- Mike Davis was an artist, and the irate company-wide memorandum was his canvas. Few in the history of humankind have recognized the savage beauty in this lowliest of media. But Davis—the erstwhile head of Tiger Oil Company, now dead at eighty-five—shattered the limits of the form with routine ease, showing us just how big an asshole one man could be. Consider his memos a spin-off of the Theater of Cruelty: “‘There will be no more birthday celebrations, birthday cakes, levity or celebrations of any kind within the office,’ the boss wrote on Feb. 8, 1978. ‘This is a business office. If you have to celebrate, do it after office hours on your own time.’ … ‘Do not speak to me when you see me,’ the man had ordered in a memo the month before. ‘If I want to speak to you, I will do so. I want to save my throat. I don’t want to ruin it by saying hello to all of you.’ ”
- It’s hard enough to get a human being to pay to read your book. Now robots are refusing to pony up, too. Google has just “fed” some eleven thousand books to its artificial intelligence, hoping to teach it how to talk like a real boy. But even though they’re rolling in the dough, Google didn’t pay any of the authors of these books, Richard Lea writes: “After feeding these books into a neural network, the system was able to generate fluent, natural-sounding sentences. According to a Google spokesman—who didn’t want to be named—products such as the Google app will be ‘much more useful if they can capture the nuance of language better’ … ‘The research in question uses these novels for the exact purpose intended by their authors—to be read,’ [Authors Guild director Mary Rasenberger] argues. ‘It shouldn’t matter whether it’s a machine or a human doing the copying and reading, especially when behind the machine stands a multi-billion dollar corporation which has time and again bent over backwards devising ways to monetize creative content without compensating the creators of that content.’ ”
- A quick survey of the art inspired by the present presidential election reveals an stirring diversity of expression, most of it about Donald Trump’s various and sundry moral failures and complete soullessness: “There’s everything from ‘DonaldTrumpMakesMeWannaSmokeCrack,’ a song by Ledinsky, a Swedish musical artist, to Sarah Levy’s menstrual blood portrait of the candidate … Mark Wagner’s collage of Mr Trump and Mrs Clinton, made entirely of banknotes (‘HILLARY BILLARY vs. DOLLAR DONALD’), offers a strong statement on the capitalism entwined with elections … a mural created by Lushsux … depicts Mrs Clinton wearing a revealing bathing suit with $100 bills stuck in it. When the artist was ordered to remove it, he painted over it so that the candidate was wearing a black niqab.”
- If you’re like me, the only thing stopping you from seeing Shakespeare’s history plays is their intertextual cross-talk—you can’t really understand one without taking in the whole bunch, so why bother? No more excuses, though. Gary Wills explains, “the Chicago Shakespeare Theater has tried to solve this problem by showing three plays in a single day (running six hours with a dinner break, the procedure followed for some lengthy Wagner operas) … The second gulp, “Civil Strife,” comes now to open the Fall season, presenting Henry VI, Parts Two and Three, and the ever-popular Richard III … Barbara Gaines, the founding director of the Chicago company and the primary force behind the series, is a pacifist, so she thinks the deep futility of war is the most important (and relevant) aspect of these plays. She is right to find in Shakespeare an understanding that war poisons all social relationships. The three parts of Henry VI find multiple ways to emphasize this point. These early works are still influenced by the medieval morality plays and by festival pageants as living traditions. They can be as didactic as such ethical allegories.”
- Good news: you can now listen to what’s widely believed to be the earliest computer-generated music ever. Bad news: it’s a rendition of “God Save the Queen,” and it sounds like “electronic bagpipes.” The recording dates to 1951, and Turing had an appropriately British reaction to his creation: “Turing’s original response upon hearing the music, according to another computer scientist from his era was stoic. ‘Good show,’ he remarked.”
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