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How An ASL Artist Spends Their Day Off In New York

“My Sunday is essentially five lives in a day.” - The New York Times

Computers, Cell Phones, And Chips Suddenly Get Exempted From Tariffs

Well, that’s nice for some companies. (And those of us who need to use electronics.) - The Verge

Dear Hollywood: Just Make About A Hundred Movies A Year That People Like

That’s it! Is that so hard? “The industry today needs to start thinking as one, to unite and slay the beast that is the streaming world. Because streaming is kicking ass in a way that it doesn’t need to.” - Variety

A Quick Cure For Writer’s Block

Author Catherine Ryan Howard says the best cure, in her experience, is having to pay the rent. - Irish Times (Internet Archive)

The Naval Academy Library Dumps Maya Angelou But Keeps Hitler

Clearly, it’s so much more dangerous to read about a young woman coming of age than to read Mein Kampf. - The New York Times

William Morris Designs Are Literally Everywhere Now

"His legacy, like his life, is one of contradictions: he was a radical socialist and hugely successful businessman, who made wallpaper for Queen Victoria; a passionate champion of craftsmanship and workers’ rights, whose designs have become a template for mass-produced tat.” - The Guardian (UK)

The Dutch Avant-Garde Theatre Company That Keeps Sending Shows To The West End And Broadway

That company is Internationaal Theater Amsterdam, directed for 20 years by Ivo van Hove and since 2023 by Eline Arbo. Her adaptation of Annie Ernaux’s The Years originated at ITA before being restaged with British actors in London, where the production just earned Arbo an Olivier Award. - The Guardian

Will AI Save Or Kill Journalism?

The more closely you look at the profession of journalism, the stranger it seems. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, fewer than fifty thousand people were employed as journalists in 2023, which is less than the number of people who deliver for DoorDash in New York City. - The New Yorker

The Central African Republic Has A National Ballet, And It’s Doing Important Work

Established in 2021, the company — also called the National Artistic Ensemble — works to collect and preserve the traditional dances of the many ethnic groups in the CAR, a nation wracked for years by civil war, instability and extreme poverty. - France 24

The Strange Limbo Of TikTok In The New World Order

TikTok already existed in a kind of limbo before last week, but now its strange state of in-betweenness is intensified: it is both alive and dead, allowed to persist but technically illegal. Trump, who may have benefitted from its audience’s attention during the 2024 election, cannot let it be banned. - The New Yorker

Is This Vermeer’s Last Painting?

Until recently the Kaplan painting had been considered to have been completed between 1670-72. That dating has now been revised, with Wheelock stating it as 1670-75. Vermeer died on 15 December 1675 and Young Woman seated at a Virginal is most likely his final picture. - The Art Newspaper

Time To Refocus The NEH And NEA?

This is where the N.E.H. and N.E.A. would serve Mr. Trump well: not only correcting “woke” excesses, but also providing an elite counterpart to MAGA’s populist thrust. Expert critics, scholars and artists could ensure that only traditionalist projects are funded. - The New York Times

The Prado Has Enlisted AI To Count People In Paintings

The Prado hopes that actually knowing exactly how many people are in these crowded scenes will help us better understand these paintings, and how the artists were using large quantities and repetition in their work. - Artnet

Biopics And Miniseries Of Bible Stories Have Become Big Business

Leading the pack is Amazon’s The Chosen, the multi-season series recounting the life of Jesus that has become an international smash and made lead actor Jonathan Roumie a superstar. Yet there’s an entire sub-industry making adaptations of Bible stories from both Old and New Testaments, and its products are extraordinarily popular. - The Guardian

Tranquil Music Of Intensity

Hania Rani, 34, has become a shooting star in a genre of pop-inflected minimalist music often referred to as neoclassical, or alt-classical... “It’s not being composed to help people relax,” she said in a recent interview. “The music might be slow — not so loud, not upbeat — but it’s actually intense.” - The New York Times

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