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Today's Stories

The Kennedy Center Under The 47th President: Emptier, Showier, Way More Political

“What is the Kennedy Center now? For one thing, it’s getting a Trumpian revamp. He ordered new marble and the repainting of the exterior columns in austere white. Portraits of the first and second couples now hang in the center’s Hall of Nations.” - Washington Post (MSN)

Guy Cogeval, Art Historian And Curator Who Turned The Musee D’Orsay Into A Well-Traveled Blockbuster Site, Has Died At 70

“In a country with a reverential approach to its artistic heritage, the flamboyant Mr. Cogeval — ‘deceptively reserved and genuinely eccentric,’ according to Le Figaro newspaper — was a subversive figure. He was unconcerned, even pleased, by the criticism.” - The New York Times

According To A Linguist Who Works At A Language App, Here Are 2025’s Most Mispronounced Words

We all know that a lot of folks get the new mayor of New York’s name wrong - sometimes deliberately. And then there’s a museum in Paris that had a famous theft this year. But Denzel Washington? Really? - NPR

A Flash Mob Waves Ukrainian Flags As La Scala’s Grand Opening Features A Russian Opera

“A dozen activists from a liberal Italian party held up Ukrainian and European flags in a quiet demonstration removed from the La Scala hubub that aimed ‘to draw attention to the defense of liberty and European democracy, threatened today by (President Vladimir) Putin’s Russia.’” - Seattle Times (AP)

Dear Ted Sarandos, We Beg Of You Not To Screw This Up

Please, please, please, PLEASE do not screw this up, Netflix. We want HBO to be HBO, Warner Bros. to be Warner Bros. - and we need movie theatres. Cinemas. Big screens … maybe for your movies, Ted. - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

As Slop Fills Streaming And Public Media Is Defunded, What Will Happen To PBS Kids?

Parents and researchers are very worried - and rightly so. - Boston Globe

Artist Imprisoned In Iran For Six Years Says Creativity, And Sewing, Kept Her Alive

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe: “They can take away the world you live in, but they can’t take away what’s happening in your mind, your imagination and your creativity. Holding on to that was how we survived.” - The Guardian (UK)

Don’t Put Hannah Arendt On A Pedestal

“Nearly a year into a second Trump presidency and 50 years after Arendt’s death, she is still routinely invoked as the key to understanding our moment. It’s been a strange afterlife for an idiosyncratic thinker who believed that politics was inherently contingent and unpredictable.” - The New York Times

The Sphere May Be The Horrifying Future Of Entertainment For All Of Us

“There is no escape in the Sphere. The walls are screens. The ceilings are screens. The floor, swooping underneath you at an impossible angle, is a screen, too.” - Slate

Mad Men’s Special Effects Foreman Has Some Things To Say About The Events Of Recent Days

Such events being HBO’s Mad Men remaster that showed a little too much. “We always tried to camouflage ourselves as much as possible, but these days they tend to just say ‘we’ll erase it in post.’ Only this time, apparently they didn’t erase us.” - The Verge (Archive Today)

Four European Countries Boycott Eurovision Over Israel’s Participation

Ireland, Spain, Slovenia, and the Netherlands have all withdrawn from the 2026 competition. The Dutch broadcaster: "After weighing all perspectives, Avrotros concludes that, under the current circumstances, participation cannot be reconciled with the public values that are fundamental to our organisation.” - The Guardian (UK)

What Changed About Hamnet Between Page And Screen

The book is not only made up of words but also concerns words. The author, who co-wrote the screenplay: "To make a 400-page novel into a 100-page script, there’s a lot of stripping back.” But then they had to add in more Shakespeare. - The New York Times

This Oscar Winner Has Been In The Business For More Than Six Decades

Youn Yuh-jung, Oscar winner for Minari, doesn’t want to be seen as an icon, however. “In Korea, they usually say, ‘Is there any message for the younger generation?’ So I usually say, I’m not the Pope, I don’t have any message.” - Variety

According To The BBC, These Are The Ten Most Iconic Gehry Buildings

From Spain to France to the Czech Republic and, well, Spain again, here are the BBC’s faves. - BBC

And We Know It’s Good For Netflix

The deal with Warner Bros. “gives the streaming giant an identity it didn’t have before and a back catalog that will rival that of Disney+. It could also transform the streaming giant into something far more akin to a traditional movie and TV studio—if that’s what it wants to be.” - Wired

Hey, Hang On, Netflix Might Be Great For Warner Bros.

Well, good, anyway. “Staffers at the company are taking comfort in what Netflix co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said about HBO on a call with Wall Street analysts just after the deal was announced. … ‘They are saying all the right things,’ the WBD insider said, somewhat hopefully.” - Vulture

Our Changing Notions Of The Purpose Of Monuments

Rather than construct an imagined past as a universal tradition, as with conventional monuments... contemporary artists understand ambivalence and impermanence as key conditions of resistance, whether in the form of ephemeral materials, representations that flit across binaries, or speculative propositions for the future that challenge linear readings of history. - Hyperallergic

Where Drag Meets The Viola (There’s A Joke In There Somewhere)

Stuck at home in Palo Alto with two parents who teach in Stanford’s music department, Ezra Costanza created the drag character Obsidienne Obsurd, a genderless Chinese-American genderless drag musician with an exuberant wardrobe, makeup palette, and playlist. - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

Architect Frank Gehry, 96

Gehry, who arrived in L.A. as an aimless teenager just after World War II and went on to become the most famous and one of the most influential architects in the world over a prolific six-decade career, died Friday at his home in Santa Monica following a brief respiratory illness. - Los Angeles Times

The Notion Of Decline Of Our Education System Is A Long-Running Trope

The suspicion that Americans are becoming more illiterate has long been irresistible to the educated class. In the present day, this happens to be objectively true. But across time and cultures, we hear the alarm of declinism. - The Atlantic

By Topic

Don’t Put Hannah Arendt On A Pedestal

“Nearly a year into a second Trump presidency and 50 years after Arendt’s death, she is still routinely invoked as the key to understanding our moment. It’s been a strange afterlife for an idiosyncratic thinker who believed that politics was inherently contingent and unpredictable.” - The New York Times

The Notion Of Decline Of Our Education System Is A Long-Running Trope

The suspicion that Americans are becoming more illiterate has long been irresistible to the educated class. In the present day, this happens to be objectively true. But across time and cultures, we hear the alarm of declinism. - The Atlantic

Fascinating: Research Find That Fantastical Programming Impairs Cognitive Attention In Children

The researchers found a significant negative effect for fantastical content. Children who watched programs featuring impossible events tended to perform worse on attention and executive function tasks immediately afterward. - PsyPost

The Importance Of Style In Science

Style, as I see it, is much more idiosyncratic and manifests in scientists who may practice in the same field and utilize similar methods, but who nonetheless differ in the way they conduct and produce their work. - Undark

Why We Shouldn’t Bring Back Gatekeepers

Put simply: Once established institutions lost the privilege to control the public conversation, they acquired an obligation to participate within it, which, so far, they have mostly failed to do. - Conspicuous Cognition

When Our Machines Become Sentient, Will We Notice?

If an AI system were sentient, then the alignment paradigm, whereby AI activities are circumscribed entirely by human goals, becomes untenable. It would be ethically impermissible to subject the interests of a sentient AI system to human-defined goals. - 3 Quarks Daily

The Kennedy Center Under The 47th President: Emptier, Showier, Way More Political

“What is the Kennedy Center now? For one thing, it’s getting a Trumpian revamp. He ordered new marble and the repainting of the exterior columns in austere white. Portraits of the first and second couples now hang in the center’s Hall of Nations.” - Washington Post (MSN)

Dear Ted Sarandos, We Beg Of You Not To Screw This Up

Please, please, please, PLEASE do not screw this up, Netflix. We want HBO to be HBO, Warner Bros. to be Warner Bros. - and we need movie theatres. Cinemas. Big screens … maybe for your movies, Ted. - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

As Slop Fills Streaming And Public Media Is Defunded, What Will Happen To PBS Kids?

Parents and researchers are very worried - and rightly so. - Boston Globe

The Sphere May Be The Horrifying Future Of Entertainment For All Of Us

“There is no escape in the Sphere. The walls are screens. The ceilings are screens. The floor, swooping underneath you at an impossible angle, is a screen, too.” - Slate

Report: Trump’s Kennedy Center Is Stiffing Artists On The Fees

Representatives for three performers tell THR they’re still waiting on checks months after their shows. - The Hollywood Reporter

This Year’s Kennedy Center Honors Will Be Different

Previous hosts of the Kennedy Center Honors have included Walter Cronkite, Stephen Colbert, Gloria Estefan and Queen Latifah. Trump will host this year, a first for a U.S. president. - NPR

A Flash Mob Waves Ukrainian Flags As La Scala’s Grand Opening Features A Russian Opera

“A dozen activists from a liberal Italian party held up Ukrainian and European flags in a quiet demonstration removed from the La Scala hubub that aimed ‘to draw attention to the defense of liberty and European democracy, threatened today by (President Vladimir) Putin’s Russia.’” - Seattle Times (AP)

Four European Countries Boycott Eurovision Over Israel’s Participation

Ireland, Spain, Slovenia, and the Netherlands have all withdrawn from the 2026 competition. The Dutch broadcaster: "After weighing all perspectives, Avrotros concludes that, under the current circumstances, participation cannot be reconciled with the public values that are fundamental to our organisation.” - The Guardian (UK)

Where Drag Meets The Viola (There’s A Joke In There Somewhere)

Stuck at home in Palo Alto with two parents who teach in Stanford’s music department, Ezra Costanza created the drag character Obsidienne Obsurd, a genderless Chinese-American genderless drag musician with an exuberant wardrobe, makeup palette, and playlist. - San Francisco Chronicle (MSN)

Troubled San Antonio Philharmonic Cancels Its Holiday Concerts

While next weekend’s classical programs are still scheduled, the orchestra’s Holiday Pops shows for the weekend before Christmas and its New Year’s Eve Gala have been called off. - San Antonio Current

Countries Boycotting Eurovision Over Decision To Allow Israel To Compete

Ireland, Spain, the Netherlands and Slovenia will boycott the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest, after Israel was allowed to compete. - BBC

Lufthansa Crew Refuses To Let Violinist Bring Instrument Case On Carrying 243-Year-Old Violin

A soloist was forced to carry her 1782 Giovanni Battista Guadagnini violin in her arms through the Helsinki airport security and onto a flight to Germany after Lufthansa refused to let her bring the case as hand luggage. - The Daily Beast

Artist Imprisoned In Iran For Six Years Says Creativity, And Sewing, Kept Her Alive

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe: “They can take away the world you live in, but they can’t take away what’s happening in your mind, your imagination and your creativity. Holding on to that was how we survived.” - The Guardian (UK)

According To The BBC, These Are The Ten Most Iconic Gehry Buildings

From Spain to France to the Czech Republic and, well, Spain again, here are the BBC’s faves. - BBC

Our Changing Notions Of The Purpose Of Monuments

Rather than construct an imagined past as a universal tradition, as with conventional monuments... contemporary artists understand ambivalence and impermanence as key conditions of resistance, whether in the form of ephemeral materials, representations that flit across binaries, or speculative propositions for the future that challenge linear readings of history. - Hyperallergic

Norman Foster’s New JP Morgan Tower In Manhattan: An Obscene Essay In Steel

The sheer amount of structural steel – 95,000 tonnes in total – is obscene for a building that contains just 60 storeys in its 423-metre height, half the number of floors you might expect in such a colossus. It uses 60% more steel than the Empire State Building, which is taller and has more...

This Year’s Best New Architecture

Editors of Dezeen pick their favorites, including new cultural institutions, homes, hotels, skyscrapers and even an architecture school. - Dezeen

Why Trump Fired His Ballroom Architect. And Here’s His Replacement

Trump and McCrery had clashed over the president’s desire to keep increasing the size of the building, but it was McCrery’s firm’s small workforce and inability to hit deadlines that became the decisive factor in him leaving, one of the people said. - Washington Post

According To A Linguist Who Works At A Language App, Here Are 2025’s Most Mispronounced Words

We all know that a lot of folks get the new mayor of New York’s name wrong - sometimes deliberately. And then there’s a museum in Paris that had a famous theft this year. But Denzel Washington? Really? - NPR

What Changed About Hamnet Between Page And Screen

The book is not only made up of words but also concerns words. The author, who co-wrote the screenplay: "To make a 400-page novel into a 100-page script, there’s a lot of stripping back.” But then they had to add in more Shakespeare. - The New York Times

Why Does AI Write Like That? And Why Are People Willing To Read It?

If you’re anything like me, you did not enjoy reading that paragraph. Everything about it puts me on alert: Something is wrong here; this text is not what it says it is. It’s one of them. - The New York Times

CEO Of Waterstone’s And Barnes & Noble Says They Would Sell AI-Authored Books (If Clearly Labeled)

“We as booksellers would naturally and instinctively disdain it,” said James Daunt, but “maybe it's going to produce the next War and Peace. And if people want to read that book, AI-generated or not, we will be selling it — as long as it doesn't pretend to be something it isn't.” - BBC (Yahoo!)

What It Says About You When Your Accent Changes

Researchers studied Taylor Swift’s voice as a way of exploring a phenomenon called “second-dialect acquisition,” or the way people learn a new style of speaking. Moving from place to place is the most obvious circumstance that might cause someone’s accent to change, but people’s voices can also evolve when they enter into new relationships. - The...

World’s Third-Busiest Public Library Faces Job Cuts, Accusations Of “Digital Vanity Projects”

The State Library of Victoria in Melbourne is Australia’s busiest, yet a restructuring is eliminating 39 jobs — including reducing the number of public-facing reference librarians by 60%. Meanwhile the SLV has worked on “digital experiences” like a rotating 3D model of legendary outlaw Ned Kelly’s helmet. - The Guardian

Mad Men’s Special Effects Foreman Has Some Things To Say About The Events Of Recent Days

Such events being HBO’s Mad Men remaster that showed a little too much. “We always tried to camouflage ourselves as much as possible, but these days they tend to just say ‘we’ll erase it in post.’ Only this time, apparently they didn’t erase us.” - The Verge (Archive Today)

And We Know It’s Good For Netflix

The deal with Warner Bros. “gives the streaming giant an identity it didn’t have before and a back catalog that will rival that of Disney+. It could also transform the streaming giant into something far more akin to a traditional movie and TV studio—if that’s what it wants to be.” - Wired

Hey, Hang On, Netflix Might Be Great For Warner Bros.

Well, good, anyway. “Staffers at the company are taking comfort in what Netflix co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said about HBO on a call with Wall Street analysts just after the deal was announced. … ‘They are saying all the right things,’ the WBD insider said, somewhat hopefully.” - Vulture

Pathé Will Return To Making English-Language Films

“French production and exhibition giant Pathé is looking to ‘re-launch’ its English-language film business with the appointment of FilmNation president of motion pictures Ben Browning as co-CEO of Pathé U.K.” - The Hollywood Reporter

Netflix To Buy Warner Bros. Discovery For $82.7 Billion

“The deal has a total enterprise value (including debt) of approximately $82.7 billion, with an equity value of $72 billion, the companies said. The announcement … came after a weeks-long bidding war that pitted the streaming giant against David Ellison’s Paramount Skydance and Comcast.” - Variety

Now Bollywood Has A Rival For The Spotlight In India’s Enormous Movie Industry

Bollywood, based in Bombay/Mumbai and producing movies in Hindi, has always been the center of India’s cinematic universe. Yet there are centers of filmmaking in other Indian languages based in other state capitals. One of those centers — Tollywood, which produces Telugu-language movies in Hyderabad — has been enjoying a big run of successes....

Ex-Director Of Dance At Kennedy Center Says Her Firing Wasn’t A Surprise

Jane Raleigh: “There was definitely an overarching feeling of waiting for the shoe to drop. I was committed to staying until I was removed, (but) I did believe from the beginning that everyone would be fired at some point. … Basically every payday Friday was mass firings day.” - Forward

Ailey Company Launches Its First Season Under Director Alicia Graf Mack

Mack, who did two stints as a principal dancer with the company (and got a master’s degree in-between), says her vision is to balance between Alvin Ailey’s own “powerful, visceral” choreography and new pieces by Fredrick Earl Mosley, Matthew Neenan, Jamar Roberts, and Urban Bush Women founder Jawole Willa Jo Zollar. - NPR

Choreographer Tere O’Connor Explains His Famously Baffling Dances

“As with other artistic attempts to track the mind more accurately — like the stream-of-consciousness of Virginia Woolf and James Joyce — O’Connor’s coexistence-of-everything choreography can appear off-putting and abstruse. But O’Connor isn’t trying to be difficult, he said.” - The New York Times

Royal Danish Ballet Returns To The Classic Choreographer Who Made The Company Great

August Bournonville directed the company in the mid-19th century, and his works and style became thoroughly identified with the institution. Yet for some years the RDB turned away from Bournonville toward contemporary ballet; new artistic director Amy Watson is bringing his works and style back to the company’s heart. - The New York Times

How Choreographers Are Using AI As A Subject

“As AI technologies proliferate and become an increasingly inescapable fact of modern life, choreographers are not only experimenting with AI tools, but they’re also creating works that grapple with the potential repercussions of artificial intelligence and the existential questions it raises.” - Dance Magazine

Thieves Steal Touring Ballet’s “Nutcracker” Sets

Toronto-based Ballet Jörgen had just begun its annual December tour of Ontario with the holiday favorite when the rental truck containing its sets and backdrops was stolen around 3:30 am Monday morning. - CBC

Royal Shakespeare Company To Eliminate Its Music Department

As part of its company-wide layoffs, the RSC will terminate its entire live music staff and switch to using recorded music. - The Stage (UK)

New York Times’s New Chief Theater Critic: Helen Shaw Of The New Yorker

“The (Times) has been publishing reviews by a number of writers since predecessor Jesse Green was reassigned earlier this year. That list notably did not include Shaw, who joins the Times after a stint as theatre critic for The New Yorker, and a tenure as chief theatre critic at New York magazine prior.” - Playbill

Bringing The Musical-Theater Version Of “La Cage Aux Folles” Home To Paris

The property was born in the French capital, first as a play, then as a hit film (followed later by the big US remake). But the American musical version had flopped in France — until the director of the Théâtre du Châtelet, Olivier Py, took it on. - The New York Times

Royal Shakespeare Co. To Cut 11% Of Staff

Company management expects to reduce its base expenses by £2.8 million ($3.7 million) annually with layoffs as well as pay cuts for some remaining staffers. - The Stage (UK)

Suddenly The Anti-Gay Slur “F******” Is All Over New York Theater

Erik Piepenburg: “This year at least six theater productions have used “f*****” in their titles. … Why is a slur that a stranger hurled at me now waving hello from my playbill?” On the other hand, famously gay Black playwright Jeremy O. Harris told Piepenburg to stop pearl-clutching. - The New York Times

Why Is A 1998 Musical Resonating With Audiences Now?

“We wrote something, you know, with very open hearts and no political agenda. We just wanted to tell this amazing story, and look what has happened.” - NPR

Guy Cogeval, Art Historian And Curator Who Turned The Musee D’Orsay Into A Well-Traveled Blockbuster Site, Has Died At 70

“In a country with a reverential approach to its artistic heritage, the flamboyant Mr. Cogeval — ‘deceptively reserved and genuinely eccentric,’ according to Le Figaro newspaper — was a subversive figure. He was unconcerned, even pleased, by the criticism.” - The New York Times

This Oscar Winner Has Been In The Business For More Than Six Decades

Youn Yuh-jung, Oscar winner for Minari, doesn’t want to be seen as an icon, however. “In Korea, they usually say, ‘Is there any message for the younger generation?’ So I usually say, I’m not the Pope, I don’t have any message.” - Variety

Architect Frank Gehry, 96

Gehry, who arrived in L.A. as an aimless teenager just after World War II and went on to become the most famous and one of the most influential architects in the world over a prolific six-decade career, died Friday at his home in Santa Monica following a brief respiratory illness. - Los Angeles Times

Star Playwright Jeremy O. Harris Jailed In Japan On Drug Charges

The 36-year-old author of the multiple-Tony-nominated Slave Play and current creative director of the Williamstown Theater Festival was arrested at the airport in Okinawa on November 16 after customs officers found several doses’ worth of MDMA (Ecstasy) in his luggage. Harris has been in custody ever since. - The Guardian

Filmmaker Jafar Panahi Says He’ll Go Home To Iran Despite Latest Prison Sentence

On Monday, while in New York to accept three Gotham Awards for his latest film, It Was Just an Accident, Panahi was sentenced to a year’s imprisonment for “propaganda activity against the state.” Nevertheless, he said today, he’ll return to Iran after his current Oscar campaign wraps up next spring. - AP

Minnesota Dance “Titan” Dies At 63

Toni Pierce-Sands, a featured soloist in some of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s most iconic suites and a co-founder of celebrated Twin Cities company TU Dance, died Tuesday in Minneapolis. She was 63 and had been battling cancer. - The Star-Tribune

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Managing Director- The Old Globe working with Management Consultants for the...

The Old Globe is seeking a Managing Director to co-lead the company as it looks ahead to the landmark celebration of its 100th anniversary

Schubert Club seeks Artistic and Executive Director

The next Artistic and Executive Director will shape Schubert Club at a moment of organizational strength and artistic vitality.

Fall 2026 Applications Open for MS in Leadership for Creative Enterprises

Earn your Master’s in One Year. Northwestern University’s MS in Leadership for Creative Enterprises (MSLCE) program develops leaders across Entertainment, Media and the Arts.

St. Louis Symphony Orchestra seeks Chief Philanthropy Officer

The next Chief Philanthropy Officer will sustain and build on a culture of philanthropy to advance the SLSO in delivering on its mission.

Improv In Real Life Podcast

This podcast is about the art of improv can help us navigate the speed of life: skills, philosophy and the research that supports it.

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Tenure-Track Assistant Professor of Arts Administration

The Arts Administration program at Elon University invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position that begins in August 2026.

The Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts California State University, Northridge seeks Executive and Artistic Director

The Executive and Artistic Director will provide leadership and have overall responsibility for programming, fundraising, external relations, mission fulfillment, and the financial performance of The Soraya.

Apply Now: Canada’s National Arts Centre Mentorship Program

A paid side-by-side opportunity in Ottawa, Canada for emerging and early-career orchestral musicians, conductors and administrators. International applicants welcome.

Executive Director, Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach

The Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach (CMSPB) is known for performances and educational programs of the highest artistic merit.

The Kennedy Center Under The 47th President: Emptier, Showier, Way More Political

“What is the Kennedy Center now? For one thing, it’s getting a Trumpian revamp. He ordered new marble and the repainting of the exterior columns in austere white. Portraits of the first and second couples now hang in the center’s Hall of Nations.” - Washington Post (MSN)

The Sphere May Be The Horrifying Future Of Entertainment For All Of Us

“There is no escape in the Sphere. The walls are screens. The ceilings are screens. The floor, swooping underneath you at an impossible angle, is a screen, too.” - Slate

Four European Countries Boycott Eurovision Over Israel’s Participation

Ireland, Spain, Slovenia, and the Netherlands have all withdrawn from the 2026 competition. The Dutch broadcaster: "After weighing all perspectives, Avrotros concludes that, under the current circumstances, participation cannot be reconciled with the public values that are fundamental to our organisation.” - The Guardian (UK)

How Did Tom Stoppard Fund His Playwriting?

Hollywood. “At one point in the early 1990s, Stoppard earned $500,000 for a five-week stretch polishing various projects for Universal Pictures. … He seemed to have a particular fondness for dog movies, contributing to both Beethoven and 102 Dalmatians.” - The New York Times

Clueless Colleges Are Preparing To Harm Their Students In The Name Of ‘Preparing’ Them For A World Of AI

“Based on the available evidence, the skills that future graduates will most need in the AI era—creative thinking, the capacity to learn new things, flexible modes of analysis—are precisely those that are likely to be eroded by inserting AI into the educational process.” - The Atlantic

A Classical Pianist’s Plea To Let Art Be Messy, And Real

"Playing an instrument well is phenomenally difficult. It takes a lifetime of arduous work and can become all-consuming, making it easy to forget that technical mastery is a means to an expressive end, not the goal. … In and of itself, it is uninteresting.” - The New York Times

Sally Rooney Says She May No Longer Be Able To Sell Her Books In The UK

Rooney says that “UK legislation may mean she cannot be paid royalties by her British publisher or the BBC because it could leave both at risk of being accused of funding terrorism.” The Irish writer has said that she intends her royalties to support the group Palestine Action. - BBC

Tom Stoppard, Playwright Of Erudition And Wit, Has Died At 88

“One of a select band of writers from any discipline to earn his own adjective – ‘Stoppardian’ – in the Oxford English Dictionary, he delighted in the most improbable juxtapositions.” He also shared a co-writing Oscar for Shakespeare in Love. - The Guardian (UK)

New York’s Newest ‘Experiential Cinema’ Is Pricey, And Private

“Pick a film from either current releases or a curated archive, select a drink package for an extra $50 each, choose a 12-13 course gourmet meal off a seasonal menu for another $100 a head, and you have a ritzy night at the movies.” - The Guardian (UK)

The Met Says There Was A ‘Security Lapse’ That Let Protestors Disrupt Carmen The Other Night

A security guard (now suspended from his job) was not at his post. “That allowed the two protesters to walk on a narrow ledge along the wall of the left side of the orchestra pit and make their way on to the stage.” - The New York Times

More Than Half Of The Novelists In Britain Think That Software, AKA AI, Will Replace Them

“Many participants reported that their work had already been used without their permission to train large language models, and more than a third (39%) said their income had fallen as a result of generative AI. A large majority also expected their earnings to decline further.” - The Guardian (UK)

Kennedy Center Special Deals For Trump Allies Investigated By Senate Democrats

“Senate Democrats are investigating the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts over its spending practices and booking deals involving political allies, accusing its leadership, installed by President Donald Trump, of ‘self-dealing, favoritism, and waste’ amid programming shifts and plummeting ticket sales.’” - The Washington Post (MSN)

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