California Center for Arts Museum To Close

The California Center for the Arts Museum in Escondido is closing July 20. It’s said to be a “temporary closure” but as the staff is being let go, it looks like the museum is done. Why? The CCA blames reduced state funding. “Though it consumes only $438,000 of the center’s current $7.3 million budget, the center says it can no longer afford to keep the museum open with reduced state funding.”

Education – Your Ad Here

As schools across America cut back on classes and programs, corporations are seeing opportunity and stepping in with funding. And, of course, opportunities to market their products to children. Critics don’t like the trend. “Children are more susceptible in school because they tend to believe that what they learn there is valid. So a commercial message in schools, no matter how subtle, gives an aura of responsibility and truth. Companies acknowledge they are trying to reach their current and future customers, but say their programs promote goodwill and help cash-strapped schools.”

The Evil, Wonderful Edinburgh Fringe

The Edinburgh Fringe Festival turns 50. “Because it is the way it is, in the place that it is, at the time that it is, it has become perhaps our nation’s most important yardstick and proof of her cultural identity and diversity. For three weeks in August, it is a living, breathing, heaving accumulation of creative energy that is unparalleled. Sound dramatic? Maybe. But it’s fact. There is nothing like it anywhere else in the world. On the one hand it is evil, disillusioning the naïve and pillaging the weak. On the other it is good, rewarding the strong and praising the innovative. Its thirst unquenchable, its attraction undiminishable, its value undeniable.”

Tonys – High Entertainment Factor

So TV ratings for last week’s Tony Awards broadcast were down. It was the most entertaining Tony broadcast in years. “The telecast was young and multicultural, traditional and classy – oddly enough, just like the real boundary-defying season. There were shockingly few of those moments that made a person embarrassed to have spent so much of her precious life in the theater. And despite the show’s hilarious preponderence of prescription-drug sponsors, I’m told that ratings actually went up 19 percent in that tyrannically desirable and healthy 18-49 demographic. Ambien, anyone?”

Can Hollywood Make Art? Not So You’d Notice At Film Fests

There is a disturbing trend at film festivals such as Cannes, writes Kenneth Turan. Hollywood movies, even first-rate films get discounted just because they’re the product of Hollywood. “Films produced in the maw of the studio system couldn’t possibly be art, and even if they were, they surely didn’t require the kind of help or recognition a major film festival award can provide.” Is this really fair?

Educational TV (It’s Not What You Think)

“Gone are the days when academia and television were from opposite ends of the intellectual spectrum. Instead, TV studies are now enjoying a newfound respectability and prominence in the academic world. The maturing of the medium, recording technology that has allowed previously ephemeral TV work to remain accessible in archival form, and students’ comfort level with video texts rather than written ones have all come together in the last few years to give new impetus to a discipline once derided as not serious enough to merit scholarly study. It’s a rich vein for study, offering a virtually unlimited terrain due to the sheer amount of TV programs on screens, something film doesn’t offer.”

The Science Of Funny (Yeah, Right!)

Researchers recently tried to determine the world’s funniest joke. And then they crunched numbers to find what was the funniest time of the year. Sure – maybe the biggest joke of all is the idea that scientists thought they could pin down what funny is. “There may be no more subjective art. One man’s glee might be another man’s unforgivable insult. Men and women often diverge wildly over what makes them laugh. Age, too, creates gulfs. Geography dictates still more patterns of comic appreciation.”

In Defence of Television

It’s so easy to blame TV for all the ills of the world. What dreck! But “contrary to the scolding alarmists who’ve launched withering attacks, blaming TV for everything from youth violence to dulling and lulling the masses into a bloated stupor, television remains the most ubiquitous, educating, egalitarian, affecting and powerful medium the world has ever known.”