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Rhoda Levine, Pathbreaking Opera Director, Has Died At 93

Perhaps her “most significant contributions to the repertoire were the premieres ... Viktor Ullmann’s Der Kaiser von Atlantis, an anti-Hitler allegory composed in the Theresienstadt concentration camp before Mr. Ullmann was murdered at Auschwitz, and Anthony Davis’s X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X.” - The New York Times

In The US, We Write Essays, And Often Think, Backwards

We think we already know what we want to find, and that enables LLMs to “hElP” with predictable, middling, brain-anesthetizing results. “But a chief delight of being human is witnessing the world’s capacity to surprise.” - The Atlantic

The Washington National Opera, Which Had A Donor Renewal After Leaving The Kennedy Center, Finds A Temporary Home

The opera, which "received an influx of donations, from more than 500 donors, after its announcement last Friday that it would seek a new home … will host two operas this spring season at George Washington University, where the organization got its start nearly 70 years ago.” - The New York Times

Spanish Singer Julio Iglesias Denies Charges That He Sexually Abused Two Women In His Employ

The two former employees “allege they had been sexually assaulted and subjected ‘to inappropriate touching, insults and humiliation … in an atmosphere of control and constant harassment.’” - The Guardian (UK)

Disney Started A Thread About Movie Quotes But Deleted It With Celerity

“People immediately replied with lines from Star Wars, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and even Mary Poppins. The throughline between all the quotes: they were pretty pointedly anti-fascist.” Luckily, people screenshot the entire thing. - The Verge (Archive Today)

One Art Student Hung An AI-Generated Show As His Own, And Then Another Art Student Ate Some Of It

The student who ate some of the show was then arrested and charged. One Bluesky post about the event said, “Look for the helpers.” - Art News

Our Attention Is Being ‘Fracked’ By Big Tech

But there are ways to resist. - The Guardian (UK)

The Physics Of Plur1bus

For real: How does “The Joining” work? Science has thoughts. - Wired

Buildings Of The Past Are Underused Tools For Dealing With Climate Change

During Britain’s “little Ice Age,” builders used common-sense tricks that could still keep houses warmer - or cooler - today. - BBC

Trump Bought At Least One Million Dollars In Netflix And Warner Bros Bonds Following Their Deal Announcement

“Trump, speaking last month with reporters on the red carpet of the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington, D.C., said Netflix’s deal to acquire Warner Bros. studios and streaming business will require a review, and said, ‘I’ll be involved in that decision.”’ - Variety

Nazis Stole Fragments Of The Bayeux Tapestry

A textile specialist “is assumed to have stolen the fragments, each only a few centimetres long, when he was sent to Bayeux as part of a research team to study Germany's ‘ancestral heritage’ - a racist and antisemitic project run by Adolf Hitler's Nazi SS.” - BBC

Both The Pompidou And The Grand Palais Appear To Be In Financial Difficulties

"The Centre Pompidou gave up one of its two spaces at the Grand Palais due to what the Paris museum described as ‘financial constraints faced by both institutions,’ according to Le Monde.” - Art News

Sundance Picks Former Universal Chair As New CEO

“Linde will begin his tenure on Feb. 17, after Sundance’s final film festival in Park City and before it heads to its new home in Boulder, Colorado.” - The Hollywood Reporter

After The Big One In An Art City In Japan, Trying To Preserve An Ancient Craft

The massive earthquake on New Year’s Day 2024 washed away the homes and studios of “hundreds of Wajima artisans in this Holy Land of Lacquerware at the tip of the Noto Peninsula, about two hours north of Kanazawa.” - The New York Times

Time Didn’t Used To Be Linear

Seriously: We decided it was in the 18th century. “In 1765, the scientist-philosopher Joseph Priestley, best known for co-discovering oxygen, invented what was arguably the world’s first modern timeline.” - Aeon

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