“People generally don’t like being mean to each other — it’s what psychologists call ‘other-regarding preferences.’ But those preferences can have negative consequences.”
To Each Era Its Own Godzilla (Ours Is Way Different From The Original, FYI)
“For its feet, the team came up with the idea of remodeling rubber boots. World War II had ended just nine years earlier and the only place such gear was available at the time was the Tsukiji Fish Market in Tokyo.”
Adventures In Synesthesia, Or, How The Rothko Chapel Evokes Paul Simon’s Graceland
“Perhaps there is something inherently musical in the experience of abstract art.”
The Street Art That Fights Street Harassment
“The messages on Fazlalizadeh’s portraits illustrate the range of harassment women encounter on the streets, from invasions of their space or time, to name-calling and unwanted touching.”
Can The Death Of The Green Bay Symphony Provide A Wake-Up Call For Other Arts Groups?
“The way people consume music has changed, and classical music organizations are working to keep up with it. We have to consider what listeners have in mind when they come to a concert and what they listen to when they’re not at a concert.”
Protesters – Or Maybe Government Forces? – Destroy A Museum And Library In Southern Turkey
“Barbarians, now too, as it has been throughout history, attacked libraries, museums and books.”
Arts Journalists Can Too Get Work – At The Arts Organizations They Used To Cover
“It’s an interesting balancing act, for sure, because on the one side you have all resources available to you, but you want to be doing journalistic work.”
Weird Fiction, Weird Writers
“For a fiction writer, editing an anthology offers multiple lessons. You learn directly from the stories, but also from the lives of the writers and from the process of acquiring the stories. The information you gather seems more like intelligence, because you’re often a detective trying to solve an inexplicable case.”
Peter Sellars To Stage His First Dance Work
“[He] has directed operas and theater, collaborated with Toni Morrison and staged St. Matthew’s [sic] Passion with the Berlin Philharmonic. Now, he will turn his attention to Flex, a Brooklyn-born form of street dance, in a commission from the Park Avenue Armory [in New York].”
The Town That’s Discovering It’s Built Out Of Jewish Tombstones
“Back in May, construction work for a new supermarket began in the center of Brest, a city in Belarus on the border with Poland. In a turn of events that wouldn’t seem out of place in a horror film, more than 450 Jewish gravestones have since been discovered in the foundations of the houses that have been demolished to make way for the store.”
Carnegie Hall To Offer Free Livestream Of Recitals
“Starting next week, Carnegie Hall will go global, partnering with the six-year-old classical-music portal medici.tv to stream [four] concerts … All will be streamed live and remain available for 90 days. And all of them will be free.”
Crisis Management, PR Firm, Speakers Bureaus Drop Jian Ghomeshi
With a second woman coming forward by name to accuse him of assault and a former Q producer giving details of sexual harassment, both Ghomeshi’s longtime PR reps and top crisis-management firm Navigator have dropped him as a client, as have two firms who booked him for speaking engagements.
Top Posts From AJBlogs 10.30.14
Curlew River: Britten’s madwoman as samurai
AJBlog: Condemned to Music Published 2014-10-30
Early Word On “Mr. Turner” – Movie, Good; Art, Bad
AJBlog: Real Clear Arts Published 2014-10-30
David Byrne: Big Money is Killing Art
AJBlog: CultureCrash Published 2014-10-30
Angry bird
AJBlog: Performance Monkey Published 2014-10-30
Remembering Tony Staniland
AJBlog: Plain English Published 2014-10-30
Chica Chica Boom Steps?
AJBlog: RiffTides Published 2014-10-29
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A School Behaves Like An Orchestra, And An Orchestra Behaves Like A School
“Both initiatives underscored the extent to which the difficulties facing classical music in the 21st century are forcing venerable institutions to adapt, if not reinvent themselves.”
Movie Theatres Ban Google Glass
“If it can record, the new guidelines say, shut it off and put it away.”
Fandango, The Movie Ticket Seller, Joins The Content Producer Race
“The deal is part of Fandango’s ongoing effort to expand its offerings as a one-stop-shop for moviegoers. The site now offers reviews, commentary, celebrity interviews, trailers, guidance for families, and of course, their well-known ticket purchasing service.”
U.S. Fails In Roman Polanski Extradition Attempt
“He has been wanted by US police since 1977 after fleeing the country before he could be sentenced for having sex with a 13-year-old girl.”
A ‘Nasty, Glorious, Freewheeling’ Alternative Art History For The U.S.
“It’s possible to create a neat and tidy map tracing the progress of American art over the last 50 years. Yes, you can draw some sort of shape connecting Pop Art to Minimalism to Conceptual Art, highlighting the famed (often white and male) artists associated with each. … But it’s a stagnant, small portrait.”