Today's Stories

A New Partnership Helps Stand-Up Comics In Chicago To Finally Get Steady Health Insurance

The Health Alliance for Chicago Comedians is building a pilot program to help 10 comics pay insurance premiums through the Affordable Care Act’s next open enrollment period. Stand-up comedians, especially early in their careers, often take gigs and side jobs which offer no insurance. - WBEZ (Chicago)

It’s Just A Few Cents: More People Are Listening To Music Pitched Down To A=432Hz

“Music recorded in 432 hertz (cycles per second) is taking off on social media platforms and music streaming services. … Scientists say there’s no robust evidence that music tuned to 432 hertz has any special benefits or healing properties. Some musicians and listeners say it helps them connect with nature, relax or concentrate.” - AP

Okay, Here’s How The Publishing Business Really Works

Nobody would patronize a best-seller–only shopping mall kiosk called We Bet We Have That Book You Want, even though best-sellers are most of what anyone buys. People want to walk into stores with lots of books which they have no interest in even looking at. - Republic of Letters

Two Washington Stars Rise Up To Take On The Damaged Washington Post

The two closely named rivals plan to take on a much more established competitor: The Washington Post, which is owned by the Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and recently cut its staff by a third. - The New York Times

Busting Conventional Wisdom: The Number Of Bookstores Isn’t Shrinking, It’s Growing Robustly

Membership in the ABA grew by more than 500 over the past year, to a total of 3,417 (at 3,783 locations), nearly triple what it was a decade ago and the highest level since the late 1990s. - AP News

Britain’s Biggest Female Ballet Star Comes Back From Paralytic Meningitis

“It was six weeks of being unable to move, ... to participate in life at all, before she could get out of bed. And then Lauren Cuthbertson, the biggest British dance star since Darcey Bussell, … had to persuade her useless limbs, now stripped of their strength, to listen to her brain again.” - The Times (UK)

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Your eyes on the world through a culture lens

A Priority For Australia’s Next Cultural Policy: Protecting Freedom Of Expression

Treating freedom of expression and social cohesion as trade-offs is a category error. Freedom of expression is an internal attribute of cultural activity, an inherent good. Without it there is no culture worthy of the name, only sanctioned content. - ArtsHub

Adelaide Wisdom Benjamin, Philanthropist Who Saved New Orleans’ Symphony Orchestra, Dies At 93

Adelaide Wisdom Benjamin, a queen of Carnival who became a lawyer and philanthropist whose gifts of money, determination and leadership helped save New Orleans’ symphony orchestra, died Saturday in her sleep at her New Orleans home. - NOLA.com

Rosamund Pike Lectures Audience Member From The Stage For Texting During Performance

“Maybe it was very important, and maybe you’re a doctor, and you’re saving someone’s life, and I hope you are, but we do see these, we do feel them. I’ve got you, I feel like I’ve got to hold you all, so when I feel that and see it, it’s hard.” - The Guardian

A Top Celebrity-Profile Writer Tries To Profile Someone Who Doesn’t Actually Exist: AI Actress Tilly Norwood

Taffy Brodesser-Akner: “Did I mention that in addition to being just a computer, she’s also kind of a bitch?” - The New York Times Magazine

University Student Audience Member Steps In To Finish Performance When Keyboardist Falls Ill

The orchestra’s keyboardist had suddenly fallen ill. Was there by any chance a pianist in the house? And one with exceptional sight-reading skills? - The Guardian

Study: Humans Need “Semantic Knowledge” To Innovate

The research demonstrates that our “semantic knowledge”, the internal cognitive map of how concepts connect and apply to one another, is the absolute precondition for meaningful invention. - Neuroscience

We Need Artists To Collaborate With AI

Machine learning represents a seismic shift, both in society and in the arts, and we need storytellers, artists, teachers and thinkers in this space to help determine the direction of that shift and help us navigate this unfamiliar territory. - The Guardian

Adelaide Benjamin, Philanthropist Who Saved The Orchestra In New Orleans, Has Died At 93

As board chair of what was then the New Orleans Symphony, she worked tirelessly to save an organization which was $3 million in debt and had stopped paying musicians. She subsequently helped its transition into the Louisiana Philharmonic, the US’s first musician-run professional orchestra. - The Times-Picayune (New Orleans)

At New York Public Radio, New CEO Ousts Many Senior Execs

“Christy Tanner, a veteran of CBS News, took the helm at NYPR in early February. Since then, she has let many of its top figures go with little explanation, … surprising the organization’s staff and unsettling some of its remaining leaders. … None of the departures have been announced publicly.” - Semafor

Arts Council England, The National Cultural Funder, Names A New Chairman

As of August 1, Dawn Airey, a longtime television executive who is currently chair of the National Youth Theatre and the educational platform Digital Theatre+, will succeed Nicholas Serota, who spent almost a decade leading the Council after a famously successful tenure as director of the Tate galleries and museums. - The Independent (UK)

Survivors Recount Living Through Russia’s Bombing Of Kyiv’s Cultural Sites

“We began evacuating the artefacts while the roof was still ablaze and the firefighting operation was still under way,” said the director of one museum. “We could hear the roof collapsing. We were constantly wading through water.” - The Guardian

Why Restorers Of This Bull Mosaic In Milan Left Out The Testicles

In fact, the missing glands on the bovine in this 19th-century floor mosaic had been gouged out by excessive tourist traffic some time ago, and the restorers (and the landlord) declined to replace them. Here’s why. - Smithsonian Magazine

Maurizio Cattelan’s Banana Is Stolen From A Museum Wall, And That Museum Wants To Prosecute

The theft of the fruit from the jokester artist’s piece Comedian happened this past Saturday at the Pompidou Center’s outpost in Metz, France; the duct tape was left behind. No suspect has yet been identified, and museum staff promptly replaced the banana. - ARTnews

Another Famous Actor Scolds Cell Phone-User From The Stage

Unlike Patti LuPone, Cynthia Erivo, Andrew Scott and others, Rosamund Pike waited until the performance (her Olivier-winning turn in Inter Alia) was over: after the curtain call, she came onstage alone and made a brief speech about why seeing an audience member using a phone during a show is so distracting. - The Guardian

By Topic

Study: Humans Need “Semantic Knowledge” To Innovate

The research demonstrates that our “semantic knowledge”, the internal cognitive map of how concepts connect and apply to one another, is the absolute precondition for meaningful invention. - Neuroscience

We Need Artists To Collaborate With AI

Machine learning represents a seismic shift, both in society and in the arts, and we need storytellers, artists, teachers and thinkers in this space to help determine the direction of that shift and help us navigate this unfamiliar territory. - The Guardian

The World Is Becoming Automated Around Us. Are Humans Losing Autonomy?

Computers talk to computers, producing information to train computers to sound more like humans or to better engage them. Humans type into the box, scroll, and wait. - The Atlantic

Oakland Creatives Are Having A (Possibly Long Overdue) Heck Of A Year

“The Town has seen its homegrown talent reach new levels of success on the global stage, from figure skater Alysa Liu earning Olympic gold in Milan to filmmaker Ryan Coogler winning four Oscars for his blockbuster Sinners and R&B powerhouse Kehlani receiving two Grammy Awards.” - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

Saying No To New Gadgets Might Make Us Happier

Just in case you’ve missed multiple strains of philosophy, ethics, and “happiness studies” over the years, not to mention Buddhist thought, well: "When we encounter something new, we get a dopamine hit. … But sometimes novelty seduces us without offering anything meaningful.” - Fast Company

The Biggest AI Writing Tell

The prose - whether in a text or fiction submission - is “perfectly clean, without a stray comma; uniform in length, with evenly paced paragraphs and a distinctive tone that is simultaneously breezy and grandiose.” - The Atlantic

A Priority For Australia’s Next Cultural Policy: Protecting Freedom Of Expression

Treating freedom of expression and social cohesion as trade-offs is a category error. Freedom of expression is an internal attribute of cultural activity, an inherent good. Without it there is no culture worthy of the name, only sanctioned content. - ArtsHub

Arts Council England, The National Cultural Funder, Names A New Chairman

As of August 1, Dawn Airey, a longtime television executive who is currently chair of the National Youth Theatre and the educational platform Digital Theatre+, will succeed Nicholas Serota, who spent almost a decade leading the Council after a famously successful tenure as director of the Tate galleries and museums. - The Independent (UK)

Survivors Recount Living Through Russia’s Bombing Of Kyiv’s Cultural Sites

“We began evacuating the artefacts while the roof was still ablaze and the firefighting operation was still under way,” said the director of one museum. “We could hear the roof collapsing. We were constantly wading through water.” - The Guardian

The Trump Administration Is Dismantling Support For Social Science Research

If the National Science Foundation does stop funding social scientists, experts told me, our 5,000-foot-view of American life will get foggier. The NSF, through the SBE division, is the primary funder of the “big three” social-science surveys, which have enabled the work of several generations of academics, economists, and policy wonks. - The Atlantic

How Alice Walton Culturally Transformed A Corner Of Arkansas

It’s impossible to miss the scope of transformation that’s happened in Bentonville, population 63,000. - Fast Company

Not So Fast: Interior Secretary Won’t Commit To Removing Trump Name From The Kennedy Center

Secretary Burgum’s hedging came as Trump attacked the decision and the judge behind it on social media Friday and Saturday. - Time

It’s Just A Few Cents: More People Are Listening To Music Pitched Down To A=432Hz

“Music recorded in 432 hertz (cycles per second) is taking off on social media platforms and music streaming services. … Scientists say there’s no robust evidence that music tuned to 432 hertz has any special benefits or healing properties. Some musicians and listeners say it helps them connect with nature, relax or concentrate.” -...

University Student Audience Member Steps In To Finish Performance When Keyboardist Falls Ill

The orchestra’s keyboardist had suddenly fallen ill. Was there by any chance a pianist in the house? And one with exceptional sight-reading skills? - The Guardian

AI-Created Music Is Now Overwhelming Playlists

AI music has gone viral before and charted before, but song generators are now good and fast enough that they can flood the zone, creating tracks that slip past the safeguards of major streaming platforms and distributors. Spam-filtering systems can do only so much to stem the flow. - The Atlantic

A Billionaire’s Firm Just Tried To Buy Universal Music, But They Turned Him Down

OK: “The music giant said Pershing Square's $64.3bn (£48bn) takeover offer was ‘not in the best interests’ of the company, shareholders, artists, fans and other stakeholders.” - BBC

The Kansas City Symphony Wants To Add A New, Separate, Non-Classical Performance Space

Why? "The possibility of generating year-round sustaining revenue for an orchestra.” - KC Studio

As Nearly All Musicians Pull Out, The President Wants To Cancel His ‘Freedom 250’ Celebration

He’s also said he wants to headline it himself. But “a senior administration official described the rollout of the concerts as ‘a mess’ and suggested that someone would most likely be fired over how the invitations to the event had been handled.” - The New York Times

Why Restorers Of This Bull Mosaic In Milan Left Out The Testicles

In fact, the missing glands on the bovine in this 19th-century floor mosaic had been gouged out by excessive tourist traffic some time ago, and the restorers (and the landlord) declined to replace them. Here’s why. - Smithsonian Magazine

Maurizio Cattelan’s Banana Is Stolen From A Museum Wall, And That Museum Wants To Prosecute

The theft of the fruit from the jokester artist’s piece Comedian happened this past Saturday at the Pompidou Center’s outpost in Metz, France; the duct tape was left behind. No suspect has yet been identified, and museum staff promptly replaced the banana. - ARTnews

Just What Does “American” Architecture Look Like In 2026?

A new book makes the case that when it comes to evolving forms and styles in American architecture, a new generation of firms is drawing inspiration from not just place and local architectural heritage, but the place a building like the Girls Inc. Youth Farm will play in the community.  - Fast Company

A Trio Of Prominent Art Critics Has Just Retired. Here’s What We’ve Lost

The trio were not only the most influential, but also the most gainfully employed—two factors that have everything to do with each other. - ARTnews

Over The Weekend, The British Museum Was Evacuated After Staff Found A ‘Suspicious’ Package

“The museum said it had also received what it described as ‘malicious communications’ before the evacuation.” - ARTnews

Museum Gift Stores Have Always Been A Little Special, But They’ve Leveled Up

“Rather than an exit point, this new wave of merchandising is quickly turning museum gift shops into a desirable entry point. Curated edits ... are now beginning to treat them as a stand-alone shopping destination, marking a shift from cultural institution to cultural retailer.” - The Guardian (UK)

Okay, Here’s How The Publishing Business Really Works

Nobody would patronize a best-seller–only shopping mall kiosk called We Bet We Have That Book You Want, even though best-sellers are most of what anyone buys. People want to walk into stores with lots of books which they have no interest in even looking at. - Republic of Letters

Busting Conventional Wisdom: The Number Of Bookstores Isn’t Shrinking, It’s Growing Robustly

Membership in the ABA grew by more than 500 over the past year, to a total of 3,417 (at 3,783 locations), nearly triple what it was a decade ago and the highest level since the late 1990s. - AP News

What We Need To Do To Get America Reading Again

Teaching people to read and building a world where they can do so are different problems. Throwing our phones in the lake can’t bring about that world, but designing the conditions for reading will. - The New York Times

Facebook Whistleblower Forced To Stay Silent On Hay Festival By Meta

Sarah Wynn-Williams, whose bestselling memoir, Careless People, details her years working at Facebook, was due to appear in conversation with the investigative journalist Carole Cadwalladr and academic Tim Wu. Instead, Wynn-Williams sat on stage for the hour-long discussion without speaking or responding. She was unable even to nod or shake her head. - The Gaurdian

If We’re Really In A Reading ‘Crisis,’ Here Are Some Solutions

It’s not about the phones. Instead, as a society, we have to remove structural barriers - and build new libraries. "A democracy needs its people to read, and it is society’s job to make that possible.” - The New York Times

Sometimes, You Have To Turn Your Back On Your TBR Pile And Simply Reread

“You take yourself with you, right? The image becomes mirrored: Who you were and what you took from a book the first time is reflected in who you are and what you take from the book now.” - Reactor Mag

Two Washington Stars Rise Up To Take On The Damaged Washington Post

The two closely named rivals plan to take on a much more established competitor: The Washington Post, which is owned by the Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and recently cut its staff by a third. - The New York Times

At New York Public Radio, New CEO Ousts Many Senior Execs

“Christy Tanner, a veteran of CBS News, took the helm at NYPR in early February. Since then, she has let many of its top figures go with little explanation, … surprising the organization’s staff and unsettling some of its remaining leaders. … None of the departures have been announced publicly.” - Semafor

Newer Streamers, Even Ones From Well-Established Channels, Hope For An Emmy Boost

Peacock and Paramount+ have high hopes. “Emmy success can still bring tangible benefits. Even the commitment to campaigning can move the needle, especially for two streamers looking to recruit more talent to their ranks.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo)

Ranking All Twenty-Two Films That Were In Contention For The Palme D’Or This Year

“The experience of watching so many movies over a twelve-day period coaxes your brain into a heightened state of pattern recognition, and you might begin to wonder if certain films have been programmed based on narrative and thematic similarities.” - The New Yorker

Turns Out If You Let YouTube Turn Into Feature Films, Kids Will Go To The Cinema

Well, not kids, but youth, YouTube youth. “The success of two YouTube-native filmmakers at the box office indicates the growing power of the platform — and online culture as a whole — in attracting audiences to cinemas.” - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

The Beatles Are Still Quite, Quite, Quite Big In The UK

“It’ll be like Barbenheimer,” says one biographer of Paul and John of the new wave of movies coming out this year, including four by Sam Mendes, with one devoted to each band member. - The Guardian (UK)

Britain’s Biggest Female Ballet Star Comes Back From Paralytic Meningitis

“It was six weeks of being unable to move, ... to participate in life at all, before she could get out of bed. And then Lauren Cuthbertson, the biggest British dance star since Darcey Bussell, … had to persuade her useless limbs, now stripped of their strength, to listen to her brain again.” - The Times...

A Dancer Helping To Redefine What A Ballet Body Is

Ballet has a reputation for upholding rigid body standards. In recent years, though, the art form has been rethinking its relationship to diversity in areas like race and body type. - The New York Times

Dance Is Getting Its Moment – In Advertising

Why so much dance on TV lately? “Where the goal is to quickly get and then hold the viewer’s attention, energetic movement is a straightforward strategy. Dance’s graphic elements immediately catch the eye, and they can make that gaze linger.” - Dance Magazine

ESPN Meets The Savannah Bananas’ Choreographer

“Maceo Harrison deftly designs routines that emphasize charisma over technical precision and spotlight the teams' natural showmen while camouflaging the players with two left feet. ... Sometimes he has mere hours to choreograph and just as little time to teach his routines to the players.” - ESPN

How Does A Choreographer Make Dance About Her Hometown Getting Ravaged By A Wildfire?

Alice Topp, a former principal dancer and choreographer-in-residence at the Australian Ballet, already had the idea of basing her first commission for Houston Ballet on the Finnish concept of sisu (stubbornly determined resilience). Then, this past January, came unhappy inspiration: bushfires struck her rural hometown 75 miles northwest of Melbourne. - Houston Chronicle (Yahoo!)

Facing Serious Cash Crunch, Sydney Dance Company Builds Up Its Teaching Offerings

Despite reaching new artistic heights, Australia’s leading contemporary dance troupe has posted four annual deficits in a row, totaling $5.2 million (US$3.7 million) and attributable mostly to the higher running costs of its revamped headquarters. Luckily, paying students are flocking to SDC’s new classes. - Australian Financial Review

A New Partnership Helps Stand-Up Comics In Chicago To Finally Get Steady Health Insurance

The Health Alliance for Chicago Comedians is building a pilot program to help 10 comics pay insurance premiums through the Affordable Care Act’s next open enrollment period. Stand-up comedians, especially early in their careers, often take gigs and side jobs which offer no insurance. - WBEZ (Chicago)

Rosamund Pike Lectures Audience Member From The Stage For Texting During Performance

“Maybe it was very important, and maybe you’re a doctor, and you’re saving someone’s life, and I hope you are, but we do see these, we do feel them. I’ve got you, I feel like I’ve got to hold you all, so when I feel that and see it, it’s hard.” - The Guardian

Another Famous Actor Scolds Cell Phone-User From The Stage

Unlike Patti LuPone, Cynthia Erivo, Andrew Scott and others, Rosamund Pike waited until the performance (her Olivier-winning turn in Inter Alia) was over: after the curtain call, she came onstage alone and made a brief speech about why seeing an audience member using a phone during a show is so distracting. - The Guardian

Hudson Valley Shakespeare Finally Has A Real Theater Building

Designed by award-winning architects Studio Gang, the 451-seat Scripps Theater Center — in Garrison, NY, 60 miles north of New York City — is a curved mass-timber structure with open sides, set on 98 landscaped acres overlooking the Hudson River. Year-round facilities will let the festival expand beyond a summer schedule. - Time Out...

Broadway’s “The Book of Mormon” Reopens After Three-Week Closure Due to Fire

“The Book of Mormon, one of Broadway’s biggest hits, resumed performances on Wednesday night after a three-week shutdown prompted by a damaging three-alarm electrical fire at the theater where the musical comedy has been running for 15 years.” - The New York Times

Royal Shakespeare Company Gets An Extra £2 Million For Touring England

Arts Council England, the national funding body, gave the RSC £2 million for two large-scale Shakespeare tours in 2028 and 2030 to regional theatres in Blackpool, Norwich, Newcastle, Bradford-Leeds, Nottingham, Canterbury, Truro (Cornwall), and York. - British Theatre Guide

Adelaide Wisdom Benjamin, Philanthropist Who Saved New Orleans’ Symphony Orchestra, Dies At 93

Adelaide Wisdom Benjamin, a queen of Carnival who became a lawyer and philanthropist whose gifts of money, determination and leadership helped save New Orleans’ symphony orchestra, died Saturday in her sleep at her New Orleans home. - NOLA.com

A Top Celebrity-Profile Writer Tries To Profile Someone Who Doesn’t Actually Exist: AI Actress Tilly Norwood

Taffy Brodesser-Akner: “Did I mention that in addition to being just a computer, she’s also kind of a bitch?” - The New York Times Magazine

Adelaide Benjamin, Philanthropist Who Saved The Orchestra In New Orleans, Has Died At 93

As board chair of what was then the New Orleans Symphony, she worked tirelessly to save an organization which was $3 million in debt and had stopped paying musicians. She subsequently helped its transition into the Louisiana Philharmonic, the US’s first musician-run professional orchestra. - The Times-Picayune (New Orleans)

Tony Leung Was Ready To Quit Acting Out Of Boredom, And Then Wong Kar-Wai Came Along

“From the first day I met him, when I was going through a period of frustration, I knew we would make special films, that he would elevate me to another level. He pressed my acting button again.” - El País English

Claude Bessy, Who Ruled The Paris Ballet School, Has Died At 93

Bessy was "a graceful French ballet star whose firm hand at the helm of the Paris Opera Ballet School for three decades made it one of the world’s top dance institutions, though her rigorous methods eventually drew stinging criticism.” - The New York Times

A Photographer Who Portrayed Women As Bold And Self-Possessed, Even In 1960s Hong Kong

Sheung was "deeply invested in crafting an image of female autonomy and audacity at a time when women’s lives were constrained by traditional expectations.” - The New York Times

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A Top Celebrity-Profile Writer Tries To Profile Someone Who Doesn’t Actually Exist: AI Actress Tilly Norwood

Taffy Brodesser-Akner: “Did I mention that in addition to being just a computer, she’s also kind of a bitch?” - The New York Times Magazine

If We’re Really In A Reading ‘Crisis,’ Here Are Some Solutions

It’s not about the phones. Instead, as a society, we have to remove structural barriers - and build new libraries. "A democracy needs its people to read, and it is society’s job to make that possible.” - The New York Times

Even If Trump’s Name Comes Off The Kennedy Center, He Might Still Destroy It

“When the history of Trump’s second administration is written, the whole sorry Kennedy Center chapter will be key to understanding the chaos, cruelty and grotesque egotism of the president, as well as the bravery and determination of those who resisted and persevered.” - Washington Post (Yahoo)

Tony Leung Was Ready To Quit Acting Out Of Boredom, And Then Wong Kar-Wai Came Along

“From the first day I met him, when I was going through a period of frustration, I knew we would make special films, that he would elevate me to another level. He pressed my acting button again.” - El País English

The Kansas City Symphony Wants To Add A New, Separate, Non-Classical Performance Space

Why? "The possibility of generating year-round sustaining revenue for an orchestra.” - KC Studio

As Nearly All Musicians Pull Out, The President Wants To Cancel His ‘Freedom 250’ Celebration

He’s also said he wants to headline it himself. But “a senior administration official described the rollout of the concerts as ‘a mess’ and suggested that someone would most likely be fired over how the invitations to the event had been handled.” - The New York Times

The Five Top Takeaways From The Kennedy Center Ruling

And yes, we sure do mean the Kennedy Center. - The New York Times

The Creator Of This Animated Cupcake Is Furious At Buzzfeed’s GenAI Plan

Remember when Jonah Peretti of Buzzfeed seemed like a good guy? That was a long time ago, and we were all so much more innocent, including the creator of Good Advice Cupcake: "I trusted them, though naively, when they said they had no interest in continuing Cuppy without me." - Wired

Federal Judge Orders Trump To Take His Name Off The Kennedy Center

A federal judge Friday ordered that President Donald Trump’s name be removed from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and that officials halt its plan to close the venue for two years. - Washington Post

ARTnews Lists “The 100 Best Artworks About America”

“What, exactly, defines America? It’s a question that’s been asked for more than two centuries, and it’s unlikely to be conclusively answered anytime soon. But, with the 250th anniversary of the nation’s founding fast approaching, we took the occasion to hash out a response to that query, using art as a guide.” - ARTnews

How We Selected Our “100 Best Artworks About America”

“We started working on this list over a year ago and spent more than a month alone wrestling with how best to define its purview. We decided this would not be a list of the best American artworks, which is both too challenging an exercise and too wide a net to cast.” - ARTnews

L.A. Phil’s Next Music Director: Daniel Harding

The 50-year-old British conductor and part-time Air France pilot is currently chief conductor at Rome’s Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and has held similar positions at the Orchestre de Paris, Swedish Radio Symphony, and Mahler Chamber Orchestra. He begins his initial six-year term in 2027. - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

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