AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only
DANCE
IDEAS
- The Writer’s Guild Has A Staff Union, And That Union Has Authorized A Strike

“The labor group’s staff union (WGSU), which includes attorneys, research analysts and other positions, claims that ‘management has dismissed [its] staff’s needs and engaged in bad faith surface bargaining with no intent to reach a fair contract.’” – Los Angeles Times (MSN)
- Layoffs Thrust Boston Museum Of Fine Art Firmly Into A Credibility Crisis

“Against the backdrop of the Trump administration’s targeting of DEI policy at universities and cultural institutions and expanding ICE raids, the layoffs are causing a community-wide crisis of confidence that good faith is guiding leadership at one of Boston’s leading art institutions.” – Boston Art Review
- Canadian Legend Catherine O’Hara, Of Schitt’s Creek, Best In Show, And Home Alone, Dead At 71

“Though Big Hollywood roles didn’t follow Home Alone‘s success, O’Hara would find her groove with the crew of improv pros brought together by [Christopher] Guest for a series of mockumentaries that began with 1996’s Waiting for Guffman.” – CBC
- This Week’s AJ Chronicles: Context is Survival

Existential crises have a way of forcing clarity. Whether the arts and the larger creative world are in crisis I leave for you to decide. But with weekly news of financial and organizational meltdowns, political pressures and an almost primordial angst about threats of AI, some things may be becoming clearer about what matters and/or what works. - Good Morning
This week’s AJ highlights: Wynton Marsalis has announced his retirement from Jazz at Lincoln Center after a 40-year tenure that essentially defined the organization. The Kennedy Center’s administrative situation has descended into farce: its newly hired VP of artistic programming, Kevin Couch, resigned after just two weeks while Sarah Kramer, a senior director who rose through the ranks over a decade, was abruptly fired. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s decision to lay off 6% of its workforce to address an “unsustainable deficit” and the Washington Post’s “existential meltdown” are departures at a more industrial scale.
There’s a growing “Resistance of the Analog” hardening into a defense against synthetic culture. Yale professors are increasingly banning screens and requiring students to read on paper to force a direct, unmediated encounter with texts that AI cannot replicate. This is justified by the week’s technology news: while advancing AI can beat the “average” human on creativity tests, it still fails to reach the level of “radical” human innovation and judgment. This defense is also taking place in the courts, with major music publishers seeking $3 billion in damages from Anthropic for the alleged mass-theft of song lyrics.
Finally, we are seeing the rise of a Keep it Human strategy. To keep audiences from disappearing into their screens, the Palo Alto Players has begun offering free childcare to lower the barriers to attending the theater. Mixing cultures, Detroit Opera is welcoming Parliament-Funkadelic for a full symphonic collaboration. And Bob Ross to the rescue: public media is being financially buoyed by the “happy little trees” of Bob Ross, whose paintings are now fetching nearly $800,000 at auction.
From Cambodian immigrants in Maine finding solace in traditional dance as ICE descends, to a Minneapolis bookshop going viral for resisting federal agents, it’s been an eventful week.
Lastly — here’s a link to this week’s AJChronicles essay, a new feature in which I riff off the week’s stories
All of this week’s stories below
ISSUES
- Layoffs Thrust Boston Museum Of Fine Art Firmly Into A Credibility Crisis

“Against the backdrop of the Trump administration’s targeting of DEI policy at universities and cultural institutions and expanding ICE raids, the layoffs are causing a community-wide crisis of confidence that good faith is guiding leadership at one of Boston’s leading art institutions.” – Boston Art Review
- San Francisco Has A Public Space Ripe For Becoming The Next High Line

“The second-level promenade of the Embarcadero Center is one of the more scenic, beautifully landscaped, well-maintained spaces in San Francisco. … Yet despite its charms, the Embarcadero Center is also one of San Francisco’s most-underutilized spaces. … (It) can and should be our High Line — only better.” – San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)
- To Wall-Text Or Not-To-Wall-Text

“It feels more important than ever to invite multiple voices into the museum space. There isn’t one perfect solution for all visitors, but we strive to offer a variety of access points—whether it’s traditional labels, guided gallery conversations or prompts to spark reflection and dialogue.” – The Art Newspaper
- James Rondeau Is Ready To Beef Up The Art Institute Of Chicago (And Let’s Just Forget About That Airplane Incident, Okay?)

As some other American museums struggle, the Institute is doing very well under Rondeau’s leadership (notwithstanding the medication-and-alcohol-fueled disrobing during a commercial flight last April). He’s now pushing for an expansion, saying the museum needs more display space. – WBEZ (Chicago)
- Museum Of Fine Arts, Boston Resorts To Layoffs

“The MFA faces ‘an unsustainable deficit that we have committed to resolve,’ (an) email to employees stated. … The institution said in a statement to WBUR it plans to reduce 6.3% of its workforce. More than 30 museum positions will be affected.” – WBUR (Boston)
MEDIA
- Why More Professors Are Making Their Students Read On Paper
“The English classroom is increasingly a kind of special place where it’s still possible to converse without the screen. AI only seems to make it more imperative to make sure that students are having a direct experience with the text.” – Yale Daily News
- Why Small Liberal Arts Colleges Are The Education Of Choice
At a small liberal-arts college, where a cohort may number fewer than 500 people, admissions officers can also take a stronger hand in assembling a group of students who match the institution’s culture and its vibe while also having very different backgrounds. – The Atlantic
- When Students Are “Customers” Education Suffers
Over the past 15 to 20 years, declining numbers of college-age Americans and a seemingly endless rise in tuition have brought about a shift in power. Students are now treated like customers who rarely have to hear information that upsets them — because schools need their money to survive. – The New York Times
- Kennedy Center VP Of Artistic Planning, Resigns After Being On The Job Two Weeks
Kevin Couch, formerly the director of programming for ATG Entertainment, a British theater company, is the latest in a string of resignations and show cancellations since President Trump purged the center’s board and made himself chairman last year. – The New York Times
- Kennedy Center Fires Senior Director Of Artistic Operations
Sarah Kramer “(had) spent the past decade rising through the ranks of the once-venerated cultural institution. She started as an assistant manager for special programming in 2016. Over the years, she was promoted to assistant manager, then manager for programming, then director, and finally senior director of artistic operations.” – The Daily Beast
MUSIC
- The Writer’s Guild Has A Staff Union, And That Union Has Authorized A Strike
“The labor group’s staff union (WGSU), which includes attorneys, research analysts and other positions, claims that ‘management has dismissed [its] staff’s needs and engaged in bad faith surface bargaining with no intent to reach a fair contract.’” – Los Angeles Times (MSN)
- How “The New Yorker Story” Became A Genre
“I hadn’t investigated this term in depth, but I understood it to mean ‘a short story that is meandering, plotless, and slight — full of middle-class people discussing their relentlessly banal problems.’ … But they were also good!” Those characteristics were deliberately shaped by the different preferences of two key editors. – Woman of Letters
- How Did The Iconic “Infinite Jest” Become A Punchline?
The occasion is a moment to ask how a novel that mourns addiction and venerates humility and patience became a glib cultural punch line, routinely subjected to the word “performative” in its most damning sense. – The New Yorker
- Minneapolis Bookshop Becomes Famous After ICE Murders
Greg Ketter became a social media phenomenon over the weekend, when MS Now aired a video of him pacing half a block away from where Alex J. Pretti had been murdered by agents an hour earlier, cursing the 50-100 armed ICE agents keeping the crowd back. – Publishers Weekly
- With Adelaide Writers’ Week Cancelled, A Grassroots Festival Is Popping Up Instead
“Constellations – also jokingly dubbed ‘Not Writers’ Week’ – is being put on by “a loose coalition” of writers and publishers and the support of not-for-profit Writers SA, with dozens of free events to be staged from 28 February to 5 March.” – The Guardian
PEOPLE
- The Writer’s Guild Has A Staff Union, And That Union Has Authorized A Strike
“The labor group’s staff union (WGSU), which includes attorneys, research analysts and other positions, claims that ‘management has dismissed [its] staff’s needs and engaged in bad faith surface bargaining with no intent to reach a fair contract.’” – Los Angeles Times (MSN)
- Layoffs Thrust Boston Museum Of Fine Art Firmly Into A Credibility Crisis
“Against the backdrop of the Trump administration’s targeting of DEI policy at universities and cultural institutions and expanding ICE raids, the layoffs are causing a community-wide crisis of confidence that good faith is guiding leadership at one of Boston’s leading art institutions.” – Boston Art Review
- Canadian Legend Catherine O’Hara, Of Schitt’s Creek, Best In Show, And Home Alone, Dead At 71
“Though Big Hollywood roles didn’t follow Home Alone‘s success, O’Hara would find her groove with the crew of improv pros brought together by [Christopher] Guest for a series of mockumentaries that began with 1996’s Waiting for Guffman.” – CBC
- This Week’s AJ Chronicles: Context is Survival
Existential crises have a way of forcing clarity. Whether the arts and the larger creative world are in crisis I leave for you to decide. But with weekly news of financial and organizational meltdowns, political pressures and an almost primordial angst about threats of AI, some things may be becoming clearer about what matters and/or what works. - Good Morning
This week’s AJ highlights: Wynton Marsalis has announced his retirement from Jazz at Lincoln Center after a 40-year tenure that essentially defined the organization. The Kennedy Center’s administrative situation has descended into farce: its newly hired VP of artistic programming, Kevin Couch, resigned after just two weeks while Sarah Kramer, a senior director who rose through the ranks over a decade, was abruptly fired. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s decision to lay off 6% of its workforce to address an “unsustainable deficit” and the Washington Post’s “existential meltdown” are departures at a more industrial scale.
There’s a growing “Resistance of the Analog” hardening into a defense against synthetic culture. Yale professors are increasingly banning screens and requiring students to read on paper to force a direct, unmediated encounter with texts that AI cannot replicate. This is justified by the week’s technology news: while advancing AI can beat the “average” human on creativity tests, it still fails to reach the level of “radical” human innovation and judgment. This defense is also taking place in the courts, with major music publishers seeking $3 billion in damages from Anthropic for the alleged mass-theft of song lyrics.
Finally, we are seeing the rise of a Keep it Human strategy. To keep audiences from disappearing into their screens, the Palo Alto Players has begun offering free childcare to lower the barriers to attending the theater. Mixing cultures, Detroit Opera is welcoming Parliament-Funkadelic for a full symphonic collaboration. And Bob Ross to the rescue: public media is being financially buoyed by the “happy little trees” of Bob Ross, whose paintings are now fetching nearly $800,000 at auction.
From Cambodian immigrants in Maine finding solace in traditional dance as ICE descends, to a Minneapolis bookshop going viral for resisting federal agents, it’s been an eventful week.
Lastly — here’s a link to this week’s AJChronicles essay, a new feature in which I riff off the week’s stories
All of this week’s stories below
PEOPLE
- The Writer’s Guild Has A Staff Union, And That Union Has Authorized A Strike
“The labor group’s staff union (WGSU), which includes attorneys, research analysts and other positions, claims that ‘management has dismissed [its] staff’s needs and engaged in bad faith surface bargaining with no intent to reach a fair contract.’” – Los Angeles Times (MSN)
- Layoffs Thrust Boston Museum Of Fine Art Firmly Into A Credibility Crisis
“Against the backdrop of the Trump administration’s targeting of DEI policy at universities and cultural institutions and expanding ICE raids, the layoffs are causing a community-wide crisis of confidence that good faith is guiding leadership at one of Boston’s leading art institutions.” – Boston Art Review
- Canadian Legend Catherine O’Hara, Of Schitt’s Creek, Best In Show, And Home Alone, Dead At 71
“Though Big Hollywood roles didn’t follow Home Alone‘s success, O’Hara would find her groove with the crew of improv pros brought together by [Christopher] Guest for a series of mockumentaries that began with 1996’s Waiting for Guffman.” – CBC
- This Week’s AJ Chronicles: Context is Survival
Existential crises have a way of forcing clarity. Whether the arts and the larger creative world are in crisis I leave for you to decide. But with weekly news of financial and organizational meltdowns, political pressures and an almost primordial angst about threats of AI, some things may be becoming clearer about what matters and/or what works. - Good Morning
This week’s AJ highlights: Wynton Marsalis has announced his retirement from Jazz at Lincoln Center after a 40-year tenure that essentially defined the organization. The Kennedy Center’s administrative situation has descended into farce: its newly hired VP of artistic programming, Kevin Couch, resigned after just two weeks while Sarah Kramer, a senior director who rose through the ranks over a decade, was abruptly fired. The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s decision to lay off 6% of its workforce to address an “unsustainable deficit” and the Washington Post’s “existential meltdown” are departures at a more industrial scale.
There’s a growing “Resistance of the Analog” hardening into a defense against synthetic culture. Yale professors are increasingly banning screens and requiring students to read on paper to force a direct, unmediated encounter with texts that AI cannot replicate. This is justified by the week’s technology news: while advancing AI can beat the “average” human on creativity tests, it still fails to reach the level of “radical” human innovation and judgment. This defense is also taking place in the courts, with major music publishers seeking $3 billion in damages from Anthropic for the alleged mass-theft of song lyrics.
Finally, we are seeing the rise of a Keep it Human strategy. To keep audiences from disappearing into their screens, the Palo Alto Players has begun offering free childcare to lower the barriers to attending the theater. Mixing cultures, Detroit Opera is welcoming Parliament-Funkadelic for a full symphonic collaboration. And Bob Ross to the rescue: public media is being financially buoyed by the “happy little trees” of Bob Ross, whose paintings are now fetching nearly $800,000 at auction.
From Cambodian immigrants in Maine finding solace in traditional dance as ICE descends, to a Minneapolis bookshop going viral for resisting federal agents, it’s been an eventful week.
Lastly — here’s a link to this week’s AJChronicles essay, a new feature in which I riff off the week’s stories
All of this week’s stories below
THEATRE
VISUAL
- Lessons From The Aztecs: Rule By Coercion Never Works
The Aztec empire did not fall because it lacked capability. It collapsed because it accumulated too many adversaries who resented its dominance. This is a historical episode the US president, Donald Trump, should take notice of as his rift with traditional US allies deepens. – The Conversation
- Perversely — AI Is Proving The Uniqueness Of Our Creativity
A great human artist, we’d like to believe, amplifies and defends the exceptionalist spirit of our species but, in an echo of the anxieties that haunted early photography, a demonised version of AI threatens to steal away our souls. – Aeon
- Why Our Cities Need More Places Of Serenity
Perceptual psychologists have long studied what happens when people stare at uniform fields of colour without visual edges or contrasts. Sometimes, experiencing this kind of sensory deprivation can result in something known as the Ganzfeld effect: a response to a uniform field that causes the brain’s pattern recognition to work harder. – Psyche
- Why Liberal Arts Education May Be More Important In The Age Of AI
A machine will never possess the level of interpersonal skills needed to manage a team, to engage in civil discourse with individuals from different cultures and backgrounds, or to resolve messy human conflicts that resist logic. Judgment will never be AI’s strength. – US News
- We Used To Think That Our Brains Were Our Brains. Now We Know Different
Neuroplasticity therefore reframes the brain as neither rigid nor infinitely malleable, but as a living system shaped by experience, effort and time. – The Conversation



















