ACTRA Strike Ratchets Up The Noise

“A war of press releases erupted yesterday after the striking Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists said it was appealing a portion of this week’s Ontario Superior Court decision, specifically the part allowing the Canadian Film and Television Production Association to take the legal dispute to arbitration.”

Women Are Plenty Funny; Men Just Aren’t Laughing

Women aren’t funny. It’s a stereotype that has been around as long as… well, comedy itself. But since there is, in reality, no shortage of funny women, where does the notion that comedy is exclusive to men come from? Comedian Drew Carey offers one explanation: “It’s not so much that women aren’t funny, he explains, as that men don’t want them to be funny.”

Cinemas Fighting Early DVD Releases

Two major UK cinema chains are refusing to show a popular new movie, apparently as a protest over the studio’s decision to release the film on DVD only a couple of months after it premiered in theaters. “DVD release dates are a hot issue in the movie industry. Cinemas in Italy and Germany have already forced studios to delay the DVD releases of a string of films.”

Gotta Love That NY Real Estate Market

New York’s Seventh Regiment Armory, which is used to stage several prominent art fairs, changed hands in mid-December, and this week, those who are used to staging events at the venue got the news they had been expecting: rents are going up. Way up. By this fall, the cost of renting the Armory for an art show will have tripled.

Pulpy, Yes. Classy, Absolutely.

Janet Maslin says that Sidney Sheldon, who passed away this week, had a talent for blending the lurid with a potent literacy that gave his books just the right kick. “He brought class to trash. And he did it with consistent professionalism, turning himself into a legitimate brand name. If that sounds like no great accomplishment, think about how rarely an author does it right.”

We Manipulate – You Decide

Allowing the public to vote on the outcome of televised competitions and reality shows has become a staple of the modern entertainment world. “Yet even as entertainment democracy proliferates, some question how well it works… And some skeptics ask whether the spread of such contests is a reflection less of rising populism than of new marketing tricks.”

Forget The Oscars – Critics Know The Score

The Oscars may be an enjoyable diversion, but David Gritten says that the Academy’s sketchy voting practices have undermined its collective judgment, and allowed the Oscars to be bypassed in importance by the various critics’ choice film awards. “I guarantee we film critics see more films week in, week out, than members of other awards bodies. When we cast a vote, it’s based on a vast wealth of film-watching experiences – by no means all of them good ones.”

Scottish Theatre Declines To Relocate To Slums

“Scotland’s flagship national theatre is set to abandon plans to base itself in a deprived Glasgow housing scheme. Easterhouse had been earmarked as a home for the National Theatre of Scotland (NTS). When the surprise move was announced in 2003 by the then Culture Minister, Frank McAveety, much was made of the symbolic power of the new cultural institution being sited in an area associated with deprivation and poverty. However, the core staff of the NTS has never moved to the £9.5m facility and has instead been based in temporary offices in central Glasgow.”

Arts Veteran Tusa To Advise Tories

“Sir John Tusa, widely respected for having turned round the fortunes of London’s Barbican Centre, is to lead a new Conservative taskforce on the arts. The former broadcaster steps down from his role as the Barbican’s chief executive in August, and in the meantime joins a number of prominent figures from Zac Goldsmith to Bob Geldof who have been enlisted by the Tories to look at all areas of policy before the next general election.”

At Least They’re Starting With High Expectations

British publisher Penguin has officially launched its wiki novel project, offering anyone who cares to participate the chance to help write a full-length book online. “‘It may end up like reading a bowl of alphabet spaghetti,’ Jeremy Ettinghausen, head of digital publishing at Penguin UK said, adding there were no plans as yet to publish the completed work.”