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She was dressed rather noticeably, and perhaps slightly humiliatingly, in a red jumpsuit and a white sandwich board she had assembled the night before, writing the words “FREE HELP” in red marker. It was the first day of a project by Ms. Giaever, 34, a filmmaker and radio producer whose work, inspired by performance artists like Sophie Calle and Tehching Hsieh, often involves personal journeys and interactions with strangers. Would the strangers in this supposedly cold and impersonal city accept her help? And if they did, how much could she really help them? Over the course of the four days I spent with Ms. Giaever, things would get more complicated.
Persons: Bianca Giaever, Giaever, Sophie Calle, Tehching Hsieh, Organizations: Yorkers
The Playwright Who Fearlessly Reimagines America
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( Imani Perry | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Rather than sink into discouragement, Parks absorbed the insult, turning it into part of her origin story. “I appreciated the note,” she said wryly, “because it planted a little seed in my subconscious: I gotta learn to spell. Dressed in purple-and-lavender-striped fingerless gloves, fur-lined boots and a black Comme des Garçons jacket, she looked every bit the iconoclastic downtown New Yorker. At 60, Parks carries herself with the energy of someone half her age, her presence a combination of gravitas and lightness, wisdom and childlike exuberance. One of America’s most celebrated playwrights — a recipient of the MacArthur “genius grant,” a Guggenheim fellowship and a Pulitzer Prize — she is in the midst of a renaissance.
Persons: Parks, , , I’m, , MacArthur Organizations: Parks, Guggenheim Locations: discouragement, New York, New Yorker
‘The Beast’ Review: Master of Puppets
  + stars: | 2024-04-04 | by ( Beatrice Loayza | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Bertrand Bonello’s “The Beast” is an audacious interdimensional romance, techno-thriller and Los Angeles noir rolled up in one. This shamelessly ambitious epic is about, among other things, civilizational collapse and existential retribution, yet it is held together by something delicate. The effect is uncanny, wryly funny, weirdly sensual and very sad. Bonello sustains this unsettling tone throughout the film, although the individual parts are less consistent. This is the toll of shifting time periods, from a costume drama to a modern mockery of incel culture.
Persons: Bertrand Bonello’s “, Gabrielle, Léa Locations: Angeles
NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The agency counted some of Russia's elite among its clientele — so I was quickly thrust into a world of private jets, guarded estates, and personal chauffeurs. I worked in Moscow until Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, when I was relocated to Monaco. I have a massage every day, I have my own massage therapist," he told us. AdvertisementBut the children often brought the topic up themselves, their comments ringing with the ideology they had likely absorbed at home.
Persons: , Cameron Manley, Barts, Vladimir Putin, Ivan, Alexei, Elena, It's, Philippe Jacquemart, Jorg Greuel, Putin, Sasha Mordovets, getty, wryly, Elizaveta Organizations: Service, Business, Monaco penthouses, Monaco, Mandoga, Getty, Mercedes, Benz, United Arab, Russia's, Sirius Locations: Moscow, Ukraine, Monaco, St, Caribbean, Rublevka, Saint, Nice, France, Russia, United Arab Emirates, Dubai, Russian, Sochi, Kyiv
It was inevitable that Liz Cheney’s new memoir would cause a splash. The memoir, “Oath and Honor,” arrives on bookshelves just as Mr. Trump is poised to reclaim the Republican presidential nomination in primaries beginning in a few weeks. But beyond its top-line arguments, the book offers a rare peek inside the Republican cloakroom at what Ms. Cheney, a former representative from Wyoming, heard from her colleagues about “the Orange Jesus,” as one wryly called Mr. Trump. Trump Republicans took Cheney’s stand personally. After Ms. Cheney spoke out against Mr. Trump and voted to impeach him, she faced a backlash from fellow Republicans accusing her of disloyalty.
Persons: Liz Cheney’s, Donald J, Trump, , Cheney, Jesus, Brown, Cheney’s Organizations: Republican, New York Times, Company, Trump Republicans, Mr, Republican Conference Locations: American, Wyoming
The future of interest rates is more surprises
  + stars: | 2023-11-24 | by ( Edward Chancellor | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +7 min
Observing these oscillating forecasts, a bystander might conclude that nobody knows anything about the future direction of interest rates. The study examined data from 19 countries back to 1870 and found only a tenuous link between the determinants of savings and investment and real interest rates. “No single factor or combination of such factors”, the authors concluded, “can consistently explain the long-term evolution of real interest rates. Indeed, if the trend persisted Schmelzing forecast that “within a generation historically implied real interest rates will have reached negative territory”. Homer and Sylla wryly observe that people assume that the interest rates they encounter are normal and are surprised by what comes next.
Persons: Claudio Borio, , , Paul Schmelzing, Sidney Homer, Richard Sylla, Sylla, Peter Thal Larsen, Streisand Neto, Thomas Shum Organizations: Reuters, U.S, Capital Economics, Bank for International, Austrian, Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics, Financial, Boston College, Treasury, Thomson Locations: Central, U.S . Federal, London, Japan
At home, she and her younger siblings would watch the 1941 Disney animated film “Dumbo” on repeat. The movie’s fantastical nature and its message of persevering against the odds resonated with her as a young girl. And after graduating in 2000 with the expectation that she would pursue a practical, lucrative career in her home country, she enrolled in medical school. No one in Veerasunthorn’s family had pursued a career in the arts. “I was leaving behind something that, to a lot of people, family and friends, is a very solid career to do something that is unknown,” she said.
Persons: , Veerasunthorn, Veerasunthorn “, Ratanasirintrawoot, Organizations: Disney, Columbus College of Art & Design Locations: Thailand’s Chonburi Province, Bangkok, Ohio
Two years of post-shutdown theater has brought to New York stages a slew of solo performers wrestling with subjects like grief, death and the apocalypse — and those are just the comedies. Solo shows are inexpensive to produce and relatively low-lift endeavors for an industry still on shaky ground. There has been no shortage this fall, and now four solo shows running Off Broadway demonstrate a range of approaches to the form, proving, at least for this round, that baring your inner thoughts and fears pays off. “School Pictures” and “Amusements,” also at Playwrights Horizons, take the opposite tack, with performers who hold themselves at a distance to direct attention elsewhere, but with devices that can be distracting and evasive. Now she is nursing HPV and moving into a convent boardinghouse named for St. Agnes, the patron saint of virgins and sexual abuse survivors.
Persons: baring, , , Waterwell, Lameece Issaq, Agnes, Peiyi Wong Organizations: Connelly, , Playwrights, Playwrights Horizons, Yorker, St Locations: New York, East, Harpy, Midtown Manhattan
By Mark TrevelyanLONDON (Reuters) - The wife of jailed Russian opposition politician Vladimir Kara-Murza, who suffers from a nerve disorder after surviving two poison attacks, said on Wednesday she feared for his life after his transfer from Moscow to a Siberian penal colony. Kara-Murza, 42, has a condition called polyneuropathy that takes away the sensation in his limbs unless controlled by medicines and exercise. The fact that they've isolated him to the maximum of course makes me very concerned for his life," Evgenia Kara-Murza said. And the lady I met for the first time yesterday, she has no idea who Vladimir is," she said. He added: "I have no doubt that in the end, our vision of Russia will prevail.
Persons: Mark Trevelyan, Vladimir Kara, Murza, Evgenia Kara, Kara, Alexei Navalny, Vladimir Putin, Vladimir, wryly, Mark Heinrich Organizations: Mark Trevelyan LONDON, Britain's, Reuters, Russian, Britain's Foreign, Commonwealth, Development, Liberal International Locations: Moscow, Omsk, Ukraine, Russia
[1/2] Evgenia Kara-Murza, wife of jailed Russian opposition figure Vladimir Kara-Murza, addresses the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy in Geneva, Switzerland May 17, 2023. Kara-Murza, 42, has a condition called polyneuropathy that takes away the sensation in his limbs unless controlled by medicines and exercise. His wife Evgenia Kara-Murza said exercise was now impossible for him in a cell measuring just 3 x 1.5 metres (9.8 x 4.9 feet), furnished with only a bed and a backless stool, where he has been held since September in a maximum-security penal colony in the city of Omsk. The fact that they've isolated him to the maximum of course makes me very concerned for his life," Evgenia Kara-Murza said. "The politically motivated conviction of Vladimir Kara-Murza is deplorable.
Persons: Evgenia Kara, Murza, Vladimir Kara, Denis Balibouse, Kara, Alexei Navalny, Vladimir Putin, Vladimir, Mr Kara, wryly, Mark Trevelyan, Mark Heinrich, Gareth Jones Organizations: Geneva, Human Rights, Democracy, REUTERS, Britain's, Reuters, Russian, Britain's Foreign, Commonwealth, Development, Liberal International, Thomson Locations: Geneva, Switzerland, Moscow, Omsk, Ukraine, Russia, Britain
THE GLOW, by Jessie Gaynor. Read by Gabra Zackman. In a last-ditch effort to impress her boss and not get fired from her public relations job — and to keep chipping away at an overwhelming medical debt — Jane attends a woo-woo wellness retreat in order to bag its enigmatic leader, Cass, as a new client. She’s warned that this retreat may be a cult, but maybe this cult could bring in a lot of money. Wryly funny and read with a delicious sharpness by Gabra Zackman, Jessie Gaynor’s fabulous debut novel, “The Glow,” is a deft sendup of wellness culture that delves a few levels deeper.
Persons: Jessie Gaynor, Read, Gabra Zackman, Jane, Cass, Jessie Gaynor’s
It’s that second feeling I thought about while visiting Shary Boyle’s “Outside the Palace of Me” at the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD), an exhibition that considers how we create our identities and present them to others — and in turn, how those performances feed back into who we are. To visit the show is to step into Boyle’s palace, or at least one wing of it. “Outside the Palace of Me” is a contemporary art fun house — only the fun isn’t as innocent and uncomplicated as it was in childhood. The exhibition originated at the Gardiner Museum in Toronto, where Boyle was raised and still lives. In the 2000s, Boyle began to make ceramics inspired by the porcelain figurines that were popular among the elites of 18th-century Europe.
Persons: It’s, Shary, Boyle, Feist, Ouroboros ” Organizations: Shary Boyle’s, Museum of Arts and Design, Gardiner Museum Locations: Toronto
It’s usually an inexpensive, efficient way to transport crops, as a typical group of 15 barges lashed together carries as much cargo as about 1,000 trucks. A narrowed shipping lane also means barges from different companies must squeeze into limited space, forcing backups and delays. Months of dry and warm weather have hit the Midwest hard, damaging crops in much of the region west of the Mississippi River. In Kansas, 40% of the soybean crop was reported in poor or very poor condition, with the same conditions for 40% of the corn crop in Missouri. From his work site beside the Mississippi River in Red Wing, Minnesota, Jim Larson watches as the river rises and falls through the seasons.
Persons: Farmer Bruce Peterson, chuckled, ” Peterson, , Louis, Paul, that’s, Nature, , Merritt Lane, Lane, Tom Heinold, ” Heinold, Heinold, Mike Steenhoek, Steenhoek, Jim Larson, Larson Organizations: DES, Canal Barge, New, Engineers, , Soy Transportation Coalition, Red Locations: DES MOINES, Iowa, Mississippi, Gulf of Mexico, Minnesota, New Orleans, St, Minneapolis, Illinois, Ohio, Wisconsin, Davenport , Iowa, Savanna , Illinois, Rock, Missouri, In Kansas, U.S, United States, Red Wing , Minnesota
CNN —Bradley Cooper and Helen Mirren have very different resumes, but they have landed in similar controversies with their latest movies, illustrating shifting standards and sensitivities about actors donning prosthetics to play Jewish characters. The first wave of that discussion came in response to images of Cooper’s makeup to resemble Leonard Bernstein for the upcoming biography “Maestro.” Mirren has drawn more attention in the UK for playing Golda Meir in the historical drama “Golda,” which opens this week. More recently, the debate has often shifted beyond racial and ethnic distinctions to other sources of sensitivity, such as Brendan Fraser wearing a fat suit to star in “The Whale.”Helen Mirren as Israeli prime minister Golda Meir in the movie "Golda." Carey Mulligan as Felicia Montealegre and Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in "Maestro." “Maestro” is scheduled for limited theatrical release in November and Netflix in December after premiering at the Venice International Film Festival.
Persons: CNN — Bradley Cooper, Helen Mirren, Leonard Bernstein, “ Maestro, ” Mirren, Golda Meir, Golda, Cooper, Mirren, “ Golda, Abraham Lincoln’s, Al Capone’s, what’s, Hollywood’s, Brendan Fraser, ” Helen Mirren, John Hurt’s, , Robert De Niro, Jake LaMotta’s, Bernstein, Meir, David Baddiel, Golda ”, Guy Nattiv, David M, Perry, Carey Mulligan, Felicia Montealegre, Bradley Cooper, Jason McDonald, Mark Harris, ” “ Golda ”, Henry Kissinger, Liev Schreiber, wryly, “ We’ve, Mirren isn’t, Ingrid Bergman, Maestro ”, “ Maestro ” Organizations: CNN, Blacks, Daily Mail, Netflix, Venice Locations: , , The, Bleecker, Raging
Opinion | The Coming Biden Impeachment Farce
  + stars: | 2023-07-28 | by ( Michelle Goldberg | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
When House Republicans return from their recess this fall, they’re likely to have an item on their agenda besides pushing the government toward shutdown: impeaching Joe Biden. “You’ve got to get to the bottom of the truth, and the only way Congress can do that is go to impeachment inquiry,” the Republican House speaker, Kevin McCarthy, said on Tuesday. “This is what they want.” And with yet another Trump indictment imminent, I suspect impeachment momentum will only accelerate. Nevertheless, with the Republican base clamoring for impeachment, McCarthy has clearly signaled it’s a live possibility. Behind this circus, however, is something rather astonishing: A major part of the pretext for a possible impeachment of Joe Biden is exactly the same set of lies about Ukraine that helped convince Democrats to impeach Donald Trump the first time.
Persons: they’re, impeaching Joe Biden, “ You’ve, Kevin McCarthy, MAGA, McCarthy, Jamie Raskin, Trump, New York Times wryly, , it’s, you’re, Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Donald Trump Organizations: Republicans, Republican House, New York Times, Republican, Fox News Locations: Ukraine
US Powerball jackpot hits $1 billion
  + stars: | 2023-07-18 | by ( Rachel Nostrant | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
July 18 (Reuters) - The U.S. Powerball jackpot has reached a whopping $1 billion for only the third time in the game's history after another Monday night drawing produced no winning ticket. The Monday drawing was the 38th in a row without someone winning the top prize, which increases every time the jackpot goes unclaimed. The odds of winning the jackpot are one in 292.2 million, according to the Powerball website. The last winning jackpot ticket was picked on April 19, for a grand prize of $252.6 million. The largest Powerball jackpot ever won was in November, when a California man drew the lucky numbers for $2.04 billion.
Persons: David Shanosky, Shanosky, Rachel Nostrant, Matthew Lewis Organizations: U.S, New, RLI Insurance, Powerball, of Columbia, U.S ., Thomson Locations: Arkansas , Georgia, Texas, Connecticut , Florida , Kentucky, New York, Pennsylvania, California, of Columbia , Puerto Rico, U.S, U.S . Virgin Islands
Will America Be Ready for Its 250th Birthday?
  + stars: | 2023-07-03 | by ( Jennifer Schuessler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
For those planning the United States’ Semiquincentennial in 2026, the past few years have sometimes felt like one long winter at Valley Forge. They’ve had to battle public apathy toward the impending 250th anniversary of American independence, which has hardly been helped by the false starts, recriminations and lawsuits plaguing the federal commission charged with coordinating the celebration. Still, as July 4 approaches, the effort is stepping into overdrive, as planners hit what some wryly call the annual panic button. On Tuesday, the rebooted United States Semiquincentennial Commission, also known as America250, will roll out a public engagement campaign at American Family Field in Milwaukee, where the Chicago Cubs will face the hometown Brewers. And so far, at least 33 states have created commissions, while institutions across the country are steaming ahead with plans for exhibitions and events of their own.
Persons: States ’, They’ve Organizations: States Semiquincentennial Commission, Chicago Cubs, hometown Brewers Locations: States, Valley Forge, recriminations, Milwaukee
“It’s quite similar to becoming a cat,” he said of his existence, wearing a cat T-shirt on a reporter’s recent visit to the apartment. “You depend on people bringing you food.”Mr. Zorin’s dismantled bicycle is stowed away in the apartment, and Ms. Timofeyeva pointed to it wryly as evidence of his innocence. According to Mr. Zorin, the group had chosen the abandoned arms factory because it looked run down, unaware that it was a military facility. Separated from the others after they entered the plant, Mr. Zorin said he was approached by two men and did not realize they were guards. During a police interrogation, which Mr. Zorin said lasted until the early hours of the following day, officers accused him of being a Russian spy and did not believe he was just an urban explorer.
Persons: , , Mr, Timofeyeva, Zorin Locations: Russian
In tweets posted by his aides, Navalny said he had been allowed no radio or conversations in his penal colony since June 1. "Instead the prosecutor came in and we continued the trial in which I stand accused of forming an organization to overthrow President (Vladimir) Putin by violent means," Navalny said. He blamed Putin squarely for the mutiny by the Wagner mercenary force that was allowed to recruit hardened convicts in exchange for promises of pardon and that the president allowed to become powerful. Navalny is serving 11-1/2 years for fraud and contempt of court on charges that he says were trumped up to silence him. He is now on trial on charges including creation of an extremist organisation and making public appeals to commit extremist activity.
Persons: Alexei Navalny, Navalny, Read, Alexey Navalny, Wagner, Vladimir, Putin, Vladimir Putin's, Sergei, Shoigu, Kevin Liffey, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: Court, ACF, Corruption, Thomson Locations: Moscow, Russia
“Past Lives,” by Korean Canadian writer and director Celine Song, is broadly autobiographical. Before “Past Lives,” Song wrote the stage play “Endlings,” which debuted in 2019 at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with its subsequent New York run cut short by the Covid-19 pandemic. Celine Song directs Greta Lee on location during the production of "Past Lives." “Past Lives” eschews such visual literalism, using its romantic totems Hae Sung and Arthur instead. Courtesy A24In “Past Lives,” the notion of “inyeon” permeates the narrative.
Persons: Greta Lee isn’t, John Magaro, Teo Yoo, “ John, ” Lee deadpanned, Magaro, Lee, , , Celine Song, Nora, Arthur, Hae Sung, ” Song, , Greta Lee, Jon Pack, “ That’s, “ I’m, Hae, ” Lee, Netflix’s, Oscar, Evelyn, Michelle Yeoh, Arthur poignantly, ” Hae Sung, Arthur wryly, White, ” –, it’s Organizations: CNN, , American, Theater, Apple, Sundance, US Locations: United States, American, Canadian, Korea, Canada, New York City, New York, Cambridge , Massachusetts, Seoul, Greta, Los Angeles, Korean, South Korea, China, Berlin
Google CEO Sundar Pichai said he's excited about Apple's Vision Pro but hasn't tried it yet. He said cost cuts and sharpened focus are "enduring work" and Google will continue to seek efficiency. Google CEO Sundar Pichai says he's excited about the potential of technology like Apple's Vision Pro to create more immersive computing experiences. Asked about further cuts at Google, the CEO said that the company will continue to try and make itself more efficient. Going back to 2o14, the company released a virtual reality headset made out of cardboard that a smartphone would slide into and serve as a display.
Persons: Sundar Pichai, hasn't, Pichai, OpenAI, Mark Zuckerberg, Satya Nadella's Organizations: Google, Bloomberg, Morning, VR, Microsoft Locations: 2o14
Traditional dishes are served for lunch at a Crimean Tatar restaurant in Kyiv. The Crimean Tatars were accused of collaborating with the Nazis and were taken off in cattle trucks to the Ural Mountains and to Uzbekistan, thousands of kilometers away. I see now how stupid it is to hold back on making new friends and acquaintances.”Crimean Tatar history books -- Viktor Shevchenko's reading during frontline deployments. According to Shevchenko, Crimean Tatars are grateful Ukraine allowed them to return in the 1990s. Ukraine’s politicians, too, were too often guilty of making empty pledges, Shevchenko said, promising greater freedoms for Crimean Tatars that never materialized.
Persons: Viktor Shevchenko, Volodymyr Zelensky, Shevchenko, ” Zelensky, Zelensky, , Andrew Carey, Catherine the Great, Joseph Stalin, , Vladimir Putin’s, I’ve, , ” Viktor Shevchenko, Viktor Shevchenko's, Ukraine’s, Ukraine Zelensky, Victor, Berkut Organizations: CNN, Crimean Tatars, Hitler’s Wehrmacht, Crimean, Tatars, United Nations General Assembly, Rights Watch, European Union Locations: Kyiv, Crimean Tatar, Crimea, Russian, Crimean, Hitler’s, Uzbekistan, Soviet Union, Ukraine, Crimean Tatars, Russia, Poland, Bilohorivka, Tatars, Moscow
Iiu Susiraja: She Has Issues? No, You Have Issues
  + stars: | 2023-05-31 | by ( Roberta Smith | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The strange, discomfiting photographs and videos of the Finnish artist Iiu Susiraja push so many buttons that her provocative exhibition at MoMA PS1 should have been staged in an elevator — to paraphrase the theater critic Peter Marks. Ambiguously titled “Iiu Susiraja: A Style Called a Dead Fish,” the show features 49 photographs and 13 short videos dating from 2008 to 2022. Like most artists whose work matters, Susiraja has no shame. Born in 1975 in Turku, Finland, where she still lives, Susiraja (pronounced ee-you susi-rah-yah) started out as a textile designer. Easy resolution of their meanings is impossible, which creates a rich internal narrative in the viewer, often starting with one’s feelings about one’s own body.
Persons: Iiu, Peter Marks, Susiraja Organizations: MoMA Locations: Turku, Finland
Not long before Rose Zhang clutched a microphone on Tuesday, Michelle Wie West laughingly made an observation: Zhang might have logged more weeks as the world’s No. 1 amateur women’s golfer than Wie West spent as an amateur, period. It was an exaggeration — even though Wie West became a professional at 15 years old and Zhang spent more than 140 weeks in the top spot — but it also wryly underscored how Zhang’s rise in women’s golf is playing out differently from how other ascending stars built their careers. In Zhang, who will make her professional debut this week at the Mizuho Americas Open in Jersey City, N.J., women’s golf is getting the rare prodigy who has played for an American college. “So I wanted to see how I fared in college golf, and it turned out well.”
Persons: Rose Zhang clutched, Michelle Wie West laughingly, Zhang, Wie, you’re, ” Zhang, Organizations: Mizuho Locations: Jersey City, N.J
As a baby cried during White House remarks, Biden joked, "I'm bored with me, too." The White House was hosting the men's and women's NCAA championship-winning teams on Friday. During a speech welcoming the men's basketball team from the University of Connecticut on Friday, which recently won the NCAA Championship, Biden drew chuckles after his self-effacing comment. While talking about a discussion he had with the university president, President Biden interrupted himself saying, "That's okay. The White House hosted the University of Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team and the NCAA-champion Louisiana State University Tigers women's team during separate events.
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