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How Detroit Reinvented Through The Arts

Fuelled by an enterprising spirit born from recent adversity, many have found new ways to inject life into their communities and cultural arenas. In Midtown, where the rhythms of jazz bars carry into the streets, a flourishing arts scene spills out of celebrated galleries like the Detroit Institute of Arts. - National Geographic

So Why Does Everyone Seem To Be Identifying With Imposter Syndrome?

The phrase “impostor syndrome” often elicits a fierce sense of identification, especially from millennial and Gen X women. When I put out a call on Twitter for experiences of impostor syndrome, I was flooded with responses. - The New Yorker

Netflix To Start Streaming Broadcast Channels

If it proves successful, Netflix and TF1’s partnership could unlock the door for more linear channels to air on streaming services, including in other parts of Europe and in the US. - Ars Technica

Man Drives Mercedes Down Rome’s Spanish Steps, Gets Stuck

Firefighters who helped the 80-year-old driver from his vehicle say that he was uninjured and disoriented but not intoxicated. A crane removed the car from the travertine staircase, which is evidently undamaged. - Artnet

Together: Inside The Sonia Friedman-Hugh Jackman-Ian Rickson Low-Cost Theatre Project

While the actors are high-profile, the production costs are kept down: small casts, minimal sets, simple tech, smaller Off-Broadway venue. A quarter of the tickets are free, distributed to community groups; another quarter are sold on show day for $35. Also, equal pay for actors, no star billing, no designated press nights. - The Guardian

Cambodia Bans Thai Films And TV

“Cambodia escalated its cold war with Thailand on Friday when it announced a ban on Thai movies and TV shows and a boycott of the neighboring country’s international internet links. Tensions between the Southeast Asian countries have soared since an armed confrontation in a border area on May 28.” - AP

Is Art Basel Being Overshadowed By Its Own Spinoffs?

For decades it was the contemporary art world’s do-not-miss fair, but the Swiss mother-ship now faces competition from Art Basel events in Qatar, Hong Kong, Miami Beach, and, especially, Paris, a city which experience-minded collectors are likely to prefer to sedate Basel. - The New York Times

Audience Members Explain Why They Went To L.A. Opera Despite Protests, Troops, And Curfew

Steven Lass: “L.A. is not scary. You could be in a bad place at the wrong time, but that can happen anywhere.” Jason Roblee: “They did cancel our brunch reservation though.” Lass: “I lived in Hawthorne during the riots, so if all the buildings aren't burning, everything is good.” - Los Angeles Times (Yahoo!)

With Its Own Building Closed For Renovations, Pompidou Center Moves Into Newly-Restored Grand Palais

The Beaux-Arts landmark on the Champs-Elysées, built for the Paris Universal Exhibition (World’s Fair) in 1900, has been renovated for the first time in its history. Among the Pompidou exhibitions so far is Fun Palace, a pink, textile structure designed by Rotterdam architect Studio Ossidiana as a habitable "living laboratory.” - Dezeen

One Of Philadelphia’s Biggest Arts Funders, Left Homeless By UArts Collapse, Has New Home

“The Barnes Foundation will be the new home for The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, a major funder of local arts programming, after the closure of the University of the Arts in June 2024 left the center without an organizational home. The Pew Charitable Trusts will continue to fund the center.” - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Indoor Skydiving — Not Only Is It Really A Thing, It’s Turning into A Form of Dance

In glass-sided vertical wind tunnels, powerful fans shoot air upward at approximately the speed a human body would fall from an airplane. …But over the last 20 years, … because the tunnels can be viewed from the ground, indoor skydiving has become a spectator sport. - The New York Times

Alt-Weeklies Are Not, In Fact, Dead (Despite The Long Casualty List)

The many postmortems after The Village Voice closed in 2017, plus the disappearance of alt-weeklies in Philadelphia, Phoenix, Minneapolis, Baltimore, the Bay Area, and St. Louis, made the situation seem bleak. Yet in many other US cities, alt-weeklies thrive — and in some places they’re healthier than the daily papers. - Columbia Journalism Review

What AI Art Looks Like When It Hasn’t Trained On Artists’ Work

Depending on your perspective, Broad’s art is either a pioneering display of pure artificial creativity, a look into the very soul of AI, or a clever but meaningless electronic by-product, closer to guitar feedback than music. - The Verge

AI Bots Are Scouring Our Museum and Library Collections. Is Our Culture Being Stolen?

"For example, one respondent’s online collection included a semi-private archive that normally received a handful of visitors per day. That archive was discovered by bots and immediately overwhelmed by the traffic, even though other parts of the system were able to handle similar volumes of traffic.” - 404 Media

How California Became The Home Of Innovation For Music Technology

San Francisco ‘60s utopian counterculture, psychedelic drugs, defying authority, breaking rules, and a general sense of severing from the past for a brighter future all led to an explosion of new ideas,” says California native and instrument luminary Roger Linn. - Music Radar

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