Reinventing America’s Tallest Building

Chicago has approved the construction of what will be America’s tallest building. “The design for the $550 million tower, which was breathtaking but hardly flawless when it was introduced last July, has taken some important steps forward, both in the sky and along the ground. Now here’s the trend part of the story: If this tower and Jeanne Gang’s sensuous Aqua high-rise both get built, Chicago will be running a clinic in the new aesthetic possibilities offered by skyscrapers that are places to live rather than work.”

Can Chicago Repeat “Wicked”?

“Wicked” has been a huge hit in Chicago. Can its success be repeated? “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” hopes to do just that. “In Chicago, at least, “Spelling Bee” and “Wicked” have some notable similarities. Both musicals currently are successful — and profitable — on Broadway. Both share a New York-based producer in David Stone. Both will have open-ended, dedicated, sit-down Chicago productions (as distinct from mere stops on a tour) that hope to be around for years.”

The Little Station That Could

“In this big-money era of consolidated station ownership and homogenized program formats, smaller, independent stations like Chicago’s WVON – with its tiny audience of mostly older listeners, weak broadcast signal and modest revenues-face oblivion. Yet the station perseveres, in large part because it fills a niche no general-market station would: providing a venue for its mostly African-American listeners to express their anger, hurt and pride and to share information about which politicians to believe in-a short list-or when to show up to protest a school closing or how to break off a little piece of the American Dream. WVON is more than a radio station; it’s a family business that has become a community trust.”

Do Buildings Build Jobs? Not What The Economists Say…

“For a decade and a half, the belief that sports teams were economic drivers helped persuade cities and states to shower billions of dollars on major league sports teams, most of it to build state-of-the-art stadiums.” But “a small community of economists who have taken up and methodically rejected many of the claims made about the economic benefits of major league sports teams: that they create jobs or bring money to local businesses or otherwise spur economic growth.” So why are cities still falling for these arguments?

Boston’s MFA Dances With Italian Government

Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts is in a high-stakes dance with the Italian government over art the Italians claim has been looted. “The Italian investigators sit on one side of the table, their cards held close to the vest. Just what have they got? Can their hand prove what so many have said for years: that the MFA bought art looted from Italian archeological sites?”

Band Sells Shares To Its Fans

When Leeds band Four Day Hombre went looking for a record deal, they were unable to get the creative and financial control they were looking for. So they turned to their fans and recruited 30 investors to fund their debut album, which is out on Monday. The investment could be about to pay off, with the band being described as “somewhere on the radar between Coldplay and Radiohead.”

Lawyers Wrap: Brown’s Da Vinci Code Ideas Not Original

The lawyers defending Dan Brown from plagiarism charges wrapped up their case: “The ideas are of too general a nature to be capable of copyright protection. Many of the ideas complained of were not original to The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. They were merely copied from others. The claimants were doing themselves exactly what they complain of in Mr Brown.”

Did Tom Cruise Threaten Over South Park Show?

Did Tom Cruise threaten to not do any publicity for the latest Mission Impossible movie if Comedy Central (owned by the same company as the movie is produced by) didn’t pull an episode of South Park that made fun of Scientology? Cruise’s reps deny the claim. Cruise “had nothing to do with any programming” they say. “At no time did Tom Cruise say he would not do publicity” for “M:I III.” “OK, but one problem: No one at Viacom has publicly offered a satisfactory explanation of why the repeat, scheduled for Wednesday night, was pulled.”