A Taiwanese study of people using online dating sites finds that “the more our brains have to search through, the more difficult it also becomes to ignore irrelevant information. A person is also more likely to be distracted (or attracted to) attributes that were not initially relevant or pertinent to their original search.” This is […]
Is Ticketmaster Hurting Because Of Ticket Sales? Nope – Business is Sweet!
Ticketmaster announces a billion-dollar loss, blaming “declining ticket sales, costs associated with layoffs and a massive impairment charge.” The loss is real (in a 2009-paper-losses, bank-accounting kind of way), of course. But: The bulk of Ticketmaster’s loss was because of a $1.1 billion charge the company took because of a precipitous decline in its share […]
Of Poverty, Banking, and the Arts
Yesterday on CNBC, host Mark Haines said that Wall Street could not possibly be run well by people making $250,000. Here’s the transcript: Let’s get back to what I regard as a fundamental issue here. I know it’s politically unpopular, politically incorrect. I know it goes against all of the populist indignation that’s out there […]
Help For The Arts (But 10,000 Arts Groups Could Go Out Of Business)
Americans for the Arts has warned arts organizations to plan scenarios for 40% cuts in their budgets as the economy gets worse. And the group says that 10,000 arts organizations could go out of business in this recession. Some have been saying for some time that the arts were overbuilt in the boom of the […]
Ominous sign…
when the most committed owners of newspapers start selling off their shares: Donald Graham, the chairman and chief executive officer of Washington Post Co.has sold tens of millions of dollars worth of stock in the past year through a series of trusts he oversees for his relatives. In the process he has decreased his control […]
Apparently, the News is Free
Is there anything ironic about National Public Radio canceling its newspaper subscriptions? This is, after all, the member organization that often fund-raises with the line “The news isn’t free.”
Is the NEA bad for the arts?
A ridiculous question, sure. The National Endowment for the Arts is the channel through which the federal government invests money in the arts. And though it’s not much money, compared to what other countries invest, it’s something. Besides giving money, the NEA also has the value of drawing attention or legitimacy to the things it […]
Time to start blogging
I’ve been using this blog mostly as a place to put administrative posts about AJ. But I’ve decided to take up blogging myself. First, a couple more administrative notes. We’ve been adding more blogs to AJ in recent weeks. Former NYTimes reporter Judith Dobrzynski’s Real Clear Arts debuted last week with a bang, and she’s […]
Some new assistant editors at ArtsJournal
I’ve been meaning to post this for some time. As my previous post explained, I was looking for some more help at ArtsJournal this fall, and posted the job notice in the post below. Ultimately, we had 134 applications for the editor job. There were some really great applicants. In the end, I chose two. […]
ArtsJournal is Hiring [UPDATE]
ArtsJournal is expanding and I’m looking for a part time editor. The job involves culling stories from the publications we monitor (basically anything about the arts in English, worldwide) and choosing 10-15 stories per shift to feature on AJ. Each shift takes about two hours and we do the site in two shifts per day […]
Why Newspapers Are Failing…
I’ve been posting lately at the National Arts Journalism Program’s new Articles blog. Today I enumerated the business reasons why newspapers are laying off staff, cutting content and scaling back their businesses. Does it really have to be this way?
A New Blog At NAJP
In my other life (what other life?) I’m the acting director of the National Arts Journalism Program (NAJP). NAJP started out as a project of the Pew Charitable Trusts in an attempt to help improve the state of arts journalism. I was an NAJP fellow at Columbia University in 1996-97. The program offered fellowships, did […]
The Rise Of Arts Culture
Today I want to make an argument about the rise of arts culture. In the 1950s, at the dawn of TV, the medium’s pioneers believed that television would be the great democratizer – exposing culture to the masses. The best of the world’s culture could be brought into the living rooms of America. The early […]
A Low Pressure Air Mass…
If the power of mass culture is based on the ability to attract a mass audience, then perhaps it’s worth looking at the size of the mass. Magazines: People magazine is solidly mass market. In 2006 it had a circulation of 3.8 million. Its rivals Us Weekly sold 1.8 million and In Style sold on […]
Rethinking Mass Culture
We’re consumed by the idea of mass culture. Since television (and before it, radio) brought the immediacy of produced culture into our living rooms, we’ve treated the power of a massive aggregated audience with awe. That something is popular enough to attain common currency means it has power. Mass culture pervades everything. Writers place a […]
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