Stories

Lufthansa Changes Musical Instrument Carryon Rules After Incident

As of March 1, Lufthansa Group, citing “customer feedback,” said it would be applying “a new, more generous” carry-on policy for small instruments, such as violins, trumpets or ukuleles. - The New York Times

Painting Unseen For 65 Years Authenticated As Rembrandt

The artwork, Vision of Zacharias in the Temple, has been in private hands since 1961, a year after art historians declared it not to be by Rembrandt. After two years of examination with state-of-the-art equipment, experts at Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum have now reversed that earlier assessment. - AP

Rebecca Benaroya, Doyenne Of Seattle Arts Philanthropists, Has Died At 103

“Together with her late husband, real estate developer Jack Benaroya, Becky Benaroya championed dozens of arts, humanitarian and civic organizations including the Seattle Symphony,” whose home, Benaroya Hall, opened in 1998. - The Seattle Times

Several Sets Of Regulators Could Still Block The Paramount-Warner Bros. Deal

Among those regulators are the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, the European Commission, and the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority. What’s more, several state attorneys general are considering a lawsuit, and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States may have concerns. - TheWrap (Yahoo!)

Paramount Says It Won’t Sell Off Warner Bros. Cable Businesses

“Paramount Skydance’s leadership says there are no plans to divest or spinoff cable assets after merging with Warner Bros. Discovery for $110 billion. The deal will see the two companies control a vast portfolio of cable and free-to-air networks, including CBS, CNN, HBO, … Discovery Channel and much more.” - TheWrap (Yahoo!)

Chicago Launches Plan To Create Loop Arts District

“The district will be supported by nearly 90 Loop arts organizations that will develop the neighborhood as an arts and culture destination. … (It) is also envisioned as a way to stitch together attractions such as Millennium Park and the Chicago Riverwalk.” - Chicago Sun-Times

Paavo Järvi Named Next Chief Conductor Of London Philharmonic

Music director or chief conductor, formerly, of (among others) the Cincinnati Symphony and the Orchestre de Paris, and currently of the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen and Zurich’s Tonhalle-Orchester, the 63-year-old Järvi will succeed Edward Gardner in London in the fall of 2028. - The Guardian

Indianapolis Museum Of Art Has Closed Its High-Tech Immersive Art Space

The museum opened the 30,000-square-foot space, called the Lume, in 2021 with a 150-projector installation emblazoning images of Van Gogh’s paintings across the walls and floor. - The Indianapolis Star (Yahoo!)

Too Many Basket Weavers?

Ontario is one of the provinces to see the highest economic impact from the sector, according to the report. - The Conversation

Turmoil At This Year’s Berlinale Has Some Wondering If Germany Can Run Big Cultural Events

Some "wonder if the German government’s views on permissible speech, shaped by its sense of responsibility for the Holocaust and desire to stop antisemitism, make it impossible to run top-tier cultural events in the country." - The New York Times

The Louvre Scandals And A French President’s Legacy

France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, is at risk of losing what could be a legacy-defining cultural project: a $1 billion-plus refurbishment of the Louvre, which would include moving the Mona Lisa, the museum’s most famous painting, to its own room and building a new entrance. - The New York Times

How Paramount Finally Succeeded At Buying Warner

As much as David Ellison and his team had been telling anyone who would listen that his business would ultimately prevail in buying a company five times its size, the reaction on Friday from Hollywood to Washington to Wall Street was astonishment. - The Wall Street Journal

In Walking Away, Netflix Won The Warner Deal

For Netflix, such a deal would have complicated the business model for a company that had already vaulted to a leading position in Hollywood on its strength as a streaming pure-play. - The Wall Street Journal

Live Nation Antitrust Trial Begins — Will The Music Juggernaut Be Broken Up?

For Live Nation, the stakes are high — a possible breakup of the company, or at least a disruption of the lucrative business model that over the last 16 years has made it a colossus of the music industry. - The New York Times

How A Phone Ban Changed One School

Anton Caldwell, Shawnee's librarian for more than 20 years, says he knew right away the ban was working. The number of students visiting the library increased, and so did the number of books they're reading. - NPR

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