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Send us Fan MailCover photo of Rick Allen - copyright Cindy Burnham, Lucky Shot Productions Show Note: 0:00 Nautilus Productions' Co-Founder Rick Allen gives the history of Allen v. McCrory - suit against NC over Allen's footage of the Queen Anne's Revenge Shipwreck 1:20 SCOTUS' 9-0 decision in Allen v. Cooper that the Copyright Remedy Clarification Act of 1990 (CRCA) was unconstitutional 2:00 NC's technical arguments against Allen's claims 2:55 court's use of pendant jurisdiction to wipe out 5 years of Allen's case3:45 petition for rehearing en banc denied 6:45 states' use of sovereign immunity against creators8:50 Jeff Sedlik's suit over use of his photo of Miles Davis as a tattoo 9:30 Michael J. Bynum's suit over Texas A&M University's unauthorized use of Bynum's 12th Man book (complaint here; dismissal of copyright infringement claims against A&M employee discussed here)11:00 Allen's recommendations to artists to protect their work online13:35 Emily Gould's discussion of LAION case 17:00 Bartz v. Anthropic - 23 June 2025 Order on Fair Use in N.D. Cal.19:50 Allen on opt out policy20:20 Visual Artists Copyright Reform Act (VACRA)21:00 Gould on survey by DACS (the Design and Artist's Copyright Society) 23:00 response to UK government's consultations 24:00 UK House of Lord's hearings24:30 Allen on artists not understanding impact of generative AI26:00 Gould on UK judgment from trial in Getty v. Stability 28:50 Gould on judgment in GEMA v. Open AI31:55 Lauren Stein on ChatGPT and law school's encouragement to use AI 33:00 Getty v. Stability in UK – Getty's drop of direct infringement claim and appeal of ruling on secondary infringement claim35:50 UK's Section 9(3) - copyright protection for original work created by a machine39:20 Stein on copyrightability and Japan's approach to sufficient human authorship41:40 Gould on Beijing Internet Court's judgment in Li v. Liu42:05 Allen's position on AI44:00 Gould on authenticity and human contribution47:35 Ed Newton-Rex Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!This podcast and its content may not be used for training or developing AI systems without permission.© Stephanie Drawdy [2026]
Send us Fan MailTo learn more, please visit Ronnie Stephens' site and view his TEDx Talk1:50 background of Ronnie's “legacy journey” as a member of the Quapaw and Cherokee Tribes3:30 1897 allotment of 240 acres to Stephens' great-grandfather4:30 Quapaw Tribe's relocation from Arkansas to Oklahoma 6:30 McGirt v. Oklahoma, 140 S. Ct. 2452 (2020)9:00 issues identified by Tribal Leaders10:50 Dawes Commission and Burke Act17:00 management of allotted land19:25 Emily Gould – question about allotted land 24:45 Keeping Traditions Alive exhibition26:20 Killers of the Flower Moon rewritten with input from Osage Nation27:55 Echo film involved input from Choctaw Nation30:00 Alan Robertshaw–Prey-film with Native American heroine31:55 Dark Winds series33:30 policy shifts needed 38:30 NAGPRA and its amendments43:45 education needed for cultural sensitivity 46:00 BBC Documentary: Rich Hall's Inventing the Indian49:20 Lauren Gowler–question about historic US federal laws55:00 definition of justice Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!This podcast and its content may not be used for training or developing AI systems without permission.© Stephanie Drawdy [2026]
Text us about this show.These days you find incredibly great surf bands all around the globe and a lot of them aren't even near surfable water. The Terra Surfers aren't only one of those bands, but they're a cut above. Based in landlocked Colorado Springs, CO, they look to the past, add a dash of this or that genre, and create fresh surf sounds that you'd swear came right out of southern California. In late 2025 they dropped a fantastic debut EP called Mountain Waves and for a relatively new band they sound like they've been at this for years. Pay attention, people, because The Terra Surfers are on the scene!All songs on this program are used with the permission of Shawn Gavin and The Terra Surfers."Haboob," "Under The Weather," and "Solar Vortex" written and performed by The Terra Surfers℗ 2025 The Terra Surfers.Melody Audiology LLCAudiology services for all. Specializing in music industry professionals and hearing conservation.Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showVisit Into The Music at https://intothemusicpodcast.com!Support the show: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/intothemusic E-mail us at intothemusic@newprojectx.com YouTube Facebook Instagram INTO THE MUSIC is a production of Project X Productions.Host/producer: Rob MarnochaVoiceovers: Brad BordiniRecording, engineering, and post production: Rob MarnochaOpening theme: "Aerostar" by Los Straitjackets* (℗2013 Yep Roc Records)Closing theme: "Close to Champaign" by Los Straitjackets* (℗1999 Yep Roc Records)*Used with permission of Eddie Angel of Los StraitjacketsThis podcast copyright ©2026 by Project X Productions. All rights reserve...
Novelist and critic Emily Gould joined NY1's Errol Louis to talk about building a writing career and sustaining a creative life in New York City. Gould recounted moving to New York in 2001 at 19 years old, starting in book publishing and being recruited as editor for the Gawker blog. She also discussed the economics of book advances and how child care and market rent make savings difficult despite steady work, and how Mayor Zohran Mamdani wants to help change that.
Send us a textOluwatobi Aluko photo by Praise SamuelShow Notes:2:50 Tobi Aluko–Nigerian copyright 5:30 Nigeria's national AI strategy and creative sector 7:25 Emily Gould – query on tech sector's strength in Nigeria9:40 debate over UK's copyright provision for machine-generated work11:40 Johann Brandstedt - Sweden's approach to copyright 13:40 Czech Republic case on AI and copyrightability 16:40 Aluko – prompting versus creating art that involves effort/process19:00 US copyright for A Single Piece of American Cheese 20:30 Prof. Ahmed Elgammal - background of AI use in the arts23:45 19th C. French case on copyright of photographs that show originality 24:45 US refusal to copyright AI outputs 26:35 Bartz v. Anthropic and Kadrey v. Meta 30:45 AICAN project32:55 GAN-based art movement celebrated prior to prompting33:55 “Text-to-Image Generators Have Altered the Digital Art Landscape—But Killed Creativity. Here's Why an Era of A.I. Art Is Over”34:25 artists survey on value from AI37:15 backlash of Christies' auction of Generative AI works 41:50 Elgammal – effort versus intentionality e.g., DuChamp/ready-made art42:30 intentionality and agency missing with prompting and random output 51:40 AI's cultural impact 1:04:30 Beethoven X project Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2025]
Send us a textCover photo by Rhonda Dumas, Pieface Photography Show notes:2:00 Museum of Southern Jewish Experience beginning2012 MSJE moved to Jackson MS and became part of Institute of Southern Jewish Life 3:30 4th year in New Orleans4:50 MSJE's mission5:45 Chapman Family Research Center6:00 archival vault – over 375 collections and over 4,000 artifacts7:20 genealogy workshops10:00 artifacts from southern Jewish general stores, e.g., 1890s saloon's whiskey jug12:30 collection digitization 13:35 Jewish orphans' home exhibition14:30 MSJE's film15:20 A Better Life for Their Children exhibition18:00 Greetings From Main Street exhibition22:00 French Jews from Alsace-Lorraine23:00 Central European Jews 23:55 Galveston Plan – Rabbi Henry Cohen26:00 New Americans exhibition at St. Charles Parish Library26:30 love story of Joseph Sperling and Anni Frind 36:00 New American Clubs38:00 relevance of Holocaust survivors' stories39:45 rapid response collecting 41:00 view of justice 42:00 lynching of Leo Frank and southern Jewish mayors44:00 social justice44:50 Howard Turner – rapid response collecting45:00 Emily Gould – slave trader memorials, e.g., Colston Statue in Bristol48:00 Confederate statues built often by the Daughters of the Confederacy50:45 future exhibition by MSJE on current war52:00 Turner: school visits at MSJE53:45 MSJE hours54:35 Shalom Y'all video, etc. on MSJE site56:00 visit to MSJE 56:55 interactive map on St. Charles streetcar line57:30 New Americans - upcoming MSJE exhibition Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2025]
Send us a textTo learn more, please visit Dr. Hartung's site. 2:30 Jonathan Petropoulos' Faustian Bargain: The Art World in Nazi Germany2:50 Hartung's 2005 book, Art Theft in War and Persecution 3:25 representation in 2014 of Cornelius Gurlitt regarding the Gurlitt Trove5:20 Gurlitt exemplifies issues with Germany's soft law towards art restitution6:50 twelve works from Gurlitt Trove confirmed as looted7:15 works from Gurlitt Trove with historical gaps in provenance8:50 Germany's task force – 5 million Euros 10:20 degenerate art in Gurlitt Trove11:10 works on loan from private collections seized as degenerate 11:40 Paul Klee's “Swamp Legend” from Sophie Küppers13:30 Kandinsky's “The Colorful Life”–Irma Klein / Lewenstein Family17:10 Germany's shift from advisory commission to an arbitration tribunal 22:30 restitution of “The Colorful Life"23:40 "Blick in Ebene" by Paul Adolf Seehaus to Koppel heirs24:10 Gibb's "Aeneas and his Family Fleeing Burning Troy" to Hartveld heirs24:35 Sir Justice Moses, chair of UK's Spoliation Advisory Panel26:00 restitution-Waldmüller's “Young Girl with Her Family” looted from Teresa Belthower; acquired by Nazi photographer Heinrich Hoffmann28:00 looted art scandal at Bavarian State Painting Collections 30:50 suit over Friedrich von Amerling's “Girl with a Straw Hat”37:05 Emily Gould–restitution by Bavaria versus other German states 39:55 no formal restitution schemes in Spain and Belgium41:25 whistleblower from Bavarian State Painting Collections42:50 Markus Stötzel, attorney for Flechtheim heirs 44:00 Picasso's “Madame Soler” taken from Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy; Bavaria refused to accept its body's restitution recommendation 47:20 Hartung's view of justice48:00 Germany's arbitration system-public versus private holders of work50:40 new framework's guidelines-presumptions and burden 53:55 new framework's guidelines-dealers and work on commission55:50 Hartung's hope to contribute to higher justice and remembrance57:20 Stolpersteine 1:01:55 Aluko, Stein & Gould Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2025]
Sabes que no eres nadie cuando descubres que no te han incluido en el chat de bombardear Yemen. La geopolítica internacional y nuestra vida emocional se rigen por la sutil modulación de grupos de Signal, Telegram y Whatsapp que tienen un ritmo, unos roles adjudicados y un protocolo no escrito. Analizamos todo lo que pasa en esos lugares en los que vivimos 24/7: los chats de tres personas o más. Links: ARTICULOS La ideología se transmite en los chats grupales de las élites. Ben smith en ‘Semafor' Garbage day, Ryan Broderick: democracy dies in billionare group chats El chat grupal como motor conversacional (LARB) How group chats rule the world, The New York Times «Berta ha abandonado el grupo»: cómo el Whatsapp más tóxico se convirtió en la otra pesadilla de esta pandemia. Beatriz García, S Moda Mi chat grupal me arruina la vida. Emily Gould. The Cut LIBROS María Agúndez en Casas Limpias (Temas de Hoy, 2024) Yaiza Berrocal, Curling (H&O editores, 2022) Beatriz Serrano, El descontento (Temas de Hoy, 2023)
Send us a textSHOW NOTES:0:00 artist & attorney Gina McKlveen1:05 artist & retired judge Jerry Alonzo - the impact of depression3:00 documentary American Symphony 3:50 Suleika Jaouad - release she experienced by painting about cancer 6:00 Alonzo's “Out of Balance” 6:40 “Civic Sacrement"8:20 woodwork during Alonzo's time as a judge 9:00 “The Jury Box” 10:45 “The Judgment” 11:45 “Justice is God's Plumb Line” 12:30 Environmental works like “Monstronse” 13:15 “Justice?” 14:15 “Passage”14:40 “Faltering”16:00 “Arc”16:25 asylum work inspired “Matthew 25” 20:30 importance of leaning into the pain21:35 Emily Gould's comments23:30 American Symphony - leaning into anxiety through art26:25 McKlveen's response to Alonzo's work26:45 “Upturned House” by Phyllida Barlow 27:20 “Inflated Balloons” 27:50 Carnegie International 28:40 McKlveen's work leaning into grief and loss29:35 “Fisherman on the Roof” 37:45 “Mermaid Mama”39:25 “Stay Wild”40:15 “Heather's Mama”42:00 McKlveen's grandparents44:50 portraiture versus still life works47:00 other artists who created still life paintings as portraits, e.g., Van Gogh48:30 Alonzo's response to McKlveen49:05 Gould's response to McKlveen49:45 Oluwatobi Aluko's response51:00 McKlveen's planned portrait of grandmother with post box like Mona LisaPlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2025]
Send us a textTo learn more, please visit Father Harmon's site.Show notes:1:15 Harmon's background and work as priest since 20082:10 teaching fine arts and being a pastoral resource at Loyola University3:00 his work in the arts8:20 history of art in Jesuit community 12:00 Daniel Segers, Jesuit Priest and artist 12:30 Harmon's process as a painter in light of being a ‘work of service'16:00 Harmon's painting from pilgrimage through Spain17:30 students' responses19:15 his attendance at New York Academy of Art 23:30 Jerry Alonzo: how to communicate through your art26:45 Pope Benedict XVI's Encyclical Letter Caritas in Veritate 28:20 definition of ‘sacred art'30:30 seeking social justice through art32:00 his work in Brownsville, TX connected to his art33:00 his series of Catholic objects35:30 his balance of time37:25 Alan Robertshaw's comments about all art being sacred42:10 Tolkien and Flannery O'Connor on religious imagination44:00 incorporating Catholic objects into his work46:50 Emily Gould - spiritual impact of artwork/architecture/nature49:15 Jarnick Vitters - importance of the physical objects to Harmon's faith51:00 Alan Robertshaw - subjective importance of objects53:30 Yelena Khajekian - art as a sacred endeavor54:40 Nnebundo Obi - interest in hearing about priest's pursuit of other vocations Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2025]
What do you do if you feel like you've been abandoned by your friends once they have kids? Seán's guest offered advice to a reader in relation to this very issue, which has garnered a massive and divisive response across social media…Emily Gould is a Features Writer for New York Magazine, and joins to discuss.
What do you do if you feel like you've been abandoned by your friends once they have kids? Seán's guest offered advice to a reader in relation to this very issue, which has garnered a massive and divisive response across social media…Emily Gould is a Features Writer for New York Magazine, and joins to discuss.
Send us a textShow notes:3:00 David Newhoff - question of authorship7:15 Peter Wasilko9:00 Andres Guadamuz - blog post on AI copyright authorship10:30 China's focus on “intellectual achievement” 12:20 Section 9(3) of its Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 13:00 Emily Gould - whether copyright is fit for purpose 13:30 UK joint evidence session on the future of AI and copyright law 17:15 Newhoff - use of an artist's style 18:40 Wasilko - an artist's training of a model with its own work20:15 artist's post-stroke gen-AI recording from model training on his work21:00 Salles Bruins' question on definition of intellect 25:40 - Ankit Sahni - China's protection28:30 Sahni - India's position on creativity falls in the middle 29:00 Ankit Sahni - RAGHAV output “Suryast” 33:45 Ankit Sahni - protection of AI-assisted works by China's courts 35:00 Wasilko - hypothetical of photographing sunsets on VR headsets36:50 Ankit Sahni - USCO's case by case basis37:50 Newhoff - what is actually protectable against infringement39:30 Sarony decision: looking at human choices used to create photos41:00 Newhoff - ‘authorship by adoption' is a “bridge too far”42:15 Salles Bruins - question about training in Wasilko's hypothetical43:10 Wasilko - “bridge too far”-requiring license to “learn” from works48:00 Stanford's CodeX Group - talk on product JudgeAI 50:30 Andres - human creativity exists irrespective of copyright 52:00 Salles Bruins - copyright is a tool to enable artists to profit 53:30 Kritika Sahni - defining intellect dependent on AI context 54:50 Ankit Sahni - sui generis system of registration 58:45 Gould - applying a right like copyright to output "tough" to get right1:02:00 Guadamuz - Ukraine's sui generis right for AI works 1:03:45 Jason Jean - defining intellect 1:08:50 Newhoff - unconvinced that it's a “sui generis question”1:09:30 Wasilko - whether inputting human work makes model “assistive”1:13:00 question of global copyright approach1:17:15 what is the end game?Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comMusic by Toulme.To hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2025]
Send us a textTo learn more, please visit Frances Liddell's site.Show Notes:0:00 Frances Liddell on justice and technology1:30 Liddell's background2:50 CryptoKitties 3:50 NFTs5:20 ORAgen & DECaDE research centre 7:20 C2PA 8:15 tokenized rights9:45 ORA use cases10:30 themes from ORA interviews12:15 YouTube as a supportive platform v. TikTok13:00 smart contracts and licensing15:00 perspectives on attribution 16:30 Emily Gould question on attribution24:50 animation sector with stronger preference for attribution not open source 26:45 interviews revealed uncertainty on data scraping29:50 lack of awareness about the environmental impact of blockchain31:50 repatriation and blockchain and her work as associate research fellow with Art & Antiquities Blockchain Consortium34:50 Balot NFT - Balot sculpture in Virginia Museum of Fine Arts 37:30 ORA project status38:15 ORAgen Fables39:00 recommendations for creatives: to review C2PA & Content Credentials41:00 Gould: responses during interviews about copyright concerns 45:30 location of individuals interviewed47:20 impact of tech on issues of injustice - benefits/concerns surrounding decentralization 50:40 current work with ORA51:30 Oluwatobi AlukoPlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.Music by Toulme.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2024]
Send us a textDiscover a One Health approach to acid suppressant use in veterinary medicine with Drs. Katie Tolbert and Emily Gould. Discover their groundbreaking research featured in JAVMA and AJVR, as they share invaluable insights on the One Health approach driving the current and future applications of these medications. Learn why evidence-based usage, treatment monitoring, and considering broader impacts on the immune system are crucial for every veterinarian. Katie and Emily guide you through the often-overlooked pH-independent effects of acid suppressants and the importance of staying open-minded to the multifaceted influences these drugs can have on animal health. Together, they highlight the interconnectedness of immunity, infectious disorders, and oncology, painting an exciting picture of where veterinary research is headed. Don't miss this insightful episode packed with expertise, innovation, and a glimpse into the future of veterinary medicine!JAVMA open access article: https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.24.07.0434AJVR open access article: https://doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.24.07.0194INTERESTED IN SUBMITTING YOUR MANUSCRIPT TO JAVMA ® OR AJVR ® ? JAVMA ® : https://avma.org/JAVMAAuthors AJVR ® : https://avma.org/AJVRAuthorsFOLLOW US:JAVMA ® : Facebook: Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association - JAVMA | Facebook Instagram: JAVMA (@avma_javma) • Instagram photos and videos Twitter: JAVMA (@AVMAJAVMA) / Twitter AJVR ® : Facebook: American Journal of Veterinary Research - AJVR | Facebook Instagram: AJVR (@ajvroa) • Instagram photos and videos Twitter: AJVR (@AJVROA) / Twitter JAVMA ® and AJVR ® LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/avma-journals
Send us a Text Message.Show notes:1:20 background and work in IP law and technology2:20 blog article, “What can internet history teach us?”3:25 IP issues emerging in the age of AI5:10 inevitability of AI6:40 global regulation of AI8:25 Emily Gould - which body would handle global regulation of AI11:00 Council of Europe's adoption of first AI international treaty 11:50 Gould - UK proposal to expand text and data mining exception to cover commercial uses 14:55 transparency issues 18:40 Gould - response - need for legislation20:20 authorship question 21:40 THJ Systems v. Sheridan (THJ Systems Ltd. v. Sheridan [2023] EWCA Civ 1354, [2024] E.C.D.R. 4, CA, 20 November 2023) is of great interest because it confirms the test for originality in copyright law in the UK after Brexit.22:55 Li v. Liu, Case Number: (2023) Jing 0491 Min Chu No. 11279, Beijing Internet Court, 27 November 202325:00 NFTs25:30 Thaler v. Perlmutter and USCO, USCA Case #23-5233 29:30 continued utility of copyright 32:40 AI copyright suits in the US36:30 cultural impact of AI models' accelerated training capabilities 38:20 view of whether there is a future for careers in art42:50 tools like spawning.ai for artists' protections 43:00 opt ins versus opt outs43:50 technological protections like Glaze and Nightshade 45:15 difficulty of implementing opt ins 47:45 injustices in the AI age and definition of justice50:33 mark that Andres hopes to make with his work53:40 Stefania Salles-Bruins - IP protection for AI software and outputsPlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.Music by Toulme.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2024]
Emily Gould, novelist and writer for New York Magazine, talks about the secret smoking habits of moms in New York City, plus, listeners expose their own smoking habits -- be it classic cigarettes, vaping, or even marijuana in the age of legalization -- why they hide it from their partners and children, and what lengths they go to to keep their smoking secret.
Our guest this week is New York Magazine Features Writer Emily Gould. Emily was previously an editor at Gawker and a publisher of Emily Books, an imprint of Coffee House Press focusing on women's first-person writing. She is the author of the novels PERFECT TUNES and FRIENDSHIP and the essay collection AND THE HEART SAYS WHATEVER and, most recently, she wrote the moving essay "The Lure of Divorce," which we talk about a lot in this episode, along with mental health crises, two-writer marriages, being "famous in Midtown," the great media scourge, ambition later in life and a lot more. You can find Kim on her Substack: kimfrance.substack.comYou can pre-order Jenn's book, AMBITION MONSTER: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Ambition-Monster/Jennifer-Romolini/9781668056585To follow Jenn's beauty recs: instagram.com/jennromolinisvanity/Concerns? Critiques? Suggestions? Just want to say "hi"? You can email us: everythingisfinethepodcast@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this special episode, hosts Medaya Ocher, Kate Wolf, and Eric Newman talk about the ethics and politics of memoir in the wake of several recent controversies. Touching on Blake Butler's Molly, Emily Gould's essay in The Cut on her flirtation with divorce, and much more, the gang considers who gets to tell whose stories, how, and why.
On this special episode, hosts Medaya Ocher, Kate Wolf, and Eric Newman talk about the ethics and politics of memoir in the wake of several recent controversies. Touching on Blake Butler's Molly, Emily Gould's essay in The Cut on her flirtation with divorce, and much more, the gang considers who gets to tell whose stories, how, and why.
Author and New York Magazine writer Emily Gould joins Sarah and Miranda to discuss her controversial personal essay, The Lure of Divorce, published in The Cut last month. We tackle the current divorce discourse, the work it takes to support our own mental health, what it's like to write so intimately and so publicly at the same time, and whether it's “basic” to be married right now. LINKS: Emily's piece The Lure of Divorce in the Cut Excerpt from Leslie Jamison's Splinters in the New Yorker Emily's profile of Adelle Waldman's “Help Wanted” All Fours by Miranda July Join the Patreon!
Reading List* The Lure of Divorce, by Emily Gould* Goulded Cages, by Phoebe Maltz Bovy* The Sad Young Literary Man Is Now a Middle-Aged Dad, by Elizabeth Weil* Can polyamory save this marriage? by Phoebe Maltz BovyMy guest on today's episode, which is part of my ongoing double secret probationary special series on the state of the discourse late winter/early spring 2024, is New York born, Toronto-based writer Phoebe Maltz Bovy.I reached out to Phoebe after reading her short post on Substack about the recent big, long, splashy essay by Emily Gould about Gould's descent into bipolar-induced mania, her separation from her husband (writer Keith Gessen), their eventual hard-won reconciliation, and the complex ways in which her feminist analyses of the problems in their marriage were much less useful and clarifying than they initially seemed.Phoebe writes:Gould … steeps herself in the men-are-bastards literature of the past years/decades, and concludes, “This was not quite the way I felt.”I cannot emphasize enough, having read many such items for researching-straight-women purposes, what a tremendous break this is from business as usual. Because if you're a 40ish straight or straightish woman, you're meant to feel one thing.Gould tries to funnel her angst-and-then-some into the expected feminist narrative, but is stymied by her realizations that she's done a lot of bad things, and that her husband, too, is a person. She looks at the facts on the ground and isn't able to blame the patriarchy for her own messy blend of mental illness and bad choices.Phoebe and I talk about Gould and Gessen, the unglamorous realities of the writing life, how much cultural capital is worth compared to actual capital, and Phoebe's review of the recent polyamory memoir by Molly Roden Winter.Phoebe Maltz Bovy is the author of The Perils of “Privilege” (2017). She is a senior editor at the Canadian Jewish News, a co-host of the Feminine Chaos podcast, author of the Substack newsletter Close-reading the Reruns, columnist for the Globe and Mail, and writer for various other publications of note.Eminent Americans is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Eminent Americans at danieloppenheimer.substack.com/subscribe
The ladies discuss Emily Gould's piece on nearly getting a divorce and Charlotte Cowles' essay about getting scammed out of $50K. Plus, we review Vultures.
Today in hell, the girls/women find themselves divided by a much-discussed personal essay in The Cut about divorce or near-divorce (or the dream of divorce?) Meghan stands up for creative license (even when suspended), while Sarah sips on some haterade. In moments, the girlxs' differencex seem irreconcialable, but they eventually decide to stay together for the sake of the kids (aka paying subscribers). Plus: Meghan attends the premiere of film version The Coddling of The American Mind in a packed and anti-fragile theater in Beverly Hills. RELEVANT LINKS“The Lure of Divorce” by Emily Gould from The Cut.The Coddling of The American Mind Movie.Get early access and bonus episodes? Upgrade your subscription.HOUSEKEEPING
We go deep on Emily Gould's NY Mag essay about her brush with divorce, mental hospital stay, and gluten free egg sandwiches. Plus—J. Lo's insane new film. Hear it all at http://patreon.com/cbcthepodSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Friend of Pod Sarah Hepola is on to discuss the viral Emily Gould divorce essay. Some of you might be blessedly unaware, but this piece kicked off quite a chattering class firestorm on Valentine's Day. Many despised Gould and saw in her so many failings of millennial culture writers. Others praised her work as honest and vulnerable. Since Sarah wrote an incredible, sometimes self-lacerating book about her own battle with alcoholism, she's well positioned to offer a verdict or two here. We discuss Gould, the past era of personal essay she spawned, millennials, feminism, and whether I should have Richard Hanania on the podcast. Many topics broached here, sports not so much. Enjoy… This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.houseofstrauss.com/subscribe
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit smokeempodcast.substack.comThis is a hot one! Nancy and Sarah fundamentally disagree about Emily Gould's viral essay on the lure of divorce. Nancy compares the story to the rot in France before the formation of the Vichy regime. Sarah believes personal essays like this help people feel less alone. Can she change Nancy's mind, as Walter Kirn did on the most recent episode? (Fast-track to 33:08 for that
Kat and Phoebe discuss a fun philosophical question about desire, a fine literary essay about not getting divorced, and the sacred gossip machine known as the whisper network.Is it better to desire or be desired? Many journalists, etc weigh in: The Desire Question|DirtEmily Gould decompensates, turns decompensation into literature.Should I Leave My Husband? The Lure of DivorceThe article shall be a book! https://twitter.com/EmilyGouldNYmag/status/1757840399928844671Phoebe on Emily Gould's not-divorcing essay: Phoebe on Emily Gould's yes, divorcing crowdfunder that preceded it: Kat on whisper networks and the women who whisper: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit femchaospod.substack.com/subscribe
This week on the the Primo episode, Jesse and Katie discuss Larry David's actual literal abuse of a human child. Plus, Emily Gould has regrets, WHYY forces a black rapper out for using the n-word (“ninja”), a very gray weed market, inconvenient hate crimes, and more. “Surveillance shows vandals who wrote racial slur on cars at Providence… To hear more, visit www.blockedandreported.org
Cover Photo of David Newhoff by Sean MekasShow Notes:1:45 Newhoff's background 4:15 impetus to write Who Invented Oscar Wilde?: The Photograph at the Center of Modern American Copyright? 6:15 SCOTUS's Warhol decision10:00 Sarony's input compared with and AI users' input14:00 Newhoff's comments to USCO's NOI and Request for Comments17:20 compulsory licensing scheme18:50 RightsClick25:45 USCO's focus on how a work was created (by AI or human) versus leaving that to courts25:55 feedback on his comments to USCO32:00 AI copyright lawsuits in the US36:25 liability for AI training data40:45 Emily Gould: whether training involves making copies, EU exception for copies43:00 whether US copyright is still fit for purpose in light of issues raised by AI44:20 work “in the style of” 48:40 Deborah Roberts vs Lynthia Edwards - suit over collage works52:30 Alan Robertshaw: threshold of infringing work versus transformative work54:50 why use AI to create artwork56:45 NFT hype57:35 the legacy Newhoff hopes to be creating 58:50 Newhoff's view of justice 1:01:00 status of Allen v. Cooper and Allen's pending constitutional takings claim1:04:00 camouflage patents1:05:20 change from allowing IP claims against states to decision that Congress does not have that authority and 11th Amendment's restriction of individuals bringing suit against states controlled Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2023]
Show Notes:0:00 Yelena Khajekian1:30 Warhol v Goldsmith decision by SCOTUS 3:00 USCO NOI's Question 84:00 Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc., 593 U.S. ___ (2021)4:20 liability question4:45 Emily Gould - fair use6:30 Alan Robertshaw - Warhol court's focus on use of the work7:50 Khajekian - artists' perspective on Warhol decision9:00 Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569 (1994)10:20 confusion of fair use analysis and court's aesthetic analysis12:00 USCO NOI's Question about fair use 13:00 Robertshaw - UK's fair dealing analysis15:50 Gould - big players like Getty 17:45 text and data mining exception20:10 Drawdy - private contracting as a solution21:00 Robertshaw - Getty22:15 Khajekian - conceptual art25:55 Warhol's 2 Cir decision 26:50 Gould & Khajekian - Richard Prince decision held not fair use27:20 Khajekian - equity issue28:40 Gould - UK courts' emphasis on purpose, e.g., Stormtrooper helmet case 30:30 Drawdy - amount and substantiality of use31:10 Gould - Australian case about Men at Work's use of folk song Kookaburra in its pop song Down Under32:20 Robershaw - dispute over Vanilla Ice's Ice Ice Baby33:00 Ed Sheeran 34:15 Getty case pending in UK35:00 Khajekian - international versus US issues 37:30 Robershaw - test that contemplates level of effort or end result regarding AI output40:30 Gould - risks involved with AI40:50 EU's application-based approach 41:10 AI for medical applications41:55 detecting forgeries will still require humans, e.g., conflicting AI results regarding Raphael42:50 implicit bias in AI43:15 dogs detecting forgeries 43:40 chickens detecting shapesPlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2023]
SHOW NOTES:0:00 Alan Robertshaw1:00 Emily Gould - overview of AI historical development2:30 first phase - 1950s Alan Turing - machines do what they are told3:10 second phase - machine learning creating models using data and develop methods to make decisions / predictions based on that data3:50 third phase - deep learning usually using neural networks to mimic the human brain4:50 GANs - part of third phase that involve generator and discriminator algorithms5:55 Obvious' Portrait of Edmond de Belamy6:40 Robbie Barrett's code used by Obvious 8:40 unpredictability in the deep learning phase 9:25 different tests applied to determine if a machine is intelligent9:55 Turing test - machine is intelligent if you can't tell the difference between responses by a human and a machine10:10 Lovelace test - machine is intelligent if you can't explain machine's answer11:20 ‘Alpha Go' algorithm 13:30 uses of AI14:20 huge training data sets15:50 major risks with AI include copyright 17:10 privacy and data protection17:20 transparency - deep fake17:40 bias amplification18:15 MIT researcher Joy Buolamwini's work with facial analysis software 19:45 UK's pro-innovation approach to AI21:45 text and data mining (TDM) exception only for non-commercial use - proposal to expand to commercial use24:25 Nov 2022 government decided not to expand TDM exception to commercial use24:55 UK Pro-innovation Regulation of Technologies Review 26:45 A pro-innovation approach to AI regulation policy paper - no legislation in the short term, no move to central regulatory body for AI 29:30 AI described in UK white paper as including autonomy and adaptivity 32:25 Global Summit on AI Safety32:45 EU AI Act with risk—based approach - June 2023 signed off by Parliament; final conclusions expected late 2023; operational circa 202636:35 US - AI suits pending37:00 Robbie Barrett 38:00 opt in versus opt out policy39:20 Senate testimony regarding UK's AI advances40:15 US Task Force on AI Policy proposed; Privacy Consumer Protection Framework40:45 Getty v. Stability AI suits in US and UK41:25 2024 elections and AI 44:00 Alan Robertshaw's case with Getty 47:05 Gould: AI voice scam48:00 Robertshaw: AI uses50:20 AI medical screening53:00 consciousness56:00 Artist Sofia Crespo's work with natural history56:30 Lines and Bones by artist Iskra Velitchkova56:50 Dawn Chorus Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg 57:30 projection for how artists in the UK will address AI issues Please share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2023]
Two shows that I highly recommend are Boppin' With Beth featuring host BETH RILEY and Catching a Wave with Jammin' JAMES RILEY. Beth and James are two peas in a pod when it comes to their marriage, radio shows, podcast, and promotions arm of TEAM RILEY RADIO, Old Fashioned Radio Publicity. On this show they talk about how they're able to not only pack a lot of great content into their hour long weekly shows, but into all the work they put in on all they have going on. This is a fun one, so give it a listen and then tune into their shows (links below!). Guaranteed to put a smile on your face and get your toes tappin'!SHOW LINKS:Boppin' With Beth: https://www.mixcloud.com/BethRiley1969/uploads/Catching a Wave with Jammin' James Riley: https://www.mixcloud.com/catchingawave/Artist Spotlight Podcast Series: https://artistspotlightpodcast.libsyn.com/Old Fashioned Radio Publicity: https://www.oldfashionedpublicity.com/"Tubed" performed by Project X with Emily Gould and Matt Hayeswritten by Project X℗ 2021 Summumai Music. Used with permission of Project X Productions."Live & Let Surf (or '007 Hangs Ten')" performed by Project X featuring Matt Hayeswritten by Project X℗ 2020 Summumai Music. Used with permission of Project X Productions.Support the showSupport the show: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/intothemusic E-mail us at intothemusic@newprojectx.com YouTube Facebook Instagram INTO THE MUSIC is a production of Project X Productions, Appleton, WI.Producer: Rob MarnochaRecording, engineering, and post production: Rob MarnochaOpening theme: "Aerostar" by Los Straitjackets* (℗2013 Yep Roc Records)Closing theme: "Close to Champaign" by Los Straitjackets* (℗1999 Yep Roc Records)*Used with permission of Eddie AngelThis podcast copyright ©2024 by Project X Productions. All rights reserved.
To learn more: 18 April 2023 UK Parliament's Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee regarding NFTs and the blockchain, Emily Gould's correspondence following the hearing on several issues touched on by the Committee; and NFT-related posts on the IAL Blog.Show Notes:1:15 Beeple sold ”Everydays — The First 5000 Days” for $69 million2:45 The Art Basel and UBS Global Art Market Report 3:00 current global art market valued at 67.8 billion3:15 current art-related NFTs valued at $1.5 billion3:50 collectibles-related NFTs valued at 11.8 billion5:00 Parliamentary committee 5:50 NFT life cycle6:40 NFT defined10:50 Distributed Ledger Technology12:20 Ethereum 14:20 Web 1-315:50 Metaverse 16:50 holograms17:35 stakeholders22:50 resale royalty right24:00 NFTs taken off chain will break royalty under smart contract27:15 Flipkick - NFT authentication service 27:25 Artclear - NFT authentication service 28:00 blockchain and provenance30:40 fractional ownership31:40 DAOs 32:40 fractional.art 32:55 Artsect Gallery34:50 Copyright infringement 37:00 licensing 37:40 Injective Protocol purchased/burnt Banksy's Morons (White)38:50 Daystorm posted NFT of Basquiat for sale along with IP rights39:30 TM infringement - MetaBirkin NFTs40:30 commercial risks 41:00 NFT platform liability and disclaimers42:00 EU copyright directive 42:25 Soleymani v. Nifty Gateway44:10 UK consumer rights act protection for Soleymani 44:30 illicit activity - theft of NFTs or unauthorized minting of NFTs44:45 ex-OpenSea employee convicted of fraud/money laundering 45:15 Osbourne v Opensea & Tulip Trading Limited v Bitcoin45:30 property status of NFTs 46:00 money laundering46:25 financial risks48:00 tax & estate planning48:15 environmental concerns50:00 Whitworth Gallery's Ancient of Days 51:10 Vacant-To-Visual Program 52:40 Hirst's Currency project 54:05 Alan Robertshaw54:30 Currency project results slightly favored physical works over NFT55:45 Hirst's The Beautiful Paintings project 56:35 international body 57:20 Robershaw 58:40 conflict between smart contracts and natural term licensing1:00:30 Robertshaw 1:01:10 transaction time1:02:20 "trustless" system actually requires trustPlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2023]
Please visit the following links to learn more: Queen Mary's LLM in Art, Business and Law and the Institute of Art and Law. Show Notes:1:00 Stephanie Drawdy - introduction1:20 Emily Gould - overview of the Institute of Art and Law (IAL)5:20 Gould's background7:35 careers in art law practice9:35 Janan Foster - background and experience with Art, Business and Law LLM11:35 Chiara Gallo - background and experience with Art, Business and Law LLM15:40 Jane (Chang Yue) Liu - experience with Siena program and internship with IAL18:40 Chelsea Conyers - experience with Siena program and internship with IAL20:35 Gina McKlveen - experience as an artist, law student and now lawyer27:40 Gould on IAL blog28:40 Alan Robertshaw29:10 McKlveen's beginning interest in art and law30:15 Jerry Alonzo's experience in the law and arts34:10 Charles Sabba's experience in the military, law enforcement and the arts43:05 Nnebundo Obi44:45 Charles Sabba45:40 Emily Gould re: interdisciplinary nature of art law cases46:35 Alan Robertshaw's law practicePlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2023]
Cover photo of Rick Allen - copyright Cindy Burnham, Lucky Shot Productions Show Notes:September 2022 2ND Saturday Discussion:1:04 Background of Blackbeard and Queen Anne's Revenge4:00 Intersal handed shipwreck over to NC; kept media rights, replica rights4:45 Allen's shooting underwater footage to document recovery of shipwreck5:50 Allen agreed to license his footage and give Intersal 25% gross profits from that6:25 2013 - changes with new NC administration - NC had been using footage commercially7:25 NC hired other production companies in violation of Intersal's media rights7:45 Intersal filed complaint in NC's Office of Administrative Hearings 7:55 Allen revoked NC's rights to use Allen's footage8:00 Oct 2013 settlement w/ NC, Intersal and Allen9:10 NC violations of settlement935 2015 Blackbeard's Law 10:15 Dec 2015 - Allen's suit against NC 10:45 Copyright Remedy Clarification Act12:10 9-0 ruling by SCOTUS that CRCA was unconstitutional13:50 Motion for Reconsideration14:25 takings clause argument 15:25 NC appealed district court's grant of MFR to the 4th Circuit16:00 summary of timeline18:00 Jan Felman's question 20:20 Indiana suit sited Allen v. Cooper 20:50 Michael Bynum's suit against Texas A&M over copyright infringement23:35 Andrew Smith's question 25:15 pattern by the state required - 16 cases cited by Allen of states violating copyrights26:00 US copyright office verified 160 cases initiated against states for copyright violations28:10 Emily Gould's question 31:30 Summary of points from Q&A32:45 financial impact of a museum created for shipwreck on the NC community36:20 Andrew Smith's FU questions 38:30 Gina McKlveen's question 43:23 Enid Lutswana's question January 2023 Conversation:47:00 Update on Allen v. Cooper47:51 January 2023 stay lifted; denied NC's petition requesting court to reconsider granting motion for reconsideration; and granted request to file amended complaint 49:00 NC's Blackbeard Law alleged to be bill of attainder51:00 Texas A&M case 51:45 bills filed re: libraries to be charged fees by book publishers52:25 Jim Olive lost suit against Univ of Houston over its misuse of photograph 52:10 Indiana case over software 54:15 TX Supreme Court in Olive ignored SCOTUS decision in Allen that held copyrights are property55:30 Allen's view of the precedent he's creating58:25 NC's failure to reach out to settle suit59:45 whether Allen's view of justice has been jaded01:01:30 chilling effect from NC's position01:03:50 definition of justice 01:06:00 the legacy he hopes to create01:08:00 Allen's legal team01:11:00 status of shipwreck project01:11:30 Intersal's pending breach of contract suit against NC 01:12:15 loss of artifacts and context at wreck site due to time delayPlease share your comments and/or questions at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.comTo hear more episodes, please visit Warfare of Art and Law podcast's website.To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast and/or for information about joining the 2ND Saturday discussion on art, culture and justice, please message me at stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. Thanks so much for listening!© Stephanie Drawdy [2022]
This is the second part of our exploration of what skills you need to learn in order to become an illustrator. If you missed EP3, be sure to check that out first to get the full list.What are the things you need to learn, and in what order? This is one of the biggest and most confounding questions for beginners. While there is no one-size-fits-all path, there are definitely some basics everyone needs as their foundation. I will tell you what I I think the most important things to learn are at first, and give you a sense of what learning these might look like. By the end of this episode, you will have a clearer picture of where to focus your efforts in the first year or so of your illustration education.HOW TO SUPPORTMy team and I work hard to produce each episode for this podcast. You can support what we're doing by joining me on Patreon at Patreon.com/tomfroeseYou can also support me by taking my Skillshare classes. Visit tomfroese.com/teaching to find links to all my classes. Use these links and get 30 days of free membership on Skillshare!WHAT'S WITH THE AWKWARD SHIRT?If you're watching on YouTube, you may have noticed my t-shirt. Join my army of Awkwardians and support the show. You can buy the shirt at Cotton Bureau. Available in many shapes and sizes.https://cottonbureau.com/p/TAK84A/shirt/hello-im-awkward#/15314078/tee-men-standard-tee-vintage-black-tri-blend-sSHOW LINKS AND REFERENCESSome of these links are affiliate links. Please use them to support the show.Links From My StoryNova Scotia College of Art and Designhttps://nscad.caRay Fenwick (Illustration)https://rfstudio.caKate O'Connorhttps://www.kateoconnor.caCo. & Co.https://www.coandco.caFuzzcohttps://fuzzco.comMattson Creativehttps://mattsoncreative.com8 Hour Dayhttps://eighthourday.comSpringfree Tramplinehttps://www.springfreetrampoline.caMaking Pictureshttps://making-pictures.com/illustration/ 06 Colour TheoryThe One Palette Illustrator (Skillshare Class by Tom Froese)https://skl.sh/3LI7x2P 07 Graphic Design15 Extremely Helpful Free Graphic Design Courses (format.com)https://www.format.com/magazine/resources/design/free-online-graphic-design-coursesGraphic Design Basics: Core Principles for Visual Design (Skillshare Class by Ellen Lupton)https://skl.sh/3IKPmdC 08 Digital MediaADOBE PHOTOSHOP — Inky Illustrations: Combining Analogue and Digital Media (Skillshare Class by Tom Froese)https://skl.sh/3T84T9KPROCREATE — Digital Illustration: Learn How to Use Procreate (Skillshare Class by Jarom Vogel)https://skl.sh/3khvS5SADOBE ILLUSTRATOR — Analog to Digital: An Introduction to Creating Digital Art (Skillshare Class by Brand Woodard)https://skl.sh/3WZo3QZADOBE ILLUSTRATOR — Learn Adobe Illustrator: Fundamentals for Beginners (Skillshare Class by Anne Larkina)https://skl.sh/3GC55JdADOBE ILLUSTRATOR — Illustrator Basics: The Pen & Pencil Tools (Skillshare Class by Dylan Mierzwinski)https://skl.sh/3X8MT0GFRESCO — Creative Digital Illustration: Learn to Use Adobe Fresco (Skillshare Class by Lisk Feng)https://skl.sh/3Zwhp6t 09 Illustration HistoryPete Beard's YouTube Channel (Check Out His Unsung Heroes of Illustration Series)https://www.youtube.com/@petebeardHistory of Illustration (Susan Doyal et. al.)https://amzn.to/3X8LUO2Meggs' History of Graphic Designhttps://amzn.to/3ZziPwO 10 WritingThe Artist's Way (Julia Cameron)https://amzn.to/3CMoh62Writing for Self-Discovery: 6 Journaling Prompts for Gratitude and Growth (Skillshare Class by Yasmine Cheyenne)https://skl.sh/3H0g9kBCreative Writing for All: A 10-Day Journaling Challenge (Skillshare Class by Emily Gould)https://skl.sh/3W1R65fBullet Journaling: Life Management for Creatives (Skillshare Class by Dylan Mierzwinski)https://skl.sh/3ZuP1S9
Emily Gould is an American author. She is the co-owner, with Ruth Curry, of the indie e-bookstore Emily Books, and the former co-editor of Gawker.com.Gould began her blogging career as one-half of The Universal Review before starting her own blog, Emily Magazine, and writing for Gawker on a freelance basis. Before joining the Gawker staff, Gould was an associate editor at Disney's Hyperion imprint.Gould is the co-author, with Zareen Jaffery, of the young adult novel Hex Education (2007). She is also the author of a memoir, And the Heart Says Whatever (2010) and the novel, Friendship (2014).On April 6, 2007, Emily Gould appeared on an episode of Larry King Live hosted by talk show host Jimmy Kimmel during a panel discussion entitled "Paparazzi: Do they go too far?" During the interview, Kimmel accused Gould of irresponsible journalism resulting from Gould's popular blog, mentioning the possibility of assisting real stalkers and suggesting that Gould and her website could ultimately be responsible for someone's death. Kimmel continued to claim a lack of veracity in Gawker's published stories, and the potential for libel it presents. At the end of the exchange Gould stated that she didn't "think it was ok" for websites to publish false information, after which Kimmel said she should "check your website then."On May 4, 2007, Gould wrote about the interview in an article for the New York Times. She penned another article for a New York Times Magazine cover story (May 25, 2008) about her experiences with Gawker, in which she described how the negative response to her television appearance led to panic attacks and subsequent psychotherapy. (Adapted from Wikipedia. Retrieved 7/10/2014.)
Rich and Tracie are joined by novelist, New York magazine features writer, and fellow blogging alum Emily Gould. They discuss the perfect penis, '90s music, and a new gem from diamond girl Jameela Jamil.CORRECTION: Kanye West is not the richest Black man in America, according to Forbes, who had not taken his deal with The Gap into account since the last time it checked. It does, however, credit him as being the fourth richest Black man in America, and one of only 15 Black billionaires in the world.To access bonus episodes, and to read Tracie's forthcoming biography of Jameela Jamil, visit Pot Psychology's Patreon.As always, you can find Pot Psych merch and smoking accessories at Pipe Dreams.And see all of our other Diamond Girls on our Instagram.
For those interested in obtaining a copy of Contested Heritage Removing Art From Land and Historic Buildings by Richard Harwood QC, Catherine Dobson and David Sawtell, please visit the publisher's website and use code P8W4VZ for a 10% discount.Show Notes:00:00 overview of Contested Heritage – Removing Art From Land and Historic Buildings2:10 Lucien Freud mural of flower; removed from a house that was a listed building3:14 Rustat Memorial plaque at Jesus College chapel4:20 Emily Gould introductory comments5:00 What is meant by contested heritage5:50 co-authors Catherine Dobson and David Sawtell6:00 dispute over public memorialization of certain person or events 8:20 question of whether a work is part of a building, who owns it, to what extent it's subject to listed building control9:05 Dill case10:15 Dill involves pair of 18th C. lead urns produced by Flemish sculptor John van Nost and placed on limestone piers in Wrest Park12:00 2015 local planning authority learn urns are not at Idlicote House and issue enforcement notice for their return17:20 regulatory issues, export licensing 17:50 property ownership19:00 Old Flo case19:30 London Borough of Tower Hamlets v. London Borough of Bromley19:40 Henry Moore statue Draped Seated Woman21:20 purpose of annexation 27:00 listed building control28:00 main considerations for authorities faced with application for removal of contested statue or other memorial or work of art29:00 for listed buildings, strong presumption in favour of building to protect special architectural or historic interest 30:00 Public Sector Equality Duty31:00 Jen Reid statute appeal32:35 Rustat Memorial case 37:40 Colston case 38:40 Colston – late 17th C. deputy governor of the Royal African Company that ran slave trade and benefactor of Bristol40:45 ‘Colston 4' trial – individuals charged with criminal damage and acquitted41:00 acquittal now on appeal by Attorney General's reference on lawfulness of some lines of defence run, including question of right to freedom of expression and extent that can justify attacking property41:45 ‘retain and explain' policy43:10 changes to planning and listed building procedures 44:35 Cecil Rhodes statues and other memorials in Oxford46:35 another Rhodes commemorative plaque in Oxford recently listed by Secretary of State 46:45 increased public awareness about these issues 47:15 Arts education charity, Art UK recent catalogue of 13,500 British public sculpture - only 2% commemorate people of colour48:35 public art 49:45 Old Flo example of post-war public authority support for public art50:00 developers recently encouraged to include public art, e.g., Desert Quartet Sculptures by Dame Elisabeth Frink placed in back of Worthing shopping center and now a listed building51:50 Ulster Defence Regiment memorial in Lisburn, N. Ireland includes a female 53:00 National Windrush Monument in Waterloo Station commemorates arrival of Caribbean migrants after WWII54:20 political issues about colonialism and empire involved with cultural heritage disputeTo view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast, please call 1.929.260.4942 or email Stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. © Stephanie Drawdy [2022]
Buckle in, folks! This week, we're talking about our garden-curator journeys, second-kid thoughts, and the slacker–to–chaos goblin line cook pipeline. Looking for Fast-Growing Trees? Thank goodness there's a company that sells exactly those. Love the Bloomerang lilac shrub, and you clearly need to know about the smoothie kit. If you wanna grow the ~cool~ flowers, check out Plantgem. A few faves they sell: ProCut plum sunflower, crocus saffron bulbs, and Irene Parrot tulip bulbs. Peony fans should investigate Styer's, David Austin is as good at roses as at customer service, and for regional wildflower seed mixes, look to Wildseed Farms. How's you decide whether or not to have a second kid? Please share any and all thoughts you have on this topic with us at 833-632-5463, podcast@athingortwohq.com, or @athingortwohq. An article related to this conversation: Emily Gould's NYT piece "More Kids? After the Last Two Years? No Thanks.” For thoughts about the present-day incarnation of the slacker, check out this tremendous tweet by @yeehaw_meg. (Of course, we're thinking about it in the context of The Bear.) Any plants you're obsessed with? Have theories about slackers? Share them with us at 833-632-5463, podcast@athingortwohq.com, or @athingortwohq. And for more recommendations, try out a Secret Menu membership. Download Best Fiends—for free—on the App Store or Google Play. Get that thicker, healthier hair with Nutrafol. Take $15 off your first month's subscription with the code ATHINGORTWO. Jazz up your wardrobe with Nuuly. Get $10 off your first month when you sign up with the code ATHINGORTWO10. YAY. Produced by Dear Media
Show notes:1:00 evidence at trial from historian David Olusoga regarding Colston's ownership of more slaves than any other Brit in history, one of the earliest, biggest slave traders 1:30 Colston died circa 1720 1:45 statue of Colston erected by Victorian dignitaries in Bristol2:10 half of the schools, streets and whatever in Bristol are named after Colston2:20 circa 1990s, true history of Colston revealed3:25 in the wake of the killing of George Floyd, the Black Lives Matter protests group pushed Colston statue into the harbor 3:45 restorative justice by others with community penalty3:55 Colston 4 jury trial over prosecution of four individuals involved in toppling Colston statute4:05 Elected for a Crown Court jury trial and were acquitted5:20 Conservatives and those in the government, including the cabinet, expressed surprise at the verdict6:10 UK Attorney General considered whether to send the case to the appeal court to consider whether there was an error of law in the direction of the jury7:50 bill going through Parliament with a provision to increase the potential sentence for criminal damage against a public monument8:15 proposed bill to change threshold that currently exists for criminal damage against a memorial or public monument with value under 5000 pounds, maximum sentence magistrates that could impose was three months in prison8:50 proposed bill is to remove financial threshold and make maximum sentence 10 yearsTo view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast, please call 1.929.260.4942 or email Stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. © Stephanie Drawdy [2022]
See Also is a weekly dispatch that connects the dots of pop culture, with plenty of further reading and ideas to Add To Cart – or at least Open in New Tab.This week, Kate and Brodie are opening the door to a world of architectural excess, decor nightmares and the interiors we go positively gaga for. Also: Alsos!See AlsosBL's article on nightmare celebrity interiors on The FaceThat piece on the fake booksFrom Grandmillennial to CluttercoreThat piece on The Cut about Millennial Interiors… which led us to Gen Z's "revolt against millennial minimalism"Emily Gould's apartment huntPaige Wassel on YouTubeEvil People in Modernist Homes in Popular FilmsSee visuals of the homes we're chatting about on our Instagram :)DONATE ALSO: Pay the RentANTICIPATORY WATCH ALSO: Angel Olsen live stream from the Theatricum Botanicum in Topanga CanyonREAD & FOLLOW ALSO: Read Susan Orlean's profile on Steve Greig in The New Yorker + follow him @wolfgang2242 on InstagramLISTEN ALSO: Michael Showalter on HBO Max Movie Club podcastLISTEN ALSO: Jackie Shane 'Any Other Way'FLOSS ALSO: Dr Tung's Smart FlossFind us on Instagram @seealsopodcast Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's episode of Tell Me About Your Father, we speak with author Keith Gessen about his new memoir “Raising Raffi,” a collection of essays on the first five years of fatherhood to his first-born son, Raffi, now 7. Gessen, the author of the novels “All The Sad Young Literary Men,” and “A Terrible Country,” is a founding editor of n+1 magazine and regular contributor to The New Yorker, and the husband of the writer Emily Gould. Listen as he tells us about being raised by a Russian father who isn't a hugger, learning to reckon with being a dad who sometimes yells, and defining what it means to be a second-generation “Bear Dad.” --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tell-me-about-your-father/support
To view rewards for supporting the podcast, please visit Warfare's Patreon page.To leave questions or comments about this or other episodes of the podcast, please call 1.929.260.4942 or email Stephanie@warfareofartandlaw.com. © Stephanie Drawdy [2022]
Make no mistake; the Colorado based Fire Folllows is here on business. Founded, crafted, and led by musician, producer, and writer Chris Watt, the band delivers a melodic, yet heavy rock sound that is defined by anthemic choruses, beautiful piano interludes, and the perfect blend of rap/scream/sing vocals. In an effort to build a dynamic band that is capable of touring in 2021, Chris brought in seasoned musicians Tim Yunker (second vocals) and Emily Gould (drums). Their influence can be immediately felt on the newest “Glass Grenade” release, showcasing Tim's gospel/soul inspired vocal stylings, and Emily's dynamic and precise drumming techniques. Fire Follows gained tremendous industry attention with the “If It's War You Want” EP release in 2019, and expects that trend to continue with the 5 song “Glass Grenade” release in 2020. The songs demonstrate Chris's ever evolving writing style, and with a radio ready production quality, are sure to cut through the industry noise. The sophomore release utilizes more scream vocals than it's predecessor, and the addition of Tim and Emily has taken the overall sound to a whole new level. The hooky choruses are sure to produce multiple hits, and will be enjoyed by fans from pop, classical, and country genres, in addition to traditional hard-rock/meal fans. The group is already writing for the next album, and actively rehearsing in preparation of touring once the industry gets back on the rails. Want to learn more about the band and its members? Head over to the YouTube channel where you can watch Podcast style dialogues between Chris, Tim, and Emily in studio. Fire Follows https://www.firefollows.com The Dark Side Of Music | Facebook https://www.facebook.com/thedarksideof_music The Dark Of Music (@thedarksideof_music) • Instagram photos and videos https://www.instagram.com/thedarksideof_music/ Black Rose Media (theblackrosemedia.com) https://www.theblackrosemedia.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thedarksideofmusic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thedarksideofmusic/support
In today's episode, we sit down with Emily Gould, the Kids Ministry Director of Epikos Church. We talk about spiritual formation and not treating the Childrens Ministry as childcare. We also have a great chat about recruiting and keeping volunteers. We also talk about the church in the metaverse. CCN: Craig Groeschel leads two people to Christ in the metaverse - https://bit.ly/33h6vc0 Listen everywhere at PracticallyPastoring.com Get in touch with Emily at: Emily@epikos.org Practically Pastoring Conference - https://PracticallyPastoringConference.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/practicallypastoring/message
Listen now | Talking about domesticity, the price of honesty, and the experience of writing on the internet for decades. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at www.aliciakennedy.news/subscribe
On this week's episode: Elizabeth, Jamilah, and Dan answer a question about a 3-year-old who forces himself to pee immediately after drinking water. We also have a follow-up question from a parent whose child recently came out to her as trans. Slate's Evan Urquhart joins the hosts to help advise the parent on how to best support her son. In Slate Plus: We have a plethora of fun, achievable outdoor DIYs for you to try with your family this summer. Slate Plus members get a bonus segment on MADAF each week, and no ads. Sign up now to listen and support our work.Recommendations:Dan recommends Perfect Tunes by Emily Gould. Jamilah recommends Women, Race, & Class by Angela Y. Davis. Elizabeth recommends the game Tiny Polka Dot.Additional Recommendations and Resources: Catch “Living Single But With Barbies” on Jamilah's Instagram. Get your kids hooked on Oliver's favorite math game, Prodigy. “My Parents Still Struggle to Know Me After I Transitioned Late” by Evan Urquhart. Check out PFLAG, which is a great organization for LGBTQ+ people, their families and allies. Watch Disclosure. The documentary is currently available on Netflix.Read Hurricane Child and Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender.Watch ContraPoints YouTube videos with your (probably older) kids as a way to prompt conversations about trans issues. Here are two to start with: "Transtrenders” and Gender Critical. Get creative outside with Buggy and Buddy free, printable scavenger hunts, Youth Squad badges, and Tinkergarten® activities. Join us on Facebook and email us at momanddad@slate.com to ask us new questions, tell us what you thought of today's show, and give us ideas about what we should talk about in future episodes. Podcast produced by Rosemary Belson. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Happy Birthday, America! This week's episode features a chat with author EMILY GOULD about cats, controversy, and Natalie Merchant! Then, Julie recaps ALADDIN and encourages you to spread rumors about the hidden swastikas in its set design, explains why FEED MY FRANKENSTEIN is Cannibal Cop's theme song, speculates as to whether Annette Bening came on to her, and mourns the waste of Jenny McCarthy's fake eyeglasses now that she will no longer be on The View. Salute the Flag!