Stories

The Booze-Fueled Battle For Oscars Buzz

The streamers battled it out with crates of artisanal food, top-drawer scotch, and other gifts to draw voters' attention to their movies. When Nomadland "premiered" (or rather re-premiered) on Hulu, for instance, "Fox Searchlight announced a virtual global premiere. ... Invitees to the event were sent the aforementioned crate—stuffed with gourmet cheese, 'humanly raised' salami, and trail mix—to enjoy...

Disabled Performing Artists Are Imagining New Worlds On – And Off – Stage

What has to change: "Disabled people may be artists, musicians, singers, or actors, our experiences and stories rarely find their way to the stage. When we do appear in scripts or on stages, almost invariably those stories focus on the non-disabled people around us and cast us as villains, punchlines, or charity projects for the protagonists. Ableism runs...

Who’s In Charge Of Reviving London’s Neglected Caribbean Cultural Hub?

"The West Indian Cultural Centre (WICC) in Wood Green was constructed in the 1980s, becoming a vibrant hub for cultural events and debates on subjects such as the struggle for racial equality. It drew huge numbers of visitors who came to hear speakers including the Nobel prize-winning poet Derek Walcott, the American civil rights activist Al Sharpton and the MP...

Tunisian Police Target A Feminist, Queer Artist

Rania Andouni was targeted for her gender expression - and when she went to the police station to file a complaint, the police not only harassed her further, but charged her. A Tunisian "sentenced Amdouni to six months in prison on the charge of 'insulting a public officer during the performance of his duty,' which is punishable by up to one year...

When Real Tragedy Strikes, What Can Criticism Do?

A critic wonders, in the wake of two mass shootings after a year of mass death and destruction. "Every day I’m thankful for the work I get to do. I am paid to watch, to think, to write. But this week, like so many others recently, it has felt pointless, even silly, to analyze fictional stories when real people...

How Will Machines Choose To Tell Stories?

Sure, Gmail offers to fill in text on your messages - but things are getting more complicated. "AI’s capacity for creativity—one of those supposedly sacrosanct human attributes—is becoming more and more of an existential sticking point as humans learn to live alongside intelligent machines." - The Atlantic

As Animal Crossing Turns One, A Writer Contemplates How Its Look And Sounds Have Accompanied The Pandemic

Amal El-Mohtar: "While the animal-people of the game speak incomprehensible approximations of their textual dialogue — not unlike hearing language in a dream — and the jaunty soundtrack provides comedy noises when you get stung by wasps or bitten by mosquitoes, the sounds of your character moving physically through the island are astonishingly immersive. ... The visual cues may...

Hey Amazon, What’s Your Problem Admitting That Leonardo Was Gay?

Amazon Prime Studio's use of a fictional woman ("a complete piece of tosh, invented by a 19th century Romantic") to bring Leonardo and his life to the small screen isn't just fiction, it's flat-out wrong. Suggestion: "Why not go to the National Gallery when it reopens and look at Leonardo’s Virgin of the Rocks. The most hypnotic figure in it...

Fake News From Assyria, 2700 Years Ago

It all comes down to the earring. "The arresting piece of jewellery, which bursts from the borders of itself with piercing radiance like a celestial orb, transforms the static action from a callous chronicle of recurring cruelty, however impeccably wrought, to something more sympathetically mythic: a meditation on the interconnectedness of all things" - and the supposed godlike powers...

Yseult Is A Chanson Singer Whose Very Existence Is Riling Up The French

The singer Yseult, a Parisian whose parents are from Cameroon, won the award for Best Newcomer at the French Grammys in February, and she has millions of fans and YouTube views. But when she won and said, "This is not just a victory for me, it’s a victory for my brothers and sisters. We have snatched this, our freedom,...

The Pandemic Was, For Some, An Inadvertent Artist Residency

The fact that freelancers could (finally) tap into unemployment through the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance programs changed, well, everything. Sarah Rose Sharp: "In my experience, the best conditions for making art involve getting paid to make art where I’ve already built the infrastructure that enables me to make art. Since March of 2020, that’s what I’ve done, and it’s been...

Beverly Cleary Taught Kids Vital Life Lessons Through Ramona, The Grubby Little Pest

Ramona is messy, makes extremely normal kid mistakes, is impulsive, and always, always demands that her parents love her - not anyway, but as is. This might seem usual now, but "in 1950, when Ramona made her first appearance, they were not unremarkable; they were trailblazing. Cleary took every attribute that girls were then warned away from — bossiness,...

New York Theatres Are Dark, But Their Windows Aren’t

While the interior is idle (or getting a revamp, in some cases), the windows to the street have a thing or two to say about art, poetry, and the power of words - and, in some cases, even dance. The Brooklyn Ballet performed 20-minute "jewel-box dances" from The Nutcracker in its street-level windows in December, using barriers to prevent...

Hint To BAFTA: You Can’t Fix A Diversity Problem With Racist Casting Directors

Yikes: "India Eva Rae, who joined Bafta’s Elevate programme in 2019, told the BBC that a casting director told her she was an 'exotic talent,' and that they 'can’t understand the English coming out your mouth.' Rae also said that she had been told not to report the incident by a 'mentor' on the scheme: 'This mentor told me and other...

Now We Truly Have Everything, Including A Playlist Of Jane Austen’s Favorite Music

Music was inextricably linked to Austen's creativity - she practiced, when she had access to a piano, every day, and copied friends' sheet music note by note. During the times her family didn't have a piano? As far as scholars can tell, she wasn't writing. - Colorado Public Radio

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