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Is Netflix’s Stumble An Inflection Point For Streaming?

Is there such a thing as too many streaming options? How many people are really willing to pay for them? And could this business be less profitable and far less reliable than what the industry has been doing for years? - The New York Times

Why Is Netflix Losing Subscribers? It’s Become Cable TV

Since NBC took back The Office and HBO Max did the same with Friends, well, it can’t exactly be said that the emperor has no content. It’s just that Netflix’s whole approach favors quantity over quality. - The Guardian

Pianist Alexei Lubimov’s First Interview Since Moscow Police Tried To Break Up His Concert

"The police said they were just following orders, and they obviously didn't know the music or why they had these orders. ... Anyway, they were late, because we'd already played Silvestrov's music. So Schubert ended up sacrificing himself for Silvestrov and Ukraine." - Van

Why Researchers Are Leaving Australia In Droves

My peers are burnt out, despondent and thinking of leaving the sector. Everybody has told me to leave the country, even if I am able to find a job here. Alongside precarious short-term contracts and chronic overwork, which are common everywhere, the government has cultivated a set of policies which demonstrate its neglect. - Sydney Morning Herald

Mills College, Where American Avant-Garde Music Got Wild (And Ultimately Kinda Cool)

Laurie Anderson, Steve Reich, Dave Brubeck, and Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh are alumni. John Cage, Terry Riley, Lou Harrison, Pauline Oliveros, the Art Ensemble of Chicago's Roscoe Mitchell, and Morton Subotnick taught there — not to mention former department head Robert Ashley, who would get stoned before lectures. - The Guardian

Study: Public Art Reduces Traffic Accidents

A study conducted by Bloomberg Philanthropies examined 17 sites over two years, before and after they were painted with “asphalt art” (art on surfaces such as roads, sidewalks, and underpasses). - Hyperallergic

And Just Who Is Joe Kahn, The New York Times’ New Top Editor?

For one thing, he's the first executive editor who may be wealthier than the paper's owners. (He is heir to a large retailing fortune.) And, finds profiler Shawn McCreesh (former assistant to Maureen Dowd), Kahn is erudite, disciplined, and very, very earnest. - New York Magazine

How Big Publishing Consolidated

As 2022 began, the U.S. trade publishing business was dominated by what has been called the Big Five—Simon & Schuster, Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, Hachette Book Group, and Macmillan.  - Publishers Weekly

France’s Top Stage Awards Underscore The Massive Divide Between State-Funded And For-Profit Theatre

"The Molières were designed to bridge the gap between (the) two opposing production models. ... The distinction has long structured French theater and shaped its aesthetics," with commercial theatre tending toward light entertainment and state-funded companies more intellectualized and experimental work. The gap, however, hasn't been bridged. - The New York Times

Struggling To Understand (It’s More Difficult Than Ever)

Not understanding makes bad things happen. When we don’t understand why lightning strikes or ships sink or babies die, sacrificing virgins might seem a viable approach. - Wired

What Happens When Big Corporations Take Over Local Newspapers? A New Study Says —

— that there's "an immediate drop in content." The drop isn't exactly a surprise, but what one lead researcher found "shocking" was that the fall, and the staffing cuts that lead to it, happen so quickly after acquisition. - Nieman Lab

National Geographic Discovers Philadelphia’s Thousands Of Murals

Mural Arts Philadelphia started as an anti-graffiti program, drafting the taggers to paint something building owners and community members would be happy, not angry, to have.  Now the 4,000+ murals are a symbol of the city, and hundreds of locations are on Mural Arts' waiting list. - MSN (National Geographic)

Standup Comedians Say Audience Behavior Just Keeps Getting Worse

"There's something in the water,” said Nish Kumar. ... "I've had a few conversations with other comics and there's a sense that something doesn't quite feel right."  And while the shift seems more noticeable since the pandemic, COVID lockdowns don't seem to be the sole explanation. - The Guardian

For This Summer, At Least, Lincoln Center Is Replacing The Mostly Mozart Festival

"Summer in the City", running mid-May to mid-August (and including six Mostly Mozart programs), is the first festival under chief artistic officer Shanta Thake, appointed with the mission of expanding beyond classical music and dance to spoken poetry, hip-hop, and other genres seen as less exclusive. - The New York Times

Producers Of “Rust” Get Maximum Fine For Negligence In Alec Baldwin’s Shooting Of Cinematographer

The report from New Mexico's Occupational Health & Safety Bureau found that the crew "demonstrated plain indifference to employee safety" and "willfully violated" established safety protocols for handling firearms on a film set, thus Leading to the death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. - CNN

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