Tiptoeing Into The Brave New World

The world of bloggers, on-demand media, and participatory journalism has required a lot of adjustment from the traditional press, and those at the helm of America’s public broadcasters have been struggling to decide which elements of the global online world they can afford to embrace, and which ones they can’t afford not to.

Take Your Author To Work Day

“With authors fiercely battling for attention in a media-saturated world, an increasing number of writers — from first-time novelists like Ms. Dean to celebrities like Madeleine K. Albright, the former Secretary of State — are visiting people where they spend much of their time: at work… A growing roster of corporations, including Microsoft, Boeing, Google and Altria, the owner of brands like Philip Morris and Kraft Foods, have played host to writers in their offices. Even the United States Treasury Department has invited nearly 40 authors to speak over the last two years. Executives see the author readings as akin to other perks like in-house gyms, subsidized cafeterias and financial advice.”

Stanley Kunitz, 100

“Stanley Kunitz, who was one of the most acclaimed and durable American poets of the last century and who, at age 95, was named poet laureate of the United States, died on Sunday at his home in Manhattan. He was 100… Over the extraordinary span of his career — nearly 80 years — Mr. Kunitz achieved a wide range of expression, from intellectual to lyric, from intimately confessional to grandly oracular. Among other honors, he won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1959, the National Book Award in 1995, at age 90, the National Medal of the Arts in 1993 and the prestigious Bollingen Prize in poetry in 1987.”

DaVinci’s Hype Machine Includes Withholding Sneak Peeks

Ordinarily, when a movie is released without critics being given an advance screening, it’s because the product is so mind-blowingly awful that the studio doesn’t want to give the press a chance to bad-mouth it before the first weekend’s receipts are in. But for the producers of The DaVinci Code, who have raised hype to an art form in the months leading up to this weekend’s premiere, the withholding of advance screenings is all about building the suspense.

Peeling Open The New Orangerie

As Paris’s Musée de l’Orangerie prepared to reopen following a 6-year, $36 million renovation, one of the biggest questions was how the Claude Monet masterpieces mounted to the walls had survived the trauma of construction. (These eight paintings cannot be removed, and an elaborate system of alarmed and reinforced boxes had to be devised to protect them from the dust and vibration.) As it turned out, the Monets are fine, and the Orangerie itself, while looking very much the same on the outside, has undergone a radical transformation inside.

Poetry’s “Surrogate Father”

Stanley Kunitz was more than just a great poet, he was a generous soul who always took the time to help and inspire the next generation, according to those who knew him. But he was also the best critic many of his devotees ever had, and the toughest, always keen to “improve a fellow poet’s work with bold, unflinching editing.”

Who’s Gagging Whom?

The Ottawa chapter of the American Federation of Musicians has been outspoken in denouncing a new confidentiality agreement proposed by the National Arts Centre for its employees, and has encouraged members of the NAC Orchestra to refuse to sign. But apparently, the union itself has rules governing what its members can and cannot say publicly. A union bylaw states that members should not speak ill of one another publicly. However, union officials note that the bylaw is part of a code of ethics, not a legally binding command, and further point out that, while the bylaw is only in effect while a musician is a member of the Ottawa local, the NAC’s new rule would require that employees stay silent for their entire lives.