“Since speculation emerged last fall that Disney might be interested in getting its paws on Netflix, Wall Street has been split on whether such a tie-up would be a bold, smart move or an unnecessarily risky gambit.”
Should Royal Albert Hall Seat-holders Be Allowed To Scalp Their Tickets At Huge Profits?
The advice to owners of permanent seats, seen by the Guardian, is that they can “significantly improve income from unwanted tickets” by using secondary sites, which have become a haven for touts exploiting the most in-demand events. The author of the document, a seat owner who asked to remain anonymous, said: “Seat owners are entitled to optimise their returns.
Is The Way To Disrupt The Art World Really To Disrupt The Art World?
“Even as one very visible portion of the art world becomes ever more soaked in money, artists like A.L. Steiner are picking up the ideas of first- and second-generation institutional critique and adapting them to the needs of the present. With what feels like increasing frequency, they are investigating, tweaking, and even striking out against the operation of museums, galleries, and the very market itself as an integral part of their larger practices.”
Getting LACMA’s Controversial New Building Built Will Take Every Skill Michael Govan Has
Fortunately, he has a lot of them, as he’s demonstrated in the ten years he’s been in Los Angeles: LACMA’s attendance has doubled and its cachet has soared. Adam Nagourney gives an overview of Govan’s prospects for the biggest project he’s ever undertaken.
Israel Can Do Archaeological Work In West Bank In Secret, Court Rules
Israel already does West Bank excavations, and lends artifacts found in them, without approval from Palestinian authorities. The new ruling permits digs done anonymously and lending artefacts without informing the Palestinians at all.