Can LA Live Without TV Car Chases?

Since OJ’s low-speed freeway chase, the car chase has been a staple of LA’s TV news shows. Local stations often devote large chunks of their shows to police car pursuits. But the LA Police Department is “considering asking television stations to eliminate or significantly reduce their coverage of live police chases. The broadcast of police pursuits is more entertainment than informative, [police chief William] Bratton has said publicly and in informal discussions with local news executives, and could be interpreted as encouraging criminal activity. Such a change would mark a distinct shift for local TV stations.”

UK Theatre – A Changing Of The Guard

Many of the UK’s biggest theatres are getting new leadership this year. “The appointments have been common currency for some time, but it’s only now, with an unprecedented flurry of handovers just around the corner, that mouths are beginning to water at what lies ahead. The players who dominated the scene during the 1990s are making way for fresh blood.”

The Surrealist’s Library – A Record

Surrealist artist Andre Breton’s collection of art – to be sold next year – provides “the most complete history of the evolution of an iconoclastic group which opposed all forms of moral and social convention and replaced them by the ‘values of dreams, instinct, desire and revolt’.” The 400 paintings, 1,500 photographs and 3,500 documents are an invaluable record. The Surrealists “1924 manifesto laid the ground for some of Europe’s most devastating artistic quarrels, often turning on a love-hate relationship with Marxism, including Breton’s falling out with the communist poet Louis Aragon.”

Thwarting The Artistic Inmate

The Australia Arts Council awarded $26,000 to inmates of a regional prison to perform an opera and cabaret. But the state’s justice minister, who found out about the grant after it was made, says he’ll have the money returned, saying “the money would be better spent on victim support services, or programmes aimed at reducing re-offending.”

Chinese Artist Owns Rights To Mao

Yes, China is still a Communist state. But the country’s leadership is anxious to show the rest of the world that it respects property rights. So that might explain a ruling by the Beijing Higher People’s Court, that ordered the Museum of the Chinese Revolution – a major landmark in central Beijing – to pay an artist’s family the equivalent of $31,000 for selling copies of a picture of Mao Zedong without permission. The court ruled “that while the museum is allowed to display Dong’s painting, reproduction rights are still held by his widow and children. The verdict would likely have horrified Mao, leader of the 1949 revolution that eliminated most private property.”

Langston Hughes Opera Recovered

A long lost blues opera by Lanston Hughes and James P. Johnson performed only three times in 1940 has been reconstructed and performed. “The music is a combination of jazz, swing, blues and ragtime, all set within a classical structure. At various points it recalls the work of Gershwin, Duke Ellington, Scott Joplin and Dvorak. Some of the numbers set spectators to tapping their fingers and toes in rhythm.”

The Poet As Suicide Bomber?

Was 17th Century poet John Milton a terrorist? Since September, the pages of a venerable British Times Literary Supplement have rung with the charge: “that Milton’s verse play ‘Samson Agonistes’ is ‘an incitement to terrorism’ and that its hero, the blind Israelite champion, who pulled down the pillars of the Philistines’ temple, killing himself along with thousands of citizens, ‘is, in effect, a suicide bomber’.”