There’s Probably Still Some Good Acid In The Mud

The upstate New York farm that hosted the original Woodstock is up for sale, 38 years after it was overrun by 400,000 people in a three-day orgy of sex, drugs, and rock. “Roy Howard, the current owner, is packing it in after years of tangling with local officials over permits for reunion gatherings to mark the 1969, three-day Woodstock music festival that helped ignite a generation.” The farm can be yours for a tidy $8m.

Corcoran Sees Mild Success, But No Breakout

“The [Washington, D.C.-based] Corcoran Gallery of Art, testing new ways to regain its foothold as a high-profile Washington exhibition space, drew modest crowds to its recent sprawling exhibition on modernism. [But] the Corcoran increased its admission from $8 [to $14] for the show. The numbers… suggest that local residents and tourists are accustomed to free first-class shows. No matter how exquisite the exhibitions, museums that charge struggle to find a broad audience.”

Letting The Author Out of The Kid’s Body

Ben Dolnick may not be your typical debut novelist – 24 years old, low-key, and getting plenty of press for his first book – but his journey from kid obsessed with Vonnegut to professional writer reads like the fantasy story every creative writing teacher dreams of. “Praised for his ability to evoke the self-conscious flailings of people close to his own age, he is an acute observer of his elders as well.”

Wood Jumping To New Yorker

Literary critic James Wood is joining The New Yorker after 12 years with The New Republic. “In some literary circles Mr. Wood has been described as a brutal critic who has blasted many of the country’s most admired writers, including Don DeLillo, Toni Morrison and Thomas Pynchon. He is also regarded as one of the most respected critics of his generation.”

Cable’s Big Summer

Cable networks in the US have been taking full advantage of the summer lull in network programming this year, launching ambitious new hourlong dramas to compete directly with the entertainment giants at CBS, ABC, Fox, and NBC. And the strategy is working, to a remarkable extent, drawing not only viewers, but also writers and actors who might previously have been loathe to do a show on basic cable.

Met To Expand Simulcasts Globally

“The Metropolitan Opera plans to expand still further its live high-definition simulcasts into movie theaters around the world for the 2007-8 season, potentially tripling the audience for these broadcasts to an estimated one million viewers… The total includes more than 300 screens in the United States, up from 113 last season.”

Never A Good Idea To Publish Your Murder Plot

A Polish author is on trial for allegedly committing the brutal crime he later detailed in a bestselling novel. The author claims he was inspired by a newspaper account of the torture and murder of a businessman. Prosecutors say that “the book contained intimate details of the murder that could be known only to police — or the killer. Further investigations revealed that the victim was an acquaintance of [the author’s] estranged wife.”