Here are a few posts from last week's Greenpage that might be worth your time...
8 Los Angeles Artists Reflect on the 2025 Wildfires
Artsy: To say the Los Angeles art community has been devastated by the wildfires would be an understatement. Artists in areas like Altadena and the Palisades have seen their workspaces gutted and livelihoods threatened as ongoing fires continue to wreak havoc across L.A. County.
‘The Brutalist’ Director Speaks Out After AI Controversy Erupts
www.forbes.com: The Brutalist director Brady Corbet is addressing the backlash caused by the revelation that AI was used in parts of the film's creation. Corbet issued a statement following revelations by the film’s editor, Dávid Jancsó, in a Jan. 11 interview with tech publication Red Shark News.
'Our ignorance and discomfort around disability and disfigurement:' Sebastian Stan delivers powerful speech at the Golden Globes, but his disabled fellow actor was overlooked
The Mary Sue: The movie A Different Man highlights the condition neurofibromatosis, where non-cancerous tumors appear on a person’s body. While Sebastian Stan is the lead actor of the film, and just picked up an award for his performance at the Golden Globes, the real star of the show is Adam Pearson, who actually has neurofibromatosis.
Hit Play on OK Go's Mindbogglingly Choreographed Music Video Filmed with 64 Phones
Colossal: We’re more selective these days about how we use the word “meta,” but when it comes to OK Go’s latest release, the band has created—bear with us here—a music video using phones about videos made with phones.
Against the Dying of the Light: Toward a Risky Theatre
AMERICAN THEATRE: Last October, I had the chance to attend the annual Freedom Awards, hosted by the National Civil Rights Museum. The 2024 honorees were civil rights attorney Sherrilyn Ifill, civil rights leader Xernona Clayton, and filmmaker Spike Lee. In all of the remarks and speeches that evening, it became even clearer to me that for every movement, there must be a countermovement. This is how we truly balance the scales of justice in the United States of America. We put pressure on systems, and practices change, then laws follow suit. It is in alignment with the order of operations of the universe: Be, do, have.
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