Changing Hollywood’s Business Model From Within

“Strike.TV was born on the picket line. The new Web site, which started this week, was conceived of during the Hollywood writers strike earlier this year, which was largely over how to divvy up revenue from online entertainment and effectively shut down Hollywood for more than three months… Months later and after much anticipation, Strike.TV has gotten under way as a portal for professionally created Web series.”

Who Were The Best Presidents? (Make-Believe Edition)

If only real life were like Hollywood, George W. Bush might have turned out to be a great president. “In an ideal world it would be great to have a president who can kick some ass,” wrote one film critic after seeing Harrison Ford in Air Force One. In our non-ideal world, of course, nuance is more valuable to presidents than ass-kicking skill, but nuance doesn’t make for very good Hollywood cliffhangers, does it?

Studs Terkel, 96

“Louis ‘Studs’ Terkel, to give him the full name he rarely used, was born in New York City but came to embody Chicago as no other writer or cultural figure ever has. And few have left such a deep literary imprint. He took the obscure academic exercise known as oral history and turned it into literature.” Terkel died this weekend at the age of 96.

What Made Studs Special

“Reporters and priests and psychologists know it takes a certain kind of personality to get a certain kind of person to speak honestly. Terkel’s gift — displayed on his syndicated radio program for decades, as well as in print — was just this. He perfected a kind of shoe-leather approach to writing the history of America in the last century that coaxed extraordinary tales out of nobodies.”

Slow-Developing Play

So many musical performances seem to come together in a flash that it can seem odd to observe a collaboration that builds over a long period of time. But such is the nature of an unusual project bringing together the soprano Dawn Upshaw, the director Peter Sellars, and the composer Gyorgy Kurtag.