NYers Turning Out For Talk

New Yorkers are flocking to lectures. “The current enthusiasm for lectures and spoken-word events calls to mind the 19th century, when crowds flocked to hear Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Mark Twain and Henry Ward Beecher lecture. At the peak of the country’s lecture craze in the 1850’s, nearly 400,000 people a week attended lectures in the northern and western parts of the country. But why the resurgence now?”

Da Vinci Code Stakes (They’re High For All Of Us)

“There’s more at stake here than Dan Brown’s royalties. If the judge in London rules that the set of ideas Leigh and Baigent espoused can be copyrighted, it would set a troubling precedent that could trip up authors and filmmakers who craft works around any new historic or scientific research. It’s worth noting that a federal judge in New York rejected a lawsuit against Brown last year by novelist Lewis Perdue, saying any similarity between their books was in ideas that could not be copyrighted.”

New Policy For A New Radio Landscape

Canada needs a new official policy on commercial radio. “We no longer have one single and regulated system of radio services delivered over the public airwaves and free of charge to Canadians. Instead, we have both a regulated system of the past and a largely unregulated, parallel system of new delivery platforms for audio content.”

Jerry Lewis Gets France’s Highest Honor

Jerry Lewis was awarded the French Legion of Honor this week. “Lewis received the honorary title of ‘Legion Commander’ in a raucous ceremony in Paris – hamming it up for the cameras, winking, sticking out his tongue and making his trademark funny faces. True to form, the comedian turned what is generally a sober event – set in a gilded hall of the Ministry of Culture – into a virtual slapstick routine.”