand its impact.

Adobe Architecture May Be The Key To Rebuilding A Fireproof Los Angeles

Since the latest wildfires, interest in natural buildings has spiked, particularly after a widely-shared photo showed a backyard SuperAdobe that emerged from the Eaton fire intact. Well-designed adobes resist earthquakes as well as fires, and they’re quicker and less expensive to build than conventional modern homes. - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

Salman Rushdie Stabbing Trial: Defense Rests Without Presenting Evidence

“(Hadi Matar,) the New Jersey man on trial (for) the 2022 stabbing of author Salman Rushdie, declined to testify in his defense Thursday as his lawyers rested their case without calling any witnesses. … Earlier Thursday, prosecutors called a forensics expert as their final witness, wrapping up seven days of testimony.” - AP

Amazon Has Been Given Creative Control Over Entire James Bond Franchise

“The Broccoli family’s feud with Amazon MGM Studios over the (property) appears to have reached a resolution. Barbara Broccoli and her stepbrother Michael Wilson, who have long controlled the 007 franchise, (have) reached an agreement to hand over creative control to a joint venture with the studio.” - The Wall Street Journal (MSN)

So Trump Replaced The Kennedy Center’s Board. Now Will He Lead Its Fundraising?

The Center gets only 16% of its budget from Federal money, and that's for maintenance, repairs and operation of the building, which the government owns. The now-fired CEO and board chairman were very successful fundraisers, and the chairman a major donor. Will anyone be making up for that? - The New York Times

Bullied At School, Samuel Marino Can Now Say He Has One Of The Rarest Voices In Opera

Mariño, a sopranist, once begged his mother to take him to the doctor to fix his voice. Now, he says before a residency in Australia, "I like to describe my voice as a light lyric soprano, with a bit of coloratura.” - The Guardian (UK)

The Deeply Human Desire That Makes Social Media A Real Problem

Everyone, deep down, has “a desire for recognition to be seen as human by other humans. This is a driving, animating desire. Attention is like right next to it, and so it tastes enough like it to keep you going for it without ever delivering the thing you want.” - Slate

The Martha Graham Dance Company Is Moving To Times Square And Getting A Lot More Space

"The company announced on Friday that it would leave its offices in the West Village of Manhattan and relocate to a 30,000-square-foot space in Times Square, more than doubling its footprint.” - The New York Times

The Tiny British Publisher That Took A Big Risk – And That Is Now Expanding To The US

“Tilted Axis has carved out a unique literary niche, and has caught the attention of critics and prize juries, landing major awards and winning acclaim for writers who were unknown in the Anglophone world.” - The New York Times

Kennicott: Can Trump Destroy The Kennedy Center?

Or will he use it in the usual way that authoritarians have used the arts in the past, as a vehicle for Trumpian propaganda? - Washington Post

L.A. Unified School District Sued For Diverting Millions Earmarked For Arts Education

"Los Angeles Unified officials repeatedly violated Proposition 28 — a state law requiring the hiring of arts teachers — misusing millions in state funds and denying promised arts instruction to students across the school system, according to allegations in a lawsuit filed Monday." - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

Tom Robbins, Author Of Novels Including Even Cowgirls Get The Blues, Has Died At 92

“With their meandering plots, pop-philosophical asides and frequent jabs at social convention and organized religion, Mr. Robbins’s books were the perfect accompaniment to acid trips, Grateful Dead shows and weekend yoga retreats, long before those things became middle-class and mainstream.” - The New York Times

Three Men Convicted In Ring Of Multiple Museum Thefts

“For two decades, a crew from Lackawanna County in Pennsylvania traveled to a dozen small museums across the country, where its ringleader smashed through security systems to strip them of art and precious memorabilia.” - The New York Times

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