AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only
DANCE
IDEAS
- Bill Ivey, Who Calmed Conservative Fury At The NEA, Has Died At 81

He was a guitar-playing folklorist who had run the Country Music Foundation in Nashville for 26 years, when President Clinton nominated him to chair the NEA in 1998. Congressional Republicans had repeatedly cut the agency’s budget following controversies over grantees; Ivey won the lawmakers over, and the NEA grew again. – The New York Times
- How The Ushers At New York’s Top Performing Arts Venues Shoo The Audience Back Into The Hall From Intermission

First, they repeatedly play a little melody on a glockenspiel or dinner chime or marimba as they stroll through the lobbies. Then, says one longtime usher at the Metropolitan Opera, “We have to push them, kind of like moving cattle.” – The New York Times
- “Parasocial” Is Cambridge Dictionary’s 2025 Word Of The Year

Taylor and Travis, podcast hosts, even chatbots — this has been a year full of intense but one-sided relationships between some ordinary individuals and celebrities (or pieces of code) they’ve never actually met. – Cambridge University Press
- Louvre Closes A Gallery Because Its Floor Might Cave In

The museum has shuttered some office space and the Campana Gallery (which showcases ancient Greek ceramics) due to “particular fragility of certain beams holding up the floors.” – AP
- A.I. and the Arts — I Use It. No one cares. Should You?

“How democratizing,” say A.I. experts. “How thrifty [cheap],” says my piggy bank. “How could you?” say actual artists.

Needless to say, this is an A.I.-generated image. I have no idea what the deal is with the keyboard. I use A.I. for stupid stuff like the image above, although I’m well aware that creating art in any form is not stupid.
Neither a graphic designer, photographer, nor other artist received even a penny for that fake photograph. It should be noted, of course, that before A.I., I might have either drawn something myself or chosen a photo from the Pexels, Pixabay, Unsplash, or even purchased an image from IStock, when necessary. I’ve done that many times. The images are not always perfect for the moment, but they’re free (except IStock, which is still relatively inexpensive), with the caveat that the users are encouraged to provide credit where credit is due. Not required, mind you, just encouraged.
I’m a terrible visual artist. My brain and hands seemingly have no relationship with each other, except for piano playing and typing. I’ve never been good at making art or crafting, and in the past, have only managed to come up with ridiculous pictures like this one.

“Phreek” © 2025 by Alan Harrison, like anyone else would claim it. This is why this particular quote from Charles Pulliam Moore in The Verge tickled me:
Even with all of the obvious concerns about copyright infringement and job displacement that generative A.I. presents, a steady chorus of voices has been insisting that this technology is going to be the future of filmmaking. A lot of gen A.I. supporters see it as a tool that’s “democratizing” art by lowering traditional barriers to entry like “learning how to draw,” “learning how to play an instrument,” or “learning how to write a story.”
Never in my wildest dreams would I have ever envisioned an entire movie that only used A.I., as Critterz did in 2023. Similarly, I might have guessed that someone would try, but I never expected Tilly Norwood to seek representation for a career as an actress, given that she doesn’t exist.
This is Tilly Norwood. She does not exist. Her entire being was generated by A.I. The long and the short of it is this: if A.I. is supposed to make our lives easier, give us time to be more effective, and give ourselves more skills than we ever thought we could have, what separates that from the promises given to us by the rollout of the internet? By the almost passé use of computers in day-to-day life, especially those in our pockets and purses?
What’s the difference between that goal and that of nonstop cross-country travel? The motorcar? Hell, the bicycle?
None, really. But to get the definitive answer, let’s ask Microsoft Copilot those very questions. After all, it should know:
The promises of A.I.—efficiency, skill amplification, and liberated time—echo the utopian aspirations of every major technological leap before it, from the bicycle to the smartphone. But what separates A.I. from its predecessors is not just scale or speed, but intimacy and agency. The internet connected us; A.I. collaborates with us. Computers extended our reach; A.I. reshapes our cognition. The motorcar and the bicycle moved bodies across space, but A.I. moves minds across possibility. Unlike tools that required manual input or navigation, A.I. anticipates, adapts, and even creates alongside us, blurring the line between instrument and partner. It’s not just a faster way to get somewhere—it’s a co-pilot that helps decide where to go. That said, the rhetoric is familiar: every innovation has promised freedom, and each has delivered both liberation and new forms of dependency. The bicycle gave mobility, but also demanded roads and rules. The internet democratized information, but also fragmented attention. A.I. may offer unprecedented augmentation, but it also raises questions about authorship, autonomy, and trust. The difference lies not in the promise, but in the proximity—A.I. doesn’t just sit in our pockets, it learns from us, mimics us, and sometimes speaks for us. That intimacy is thrilling, but it demands a new kind of vigilance, one that recognizes that the most powerful tools are no longer extensions of our bodies, but reflections of our minds.
— Microsoft CopilotA.I. will, in fact, continue to put people out of work. Some will use it cheaply and somewhat harmlessly (like me). Others will use it to reduce costs by reducing the need for human artists, draftspeople, administrative staff, performers, and pretty much everyone else it takes to produce live performing arts. Museum staff will also be made redundant, up to and including the artists who put the art on the walls. The walls will be made redundant as well.
You can see where this is going.

Why have a museum when you can invent your own? (An A.I.-generated museum. Phreek © used by self-permission) So there it is. I’ve replaced real working artists and photographers with A.I. Or rather, I’ve replaced some free/cheap art available online with A.I. I did it as though no one got hurt. My use will never be more than trivial. And yet, I still have this notion that people are getting hurt.
If you could save your company hundreds of thousands of dollars in expense by replacing a whole boatload of humans with artificial intelligence, would you? Would you care? I know the artists would care, but would the board members?
This is another reason to remember that community-centered nonprofit arts organizations (which should, of course, describe all nonprofit arts organizations, no matter the size) should stop thinking about cutting costs and selling tickets and start thinking in terms of community action in line with what the public believes is charitable activities. That gives the company a reason based in humanity, not the ether.
For artists, art is enough. But not for arts organizations. When you are there to help people have better lives with your charity, it is nothing but humbug if you’re getting rid of your own employees (including artists of all kinds) and replacing them with an algorithm. Or, as Microsoft Copilot put it:
“Delegating too much thinking to A.I. risks eroding human judgment, creativity, and accountability—while amplifying bias, surveillance, and manipulation.” Hard to argue that. Especially when there’s no one with whom to argue.

If you want your nonprofit arts organization to thrive, just pick up this inexpensive trilogy. Book 3 comes out in the UK today; in the US in one week!

Buy me a cup of coffee? For Thanksgiving? (It’s cheaper than a pumpkin pie…)
ISSUES
- Louvre Closes A Gallery Because Its Floor Might Cave In

The museum has shuttered some office space and the Campana Gallery (which showcases ancient Greek ceramics) due to “particular fragility of certain beams holding up the floors.” – AP
- Phillips Collection To Controversially Sell Masterpieces To Buy New Art

“Like many of my museum colleagues,” said Eliza Rathbone, chief curator emerita at the Phillips, “I’m deeply saddened and appalled that the Phillips Collection would so irreparably mar the vision of the founder by selling such carefully chosen works.” – Washington Post
- The Studio Museum In Harlem Reopens, After Seven Years, In Its Own New Home

The museum director: “In many ways I do feel the timing of our opening now is ideal. … We’re opening in a moment that’s very much like the moment when the museum was founded.” – Gothamist
- The Return Of A Night At The Natural History Museum

“Children ran, some of them in stocking feet, through the displays, with abandon. (Running had been discouraged in the safety lecture, but this did not dissuade a young boy who shouted ‘I have to look for the animals that will hunt us in the night.’)” – The New York Times
- Man Who Stole A Banksy Print To Pay Off Drug Debt Sentenced To Prison

He “was seen on CCTV waiting outside the gallery for about 10 minutes on 8 September last year, before repeatedly smashing the glass door with a heavy blunt object.” – The Guardian (UK)
MEDIA
- How The Ushers At New York’s Top Performing Arts Venues Shoo The Audience Back Into The Hall From Intermission
First, they repeatedly play a little melody on a glockenspiel or dinner chime or marimba as they stroll through the lobbies. Then, says one longtime usher at the Metropolitan Opera, “We have to push them, kind of like moving cattle.” – The New York Times
- A $500M American Dream Museum?
Visitors to Washington have a new, free attraction: the Milken Center for Advancing the American Dream. After a $500 million renovation of two former banks across from the Treasury Department, the center opened in September to explore the past, present and future of this enduring but elusive aspiration. – Washington Post
- London’s Royal Ballet And Opera Makes Bank, Or Maybe Sustainable Income, On Its New Ticket Model
Dynamic pricing is common, and as one performing arts critic pointed out, it “can shift in both directions, with prices increasing when tickets start selling out at popular shows but also decreasing where demand is slower.” – BBC
- How Large Data Sets And AI Analysis Are Absolutely Murdering Our Private Lives
“Personal data isn’t just a record of who we are. It’s our actions, transactions, locations, conversations, preferences, inferences, and vulnerabilities. It’s our identities, our intimate selves, our hopes and dreams, and our fears and flaws.” – Fast Company
- Disney May Be Turning To AI To Help Create ‘User-Generated Content’ On Its Main Streamer
Bob Iger knows it’s, uh, interesting to be suing some AI companies while courting others. “’It’s obviously imperative for us to protect our IP with this new technology,’ Iger said.” – NPR
MUSIC
- “Parasocial” Is Cambridge Dictionary’s 2025 Word Of The Year
Taylor and Travis, podcast hosts, even chatbots — this has been a year full of intense but one-sided relationships between some ordinary individuals and celebrities (or pieces of code) they’ve never actually met. – Cambridge University Press
- What Explains Boomers’ Addiction To Ellipses?
There’s an extensive online discourse on the Baby Boomer generation’s penchant for ellipses. ‘OK . . .’ ‘Thanks . . .’ ‘See you next week . . .’ Sometimes they’re a playful way to build suspense, sometimes a form of passive aggression, and sometimes they relay an implication. – Granta
- The Latest Threat To Authors And Books
What is “Take Back the Classroom” – and how did it get so prominent, so quickly? – BookRiot
- Writers On The Gulf Between Books And Screen
Viet Thanh Nguyen: “When poets write, the only thing that it costs a poet is their life. … But when you make a TV show or a film, it costs tens of millions of dollars, and then everybody cares.” – Los Angeles Review of Books
- African Publishers And “The Wakanda Problem”
“When we listen to audiobooks produced in the West, they have a Wakandan accent,” said Eghosa Imasuen, executive director of Narrative Landscape Press in Lagos, Nigeria. “Nobody talks like that on the continent.” – Publishers Weekly
PEOPLE
- Bill Ivey, Who Calmed Conservative Fury At The NEA, Has Died At 81
He was a guitar-playing folklorist who had run the Country Music Foundation in Nashville for 26 years, when President Clinton nominated him to chair the NEA in 1998. Congressional Republicans had repeatedly cut the agency’s budget following controversies over grantees; Ivey won the lawmakers over, and the NEA grew again. – The New York Times
- How The Ushers At New York’s Top Performing Arts Venues Shoo The Audience Back Into The Hall From Intermission
First, they repeatedly play a little melody on a glockenspiel or dinner chime or marimba as they stroll through the lobbies. Then, says one longtime usher at the Metropolitan Opera, “We have to push them, kind of like moving cattle.” – The New York Times
- “Parasocial” Is Cambridge Dictionary’s 2025 Word Of The Year
Taylor and Travis, podcast hosts, even chatbots — this has been a year full of intense but one-sided relationships between some ordinary individuals and celebrities (or pieces of code) they’ve never actually met. – Cambridge University Press
- Louvre Closes A Gallery Because Its Floor Might Cave In
The museum has shuttered some office space and the Campana Gallery (which showcases ancient Greek ceramics) due to “particular fragility of certain beams holding up the floors.” – AP
- A.I. and the Arts — I Use It. No one cares. Should You?
“How democratizing,” say A.I. experts. “How thrifty [cheap],” says my piggy bank. “How could you?” say actual artists.

Needless to say, this is an A.I.-generated image. I have no idea what the deal is with the keyboard. I use A.I. for stupid stuff like the image above, although I’m well aware that creating art in any form is not stupid.
Neither a graphic designer, photographer, nor other artist received even a penny for that fake photograph. It should be noted, of course, that before A.I., I might have either drawn something myself or chosen a photo from the Pexels, Pixabay, Unsplash, or even purchased an image from IStock, when necessary. I’ve done that many times. The images are not always perfect for the moment, but they’re free (except IStock, which is still relatively inexpensive), with the caveat that the users are encouraged to provide credit where credit is due. Not required, mind you, just encouraged.
I’m a terrible visual artist. My brain and hands seemingly have no relationship with each other, except for piano playing and typing. I’ve never been good at making art or crafting, and in the past, have only managed to come up with ridiculous pictures like this one.

“Phreek” © 2025 by Alan Harrison, like anyone else would claim it. This is why this particular quote from Charles Pulliam Moore in The Verge tickled me:
Even with all of the obvious concerns about copyright infringement and job displacement that generative A.I. presents, a steady chorus of voices has been insisting that this technology is going to be the future of filmmaking. A lot of gen A.I. supporters see it as a tool that’s “democratizing” art by lowering traditional barriers to entry like “learning how to draw,” “learning how to play an instrument,” or “learning how to write a story.”
Never in my wildest dreams would I have ever envisioned an entire movie that only used A.I., as Critterz did in 2023. Similarly, I might have guessed that someone would try, but I never expected Tilly Norwood to seek representation for a career as an actress, given that she doesn’t exist.
This is Tilly Norwood. She does not exist. Her entire being was generated by A.I. The long and the short of it is this: if A.I. is supposed to make our lives easier, give us time to be more effective, and give ourselves more skills than we ever thought we could have, what separates that from the promises given to us by the rollout of the internet? By the almost passé use of computers in day-to-day life, especially those in our pockets and purses?
What’s the difference between that goal and that of nonstop cross-country travel? The motorcar? Hell, the bicycle?
None, really. But to get the definitive answer, let’s ask Microsoft Copilot those very questions. After all, it should know:
The promises of A.I.—efficiency, skill amplification, and liberated time—echo the utopian aspirations of every major technological leap before it, from the bicycle to the smartphone. But what separates A.I. from its predecessors is not just scale or speed, but intimacy and agency. The internet connected us; A.I. collaborates with us. Computers extended our reach; A.I. reshapes our cognition. The motorcar and the bicycle moved bodies across space, but A.I. moves minds across possibility. Unlike tools that required manual input or navigation, A.I. anticipates, adapts, and even creates alongside us, blurring the line between instrument and partner. It’s not just a faster way to get somewhere—it’s a co-pilot that helps decide where to go. That said, the rhetoric is familiar: every innovation has promised freedom, and each has delivered both liberation and new forms of dependency. The bicycle gave mobility, but also demanded roads and rules. The internet democratized information, but also fragmented attention. A.I. may offer unprecedented augmentation, but it also raises questions about authorship, autonomy, and trust. The difference lies not in the promise, but in the proximity—A.I. doesn’t just sit in our pockets, it learns from us, mimics us, and sometimes speaks for us. That intimacy is thrilling, but it demands a new kind of vigilance, one that recognizes that the most powerful tools are no longer extensions of our bodies, but reflections of our minds.
— Microsoft CopilotA.I. will, in fact, continue to put people out of work. Some will use it cheaply and somewhat harmlessly (like me). Others will use it to reduce costs by reducing the need for human artists, draftspeople, administrative staff, performers, and pretty much everyone else it takes to produce live performing arts. Museum staff will also be made redundant, up to and including the artists who put the art on the walls. The walls will be made redundant as well.
You can see where this is going.

Why have a museum when you can invent your own? (An A.I.-generated museum. Phreek © used by self-permission) So there it is. I’ve replaced real working artists and photographers with A.I. Or rather, I’ve replaced some free/cheap art available online with A.I. I did it as though no one got hurt. My use will never be more than trivial. And yet, I still have this notion that people are getting hurt.
If you could save your company hundreds of thousands of dollars in expense by replacing a whole boatload of humans with artificial intelligence, would you? Would you care? I know the artists would care, but would the board members?
This is another reason to remember that community-centered nonprofit arts organizations (which should, of course, describe all nonprofit arts organizations, no matter the size) should stop thinking about cutting costs and selling tickets and start thinking in terms of community action in line with what the public believes is charitable activities. That gives the company a reason based in humanity, not the ether.
For artists, art is enough. But not for arts organizations. When you are there to help people have better lives with your charity, it is nothing but humbug if you’re getting rid of your own employees (including artists of all kinds) and replacing them with an algorithm. Or, as Microsoft Copilot put it:
“Delegating too much thinking to A.I. risks eroding human judgment, creativity, and accountability—while amplifying bias, surveillance, and manipulation.” Hard to argue that. Especially when there’s no one with whom to argue.

If you want your nonprofit arts organization to thrive, just pick up this inexpensive trilogy. Book 3 comes out in the UK today; in the US in one week!

Buy me a cup of coffee? For Thanksgiving? (It’s cheaper than a pumpkin pie…)
PEOPLE
- Bill Ivey, Who Calmed Conservative Fury At The NEA, Has Died At 81
He was a guitar-playing folklorist who had run the Country Music Foundation in Nashville for 26 years, when President Clinton nominated him to chair the NEA in 1998. Congressional Republicans had repeatedly cut the agency’s budget following controversies over grantees; Ivey won the lawmakers over, and the NEA grew again. – The New York Times
- How The Ushers At New York’s Top Performing Arts Venues Shoo The Audience Back Into The Hall From Intermission
First, they repeatedly play a little melody on a glockenspiel or dinner chime or marimba as they stroll through the lobbies. Then, says one longtime usher at the Metropolitan Opera, “We have to push them, kind of like moving cattle.” – The New York Times
- “Parasocial” Is Cambridge Dictionary’s 2025 Word Of The Year
Taylor and Travis, podcast hosts, even chatbots — this has been a year full of intense but one-sided relationships between some ordinary individuals and celebrities (or pieces of code) they’ve never actually met. – Cambridge University Press
- Louvre Closes A Gallery Because Its Floor Might Cave In
The museum has shuttered some office space and the Campana Gallery (which showcases ancient Greek ceramics) due to “particular fragility of certain beams holding up the floors.” – AP
- A.I. and the Arts — I Use It. No one cares. Should You?
“How democratizing,” say A.I. experts. “How thrifty [cheap],” says my piggy bank. “How could you?” say actual artists.

Needless to say, this is an A.I.-generated image. I have no idea what the deal is with the keyboard. I use A.I. for stupid stuff like the image above, although I’m well aware that creating art in any form is not stupid.
Neither a graphic designer, photographer, nor other artist received even a penny for that fake photograph. It should be noted, of course, that before A.I., I might have either drawn something myself or chosen a photo from the Pexels, Pixabay, Unsplash, or even purchased an image from IStock, when necessary. I’ve done that many times. The images are not always perfect for the moment, but they’re free (except IStock, which is still relatively inexpensive), with the caveat that the users are encouraged to provide credit where credit is due. Not required, mind you, just encouraged.
I’m a terrible visual artist. My brain and hands seemingly have no relationship with each other, except for piano playing and typing. I’ve never been good at making art or crafting, and in the past, have only managed to come up with ridiculous pictures like this one.

“Phreek” © 2025 by Alan Harrison, like anyone else would claim it. This is why this particular quote from Charles Pulliam Moore in The Verge tickled me:
Even with all of the obvious concerns about copyright infringement and job displacement that generative A.I. presents, a steady chorus of voices has been insisting that this technology is going to be the future of filmmaking. A lot of gen A.I. supporters see it as a tool that’s “democratizing” art by lowering traditional barriers to entry like “learning how to draw,” “learning how to play an instrument,” or “learning how to write a story.”
Never in my wildest dreams would I have ever envisioned an entire movie that only used A.I., as Critterz did in 2023. Similarly, I might have guessed that someone would try, but I never expected Tilly Norwood to seek representation for a career as an actress, given that she doesn’t exist.
This is Tilly Norwood. She does not exist. Her entire being was generated by A.I. The long and the short of it is this: if A.I. is supposed to make our lives easier, give us time to be more effective, and give ourselves more skills than we ever thought we could have, what separates that from the promises given to us by the rollout of the internet? By the almost passé use of computers in day-to-day life, especially those in our pockets and purses?
What’s the difference between that goal and that of nonstop cross-country travel? The motorcar? Hell, the bicycle?
None, really. But to get the definitive answer, let’s ask Microsoft Copilot those very questions. After all, it should know:
The promises of A.I.—efficiency, skill amplification, and liberated time—echo the utopian aspirations of every major technological leap before it, from the bicycle to the smartphone. But what separates A.I. from its predecessors is not just scale or speed, but intimacy and agency. The internet connected us; A.I. collaborates with us. Computers extended our reach; A.I. reshapes our cognition. The motorcar and the bicycle moved bodies across space, but A.I. moves minds across possibility. Unlike tools that required manual input or navigation, A.I. anticipates, adapts, and even creates alongside us, blurring the line between instrument and partner. It’s not just a faster way to get somewhere—it’s a co-pilot that helps decide where to go. That said, the rhetoric is familiar: every innovation has promised freedom, and each has delivered both liberation and new forms of dependency. The bicycle gave mobility, but also demanded roads and rules. The internet democratized information, but also fragmented attention. A.I. may offer unprecedented augmentation, but it also raises questions about authorship, autonomy, and trust. The difference lies not in the promise, but in the proximity—A.I. doesn’t just sit in our pockets, it learns from us, mimics us, and sometimes speaks for us. That intimacy is thrilling, but it demands a new kind of vigilance, one that recognizes that the most powerful tools are no longer extensions of our bodies, but reflections of our minds.
— Microsoft CopilotA.I. will, in fact, continue to put people out of work. Some will use it cheaply and somewhat harmlessly (like me). Others will use it to reduce costs by reducing the need for human artists, draftspeople, administrative staff, performers, and pretty much everyone else it takes to produce live performing arts. Museum staff will also be made redundant, up to and including the artists who put the art on the walls. The walls will be made redundant as well.
You can see where this is going.

Why have a museum when you can invent your own? (An A.I.-generated museum. Phreek © used by self-permission) So there it is. I’ve replaced real working artists and photographers with A.I. Or rather, I’ve replaced some free/cheap art available online with A.I. I did it as though no one got hurt. My use will never be more than trivial. And yet, I still have this notion that people are getting hurt.
If you could save your company hundreds of thousands of dollars in expense by replacing a whole boatload of humans with artificial intelligence, would you? Would you care? I know the artists would care, but would the board members?
This is another reason to remember that community-centered nonprofit arts organizations (which should, of course, describe all nonprofit arts organizations, no matter the size) should stop thinking about cutting costs and selling tickets and start thinking in terms of community action in line with what the public believes is charitable activities. That gives the company a reason based in humanity, not the ether.
For artists, art is enough. But not for arts organizations. When you are there to help people have better lives with your charity, it is nothing but humbug if you’re getting rid of your own employees (including artists of all kinds) and replacing them with an algorithm. Or, as Microsoft Copilot put it:
“Delegating too much thinking to A.I. risks eroding human judgment, creativity, and accountability—while amplifying bias, surveillance, and manipulation.” Hard to argue that. Especially when there’s no one with whom to argue.

If you want your nonprofit arts organization to thrive, just pick up this inexpensive trilogy. Book 3 comes out in the UK today; in the US in one week!

Buy me a cup of coffee? For Thanksgiving? (It’s cheaper than a pumpkin pie…)
THEATRE
VISUAL
- Have Screens Actually – We Mean It, This Time – Destroyed Education, Worldwide?
“It seems ridiculous to have to say this, but digital distraction is terrible for academic performance.” – The New York Times
- Netflix House Is Temu Disneyland, In A Mall
“Let’s say you are a Netflix fan, as anyone making a pilgrimage to Netflix House is sure to be. What, then, are you a fan of? … Netflix has been on a relentless campaign to become a fandom hub, a never-ending Comic-Con celebrating itself.” – Slate
- British Church Architecture Is, Frankly, Cold On The Inside
How to solve this problem? Heat pumps, of course. – Wired
- Creator Of The AI Actress Tilly Speaks Out
“As a creative, I have really enjoyed creating her,” she says. “It’s been just like a writer creating characters. You fall in love with your characters when you’re writing them. It’s a wonderful process. It wasn’t like I just made her in a second, and that was it. You know, it took a long time.” – Variety
- Has 21st Century Culture Lost Its Creativity?
Music without instruments and lyrics without meaning. Endless reboots, sequels and superheroes in the cinema. After a burst of magnificent TV dramas in the noughties, every glitzy new show is hailed as a must-see when most are mediocre. The algorithm has vanquished imagination. – The Economist


















