How Random House Boss Was Ousted

Why did Peter Olson fire highly respected Ann Godoff from her perch as the president of the Random House Trade Group? “Mr. Olson’s motives are a matter of great consequence in the book business, where Bertelsmann’s Random House division is the largest consumer publisher in the world. He said his public condemnation of Ms. Godoff’s performance simply reflected honesty about a ruthless devotion to the bottom line: publishers who repeatedly fail to meet financial goals must go.” She failed, so she was out.

What Place Animals In The World?

“Along with other ecologically concerned citizens, scholars are trying to articulate the place that animals occupy in our world – or, less anthropocentrically, how human and nonhuman animals share this world. This work involves deconstructing the divisions and prejudices that separate people from animals, going all the way back to the Great Chain of Being in Aristotle’s scala naturae and the proclamation of human mastery over animals in Genesis. Much of the most exciting current research comes out of the humanities and social sciences rather than the natural sciences.”

Is Big Media A Threat Or An Opportunity?

Are our public airwaves and media choices being compromised as consolidation reduces the number of companies controlling media? “Should we totally deregulate the public airwaves and permit the dwindling of major media down to a precious few? Should we reduce choices available to cantankerous individualists who do not want their information and entertainment limited by increasingly massive mass media? ‘Luddite nonsense,’ answer many merging movie mogul and media magnates, as they point to the seemingly fierce competition from the Internet and the proliferation of cable channels.”

Thief Steals Art For Fake Gallery

A man who took art from artists for a gallery that didn’t exist, has been arrested in Florida. He portrayed himself as a Miami Beach gallery owner or lawyer, and “aspiring painters and sculptors sent him their work to be displayed in galleries. Several artists gave Evan Carter their credit card numbers to pay gallery dues or other fees, then noticed unfamiliar charges, police reports said.”

Sorting Out The Power Shift In Big Music/Tech Agreement

Last week’s truce between big music and tech companies concerning digital copying is a marriage of convenience. “Government intervention in product design is every tech company’s worst nightmare, and the specter of septuagenarian senators struggling to understand (let alone legislate) application program interfaces and watermarks was a frightening thought indeed. But the truce actually highlights the fact that a power shift has taken place between the media moguls and big tech. And guess what. Tech won.”

Training Orchestra – Does Toronto Deserve More?

Thirty years ago a young Seiji Ozawa learned to conduct as director of the Toronto Symphony. Now the orchestra has hired another inexperienced conductor in Peter Oundjian. “More than three decades later, we have a right to ask whether our orchestra should still be a learning opportunity for a relatively inexperienced maestro. Ozawa, as things transpired, turned out to be a quick study. But San Francisco and Boston, his next cities of residence, reaped most of the dividends.”

Al Hirschfeld, 99

His signature drawings of performers from the theatre were instantly recognizeable. “Mr. Hirschfeld was the best-known artist in the world of theater and had won a special Tony — an Antoinette Perry award — as a sign that the theater world welcomed him not only as an observer but also as one of its own.”

Going It Alone

Most people like to go to performances with someone else. Indeed, many consider going it alone to be some sort of personal failure. But David MacFarlane has discovered the benefits of single tickets. “Most importantly, going out alone means you can do whatever you want to do when it comes to responding to a performance.”