AJ Four Ways:
Text Only (by date) | headlines only
- Ordway Center for the Performing Arts seeks Vice President, Earned Revenue & Marketing
Organization
Ordway Center for the Performing Arts is comprised of several key components, including the Ordway Music Theater, the Ordway Concert Hall, Ordway Education and Community Engagement programs, and major community access initiatives such as the Flint Hills Family Festival. Located in the heart of downtown Saint Paul, Minnesota, the Ordway is a leading nonprofit performing arts center dedicated to serving as a cornerstone of exceptional artistic, educational, and cultural experiences. Since opening its doors in 1985, the Ordway has been a vibrant home for artistic excellence and community connection, presenting Broadway musicals, concerts, dance, vocal artists, and other live performances while advancing a steadfast commitment to making the arts accessible to all. In the most recent season, more than 217,000 audience members attended Ordway performances and events, representing an 11% increase over the prior season. The Ordway also generates an estimated $40 million in annual economic impact, supporting downtown Saint Paul’s restaurants, hotels, and local businesses.
The Ordway’s performance venues include the Ordway Music Theater and the Ordway Concert Hall, each designed to support a wide range of artistic experiences. The Ordway Music Theater is a 1,900-seat performance venue that brings audiences together for Broadway theater, music, dance, comedy, concerts, and other major productions. Complementing the Music Theater, the Ordway Concert Hall is a state-of-the-art, 1,100-seat performance and recording venue created through the collaboration of the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts, Minnesota Opera, The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and The Schubert Club. Officially opened in 2015, the Concert Hall was designed for acoustic and electro-acoustic music in an intimate setting, with no seat more than 90 feet from the stage.
Ordway Education celebrates the artist in every child through performing arts experiences. Since 1990, more than one million students and educators from across the region have attended an Ordway school performance. Through school performances, artist residencies, classroom resources, Festival School Week, and free video lessons, Ordway Education supplements arts learning for students and educators while helping make live performance accessible and affordable. School matinees feature world-class artists, and the Ordway supports school access through $4 tickets and bus reimbursement for all schools. During the most recent reporting period, more than 45,000 students, educators, and families were served through matinees, workshops, and community programs.
The Ordway’s Community programs connect live performances with thousands of community members each year through high-quality arts learning and engagement experiences. These programs include celebrations, backstage tours, community discussions, the Saint Paul Public Schools Honors Concert, the Flint Hills Family Festival, The Sally Awards, and other opportunities that inspire future generations and strengthen a diverse arts community. The Flint Hills Family Festival, first held in 2001, has welcomed more than one million students and families to downtown Saint Paul and remains one of the longest-standing and most accessible events of its kind in the country. The Ordway also expands access through complimentary and subsidized ticket programs, including 10,920 complimentary Access Tickets distributed through Tickets for Kids, Project Success, Boys and Girls Club, HopeKids, VetTix, and Ronald McDonald House.
Ordway has a 35-member board of directors led by Board Chair Dan Stoltz. The Vice President, Earned Revenue & Marketing, has three direct reports in its current team structure¬—the Director of Group Sales and Marketing, Marketing Manager, and Graphic Designer—and reports to the President and CEO. For the Fiscal year ending June 30, 2025, Ordway reported a total revenue of $16.9 million, with 71% from earned revenue sources, 29% from contributed income.
Sources: edited from ordway.org; propublica.org
Community
Saint Paul, Minnesota, is a welcoming capital city that combines historic neighborhoods, civic energy, cultural activity, and abundant outdoor amenities. With a 2024 estimated population of 307,465, Saint Paul is a diverse and well-educated community, where 18.2 percent of residents are foreign born, and 27.7 percent of residents age five and older speak a language other than English at home. The city’s 2040 Comprehensive Plan describes Saint Paul as a place of opportunity for people of all incomes, ages, races, ethnicities, and abilities, guided by a long-range vision for growth, strong neighborhoods, and inclusive development. Residents and visitors benefit from more than 180 parks, 26 recreation centers, 120 miles of trails, three public pools, a city beach, and Como Park Zoo and Conservatory, creating a vibrant urban community with recreation, gathering places, and cultural experiences throughout the city.
Saint Paul continues to invest in a resilient, vibrant, and inclusive future. The city’s planning work includes a comprehensive blueprint for development through 2040, as well as district planning, bicycle and pedestrian planning, the Mississippi River Corridor Plan, the Downtown Development Strategy, and the Great River Passage Plan. Downtown Saint Paul and the surrounding riverfront form a hub of culture, home to museums, theaters, concerts, sporting events, and historic charm. The city’s Cultural District includes major venues and gathering places such as the Fitzgerald Theater, Park Square Theatre, Union Depot, and Landmark Center. Through the Cultural STAR program, the City of Saint Paul has invested in arts and cultural programming and organizations since 1994, awarding more than $42.6 million to more than 1,450 projects. In this civic and cultural setting, Saint Paul offers the character of an established capital city with the energy of a community actively shaping its future, an ideal home for people who value the arts, public spaces, diverse neighborhoods, and meaningful community connection.
Sources: edited from stpaul.gov; census.gov
Position Summary
The Vice President, Earned Revenue & Marketing (VP) of The Ordway Center for the Performing Arts (Ordway) will be a dynamic revenue strategist and audience builder, leading the growth of an $11 million portfolio anchored by Broadway ticket sales, the organization’s primary economic engine. Working closely with the President & CEO and senior leadership team, the VP will shape bold, data-informed strategies that elevate the Ordway’s visibility, deepen audience loyalty, and expand participation across the community. Through innovative marketing, sales, and engagement initiatives, this leader will drive attendance, strengthen earned revenue, and help ensure the Ordway’s continued vitality as one of the region’s premier cultural destinations.
Roles and Responsibilities
Revenue Strategy and Audience Growth
• Provide strategic leadership to the Marketing, Sales, and Audience Development departments to maximize ticket sales, audience growth, and earned revenue.
• Lead strategically and deliver more than $11 million in annual revenue, driven primarily through Broadway programming, subscriptions, group sales, and single-ticket sales.
• Develop and implement innovative marketing and sales strategies that expand audiences, increase attendance, and grow revenue across Broadway and other Ordway-presented programming, promoting the Ordway’s programs, services, venues, and performances while reaching underutilized, diverse, and emerging demographic markets.
• Strategize and guide annual season campaigns, ensuring that financial and human resources are directed toward the most effective channels, including digital marketing, telemarketing, group sales, incentive programs, and community-based initiatives.
• Provide strategic direction for new market development, campaign planning, research efforts, and audience development initiatives that advance the Ordway’s strategic and financial goals.
• Partner with senior leadership to align Marketing, Advancement, and Business Resources strategies, optimizing the patron journey from first purchase through repeat attendance, deeper engagement, and long-term loyalty.
• Embrace other revenue strategy and audience growth responsibilities as needed.Strategic Leadership and Organizational Collaboration
• Serve as a key member of the Senior Leadership Team, providing strategic direction and leadership in support of the Ordway’s mission, vision, and long-term goals.
• Collaborate with the President & CEO, Senior Leadership Team, and Board of Directors to achieve organizational priorities and strengthen cross-departmental alignment.
• Translate the Ordway’s strategic plan into departmental goals, action plans, and measurable outcomes.
• Monitor departmental goals, performance indicators, and results, reporting regularly on key strategic areas and outcomes.
• Serve as an Ordway representative on outside boards and committees, including as the marketing representative for the Arts Partnership.
• Embrace other strategic leadership and organizational collaboration responsibilities as needed.
Brand Leadership, Visibility, and Market Positioning
• Raise the profile, visibility, and image of the Ordway locally, regionally, and nationally, positioning the organization as a leading cultural institution.
• Collaborate with the Senior Leadership Team, Board of Directors, communications agency, and Arts Partners to establish strategic branding, marketing plans, and goals that elevate the Ordway’s profile, expand audiences, and increase revenue.
• Identify and secure new and expanded opportunities to raise awareness of the Ordway, its competitive advantages, programs, venues, and partners.
• Parter with departmental leadership to translate strategic goals and operational plans into creative communications, media, advertising, and promotional initiatives.
• Guide positioning strategies across all channels, balancing creativity, consistency, budget optimization, and measurable impact.
• Cultivate, retain, and optimize media partnerships that build awareness, enhance visibility, and elevate the Ordway’s profile and reputation.
• Steer the ongoing development and enhancement of the Ordway’s website to ensure it aligns with institutional strategies, audience needs, and revenue goals.
• Oversee internal and external communication, editorial, and design standards for marketing materials and publications.
• Embrace other brand leadership, visibility, and market positioning responsibilities as needed.
Marketing Analytics, Research, and Performance Measurement
• Develop, oversee, and maximize efficient and resourceful marketing functions that generate timely, accurate, and meaningful quantitative and qualitative data.
• Inform strategic business decisions, audience development, and revenue growth using market research, data analysis, and performance metrics.
• Inventory and evaluate current market research tools, data analysis platforms, subscriptions, and methods, recommending enhancements, additions, or eliminations as appropriate.
• Identify and guide targeted data analyses that support understanding of current and future demographic, political, economic, and social trends impacting the Ordway’s audiences and revenue streams.
• Provide thoughtful analysis and interpretation of market research data, drawing clear implications and recommendations that support critical business decisions.
• Guide and influence marketing and ticket services strategies for seasons, subscriptions, single-ticket sales, and group sales to maximize revenue and audience engagement.
• Embrace other marketing analytics, research, and performance measurement responsibilities as needed.
Advancement, Patron Engagement, and Institutional Alignment
• Collaborate with Advancement to align departmental goals, strategies, and communications in ways that increase giving, deepen patron involvement, and strengthen the Ordway’s image.
• Partner with Advancement to create integrated communications campaigns that deliver consistent messages to donors, patrons, and audiences.
• Support strategies that deepen donor understanding of and connection to the Ordway, optimizing giving, participation, and long-term engagement.
• Team with Advancement to broaden and integrate the donor base with subscription, single-ticket, and group sales buyers, increasing the likelihood that ticket buyers become donors and donors become ticket buyers.
• Strategize with Ordway departments and Arts Partners to identify public-, patron-, and audience-worthy ideas, programs, and initiatives.
• Embrace other advancement, patron engagement, and institutional alignment responsibilities as needed.Traits and Characteristics
The Vice President, Earned Revenue & Marketing, will be a resourceful and results oriented leader who maximizes time, talent, energy, and resources to advance organizational priorities with efficiency and impact. They approach their work with purpose, ensuring that support, collaboration, and decision making align with meaningful outcomes rather than action for action’s sake. Their objective, practical mindset provides a clear understanding of organizational systems, operations, and surroundings, enabling thoughtful decisions grounded in functionality and sound judgment. Receptive to new ideas, methods, and opportunities, they remain open to innovation and approaches that extend beyond established practices. Focused and intentional, they demonstrate confidence, assertiveness, and a strong commitment to success in complex or high stakes situations. They act with urgency, responding quickly, moving priorities forward, and maintaining focus and momentum. As a highly interactive communicator, they engage frequently and effectively with staff, board members, community partners, donors, and other stakeholders. Versatility and adaptability allow them to navigate changing circumstances with ease while balancing strategic priorities, operational demands, and evolving organizational needs.
Other key competencies include:
• Time and Priority Management – The facility to prioritize and complete tasks to deliver desired outcomes within allotted time frames.
• Goal Orientation and Leadership – The capacity to organize, inspire, and influence people to believe in a vision, creating a sense of common purpose centered on the well-being and growth of Ordway’s staff, patrons, and community, and setting and attaining goals established to advance Ordway’s profile.
• Planning and Organizing – The aptitude to utilize logical, systematic, and orderly procedures to meet objectives, prioritizing tasks for optimum productivity and anticipating probable effects, outcomes, and risks.
• Conceptual Thinking – The ability to analyze hypothetical situations, patterns, and abstract concepts to identify connections, craft creative conclusions, and apply clear, connected reasoning to complex ideas.
• Self-Starting and Personal Accountability – The vitality to demonstrate initiative, inspire others to action, and model integrity, fairness, and objectivity in personal and professional interactions.Qualification
A proven track record leading revenue functions of $11 million or more in Broadway, theatrical, or performing arts environments is desirable, along with deep expertise in ticketing strategy, audience behavior, demand generation, subscriptions, group sales, and dynamic pricing models. Strong experience in data-driven decision-making, forecasting, performance analytics, market research, trend analysis, and budget development and monitoring is essential. Demonstrated ability to build and lead high-performing, sales-focused teams while operating at the intersection of strategy, execution, and organizational leadership is needed. Knowledge of promotional and marketing techniques, media relations, public presentation, audience development, and partnership development is expected, as is the ability to communicate effectively with diverse employees, creative teams, technical crews, theater management, patrons, sponsors, media, and community organizations. Knowledge of the performing arts and experience attracting and sustaining diverse audiences for music, dance, theater, and Broadway programming are highly valued. Proficiency with Microsoft Office Suite and related communications tools is required, along with excellent writing, editing, confidentiality, multitasking, professional representation, scheduling flexibility, and the ability to travel as needed.
Compensation and Benefits
The Ordway offers a comprehensive compensation and benefits package, including an annual salary range of $140,000 to $160,000. Benefits include medical, dental, and vision insurance; retirement plan options through TIAA-CREF; financial counseling and college savings support; FSA, HSA, and transportation spending programs; company-provided life, AD&D, and long-term disability insurance; voluntary life/AD&D coverage; vacation, holidays, floating holidays, sick leave, earned safe and sick time, Minnesota Paid Family & Medical Leave, and employee assistance programs.
Applications and Inquiries
To submit a cover letter and resume with a summary of demonstrable accomplishments (electronic submissions preferred), please visit https://artsconsulting.com/opensearches/ordway-center-for-the-performing-arts-seeks-vice-president-earned-revenue-marketing/
The Ordway is an equal opportunity employer and will consider candidates regardless of race,
color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, creed, marital status, familial status,
public assistance status, age, local human rights commission activity, national origin,
veteran status, or disability status. The Ordway facilities and administrative offices
are wheelchair accessible, and service animals are welcomed. - Whose Name Is On This, Anyway?
Good Morning,
Swap the name on a painting and does it make a difference in how you see it? Psyche digs into “prestige bias” — the well-documented tendency to value the who over the what. Apropos, the director of the Detroit Institute of Arts announces a rediscovered early Velázquez (ARTnews), and a canvas nobody was arguing about last week becomes news.
So today’s AI stories are really attribution stories. Tilly Norwood, the AI “actress,” gets her first feature — and her creators will label her as synthetic rather than pretend otherwise (Variety). And AI trained on human prose is now changing how humans write, a linguistic hall of mirrors in which nobody can say for certain whose name belongs on a sentence (The Guardian).
Getting back to the importance of names: Joe Hisaishi, who scored Studio Ghibli’s films, fills Madison Square Garden with orchestral music, and the Philadelphia Orchestra just made him composer-in-residence (The New York Times).
The highest-stakes version of this idea: the White House report alleging Smithsonian “bias” in the history it tells turns out to be riddled with errors of its own (Washington Post).
All of our stories below.
- The Longest-Running PBS Show In History Is, At 70, Older Than PBS Itself
“Richard Heffner’s The Open Mind, the gleefully eggheaded talk show on which Martin Luther King Jr gave his first sit-down televised interview — continues to soldier on,” with grandson Alexander Heffner hosting since Richard’s death in 2013. – The Hollywood Reporter
- Do We Listen/See/Read Differently When The Name Of The Artist Is Changed?
Why should a name matter so much? Psychologists have a term that might help explain what’s happening here: prestige bias. Developed by the cultural evolution theorists Joseph Henrich and Francisco J Gil-White, the concept describes the human tendency to preferentially attend to, learn from, and value the outputs of high-status individuals. – Psyche
- When Tamara Rojo Danced With Robots
Such an opportunity was bound to present itself to the director of San Francisco Ballet in the 2020s. It’s no surprise that she took the opportunity — but what she has to say about the experience, while quite perspicacious, isn’t much of a surprise either. – The Times (UK)
- Netflix Challenges France’s Requirement On What It Spends On Production In France
“These new rules cross a line,” claims the streaming giant. “They attempt to fix in law the exact genre balance of our slate, constrain our ability to back other types of French works – drama, comedy, unscripted – and do so only for streamers, while traditional broadcasters are spared.” – Deadline
- White House’s “Report” Criticizing Smithsonian History Is Riddled With Errors
The report often doesn’t even bother to engage with many of the claims it ridicules — like obvious and well-documented facts about anti-Chinese sentiment in post-Civil War America — or takes them as self-evident proof that the Smithsonian is misrepresenting history. – Washington Post
- How AI Is Changing How Humans Write
The problem is that not only does AI train on human writing, but humans are stylistically influenced by AI, the interplay creating a kind of linguistic hall of mirrors. Short of an author admitting it, it’s hard to say for certain whether an individual piece of writing is AI or not. That uncertainty is a recipe for paranoia. – The Guardian
- This Year’s Black British Theatre Awards Are Cancelled
In a statement released on social media, the organisers said: “To Our BBTA Community, due to unforeseen circumstances, we have made the difficult decision not to hold the Black British Theatre Awards ceremony in 2026. We know this will be disappointing news … and it was not a decision we took lightly.” – WhatsOnStage (UK)
- When Innovation Scrambled Everything At The Turn Of The 20th Century
At the time, Americans did not understand that they were living through the largest energy transition in human history. Instead, they perceived a series of disconnected events. Unable to discern or conceptualize an underlying cause, they often declared the transformations around them were “kaleidoscopic.” – MIT Press
- Richard Glanton, Combative Former Head Of The Barnes Collection, 79
“The problems at the Barnes were so obvious,” he told The New York Times in 1993, “Ray Charles could see them in a swamp at midnight.” – The New York Times
- Theatre Historian Robert Kimball, 86
Robert Kimball, a musical theater historian and champion of American popular song who unearthed hundreds of pieces long thought to be lost and helped rediscover the work of the seminal Black Broadway songwriting team of Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake, died on Wednesday in Manhattan. – The New York Times
- The Legit Classical Composer Who Can Sell Out Madison Square Garden
Joe Hisaishi developed his huge following with his scores for Hayao Miyazaki’s animated films for Studio Ghibli. Yet he’s long had a parallel career as a conductor of standard orchestral repertoire in Japan. Now he’s shifting his focus to classical music, and he’s been appointed the Philadelphia Orchestra’s composer-in-residence. – The New York Times
- Research: Learning From Short-Form Video Doesn’t Stay With You
Using social media applications to digest bite-sized educational content actually reduces a person’s ability to remember the information, according to new research. – Psypost
- AI Labs Are Recruiting Philosophers
A.I. labs, and the related nonprofits around them, have been recruiting workers as versed in Consequentialism and John Stuart Mill as in neural networks and reinforcement learning. – The New York Times
- Get A Load Of Shanghai’s Grand New Opera House
One of the key features is the dramatic spiral roof, which takes cues from an unfurled Chinese folding fan, a space that is accessible to visitors and serves as an observation deck overlooking the Huangpu River and the city’s skyline. – New Atlas
- The Congresswoman Who Sued Trump For Renaming The Kennedy Center — And Won
Joyce Beatty, a seven-term representative from Ohio, became an ex officio Congressional member of the Kennedy Center’s board in 2019. She says that the resolution to add Trump’s name to the complex was introduced without advance notice at a meeting in December, and she was muted when she objected. – The New York Times
- AI “Actress” Tilly Norwood To Star In AI-Scripted Feature Film — And It Will Be Honest About What She Is
“Set inside the ‘Tillyverse,’ a digital world located somewhere up in the Cloud, the film” — titled Misaligned and made by Particle 6, the AI-oriented studio which prompted Norwood into existence — “will follow Tilly, an AI being with no real body … or lived experience of her own, only access to everyone else’s.” – Variety
- Thieves Steal $5.1 Million Worth Of Crystal And Jewelry From Lalique Museum In France
“Three thieves targeted the Lalique museum in Wingen-sur-Moder in northeastern France at around 5:30 am on Sunday, … (and) made off with 27 pieces of jewelry worth an estimated €4.5 million ($5.1 million), prosecutors said Monday.” – AFP (Yahoo!)
- Historians Defend Smithsonian American History Museum Director From Trump Administration Attacks
“(Anthea) Hartig, director of the National Museum of American History since 2019, has commissioned exhibitions that … document the lived experiences of ordinary people, sometimes focusing on race, sexuality and colonialism. … Many historians support her goal of telling a more nuanced story of the United States.” – The New York Times
- What Exactly Does The Trump Administration Think Is Wrong With The Way The Smithsonian Depicts American History?
“Here are some of the report’s main charges, and how they relate to the administration’s broader push to promote what President Trump has called ‘patriotic’ history.” – The New York Times
- Velázquez Portrait Rediscovered By Detroit Institute Of Arts Director
“Salvador Salort-Pons, the director of the Detroit Institute of Arts, recently revealed the discovery of a portrait by Diego Velázquez made during the artist’s earliest years as a court painter to King Philip IV. Salort-Pons, a specialist in Velázquez, published his findings in the current issue of ARS Magazine.” – ARTnews
- New Hampshire Governor Vetoes Book-Banning Bill
“House Bill 434 would require school districts to establish formal policies for removing content from schools that is ‘obscene and harmful to minors,’ … (creating) a standardized removal process in which parents could challenge any book, magazine, film, video, web-based content, sound recording, or live performance offered to students.” – New Hampshire Bulletin
- Artistic Director – Syracuse Stage working with Management Consultants for the Arts

Syracuse Stage, Central New York’s premier professional theatre, seeks its next Artistic Director, who will join Managing Director Carly DiFulvio Allen to lead this storied organization. The company welcomes applications from talented individuals passionate about developing and stewarding Syracuse Stage’s artistic vision and curating theatre seasons of extraordinary quality that engage, entertain, and inspire the Syracuse community. Syracuse Stage has engaged Management Consultants for the Arts to lead the search, and interested candidates may apply for this position by visiting this link: https://www.mcaonline.com/searches/artistic-director-syracuse-stage
The annual salary range for the Artistic Director role at Syracuse Stage starts at $180,000 and includes a full benefits package commensurate with other organizations of its size, including:
- Medical/dental/vision insurance plans;
- Life Insurance, AD&D Coverage and long-term disability coverage;
- 403(b) plan;
- Paid vacation, holidays, sick leave, and personal days.
Founded in 1974, Stage has produced more than 300 plays in 48 seasons including a number of world, American, and East Coast premieres. Each season 60,000 patrons enjoy an adventurous mix of new plays and bold interpretations of classics and musicals featuring exceptional theatre artists. As the nonprofit, professional theatre in residence at Syracuse University, Stage has been integral to the success of the Department of Drama, one of the leading undergraduate theatre programs in the country. While embedded in the University, Stage is a separate 501(c)(3) organization, governed by its own Board of Directors.
- The Story Behind The Abrupt Departure Of Arena Stage’s Artistic Director
Former employees describe the tenure of artistic director Hana S. Sharif, who resigned last month, as “three years of terror.” – Notus
- Physical Media Are Dying. The Meaning Of “Buying” Something Has Changed
There is growing opposition to the rent-or-license model that has become increasingly common in pop culture, gaming, and streaming. In California, a law that took effect in 2025 requires digital stores to be clearer when consumers are buying a revocable licence rather than full ownership. – Fast Company
- Huge Shakeup In UK TV: Sky To Buy ITV
ITV confirmed to shareholders on Monday morning that it will sell to its pay-TV rival, meaning a crown jewel of British broadcasting becomes part of the NBCUniversal entertainment empire. – Deadline
- The End Of A Cultural Era: “Hockey Night In Canada” Is No More
Some called for defunding the national public broadcaster and others bemoaned the failures of successive federal governments to properly invest in the CBC. Many other Canadians, however, mourned the loss while simultaneously breathing a sigh of relief. – The Conversation
- The Knowing Beyond Knowledge
“What is the sense that something escapes the conditions of knowledge? It is, I think, the sense, or fact, that our primary relation to the world is not one of knowing it.” – The Point
- Trump White House Launches Scathing Attack On Smithsonian Over Its Portrayal Of History
The 162-page report, by the White House’s Domestic Policy Council, represents a sweeping attack on the museum’s presentation of American history. It is the latest step in the Trump administration’s campaign to pressure the Smithsonian into conforming to what President Trump has described as “patriotic” history.
- Paramount’s Looming $650M Problem In Its Warner Deal
Reuters said the fee would equate to around $650 million in cash to be paid by Paramount every three months, providing the U.K. government some leverage over Paramount if a study drags on to slow the deal’s closure. – The Street
- The Art World Really Is Unsustainable Now
It is extraordinarily difficult for most brick-and-mortar stores in any industry to survive, and that is especially true for art galleries. These large art shows may create a lot of foot traffic, but that doesn’t always translate to robust on-site sales for the galleries. – The New York Times
- What AI Is Doing To Art
Art forms that once expressed creators’ personal visions are reduced to fulfilling the audience’s cravings. In theory, I understand why some people say AI is just another creative tool, like the camera or the keyboard. In practice, that tool is filling our world with the ugly, frictionless, disposable content we’ve quickly come to call “slop.” – The Atlantic
- Chief Executive Officer – SAY: The Stuttering Association for the Young
SAY: The Stuttering Association for the Young seeks a visionary, purpose-driven, and tenacious Chief Executive Officer to lead the organization as it prepares for the planned retirement of its Founder and CEO, Taro Alexander.
For 25 years, SAY has provided support, advocacy, and life-changing experiences for young people who stutter. This CEO position is a rare opportunity to guide a pioneering national organization into its next era of impact, influence, and sustainability. SAY’s incoming CEO will manage and propel a respected national brand, a powerful community of participants and alumni, an engaged board, and a talented staff.
The salary for this position begins at $150,000, with an anticipated start date in late 2026. Candidates must be based in the greater New York City region or willing to relocate to it. The role is hybrid. The CEO will work in-person in the NYC office regularly and travel nationally to attend programs, fundraising events, and donor and partner meetings.
The search is led by Brett Egan and Syrah Gunning of the DeVos Institute of Arts and Nonprofit Management. Learn more and apply at https://tinyurl.com/SAYartsjor.
- The Best Architecture Of America’s 250 Years
From California bungalows to New York skyscrapers, from forest retreats to streamlined headquarters, what makes an architecture American, let alone the most significant example of such? – Architectural Record