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How The Journalists Of Kyiv’s Main English-Language Newspaper Regrouped After Its Oligarch Owner Fired Them All

When Adnan Kivan bought the Kyiv Post, he promised editorial independence; when the paper became too critical of the Ukrainian government for his taste, he sacked the staff. Within a month they launched the online, reader-funded Kyiv Independent, which now has 10,000 supporters. - Press Gazette (UK)

Culture Wars Come To The High School Musical

“You see politicians and officials enacting rules and laws which are incredibly onerous and designed to enforce a very narrow view of what students can see, read, learn or act on stage.” - Washington Post

Despite The Invasion, Independent Bookstores Are Opening And Thriving In Kyiv

"They have popped up like mushrooms after rain," says one visitor. Charlotte Higgins, The Guardian's chief culture writer, visits three of them. - The Guardian

School Field Trip To See “James and the Giant Peach” Canceled After Parents Complain

The cancellation came after a parent told school board members that she was worried about her 5-year-old daughter’s upcoming field trip to see the play, in which male actors play female characters. - Washington Post

Where Did The EGOT Thing Come From, Anyway?

"Many people who first heard of an EGOT assume it originated on the hit NBC sitcom 30 Rock. ... It turns out the term dates back to 1984, when only three people had achieved EGOT-hood: the composer Richard Rodgers and the actresses Helen Hayes and Rita Moreno." - The New York Times

What The Writers’ Guild Is Demanding In The Hollywood Strike

"The Guild (wants) a TV staffing minimum, which would range from six to 12 writers per show, based on the number of episodes, ... (and) a guaranteed minimum number of weeks of employment per season, ranging from 10 weeks to 52 weeks." The studios flatly reject both demands. - Variety

An Advance Look At Madrid’s €162 Million Museum Of Royal Collections, Opening This Summer

"Overseen by Spain's national heritage institution, Patrimonio Nacional, the gallery's aim is to share hundreds of items drawn from the 19 royal palaces and 10 monasteries under Patrimonio Nacional's stewardship." - The Guardian

2023 Tony Nominations Led By “Some Like It Hot,” “& Juliet,” “Shucked,” “A Doll’s House,” “Leopoldstadt”

Some Like It Hot garnered 10 nominations, while musicals & Juliet, Shucked, and New York, New York each landed nine. Leading the plays were A Doll's House, Leopoldstadt, and Ain't No Mo' with six nominations each. - Variety

Maybe This Man, Not John James Audubon, Is The Painter Of Birds We Should Revere

"Born in 1869, (Rex) Brasher left an enormous body of paintings, almost 900 large-scale watercolors documenting American bird life and habitat, that became the source material for a monumental 12-volume compendium of hand-colored reproductions." (And he didn't defend slavery or shoot the birds before painting them.) - MSN (The Washington Post)

The Hollywood Writers’ Strike Is On

"Television and movie writers declared late Monday that they will launch a strike for the first time in 15 years, as Hollywood girded for a walkout with potentially widespread ramifications. ... The Writers Guild of America said that its 11,500 unionized screenwriters will head to the picket lines on Tuesday." - AP

What’s Going To Change During The Hollywood Writers’ Strike: An Explainer

How the walkout will affect talk shows and scripted shows in the near term, and what the stakes are for each side. - AP

Gordon Lightfoot, Hit-Spinning Singer-Songwriter Of The 1970s, Is Dead At 84

A major presence on the US charts and an even bigger star in his native Canada, he's remembered for "Sundown," "If You Could Read My Mind." "Rainy Day People," and "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald." - Variety

Fetishizing Neutrality: The Mythologies Of Objectivity

Is neutrality even attainable? “No journalistic process is objective,” Wesley Lowery, a former Washington Post reporter, observed in a widely discussed New York Times opinion piece from 2020. “And no individual journalist is objective, because no human being is.” Given “the failures of neutral objective journalism,” he urged another ideal: “moral clarity.” - The Atlantic

Traffic Flow — A Story Of Chasing Online Audience

Most people who write for the internet have had the experience of publishing something that escapes the bounds of one’s usual audience and goes viral. The experience can be mesmerizing. - Slate

NYC’s New Museum Of Natural History Extension Is A Winner

New Yorkers live to grouse about new buildings. This one seems destined to be an instant heartthrob and colossal attraction. - The New York Times

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