Here are some posts from last week's Greenpage that might be worth your time...
Workers Bear the Burden of Des Moines Metro Opera’s Ambitions
www.broadwayworld.com: It sounds like boot camp. An 89.5 hour workweek. Back to back 14 hour days. Overtime pay a rarity (and lack thereof legally sanctioned). Working in a warehouse where temperatures exceeded 100. Bullying. An open pit with no proper safety barriers. An employee so depleted and delirious that a doctor asked whether they were a victim of human trafficking. People in tears. Others too stressed to sleep. Dozens of employees sharing a single kitchen, with one stove and one refrigerator.
IATSE on President Trump Movie Tariff Announcement: ‘U.S. Needs Balanced Federal Response to Return Film and TV Jobs’
IATSE: IATSE continues to pursue all policy measures that can be implemented to return and maintain U.S. film and television jobs, while not disadvantaging our Canadian members. Federal policymakers must act to level the playing field and make the U.S. film and television industry more competitive on the global stage. IATSE is engaging with the Trump administration and Congress to advocate for policies that result in those stated goals.
What's at Stake for Live Nation/Ticketmaster? Billions - Plus its Entire Business Model
TicketNews: Two historic cases now threaten Live Nation and Ticketmaster from different directions: the DOJ’s antitrust lawsuit filed in 2024, which seeks remedies up to a full corporate break-up, and the FTC’s consumer-protection and BOTS Act lawsuit filed this week, which targets deceptive fees and resale practices. Together, they put Live Nation’s vertically integrated empire — and the fee-heavy ticketing system fans have railed against for years — in serious jeopardy.
Michigan anti-porn bill would criminalize ASMR, written erotica, and nonsexual depictions of trans people
reason.com: An "Anticorruption of Public Morals Act" sounds like something out of the Victorian era. But far from the brainchild of Comstock-era Progressive scold, it's a new bill in Michigan. Introduced September 11 by state Rep. Josh Schriver (R–Oxford), the act would ban the online distribution of material "that corrupts the public morals."
Taylor Swift Lawsuit Dismissed: Judge Rules Lyrics Didn't Copy Poems
www.billboard.com: A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit claiming Taylor Swift stole lyrics for 15 of her songs from a self-published Florida poet, ruling the accuser was trying to claim ownership over basic ideas and “common words.”






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