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Today's Stories

We’ve Always Been Worried About Distraction (So What’s The Crisis?)

Haven’t critics freaked out about the brain-scrambling power of everything from pianofortes to brightly colored posters? Isn’t there, in fact, a long section in Plato’s Phaedrus in which Socrates argues that writing will wreck people’s memories? - The New Yorker

CEO Of Music AI Company: Making Music The Traditional Way Sucks

“It’s not really enjoyable to make music now. It takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of practice, you need to get really good at an instrument or really good at a piece of production software. And I think the majority of people don’t enjoy the majority of the time they spend making music."...

Warning: Hollywood Screen Music Production Is Endangered

Los Angeles is facing a loss of artists, producers and executives ranging from sound to visual effects. Musicians, and the players behind them, are a vital aspect in that. - The Hollywood Reporter

Is Netflix Deliberately Dumbing Down TV For The Internet Generation?

Is it inherently bad to cater to people who may prefer their viewing on the more casual side? Is it snobbery to believe that TV must demand all of our attention all of the time? - The Guardian

Classical Music’s Identity Crisis: Political Music Under Biden

Classical music has long been wandering in the desert of its own identity crisis, and 2016 was an unexpected checkpoint. Overnight, it seemed that artists had sprung into creative overdrive, making works to comment on the moment - Van

Data’s In: What And How We Read Last Year

About 63 percent of us read at least one book last year, an improvement from the 54 percent we saw in 2023.Other sources don’t point to a seismic shift in reading habits, so this may be a refined estimate rather than a trend. - Washington Post

Study: LLM AI’s Aren’t Very Good At History Yet

“The main takeaway from this study is that LLMs, while impressive, still lack the depth of understanding required for advanced history. They’re great for basic facts, but when it comes to more nuanced, PhD-level historical inquiry, they’re not yet up to the task." - TechCrunch

Is The TikTok Battle A Chance To Reimagine How The Internet Works?

Broadly, Project Liberty is part of the movement toward a decentralized social Internet, where no single network controls users’ data and users can instead move their online identities and communities from one network to another without having to start from scratch. - The New Yorker

The Director Claims His Movie About The Munich Olympics Isn’t Political

But not everyone agrees. “Workers at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema collected just over 1,000 signatures in an ongoing petition requesting the theatre chain pull the film. ... The petition cites the film as being complicit in "manufacturing consent" for actions taken against Palestinian people.” - CBC

Naomi Watts Was Once Told That She’d Be Finished Acting Once She Turned 40

"Now 56, she is fresh off a Golden Globe nomination for her performance as Babe Paley in Feud: Capote vs. the Swans. In March, she’ll star in the movie The Friend,” and she also has a new book coming out. - The New York Times

Lynne Taylor-Corbett, Who Choreographed Footloose And Brought Dance To A Wide Audience, Has Died At 78

The choreographer of exuberant musicals said, “My goal as a dancer and choreographer is to be understood. … Dance should not be a cerebral experience that the dancers have and the audiences watch. I want dancers to communicate something and have the audience receive the same thing.” - The New York Times

Andrew Lloyd Webber Will Teach These Soccer Fans To Sing Opera

No, this is not The Onion: “A group of Bradford City fans will go from singing on the terraces to performing as a choir for a BBC programme called ‘Bantam of the Opera.’”- BBC

The Thriving Publishing Renaissance In Africa

The continent doesn’t need the West to “discover” writers. Instead, “a radical shift is underway, transforming the region’s literary landscape from within and opening up possibilities unimaginable to previous generations of writers.” - The New York Times

Without Reality TV, We’d Never Have Arrived At Today’s Inauguration

“The idea that blandly macho host would become one of the most influential figures in American life would have seemed as ridiculous as, well, Donald Trump getting elected president. Twice.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

How Did Popcorn Become Such A Movie Staple?

You can praise (or blame) a saleswoman in Kansas City who "built a concession empire in the middle of the Great Depression.” - and changed popcorn’s status from banned in cinemas to practically synonymous. - NPR

Playwright, Director, And Composer Claire Van Kampen Has Died At 71

Van Kampen, married to actor Mark Rylance, not only "was the first female musical director at both the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre,” but she also composed original scores for Broadway musicals and British productions alike. - BBC

Sex Might Be Back In Movies, But It’s Not Very Sexy

In a lot of awards-discussion movies from 2024, "The directors are using the moments to explore complex power dynamics between characters. These scenes are meant to engender discussion, not arousal.” - The New York Times

Los Angeles Art Fairs Decide To Keep Going

Because now, of course, artists and the arts really need money. And then there’s hope. “It’s an important moment to give people a sense that we’re rebuilding, that there’s something to show up for. … It’s crucial.” - Hyperallergic

Prince Harry’s Case Against British Tabloids Is Rapidly Reaching Its Most Vital Days

“This will be the first time that News Group Newspapers has had to defend itself against allegations that its journalists and executives across the whole organisation were involved in or knew about unlawful newsgathering techniques.” - BBC

Grand Theft Hamlet Got Its Start From Actors Out Of Work During The Early Days Of The Pandemic

So began “a ludicrous journey to making one of the weirdest versions of one of the most performed pieces of literature: a staging of Shakespeare’s Hamlet entirely within the universe of Grand Theft Auto.” - The New York Times

By Topic

We’ve Always Been Worried About Distraction (So What’s The Crisis?)

Haven’t critics freaked out about the brain-scrambling power of everything from pianofortes to brightly colored posters? Isn’t there, in fact, a long section in Plato’s Phaedrus in which Socrates argues that writing will wreck people’s memories? - The New Yorker

Is The TikTok Battle A Chance To Reimagine How The Internet Works?

Broadly, Project Liberty is part of the movement toward a decentralized social Internet, where no single network controls users’ data and users can instead move their online identities and communities from one network to another without having to start from scratch. - The New Yorker

Sex Might Be Back In Movies, But It’s Not Very Sexy

In a lot of awards-discussion movies from 2024, "The directors are using the moments to explore complex power dynamics between characters. These scenes are meant to engender discussion, not arousal.” - The New York Times

An Idea For Los Angeles This Awards Season

Let’s stop complaining about the Oscars. “Awards season is an intrinsic part of the Los Angeles economy, and keeping the major events in place will do more to help those in need than a statement-making cancellation ever could.” - Vulture

On Social Media, Disasters Are Now Merely Consumable Content

Like every major platform in 2025, X has become more like TikTok, prioritizing recommended content from accounts from people users follow. You can still follow people on X, but its new influencer economy demands viral engagement, and viral engagement comes through the For You page and especially video. - Intelligencer (MSN)

The Death Of DEI

For a large swath of the country, the idea of DEI has become a catchall insult. DEI is part bogeyman, part always-there scapegoat for some combination of bureaucracy, overreach, or mediocrity. - The Atlantic

Study: LLM AI’s Aren’t Very Good At History Yet

“The main takeaway from this study is that LLMs, while impressive, still lack the depth of understanding required for advanced history. They’re great for basic facts, but when it comes to more nuanced, PhD-level historical inquiry, they’re not yet up to the task." - TechCrunch

The Director Claims His Movie About The Munich Olympics Isn’t Political

But not everyone agrees. “Workers at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema collected just over 1,000 signatures in an ongoing petition requesting the theatre chain pull the film. ... The petition cites the film as being complicit in "manufacturing consent" for actions taken against Palestinian people.” - CBC

Without Reality TV, We’d Never Have Arrived At Today’s Inauguration

“The idea that blandly macho host would become one of the most influential figures in American life would have seemed as ridiculous as, well, Donald Trump getting elected president. Twice.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

Prince Harry’s Case Against British Tabloids Is Rapidly Reaching Its Most Vital Days

“This will be the first time that News Group Newspapers has had to defend itself against allegations that its journalists and executives across the whole organisation were involved in or knew about unlawful newsgathering techniques.” - BBC

A Marvel Card Game Goes Dark Along With TikTok

“‘Marvel Snap’ players were shocked to wake up on Sunday and find themselves unable to access the speed-battle card game. They were greeted instead with a brief message about the game’s future when they opened the app.” - Washington Post

Where Do Neil Gaiman Fans Go From Here?

One fan’s contribution: “Whenever allegations come out about an artist whose work is important to me: I see the moment I learned of them as an inflection point. From that very instant, it's on me.” - NPR

CEO Of Music AI Company: Making Music The Traditional Way Sucks

“It’s not really enjoyable to make music now. It takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of practice, you need to get really good at an instrument or really good at a piece of production software. And I think the majority of people don’t enjoy the majority of the time they spend...

Classical Music’s Identity Crisis: Political Music Under Biden

Classical music has long been wandering in the desert of its own identity crisis, and 2016 was an unexpected checkpoint. Overnight, it seemed that artists had sprung into creative overdrive, making works to comment on the moment - Van

Andrew Lloyd Webber Will Teach These Soccer Fans To Sing Opera

No, this is not The Onion: “A group of Bradford City fans will go from singing on the terraces to performing as a choir for a BBC programme called ‘Bantam of the Opera.’”- BBC

Music Therapy Helped Joni Mitchell Walk And Talk Again After Her Stroke

Her neuroscientist friend Daniel Levitin believes "that music is a golden thread in the fabric of identity” - and that music therapy could help many other stroke survivors. - The Guardian (UK)

The San Antonio Philharmonic Is Recently Born, And Now It Would Really Like To Survive

The group was formed out of the ashes of the San Antonio Symphony in 2022, and things looked rosy. But “bitter disputes have erupted among board members and donors. And financial strains have forced the orchestra to make last-minute trims to its season.” - The New York Times

How We Listened In 2024: Increase To Almost 5 Trillion Streams

The global music industry hit 4.8 trillion streams in 2024, a new single-year record, Luminate’s 2024 Year-End Report found. That’s up 14% from 2023, which held the previous record. - APNews

Los Angeles Art Fairs Decide To Keep Going

Because now, of course, artists and the arts really need money. And then there’s hope. “It’s an important moment to give people a sense that we’re rebuilding, that there’s something to show up for. … It’s crucial.” - Hyperallergic

This Law Course Takes Students To Art Museums To Help Them Understand How To Build Arguments

“Both activities involve storytelling. Both involve putting yourself in someone else’s shoes. And both depend on properly balancing evidence and emotion, comprehensiveness and concision, provocation, and restraint.” - Fast Company

Hollywood Is Playing A Strong Part In Brutalism’s Redemption

And not just with The Brutalist, either. Recall: “There was a time, in the 1980s, when a writer in a national newspaper demanded that practitioners of brutalism be ‘taken out and shot.’”- The Observer (UK)

The Tight-Knit Artists’ Community In Altadena That Lost Everything

“It was an improbable place. An artist collective known as JJU, or John Joyce University, hidden in the foothills of Altadena, resembled a 1960s fever dream of communal living.” - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

The Iron Horse Rides Again

University of Georgia students did not like this sculpture: When it was “extricated from a concrete pad in a cornfield outside Athens for conservation, it was missing 32 pieces and bore decades-deep scars of etching and graffiti, and a bullet wound in its neck.” - The New York Times

The Broad Museum Is Hit With Sexual Harassment And Discrimination Lawsuits

“The lawsuit accuses the Broad of failing to take 'reasonable steps to prevent retaliation and wrongful termination against Walker who opposed discrimination in the workplace.’” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

Data’s In: What And How We Read Last Year

About 63 percent of us read at least one book last year, an improvement from the 54 percent we saw in 2023.Other sources don’t point to a seismic shift in reading habits, so this may be a refined estimate rather than a trend. - Washington Post

The Thriving Publishing Renaissance In Africa

The continent doesn’t need the West to “discover” writers. Instead, “a radical shift is underway, transforming the region’s literary landscape from within and opening up possibilities unimaginable to previous generations of writers.” - The New York Times

Video Game Writers Long To Improve Their Genre

“A game’s popularity often depends not on quality, Ingold said, but on the whims of the biggest Twitch streamers or the algorithm that drives Steam, the main distribution platform for computer games. Independent studios struggle to break through. Many close.” - The New York Times

Publishers, Who First Resisted And Then Embraced TikTok, Worry About What Can Replace ItT

As author Brandon Taylor noted on social media, it’s a little disingenuous for The NYT to publish this article since it’s a whole newspaper that could focus more on books. Still, BookTok was special, and the BookTok goodbyes were intense. - The New York Times

In An Era Of Book Censorship, Can Students Develop A Bill Of Rights For Reading?

Students in Texas are lobbying their state legislature, and one says, "Student voices have been silenced far too long in decisions affecting our educational realities. Our declaration is the product of diverse student perspectives across Texas coming together to envision a future that serves all of us.” - Book Riot

What Would Garcia Marquez Think Of The New Screen Version Of His Masterpiece?

“'It would be a travesty,' he said. 'What is most entrancing in the book cannot be translated into another medium. People keep forgetting that it’s very…. literary.’ And repeated: 'Ni muerto!'” - LitHub

Warning: Hollywood Screen Music Production Is Endangered

Los Angeles is facing a loss of artists, producers and executives ranging from sound to visual effects. Musicians, and the players behind them, are a vital aspect in that. - The Hollywood Reporter

Is Netflix Deliberately Dumbing Down TV For The Internet Generation?

Is it inherently bad to cater to people who may prefer their viewing on the more casual side? Is it snobbery to believe that TV must demand all of our attention all of the time? - The Guardian

How Did Popcorn Become Such A Movie Staple?

You can praise (or blame) a saleswoman in Kansas City who "built a concession empire in the middle of the Great Depression.” - and changed popcorn’s status from banned in cinemas to practically synonymous. - NPR

This Movie All About A Fantasy Winnipeg Is Shortlisted For The Oscars

Those watching the movie should “expect to see a film that displays the city in a way it has never been seen before — a place where the official languages are Farsi and French ... and the local Tim Hortons serves up its hot beverages in a samovar.” - CBC

The World Of Movies Has So Few Black Women Buddy Comedies

In the past thirty years, there have been two - possibly three, if you include Waiting to Exhale. - HuffPost

A New Deal For Imax

Netflix made a deal with Imax to release Greta Gerwig’s Narnia only in those theatres for two weeks before the movie heads to the streamer. That’s a bit delicate for Netflix, as its primary audience is, of course, online. - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

World’s Top Street Dance Competition Comes To Arab World For First Time

"Rhythmic beats echoed through the Tunis Opera Theatre stage as dancers faced off at the first-ever edition in the Arab world of a street dance tournament originating in Paris. This year's Juste Debout is hosted in eight cities including London, New York, Beijing and Tokyo, as well as the Tunisian capital." - AFP (Barron's)

The California Roots Of Martha Graham’s Modern Dance Revolution

The metro Pittsburgh-born Graham spent her teenage years in Santa Barbara and saw her first dance performance — featuring her future teacher Ruth St. Denis — in Los Angeles in 1911. "She talked about how intoxicating the light in Santa Barbara was to her, and she would just run and spin." - Orange County...

The National Dance Project Is Ending (At Least In Its Current Form)

Since its founding in 1996, the regranting program has played a crucial role, supporting the creation of new dance works, funding touring, and fostering relationships between artists and presenters. As the Mellon Foundation concludes the program's funding arc, NDP's final grant cycle will support works touring from 2026 through 2029. - Dance Magazine

Ballet Memphis CEO To Step Down

Gretchen Wollert McLennon, a former student at the company's school who succeeded company founder Dororthy Gunther Pugh in 2020, will depart at the end of the current season. She saw Ballet Memphis through the pandemic and increased main-stage ticket sales year-over-year. - Memphis Flyer

A Dance Company For Neurodivergent Participants

Azara addresses a gap in the dance world: the need for spaces where people who have autism, A.D.H.D. or other conditions that fall under the broad term “neurodivergent” can freely experience the art form. - The New York Times

Another Way That Dancing Can Help Treat Parkinson’s Disease

Several past studies and subsequent clinical experience have shown that dancing can help with the physical symptoms of the incurable neurological disorder. A new study indicates that dancing can also help alleviate the depression suffered by many Parkinson's patients. - The Washington Post (MSN)

Grand Theft Hamlet Got Its Start From Actors Out Of Work During The Early Days Of The Pandemic

So began “a ludicrous journey to making one of the weirdest versions of one of the most performed pieces of literature: a staging of Shakespeare’s Hamlet entirely within the universe of Grand Theft Auto.” - The New York Times

They’re Already Thinking About An “Emilia Pérez” Broadway Musical

"We would love to put Emilia Pérez on Broadway," said co-composer Clément Ducol. "At the start, (director) Jacques (Audiard) mentioned he was thinking of it as an opera." Added the other co-composer, Camille Ducol, "We’d love a live version, and there have been talks. More to follow." - Broadway Buzz

Rehab For Actors Recovering From Playing Hamlet

It doesn't necessarily seem all that improbable, but no, this isn't really a thing. It is, however, the concept of the play Hamlet Camp, which has just opened in Sydney — starring, yes, three actors who have played Hamlet. - The Guardian

Former Theatre Company CEO Faces Trial On Multiple Sexual Abuse Charges

Timothy O’Connor, former chief executive of the Harvest Rain Theatre Company in Brisbane, Australia, faces charges from seven accusers aged from 12 to 29; alleged offenses include rape, attempted rape, sexual assault, indecent treatment of a child, recordings in breach of privacy, fraud, common assault and indecent acts. - ArtsHub (Australia)

Is London’s West End Dying? Not So Fast, Says Lyn Gardner

Writing theatre’s obituary based on misinformation or dismissing the entire art form as a turn-off on the basis of a single theatre visit (nobody writes off all literature because they didn’t enjoy Pride and Prejudice when they read it aged 17) is easy pickings, but is damaging when so regularly repeated. - The Stage

Prolific Young Producer Takes Over Off-Broadway Theater Left By Second Stage

Greg Nobile's Seaview Productions, which was behind such notable shows as Slave Play, Romeo + Juliet, Sea Wall/A Life (starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Tom Sturridge), and the upcoming Good Night and Good Luck starring George Clooney, is taking the former Tony Kiser Theater, which will be called Studio Seaview. - The New York Times

Naomi Watts Was Once Told That She’d Be Finished Acting Once She Turned 40

"Now 56, she is fresh off a Golden Globe nomination for her performance as Babe Paley in Feud: Capote vs. the Swans. In March, she’ll star in the movie The Friend,” and she also has a new book coming out. - The New York Times

Lynne Taylor-Corbett, Who Choreographed Footloose And Brought Dance To A Wide Audience, Has Died At 78

The choreographer of exuberant musicals said, “My goal as a dancer and choreographer is to be understood. … Dance should not be a cerebral experience that the dancers have and the audiences watch. I want dancers to communicate something and have the audience receive the same thing.” - The New York Times

Playwright, Director, And Composer Claire Van Kampen Has Died At 71

Van Kampen, married to actor Mark Rylance, not only "was the first female musical director at both the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre,” but she also composed original scores for Broadway musicals and British productions alike. - BBC

Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston, Who Brought Vivid Depictions Of Internment To Life In Her Memoir, Has Died At 90

In Farewell to Manzanar, Houston “recounts the more than three years and about 10,000 other Japanese Americans endured at the camp until the war ended. Given its location, at the foot of the Sierra Nevada, the weather could be fiercely hot or freezing cold.” - The New York Times

Zilia Sanchez, Whose Erotically Charged Art Earned Her Fame In Her 90s, Has Died At 98

Sánchez primarily worked in "an era when Latina and lesbian artists — she was both — were largely confined to the shadows.” - The New York Times

Actor Joan Plowright, 95

Until late in life, her fame as the wife/widow of Laurence Olivier obscured from the wider public (though not from colleagues) her own extraordinary achievements on film and, especially, on stage. - The Washington Post (MSN)

AJ Premium Classifieds

Director of Development – Glimmerglass Festival

The Director of Development oversees all aspects of fundraising.

Seraphic Fire Seeks Director of Sales and Marketing

Nationally recognized choral ensemble seeks to fill this position responsible for driving ticket sales, increasing audience engagement, and enhancing brand visibility to support its mission.

Opera Theatre of Saint Louis seeks Artistic Director

Opera Theatre of Saint Louis invites nominations and applications for the position of Artistic Director. Please write to Christopher Wingert at cwingert@catherinefrenchgroup.com for complete announcement.

AJClassifieds

Director of Blume Studios Events

Blumenthal Arts seeks an innovative leader and event producer to serve as Director of Blume Studios Events.

Apply Now: Canada’s National Arts Centre Mentorship Program

Play in section with Canada’s National Arts Centre Orchestra: June 12 to July 1, 2025

Director of Leadership Gifts – Grand Teton Music Festival

Reporting to the Director of Development, the Director of Leadership Gifts is a critical new role responsible for expanding the Festival’s fundraising capacity.

Join GTMF’s Summer Seasonal Team – MULTIPLE POSITIONS OPEN

The Grand Teton Music Festival is hiring multiple seasonal employees to support our summer season!

Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco seeks Chief Marketing Officer

The CMO is a key member of the museum's senior leadership team and reports to the Director and CEO. Compensation between $240,000 and $270,000.

Adirondack Experience seeks Director of Advancement

The Director of Advancement will serve as the museum’s principal development strategist and fundraiser and will report to the Executive Director while building a network of new support for the mission of ADKX and stewarding its longtime donors.

Executive Assistant & Board Liaison

The Grand Teton Music Festival (GTMF) seeks an interested individual to join its year-round staff as the Executive Assistant & Board Liaison.

Theatre for a New Audience seeks Executive Director

The Executive Director, in co-partnership with the Artistic Director, will jointly lead TFANA as it builds on its artistic vision and mission.

NYU’s Steinhardt School: Clinical Assistant Professor in Performing Arts Administration

NYU Steinhardt seeks a Clinical Assistant Professor in Performing Arts Administration. Start Jan 2026. Teach, mentor, and develop global performing arts leaders. Salary: $74–$114k. Apply by 2/15.

Without Reality TV, We’d Never Have Arrived At Today’s Inauguration

“The idea that blandly macho host would become one of the most influential figures in American life would have seemed as ridiculous as, well, Donald Trump getting elected president. Twice.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

Publishers, Who First Resisted And Then Embraced TikTok, Worry About What Can Replace ItT

As author Brandon Taylor noted on social media, it’s a little disingenuous for The NYT to publish this article since it’s a whole newspaper that could focus more on books. Still, BookTok was special, and the BookTok goodbyes were intense. - The New York Times

The Broad Museum Is Hit With Sexual Harassment And Discrimination Lawsuits

“The lawsuit accuses the Broad of failing to take 'reasonable steps to prevent retaliation and wrongful termination against Walker who opposed discrimination in the workplace.’” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

When Is A Calder Not A Calder?

Or rather, when is a broken Calder still a Calder? "Richard Brodie, an art collector, says his ability to sell the work has been undermined by the Calder Foundation,” and he is suing to get the artist’s name back on the piece. - The New York Times

Getty Museums In L.A. Now Seen As “Beacon Of Fire Preparedness”

"The Center, which houses a sprawling collection in a modernist building, is described on the Getty website as a 'marvel of anti-fire engineering.' The Villa, which focuses on ancient Greek and Roman art, has a well-tuned anti-fire protocol that kept it intact amid the devastation (in) Pacific Palisades." - The Washington Post (MSN)

US Supreme Court Unanimously Upholds Law Banning TikTok

"TikTok, which has 170 million monthly American users, had argued the ban tramples on the First Amendment rights of both the app and its users — an argument that the court ultimately shot down on Friday." - TheWrap

David Lynch, 78

"(His films) bridged the mainstream and avant-garde, exploring the sinister recesses of the human psyche — and the mysteries behind America’s white picket fences — with an unsettling blend of melodrama, whimsy and nightmarish horror." - The Washington Post (MSN)

In Defense Of El Sistema, The Simón Bolívar Orchestra, And, Yes, Dudamel

European Union Youth Orchestra director Marshall Marcus, who's seen a lot of El Sistema's educational work up close, argues that those who denounce the program, its flagship orchestra and its most famous alumnus for providing window-dressing to the Maduro regime are missing the point — and overlooking the good El Sistema does. - The...

The Extraordinary Efforts To Save The Getty Center From Fire

Fire extinguishers in hand, the museum said, the Getty’s staff scours the sparse ground beneath their boots as well as the canopies of oak trees overhead. They look for embers. - The Wall Street Journal

A Proposal For Keeping The Wanamaker Organ Safe And In Regular Use

The instrument's landmark status only means that it can't be destroyed or moved without approval: a new owner or occupier of the soon-to-be-former Macy's in central Philadelphia could simply mothball it. Peter Dobrin has a suggestion for the space that could keep the public coming in to listen. - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

How The Getty Villa Survived The Palisades Fire: An Inside Look

"Getty Trust CEO Katherine Fleming described the scene on the ground and how she and her staff worked from a conference center-turned-war room at the Getty Center in Brentwood, about 10 miles away — all while 16 staff members remained at the Villa to implement emergency protocols." - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

“Post-Woke”? Is The Art World Set To Move Away From “Radlib” Identity Politics?

Ben Davis: "The main issue that will dominate, I believe, is cultural institutions trying, and probably failing, to process the confused splintering of the liberal ideological consensus. A faith in a certain type of cultural politics has fallen apart. What comes after, for the moment, is unclear." - Artnet

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