ArtsJournal Classic

AJ Four Ways: Text Only (by date) | headlines only

DANCE

    IDEAS

    • Billionaires, blue books, and blacklists

      Good Morning,

      AI showed up everywhere today — and not as a feature. A Stanford senior describes a campus where ChatGPT has become the medium of student life, from history papers to dating (The New York Times). Another professor watches students photograph exams mid-test, feed them to an LLM, then copy machine-written answers into the blue book (The New Critic). Meanwhile, the world’s first AI museum is opening in LA, marketing “phantasmagorical” generated wonder as the new immersive (The Conversation).

      The counterweight: humanities enrollments are climbing as tech jobs evaporate (Irish Times). The students who were told AI made them obsolete are now being told their human-ness is the asset.

      Two more: Peter Gelb — $1.2M salary, who manages 3,000 employees, 15 unions, and a 144-member board — says he won’t retire because he can’t imagine life without work (The New York Times). And the head of French TV’s Canal+ vows to blacklist 600 movie artists who signed a petition against the company’s right-wing billionaire owner (The Guardian). Not all pressure on culture comes from algorithms. All of our stories below.

      See you tomorrow.

      Doug

    • Peter Gelb No Longer Considering Retiring From The Met

      “I should leave when I cannot do the job properly or when the board doesn’t want me to be here. I’m a workaholic, I’ve always worked. I don’t enjoy free time. I wake up in the middle of the night thinking about work. I need work. My life would be empty without work.” – OperaWire

    • How AI Has Taken Over College Education

      During the exam, students were pulling out phones and taking photographs of the test to submit to LLMs before copying down machine-written responses into their blue books. – The New Critic

    • France’s Top TV Production House Says It Will Blacklist Artists Who Protest Billionaire

      The head of France’s biggest film producer, Canal+, has said the group will no longer work with hundreds of cinema figures who signed a petition voicing concern over the growing influence of the rightwing billionaire owner Vincent Bolloré. – The Guardian

    • How AI Has Taken Over My College Education At Stanford

      Stanford has always been a haven for aspiring techies, but recent events have taken the school into uncharted territory. A.I. is everything. We talk about it at the dining halls and in history classes, on dates and while smoking with friends, at the gym and in communal dorm bathrooms. – The New York Times

    ISSUES

    MEDIA

    MUSIC

    PEOPLE

    • Billionaires, blue books, and blacklists

      Good Morning,

      AI showed up everywhere today — and not as a feature. A Stanford senior describes a campus where ChatGPT has become the medium of student life, from history papers to dating (The New York Times). Another professor watches students photograph exams mid-test, feed them to an LLM, then copy machine-written answers into the blue book (The New Critic). Meanwhile, the world’s first AI museum is opening in LA, marketing “phantasmagorical” generated wonder as the new immersive (The Conversation).

      The counterweight: humanities enrollments are climbing as tech jobs evaporate (Irish Times). The students who were told AI made them obsolete are now being told their human-ness is the asset.

      Two more: Peter Gelb — $1.2M salary, who manages 3,000 employees, 15 unions, and a 144-member board — says he won’t retire because he can’t imagine life without work (The New York Times). And the head of French TV’s Canal+ vows to blacklist 600 movie artists who signed a petition against the company’s right-wing billionaire owner (The Guardian). Not all pressure on culture comes from algorithms. All of our stories below.

      See you tomorrow.

      Doug

    • Peter Gelb No Longer Considering Retiring From The Met

      “I should leave when I cannot do the job properly or when the board doesn’t want me to be here. I’m a workaholic, I’ve always worked. I don’t enjoy free time. I wake up in the middle of the night thinking about work. I need work. My life would be empty without work.” – OperaWire

    • How AI Has Taken Over College Education

      During the exam, students were pulling out phones and taking photographs of the test to submit to LLMs before copying down machine-written responses into their blue books. – The New Critic

    • France’s Top TV Production House Says It Will Blacklist Artists Who Protest Billionaire

      The head of France’s biggest film producer, Canal+, has said the group will no longer work with hundreds of cinema figures who signed a petition voicing concern over the growing influence of the rightwing billionaire owner Vincent Bolloré. – The Guardian

    • How AI Has Taken Over My College Education At Stanford

      Stanford has always been a haven for aspiring techies, but recent events have taken the school into uncharted territory. A.I. is everything. We talk about it at the dining halls and in history classes, on dates and while smoking with friends, at the gym and in communal dorm bathrooms. – The New York Times

    PEOPLE

    • Billionaires, blue books, and blacklists

      Good Morning,

      AI showed up everywhere today — and not as a feature. A Stanford senior describes a campus where ChatGPT has become the medium of student life, from history papers to dating (The New York Times). Another professor watches students photograph exams mid-test, feed them to an LLM, then copy machine-written answers into the blue book (The New Critic). Meanwhile, the world’s first AI museum is opening in LA, marketing “phantasmagorical” generated wonder as the new immersive (The Conversation).

      The counterweight: humanities enrollments are climbing as tech jobs evaporate (Irish Times). The students who were told AI made them obsolete are now being told their human-ness is the asset.

      Two more: Peter Gelb — $1.2M salary, who manages 3,000 employees, 15 unions, and a 144-member board — says he won’t retire because he can’t imagine life without work (The New York Times). And the head of French TV’s Canal+ vows to blacklist 600 movie artists who signed a petition against the company’s right-wing billionaire owner (The Guardian). Not all pressure on culture comes from algorithms. All of our stories below.

      See you tomorrow.

      Doug

    • Peter Gelb No Longer Considering Retiring From The Met

      “I should leave when I cannot do the job properly or when the board doesn’t want me to be here. I’m a workaholic, I’ve always worked. I don’t enjoy free time. I wake up in the middle of the night thinking about work. I need work. My life would be empty without work.” – OperaWire

    • How AI Has Taken Over College Education

      During the exam, students were pulling out phones and taking photographs of the test to submit to LLMs before copying down machine-written responses into their blue books. – The New Critic

    • France’s Top TV Production House Says It Will Blacklist Artists Who Protest Billionaire

      The head of France’s biggest film producer, Canal+, has said the group will no longer work with hundreds of cinema figures who signed a petition voicing concern over the growing influence of the rightwing billionaire owner Vincent Bolloré. – The Guardian

    • How AI Has Taken Over My College Education At Stanford

      Stanford has always been a haven for aspiring techies, but recent events have taken the school into uncharted territory. A.I. is everything. We talk about it at the dining halls and in history classes, on dates and while smoking with friends, at the gym and in communal dorm bathrooms. – The New York Times

    THEATRE

      VISUAL

      WORDS