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Amazon MGM Did Not Actually Pay $1 Billion For Control Of James Bond Franchise

Approximately one billion-with-a-b was the figure reported when longtime Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson decided to sell and basically retire from the 007 business. However, a recent earnings report for Wilson and Broccoli’s company Eon Productions revealed a purchase price which was nowhere close to ten figures. - Variety

A Bay Area Project To Find Artists Affordable Housing

By adapting the community land trust model — a strategy long used to preserve affordable housing for teachers, city workers, and other essential labor sectors — the group is securing permanently affordable, community-owned homes and creative spaces for artists. - NextCity

Those Who Are Resisting Using AI

As the tech industry and corporate America go all in on artificial intelligence, some people are holding back. - Washington Post

American Wins The International Chopin Competition

Eric Lu, a 27-year-old pianist from Massachusetts, won the International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition, becoming the first American since 1970 to receive the top honor in a contest regarded by some as the Olympics of classical music. - Washington Post

Iris Murdoch’s Unpublished Poems About Bisexuality Are Coming Out From Penguin Random House

“Poems from an Attic: Selected Poems, 1936–1995, to be published on 6 November, brings together decades of work that Murdoch largely kept private, stored for years in a chest in her Oxford home.” - The Guardian

Indie Filmmakers And Producers Say L.A. Has Become A “Hostile” Place To Shoot

As one producer said about the mandatory location inspection by a fire marshal, "As a resident, I understand the need for fire protection and to preserve our parks, especially now. But ... I'm paying almost $1,500 a day for a guy to sit in his car for most of the time." - TheWrap (MSN)

The Crown Jewels At The Louvre Were Not Insured. Why Not?

There are actually some good, and even practical, reasons not to insure the Louvre or its contents. By law, in fact, such items are insured only when they travel. - The Telegraph (UK) (Yahoo!)

The Louvre Burglars’ Fluorescent Vests Were An Excellent Disguise

“(One expert) said that high-visibility safety jackets had become such a ubiquitous symbol of authority — like a clipboard or a reporter’s microphone — that they were like ‘a cloak of invisibility.’” (Not to mention that the screaming yellow or orange fabric distracts the eye from the wearer’s face.) - The New York Times

Aspen Music Festival CEO To Step Down After 20 Years

Alan Fletcher took the helm at the festival and school in 2006, oversaw the construction of the $80 million Bucksbaum Campus, and established several new education programs as well as (with Renée Fleming and Patrick Summers) the Aspen Opera Theater and VocalARTS program. He retires at the end of 2026. - Aspen Public Radio

Misty Copeland Dances Her Final Performance With ABT

“Misty Copeland took one last spin on her pointe shoes Wednesday, showered with golden glitter and bouquets as she retired from American Ballet Theatre after a trailblazing career in which she became an ambassador for diversity in an overwhelmingly white art form.” - AP

No Broadway Strike: Musicians’ Union And Producers Reach Contract Deal

AFM Local 802 announced that a deal with the Broadway League at 4:30 Thursday morning, saying in a statement that “this three-year agreement provides meaningful wage and health benefit increases.” - The Hollywood Reporter

Here’s One Corner Of Music Where AI Can Be Legitimately Helpful

String player and early music specialist Kivie Cahn-Lipman writes about how — when given the right parameters and prompts — ChatGPT helped him decipher the, um, idiosyncratic handwriting of the scribe in a 17th-century manuscript which he simply couldn’t figure out on his own. - Early Music America

The Art Of Forgery Is Everywhere

We have faked historical bindings, fake manuscripts, and fake letters by famous people like the Protestant Reformer Martin Luther. We have books about impostors from the Middle Ages to the modern era as well as hoaxes and archaeological forgeries.  - JStor

The 90-Second Video Drama Series Has Become Big Business

“In just four years since the launch of these vertical dramas, the genre’s market has surpassed $8 billion globally. ... Once dismissed as a niche Chinese trend, short dramas are now one of the fastest-growing scripted formats — and Hollywood’s studios, producers and investors are finally catching on.” - TheWrap (Yahoo!)

How Sacramento Artists Are Redefining The Creative Economy

Across the country, arts funding models are shifting. Where once large institutions absorbed the majority of public and philanthropic support, new approaches are emphasizing direct investment in artists themselves. - Comstock Magazine

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