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Innovation Is Fine. But Wisdom Creates Longterm Success

Fairly or unfairly, many tech companies with disproportionately young employees and leaders have gone from a shining example of how entrepreneurial capitalism can improve our lives to something that seems unhealthy and even sinister over the past several years. - The Atlantic

Tennessee Is Fighting A Culture War Over What Books Students Can Read

“It looks like the entire curriculum is developed to normalize sexuality, normalize nudity and normalize vulgar language,” said Mike Cochran, a school board member. “I think we need to re-look at the entire curriculum.” - The New York Times

European Theatre Pioneers A Kind Of Tour That’s Climate-Friendly

It is an unusual production model in European theater, where directors tend to have the final word on every iteration of their work. The goal, Mitchell explained in a video interview, was to figure out new avenues for theater-making in the face of an environmental threat. - The New York Times

New Clue In The Gardner Museum Heist?

Anthony Amore, chief of security for the Gardner museum, tells Boston 25 News that a recent tipster prompted officials to take another look at the murder of career criminal Jimmy Marks, a known career criminal, because the killing may have possible links to the heist. - Smithsonian

Amsterdam Hermitage Art Museum Cuts Ties With The St. Petersburg Mother Ship

"Due to our carefully built relationship," said a statement from the Dutch satellite, "we had access to one of the world's most famous art collections that we could use to complement our exhibitions. ... The recent attack by Russia on Ukraine means that neutrality is no longer tenable." - ARTnews

Valery Gergiev, Political Cautionary Tale?

What is happening here represents just the latest, though perhaps the most glaring, iteration of an age-old conundrum. What expectations do we have — should we have — for artists and other ostensibly nonpolitical actors in a time of crisis? Is it incumbent on literally everyone to declare their allegiances? - San Francisco Chronicle

Does Every Broadway Show These Days Have To Grapple With The World’s Pressing Issues?  Can’t Some Shows Just Be Fun?  (A Debate)

"Critic Hayley Levitt ... now finds herself in a state of bafflement when a comedy is just for laughs. Critic Zachary Stewart loves a good political play, but lately thinks a lot of creatives have gone too far in putting fashionable politics onstage — often in a cynical way." - TheaterMania

Star Russian Conductor Suspended For Starting Performance With A Wish For Peace

Before the performance, conductor Ivan Velikanov — a star on the Russian music scene hailed as "the new Teodor Currentzis" — came on stage, gave a short speech calling for peace and led the orchestra in Beethoven's "Ode to Joy." The opera followed. - DW

One Of The World’s Largest Pipe Organs, Once A TV Star, Has Been Taken Apart, Fixed Up, And Returned To California

"Hazel" (formally, the Hazel Wright Organ) was the instrument of the Crystal Cathedral, from which Rev. Robert H. Schuller once hosted the Sunday morning show Hour of Power. After years of repair, Hazel is back home in what's now Christ's Cathedral in the Catholic Diocese of Orange County. - AP

Famous Hollywood Celebrity Biographer Dishes On Herself

Regardless of one’s opinions about Kitty Kelley, or her methodology, there can be no denying that her brand of take-no-prisoners celebrity journalism — the kind that in 2022 bubbles up constantly in social media feeds in the form of TMZ headlines and gossipy tweets — was very much ahead of its time. - The Hollywood Reporter

If You Find Dickens’s Novels Too Melodramatic, Try Reading Them The Way He Read Them To Audiences

"His health was failing, but he gave every reading his histrionic last ounce. ... As Ruskin explained it, Dickens 'chooses to speak in a circle of stage fire.' The reason the books are melodramatic is that they are melodrama. If you're looking for something else, read Anthony Trollope." - The New Yorker

Behind The Scenes Of Furious Debates About Changing The Oscars Broadcast

In the end, rather than dropping 12 categories altogether from the telecast, the Academy was able to satisfy ABC with the current plan, which will leave the network with more time to restore the sorts of ratings-drivers that were glaringly absent from last year’s telecast. - The Hollywood Reporter

2,000-Year-Old Sculptures Smashed By ISIS Restored And Returned To Ancient City Of Hatra

The ruins of the Parthian city, located 70 miles southwest of Mosul, were occupied by ISIS from 2015 to 2017; as usual, they destroyed every ancient statue they could get their hands on.  Three large Hatra sculptures have now been pieced back together, with more in progress. - The Art Newspaper

For The First Time, A Ballet Company Brings In An Intimacy Coordinator

Consultants who "choreograph" sex scenes and ensure actors feel safe performing them are becoming common in film, TV, and theatre, but this production at Scottish Ballet is thought to be a first for classical ballet.  And for this piece, Kenneth MacMillan's The Scandal at Mayerling, it makes sense. - The Scotsman

This May Be The World’s Largest Puppet

"Percy the Porcupine, the two-story creation, is covered in 2,000 foam quills and has an articulated nose the size of a 2-ton Volkswagen. And that's just the animal's head. The five fabricators (at Jim Henson's Creature Shop) ... decided to leave the body out of the equation." - Yahoo! (Los Angeles Times)

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