Editorials
534 results
Page 51

Arts funding: Where I stand
The critical test in public funding for the arts must be: Where is the money going? And if it’s going to me, I’m all for it.

Editorials
4 minute read

Bill Buckley reconsidered
The conservative icon Bill Buckley’s oeuvre was enormous, and also shallow. At each opportunity for personal growth in his life, Buckley instinctively opted for style over substance, for celebrity over scholarship, for brilliance over wisdom, and for rhetoric over philosophy.

Editorials
7 minute read

Is cooking an art form?
The food and wine writer Lynn Hoffman takes me to task for failing to grant his chosen field the same level of respect that Broad Street Review accords to the performing and visual arts. Who is this goofball gourmet to question my judgment?

Editorials
4 minute read

Freeloading critics
Are critics freeloaders who cause actors to starve by displacing paying customers? That question begs a larger one: Why do people become performers or critics in the first place?

Editorials
5 minute read

Cultural aptitude test
Just in time for the holidays, here’s my present: an up-to-date cultural aptitude quiz that should delight true sophisticates while simultaneously weeding out the imposters who persist in visiting our website even though it’s obviously over their heads.

Editorials
4 minute read

Is 'Bush hatred' irrational?
Liberals’ irrational hatred of George W. Bush, complains a conservative professor, has “made rational discussion of politics in Washington all but impossible.” He’s right, of course, but he overlooks the critical question.

Editorials
2 minute read

An unintended benefit of 'Atlas Shrugged'
Ayn Rand’s novel Atlas Shrugged has inspired two generations of business executives, not to mention Alan Greenspan and Hugh Hefner, with its message that “Greed is good.” But its greatest value may be unintentional: It inadvertently provides a vivid demonstration of the mind of the true believer— of left or right.

Editorials
5 minute read

Barrymore Awards reconsidered
Philadelphia’s Barrymore Awards, like all awards, are not works of art or substance. They’re a combination of popularity contest and promotional gimmick. Why is it the business of journalists or critics or the theaters’ paying customers to assist in this effort to manipulate us?

Editorials
4 minute read

The 'Inquirer's' killer bee
The Inquirer’s CEO wants to place a giant inflatable bee on the newspaper's landmark building. What will this marketing wizard think of next? Consider the possibilities.

Editorials
3 minute read

Dartmouth College trustee fight
Dartmouth College alumni are up in arms because the college has diluted their power to elect the school’s trustees. But where is it written that a school is best managed by its alumni, as opposed to, say, educators?

Editorials
4 minute read