Results tagged “Gawker” from Life's a Pitch
According to "art community consultant" Patrick Courrielche, who supports those Obama Joker posters, the NEA organized a recent conference call to assemble an army of artists who will maybe possibly (hopefully?) use their work to inspire service in key social arenas, such as health care and energy.First-ly, "Art Community Consultant"? Oh come on now. I was told from Day 1 in this business that "consultant" meant "unemployed" in the arts. And kind of everywhere, right?
...The call's participants were "encouraged" to use their myriad mediums to concoct "creative ways to talk about the issues facing the country." Now, it's not unusual for the government to use art in times of economic need. Long ago, the New Deal's Works Progress Administration set up the Federal Art Project, which had artists beautify the Depression-pocked landscape and remind them of essential needs, like good dental care. But the WPA and NEA are different beasts, and Courrielche worries that the NEA, which offers grants to artists and often drums up even more money for grantees, will use this initiative to pick and choose ideologically motivated artists.
Regardless, it's interesting. Of course artists should be involved in politics and educational outreach. Whether it would be/could be a government propaganda "machine"? Don't know. Sure, people are stupid and might vote for whomever/whatever The Jonas Brothers tell them to, but is that any different than the myriad of people who said they'd vote for Hillary Clinton because they recognized her last name? You have to work with what you've got! Read on at Gawker.
At long last, the New York Times may have figured out how to make money off its website: by charging for it.Bloomberg reports that the NYT is floating the idea of charging $5 a month to access its website in a survey of readers. (It also asked if subscribers would be willing to pay $2.50 per month).
...If all 650,000 print subscribers paid $5 a month for the website, that would be an instant $39 million per year. More likely, many people would choose either only the print subscription (old people) or only the online subscription (non-old people). That means that the NYT could potentially sell many more online subscriptions than it sells print subscriptions. Its website is orders of magnitudes more popular than its print product already.
Also on Gawker today, the demise of the democratic comment system. Gawker: Encouraging People To Not Be Idiots Since 2009.
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Amanda Ameer left her position as Publicity Manager at IMG Artists in June 2007 to start First Chair Promotion. She currently represents Hilary Hahn, Gabriel Kahane, The King's Singers, David Lang, Eric Owens, Michael Gordon, Hélène Grimaud, Sondra Radvanovsky and Julia Wolfe, and serves as a consultant to Chamber Music America.
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This site has musicians teaching viewers how to play their most popular songs on the guitar via downloadable video.
This microsite for one of MOMA's 2006 exhibitions is a(n extreme) lesson in what can be done digitally for special projects (world premieres?).
Sometimes, when the (performing arts) world gets me down, I go to The Met's website and feel better about it all.
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