ArtsJournal Classic

AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • Netflix’s Big Time Bet On Streaming Live Sports

      The stakes are high. WrestleMania, which began in 1985, is being treated as a litmus test – not just for WWE’s global expansion, but for Netflix’s potential move into live sports. – BBC

    • What Happens To Our Culture When Hobbies Get Too Expensive

      Hobby inflation, understood in this light, is about much more than price hikes: It’s about the shrinking and possible disappearance of opportunities for people from different backgrounds to get to know one another. – The Atlantic

    • Coming To Terms With Richard Serra

      Over the past half century the art history industry has produced reams of interpretation, incorporating no shortage of words by Serra himself. The author of work so totally laconic has set the terms of its understanding as if the death of the author bypassed him entirely. – N + One

    • How “Blockbusters” Degraded Hollywood’s Soul

      I think Hollywood used to propose itself as a place where artists and creative people could sustain themselves, perhaps even strike it rich, and that’s gone. The loss of that idea is … incalculable. – Los Angeles Times

    • A Mathematical Model To Better Understand Language?

      By thinking of language as a mathematical category, Tai-Danae Bradley‘s been able to apply established tools to study it and glean new insights. Linguists hope her model can help them to prove certain theories about how grammar and meaning emerge from strings of words, and to identify how AI-generated text differs from human language. – Quanta

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    • A Mathematical Model To Better Understand Language?

      By thinking of language as a mathematical category, Tai-Danae Bradley‘s been able to apply established tools to study it and glean new insights. Linguists hope her model can help them to prove certain theories about how grammar and meaning emerge from strings of words, and to identify how AI-generated text differs from human language. – Quanta

    • Study Literature? What It Means

      As the English degree craters, and the idea of the university itself is under assault in the United States and elsewhere, those of us who remain interested in literate culture are sensing in its decline some correlation with the current apoplexy, if not direct causation. – 3 Quarks Daily

    • Books Have “No Economic Value” Claims Meta

      Meta cited an expert witness who downplayed the books’ individual importance, averring that a single book adjusted its LLM’s performance “by less than 0.06 percent on industry standard benchmarks, a meaningless change no different from noise.” Thus there’s no market in paying authors to use their copyrighted works, Meta says. – Futurism

    • British Authors Protest Zuckerberg’s Taking Of Their Books For Generative AI

      “Earlier this month, a group of protesters gathered outside the London headquarters of Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. They were demonstrating over the company’s use of millions of pirated books and research papers to feed their family of generative AI models.” – The Guardian (UK)

    • The Naval Academy Was Supposed To Host A Lecture On Idea Censorship And Reading Fearlessly

      Then the Academy, apparently not fearless, censored the lecture. “I did not want to cause them trouble. I did, however, feel it was essential to make the point that the pursuit of wisdom is impossible without engaging with (and challenging) uncomfortable ideas.” – The New York Times

    PEOPLE

    • Netflix’s Big Time Bet On Streaming Live Sports

      The stakes are high. WrestleMania, which began in 1985, is being treated as a litmus test – not just for WWE’s global expansion, but for Netflix’s potential move into live sports. – BBC

    • What Happens To Our Culture When Hobbies Get Too Expensive

      Hobby inflation, understood in this light, is about much more than price hikes: It’s about the shrinking and possible disappearance of opportunities for people from different backgrounds to get to know one another. – The Atlantic

    • Coming To Terms With Richard Serra

      Over the past half century the art history industry has produced reams of interpretation, incorporating no shortage of words by Serra himself. The author of work so totally laconic has set the terms of its understanding as if the death of the author bypassed him entirely. – N + One

    • How “Blockbusters” Degraded Hollywood’s Soul

      I think Hollywood used to propose itself as a place where artists and creative people could sustain themselves, perhaps even strike it rich, and that’s gone. The loss of that idea is … incalculable. – Los Angeles Times

    • A Mathematical Model To Better Understand Language?

      By thinking of language as a mathematical category, Tai-Danae Bradley‘s been able to apply established tools to study it and glean new insights. Linguists hope her model can help them to prove certain theories about how grammar and meaning emerge from strings of words, and to identify how AI-generated text differs from human language. – Quanta

    PEOPLE

    • Netflix’s Big Time Bet On Streaming Live Sports

      The stakes are high. WrestleMania, which began in 1985, is being treated as a litmus test – not just for WWE’s global expansion, but for Netflix’s potential move into live sports. – BBC

    • What Happens To Our Culture When Hobbies Get Too Expensive

      Hobby inflation, understood in this light, is about much more than price hikes: It’s about the shrinking and possible disappearance of opportunities for people from different backgrounds to get to know one another. – The Atlantic

    • Coming To Terms With Richard Serra

      Over the past half century the art history industry has produced reams of interpretation, incorporating no shortage of words by Serra himself. The author of work so totally laconic has set the terms of its understanding as if the death of the author bypassed him entirely. – N + One

    • How “Blockbusters” Degraded Hollywood’s Soul

      I think Hollywood used to propose itself as a place where artists and creative people could sustain themselves, perhaps even strike it rich, and that’s gone. The loss of that idea is … incalculable. – Los Angeles Times

    • A Mathematical Model To Better Understand Language?

      By thinking of language as a mathematical category, Tai-Danae Bradley‘s been able to apply established tools to study it and glean new insights. Linguists hope her model can help them to prove certain theories about how grammar and meaning emerge from strings of words, and to identify how AI-generated text differs from human language. – Quanta

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS