Can writing about arts and culture coexist with Twitter's increasingly nihilistic mandate under new owner Elon Musk?
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[Essential Arts] [Click to view images]Twitter is now under the ownership of Elon Musk. What does this mean for arts journalism? (Associated Press) By Jessica Gelt Itâs Saturday morning and Iâve been up all night scrolling Twitter, trying to decide if my mandate as an arts and culture writer is in direct conflict with the use of the increasingly divisive social media platform under the new ownership of the worldâs richest and most annoying man, Elon Musk. My job is to shine light on the ways that human creativity can illuminate, challenge and ultimately transform life on Earth, and to unearth injustice of all kinds as it relates to the creation, use and consumption of that art. Twitterâs job is to foment outsized outrage at just about everything. I may love the latest COVID-inspired verse by [@plaguepoems]( and I always enjoy the faux-right-wing virility of [@walterowensgrpa]( whose bio reads: âObamacare made my grandson gay Owen is my grandson I am his grandpa,â but is it OK for me to contribute to the success of a site that has become so ugly? The punk rocker in me loves a good dumpster fire, so my account remains active today. Weâll see what fresh horror tomorrow brings, and if I have the stomach for it. Iâm Twitter apologist Jessica Gelt filling in for Twitter aficionado Carolina A. Miranda, whose ability to wring pathos and humor out of 280 characters is truly epic â and Iâve got your essential arts news right here. Journalismâs Twitter problem Twitter is more than a cesspool of [racist rantings]( [political infighting]( [cute cat memes]( and [uncensored opinions that you wish you hadnât seen]( â itâs also a news platform, made so by some of its most dedicated users: journalists. According to a [recent Pew Research study]( Twitter is the most-used social media platform among journalists, with 69% of us saying that we use it the most, or second most, in the course of our jobs. (Guilty!) We didnât become addicts out of the blue: Twitterâs rise in the mid-aughts directly coincided with the devastating fall of print media. The platformâs ability to drive traffic online was seen as a life raft for publications struggling to monetize the web. Twitter encouraged our ardor, and in those early days, entire newsrooms were given the coveted blue check marks denoting official accounts. We repaid the volatile social media site with our near-constant attention. I was once pulled into an editorâs office and reprimanded for not tweeting enough. He had been keeping track, it turned out â a practice not uncommon in newsrooms at the time. When I ponder the role Twitter plays in society, I invariably think of Shirley Jacksonâs 1948 short story âThe Lottery.â The chilling tale depicts a small townâs practice of picking a citizen at random and stoning that person to death in the town square. As a parable about the dangers of mob mentality, âThe Lotteryâ is without rival. As a modern digital town square, Twitter is ruled by crowd psychology and prone to online stonings of all kinds. Twitter pile-ons can target relatively benign offenders like â[Bean Dad]( whose thread about his 9-year-old daughterâs trouble opening a can of beans led to condemnation so severe that he was forced to deactivate his account and issue a public apology. In its most extreme form, it can spill out of the digital realm into real life, as the world saw in terrifying detail on Jan. 6 after President Trump tweeted, âBe there, will be wild!â to participants in the Capitol attack. The siteâs greatest failing is now being exacerbated by the platformâs new overlord: rock-thrower-in-chief and [billionaire apostate, Elon Musk]( who seems intent on offending almost everyone, recently tweeting, âBeing attacked by both right & left simultaneously is a good sign,â and pinning to his profile a poll that asks what advertisers should value more, freedom of speech or political correctness. Musk has also caused a furor by threatening to charge $8 per month for Twitter Blue, which verifies celebrity accounts, as well as those of most mainstream journalists. A revolt is in the making â with all kinds of well-known people, [including master of horror Stephen King,]( declaring they will never pay for their blue check mark. Should identity verification vanish, the trolls will be empowered in formerly unimaginable ways. [A man gestures as he speaks onstage.]
New Twitter owner Elon Musk is pushing journalist Twitter users to the brink. (Susan Walsh / Associated Press) This is all coming from a man who sees no problem reinstating the hate-mongering Trumpâs Twitter account and could soon do so, and who recently posted, then deleted, a tweet linking to conspiracy theories about the violent attack on Paul Pelosi. Muskâs ownership has pushed journalists who promote their work on the site to a moral crossroads: to tweet or not to tweet. For arts and culture writers, whose stories often donât garner the broad readership enjoyed by big-tent entertainment news about Hollywood and pop music, Twitter has been an especially useful tool of dissemination. Itâs a forum for meeting kindred spirits and fellow arts practitioners and for staying up to date on cultural conversations before they begin to trend. Leaving is hard, although some journalists are already doing it. I applaud their resolve and ability to place principle above the convenient expediency of the fast-moving, ever-churning social media site. As I mentioned up top, I remain a Twitter user. One of my biggest concerns about society today is its extreme fracture, which I believe stems from our ability to silo ourselves off from ideas and people we find offensive and uncomfortable. For that reason I have never blocked someone on social media â no matter how angry or indignant they make me. And thatâs how Iâm justifying my continued presence on the site. Itâs a window into the soul of America, and like America, it is exceedingly dark right now. Below are where other members of Team Arts fall when it comes to that question. Answers are lightly edited and condensed for clarity and brevity: Carolina A. Miranda: Iâve historically loved Twitter as a platform since, of all the social media spaces, itâs the one that I think best plays to writers â the tight confines of space making for a certain pithiness. And when I was a freelancer, it was my journalism water cooler. But it was getting increasingly toxic (well before Elon Musk), and I have deleted the app from my phone. (Do I need to wake up on Sunday to find some mansplainer with 10 followers informing me Iâm an idiot? No gracias.) Iâm hoping we can all act like itâs the late aughts and reunite on Tumblr. I still have an active account. Mark Swed: Between 1965 and 1982, John Cage kept an irregular diary comprised of elliptical observations that read like proto-tweets. âAsked the Spanish doctor what she thought about the human mind in a world of computers,â began one. âShe said computers are always right, but life isnât about being right.â When he published the collection, he titled it: âHow to Improve the World (You Will Only Make Matters Worse).â Charles McNulty: Professional obligation brought me to Twitter and professional duty kept me there. Until, that is, Elon Musk, Twitterâs new owner, promulgated a link to a vicious conspiracy theory about the brutal attack on Paul Pelosi. My exit wasnât dramatic. I changed my password to something Iâd never be able to remember, signed out of my account, and the rest has been blessed silence. Disgust with Muskâs irresponsibility aside, Iâd been looking for a reason to say goodbye. Twitter was the first thing I would check when I opened my laptop in the morning. Under the illusion of keeping up, I found myself in a continual state of political outrage, wondering what fresh hell was in store for us this hour. Attention is a limited resource, and as a writer I felt I was being prodigal with mine. Thereâs a world elsewhere â books, newspapers, websites and the replenishing art of human conversation. I feel no need to proselytize. My decision was personal. I wanted a longer view than a treadmill of 140 characters could provide. Deborah Vankin: I loathe Twitter. There, I said it. I begrudgingly check it daily, several times a day (an hour?), to keep up on âthe conversationsâ; but I consume it as a news feed rather than a platform for personal expression. Or as a space to promote recent stories. As a journalist, as an observer of our culture, the world, I feel an obligation to stay and monitor the site, whatâs said, the good, the bad and the increasingly ugly. Leaving Twitter, taking a stand, is admirable; I understand the perspective. But as an objective journalist, I feel a greater obligation to stand in the midst of the chaos, to continue to observe and interpret, wherever that may lead. Especially because of where it may lead. Steven Vargas: I have a love-hate relationship with Twitter. The app keeps me informed on what conversations are happening globally and locally. Although Iâm able to keep up with the trends and memes, itâs also a source of anxiety. At some point, the information gets overwhelming, and the voices become repetitive. Itâs particularly harmful when I witness injustices on my timeline, especially ones that hit close to home. Itâs hard to look away, much less speak on the matter, yet there are many who have the ability to post without experiencing the pain of typing each character â whether it be from bravery or privilege. For this reason, I use the app in spurts, ensuring I donât get caught up in the storm while still staying informed. The space can be toxic, but it can also be communal. Itâs a balance Iâm still navigating. ADVERTISEMENT
LA Vanguardia The Times [has published its exciting]( illuminating and long-overdue [LA Vanguardia project]( which highlights âthe Latino innovators, instigators and power players breaking through barriers.â Many of its subjects are artists, including the Colombian-born playwright Diana Burbano, whom I had the great pleasure of [interviewing at her home]( in Long Beach. Burbano told me all about her fascination with tracing her family heritage through 23andMe, and how playing stereotypical âhot tamaleâ roles as an actress led her to begin penning her own work. [A woman in a sleeveless pink top stands in front of a tree smiling for a photo.]
Diana Burbano is a playwright and Colombian immigrant who emphasizes Latinx themes in her work. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times) Miranda [held a roundtable]( featuring several cultural leaders âwho are establishing new institutions and reimagining old ones,â including playwright [Luis Alfaro]( Lucas Museum of Narrative Art chief curator [Pilar Tompkins Rivas]( and Redefine Entertainment co-founder [Jairo Alvarado](. The group was joined by scholar [Ana-Christina Ramón]( who leads UCLAâs Entertainment and Media Research Initiative. âTo speak of Latino culture in the United States is often to tell a story of absence, of [underrepresentation and misrepresentation]( of everything that is missing rather than all that exists. This will not be that story,â Miranda writes. Vargas took a deep dive into the world of [âpunkingâ and âwhacking,â]( styles of dance pioneered by gay men in the 1970s and celebrated today through various dance competitions. Vargas tells the story of Viktor Manoel, âthe last founding member of punking alive today.â âThe movements also nodded to how they had grown up at a time when being gay meant not being âallowed to express love,ââ Manoel explains. Writes Vargas: âTo Manoel and his friends, punking spoke to the freedom they found in the club.â Eve Recinos wrote about Meztli Projects, a Los Angeles-based [arts and culture collaborative](. Its project director and program co-creative director, Joel Garcia, is also a former co-director of the legendary Boyle Heights arts collective [Self Help Graphics & Art](. The story examines the group, which centers âIndigeneity into the creative practice of Los Angeles.â [Comedian and playwright]( John Leguizamo [wrote an open letter to Hollywood]( calling for a âbetter pipeline for Latinos in movies, TV shows and plays. We need a system for our stories and our projects. We need executives to provide the greenlight.â On and off the stage Vargas writes about another Latino playwright, Octavio Solis, whose new play, â[Scene With Cranes]( âallows an intense sense of pain to surface.â The world premiere launched the [20th anniversary season]( of CalArts Center for New Performance earlier this fall, and âprovides the Latino matriarch a stage to display the complexities and brutal truths of what it means to be a mother, showing the power a mother has â and must withhold â to keep the family unit together.â [On a stage, a boy lies on a couch with his head in a woman's lap.]
Isaias Alexander Miranda and Marissa Chibás perform during a rehearsal of âScene With Cranes.â (Gema Galiana) Vargas also penned a story about lauded Latino playwright Alfaroâs exit from Center Theater Group, after the associate artistic director announced his resignation on Facebook. Referring multiple times to the power of âchange,â Alfaro wrote, âWe have a long way to go in our pandemic recovery AND in our commitment to equity and diversity.â Vargas notes, âWhile his resignation comes abruptly in the middle of CTGâs 2022-23 season, Alfaro has said in the past that change is native to theater.â ADVERTISEMENT
In and out of galleries Christopher Knight heads to UC Riversideâs California Museum of Photography to take in [an exhibit featuring the work of Christina Fernandez]( who was born in L.A. in 1965 and has been on the faculty at Cerritos College in Norwalk for three decades. Her work, Knight notes, represents âan important pivot between classic Chicano art celebrating Mexican and Mexican American identity, raised in the face of oppressive stereotyping, and a more fluid and open-ended Conceptual structure that shakes things up.â Knight also weighs in Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardensâ acquisition of a 1784 portrait of Joseph Hyacinthe François-de-Paule de Rigaud, comte de Vaudreuil, painted by Ãlisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun (1755-1842). [An oil portrait of a gray haired man in 18th century clothing.]
Ãlisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, âPortrait of Joseph Hyacinthe Francois-de-Paule de Rigoud, comte de Vaudreuil,â circa 1784, oil on canvas. (The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens) â[Lavish hardly begins to describe the painting](. Itâs a knockout,â Knight writes of the French work of art that was gained through the museumâs formal relationship with the Ahmanson Foundation. Miranda journeys to the Bay Area [for a dispatch about]( the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art exhibition â[Diego Riveraâs America]( which features more than 150 paintings, frescoes, sketches and drawings. That display runs parallel to âthe museumâs long-term display of â[Pan American Unity]( a portable 10-panel fresco Rivera painted in San Francisco in 1940 â his last mural in the U.S.â Miranda writes, âThe deep dives on Rivera make for compelling viewing in tandem with a separate exhibition in Los Angeles: â[Reinventing the Américas: Construct. Erase. Repeat]( currently on view at the Getty Center, which gathers several centuriesâ worth of prints, watercolors, bookplates and maps that explore how the concept of âAmericaâ has been depicted and defined. Together the shows offer an intriguing window into Latin American identity as it was constructed â and is now being deconstructed.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber](. Just dance L.A. Dance Project recently celebrated its 10-year anniversary gala at the estate of Jeanne and Anthony Pritzker in Beverly Hills, and [Vargas was there to capture the action](. âWalking through the estate, dancers moved from room to room, arms outstretched to welcome everyone in before diving into a routine that kissed the ground of every part of the estate,â he writes, noting the particular pride of LADP artistic director and co-founder Benjamin Millepied at the groupâs staying power. Essential happenings Matt Cooper is back with your guide to all the [fabulous arts and culture events]( the Southland has to offer this week. Highlights include: Israel Philharmonic at the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall, Christiane Jatahyâs âDepois Do Silêncioâ (After the Silence) at REDCAT, the 10th Art & Nature Festival at Laguna Art Museum and âMy Body, No Choiceâ at the Fountain Theatre. Finally, The Times is launching a new arts and entertainment guide penned by Vargas titled L.A. Goes Out. [The dispatch will be delivered Wednesdays]( starting Nov. 16. [Sign up here]( and never say, âIâm bored, thereâs nothing to do,â again. Moves The Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach announced this week that it received a $2.5-million grant from the Perenchio Foundation. A flexible grant intended to help cover operating and other expenses, it is to be paid out over three years. Passages New Yorker [cartoonist George Booth has died.]( The artist spent nearly half a century at the magazine, creating scores of offbeat cartoons featuring cats and dogs mixing with a variety of zany characters. In Other News â Author Joan Didionâs personal effects will be auctioned off at [an estate sale on Nov. 16](. The artifacts from Didionâs life in letters are on view now at Stair Galleries in Hudson, N.Y. â The National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., is [adding seven new faces to its ranks]( including pandemic hero Anthony Fauci and film and television superstar Ava DuVernay. â Two climate protesters have been [sentenced to two months in prison]( for gluing themselves to Johannes Vermeerâs âGirl With a Pearl Earringâ and its display. â An oil sketch at Museum Bredius in the Hague, Netherlands, [might be a Rembrandt,]( according to a Dutch art historian. â [The New Yorkerâs winter art preview]( is out, and it contains all kinds of riveting Big Apple offerings including a collection of Nick Caveâs âSoundsuitsâ at the Guggenheim. â A sculptural frame said to be the work of Jean Michel-Basquiat has [been revealed to be the creation of]( Austrian musician and artist André Heller. Heller dismissed charges of forgery, calling the mix-up a âchildish prank.â â Cindy Sherman [has joined the board]( of New Yorkâs International Center of Photography. And last but not least ... Hereâs what [Elon Musk thinks of Twitter:]( âBecause it consists of billions of bidirectional interactions per day, Twitter can be thought of as a collective, cybernetic super-intelligence.â Um, right. ADVERTISEMENT
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