The Metropolitan Opera announced its 2026–27 season this week, and the headline takeaway is this: 17 productions. The fewest in a full season since the company moved into Lincoln Center in 1966. More than a third of all performances will be Aida, La Bohème, or Tosca. Peter Gelb, whose long tenure has been marked by entrepreneurial ambition and significant financial struggle, simultaneously … [Read more...]
Archives for February 2026
The Middleware Manifesto: A Proposal for Rebuilding American Culture
In my last post, Why the Death of American Leadership may run through your Local Orchestra, I argued that the struggles of institutions like orchestras and newspapers aren't a series of isolated but mounting failures but a systemic breakdown in the civic middle, the connective tissue that holds communities together. It's happening not only across the arts but across our political, civic and … [Read more...]
AJ Chronicles: This Week’s Stories — Changing of the Guard
This week there's a question that connects nearly every story. Who gets to decide what's real? A viral AI-generated video of Tom Cruise fighting Brad Pitt is racking up views. Neither actor consented or was paid. SAG-AFTRA is furious. Lawsuits await. Meanwhile, Tracey Emin is telling young artists to buy cameras, keep diaries, and send letters because everything on your phone already belongs … [Read more...]
AJ Chronicles: This week’s stories — When Spectacle replaces Authority
First up, a visual metaphor for the culture this week: a 15-foot gold-leaf statue of the President commissioned by crypto investors, versus the empty desks at the Washington Post, where the entire photography staff and Pulitzer Prize-winning art critic Sebastian Smee were unceremoniously let go. Heavy-metal "boosterism" in its rawest form versus the sound of expertise leaving the building. This … [Read more...]
Why the Death of American Leadership may run through your Local Orchestra
In the space of a week, we have lost two significant and iconic American institutions. But the shuttering of the Kennedy Center and the decimation of the Washington Post are neither isolated nor unrelated. They represent a break in the connective tissue that used to unite Americans. This is part of a larger systemic uncoupling of our civic, political and cultural institutions from the engine that … [Read more...]
This Week’s AJ Chronicles: Context is Survival
This week we collected 119 stories. Here's what I learned: Existential crises have a way of forcing clarity. Whether the arts and the larger creative world are in crisis I leave for you to decide. But with weekly news of financial and organizational meltdowns, political pressures and an almost primordial angst about threats of AI, some things may be becoming clearer about what matters and/or … [Read more...]






