Stories

What If Chalamet Was Just Using The Wrong Metrics?

One soprano: “Some things are made primarily for consumption, while others help form us as human beings” Ouch. - HuffPost

This Los Angeles Project Brings Veterans In Long, Close Contact With Shakespeare

A new venture in Los Angeles brings the Shakespeare Center and local veterans together for a year-long learning and writing experience. They perform today, and the program is billed as “written by the Ensemble of Veterans In Art & US Vets in collaboration with William Shakespeare.” - LAist

New Job For Actors Is, As They Say, A Trap

“If you’ve got strong creative instincts, the ability to authentically portray emotion, and are capable of staying true to a character’s voice throughout a scene, there’s a job listing calling for your experience.The catch: ... You’d be using your talents to train an AI model.” - The Verge

The Musician Actors Of Hades And Other Broadway Shows

“Putting bands and musicians at the center of theatrical storytelling can give it a special immediacy and urgency, not least by reconnecting a form that can have a tendency to be stultified and overly formalized to its original music-making impulses.” - American Theatre

What A Classic Zombie Movie Teaches About Film, And Life

“I’ve seen Night three hundred times. It’s a film that, no matter how many times I watch it, yields new information, especially once I began scrutinizing it frame-by-frame.” - LitHub

What The Screenwriter Of Blue Moon Actually Thinks Of The Musical Oklahoma

Or, to give it its proper name, Oklahoma!: “It’s one beautiful song after another. They really are beautiful melodies. I think the show is corny and embarrassing, actually. … I like the songs when I go see Oklahoma! — I trance out at the story.” - Vulture

The Women Of Color Lifting Up Others Behind The Scenes Of Sinners

“Cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw's journey to become part of Coogler's Sinners crew began with a recommendation from her friend, Rachel Morrison, the cinematographer on Coogler’s Black Panther.” - CBC

This Filmmaker Has Two Documentaries In Oscars Contention Today

Geeta Gandbhir says she slept through the phone calls that told her she was nominated for best documentary feature for The Perfect Neighbor and best documentary short for The Devil is Busy. Has she written two speeches? Maybe. - BBC

The Book World Seems To Have Fallen Back In Affection With Barnes And Noble

“Like all big chains, when you shop there, more of your money leaves the community than when you shop at something locally owned. … anything that takes market share from Amazon is positive.” - The Atlantic

Meet The Renderings Of The New Kennedy Center

Which — for the moment? — looks a lot like the old one. - Washington Post (MSN)

Inside The Boston Symphony Orchestra’s Power Struggle That Led To Andris Nelson’s Ouster

“The maestro’s fall is the bare-knuckled endgame of a years-long power struggle over the soul of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, an ensemble renowned for its musical excellence, but which has struggled to keep pace with the times.” - Boston Globe

BuzzFeed’s Pivot To AI Is About To Lead To Bankruptcy

“Three years after its AI pivot, the writing is on the wall. The company reported a net loss of $57.3 million in 2025 in an earnings report released on Thursday. In an official statement, the company glumly hinted at the possibility of going under sooner rather than later.” - Futurism

Is The Met In A Death Spiral?

“Without serious remedial action, the institution known as the Metropolitan Opera could well go dark.” - David McKee

Richard Grenell Out At The Kennedy Center

He leaves behind an institution that is drastically changed, and in many ways diminished, from a year ago, when Mr. Trump installed himself as chairman and filled the board with loyalists as he moved to put his imprint on the center, including what appeared on its stages. - The New York Times

The First-Ever Film About Robots Has Been Rediscovered. It Was Made In 1897.

“A copy of Gugusse and the Automaton, an 1897 short made by legendary film pioneer George Méliès, was discovered by a man in Grand Rapids, Mich., in a box of films that had been owned by his great-grandfather. The Library of Congress revealed the find on its blog (last month).” - San Francisco Chronicle (Yahoo!)

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