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This week’s poem: Jerome Sala’s “Most Hated Celebs — Exposed!”
The cinematic shindig’s lineup features unconventional takes on familiar subjects.
Two jazz writers for the magazine pay homage to the indispensable accomplishments of jazz writer Dan Morgenstern, who passed away on September 7 at the age of 94.
Short Fuse host Elizabeth Howard talks to Adam Kuper about his book “The Museum of Other People: From Colonial Acquisitions to Cosmopolitan Exhibitions”.
In his letters, Irish poet Seamus Heaney’s tone, and the expanse of his openness, varies according to the addressee — but his approach to all is inevitably marked by seriousness and elegance.
HBO’s “Industry” is an intense and highly intelligent series that just seems to keep getting better and better.
You want Baroque energy and Early Classic poise? Here’s a first-rate recording of a one-act, one-singer opera by Telemann along with some of his imaginative orchestral works.
Goose’s three nights seemed a bit hit-and-miss, which is not unusual for jam-bands, although that only made highpoints more exhilarating.
Visual Arts Commentary: Sunshine and Shadows — Sundials, Where Art and Technology First Met
Considered the earliest integration of art and technology, sundials of various types have been around for 4000 years or so.
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