Here are the top five comment generating posts of the past week:
Japanese architect designs Christmas trees that will be turned into furniture
Woodworking Network: Japanese architect Kengo Kuma has designed two "Christmas trees" that are being exhibited in the lobbies of two high-end Toyko hotels, the Tokyo EDITION Ginza and the Tokyo EDITION Toranomon. Made from timber components, the trees will be crafted into furniture to be used at the two hotels. The exhibition will run until December 25 at the Tokyo Edition Ginza and until December 26 at the Tokyo Edition Toranomon.Music Content Creators Set To Lose Quarter Of Income Thanks To Generative AI
www.forbes.com: Music creators will lose billions because of generative AI, the first-ever global study of the economic impact of AI on the sector shows. The research, for the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers, finds that the market for generative AI music and audiovisual content will rise from €3 billion ($3.2 billion) now to €64 billion ($67 billion) in 2028.WICKED Movie Gets Trigger Warning In UK For 'Upsetting' Response to Green Skin
www.broadwayworld.com: In 2021, the BBFC revealed that parents would like content warnings on racism and discrimination being shown in media so they can make informed decisions. The research also concluded that some parents found value in exposing their children to instances of discrimination to "prepare them for real life."'Wicked' Success and a Look Back Hollywood's Bumpy Road to Oz
www.hollywoodreporter.com: Jon M. Chu’s musical Wicked (Part One), starring Ariana Grande as Glinda and Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba, is set to defy gravity over the coming weeks as the blockbuster event of the holiday season. Adapted from Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman’s long-running Tony and Grammy Award-winning Broadway musical, itself based on Gregory Maguire’s fantasy novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West, Wicked has the kind of built-in fan base most Hollywood musicals can only dream of.Questions confronting theater at the onset of possible tyranny
DC Theater Arts: For decades, the DC, Maryland, and Virginia region has been well regarded for producing theater with social vision and impact and progressive values. With the election over, now what? What lies ahead for the DMV theater community? Will the region find itself in dark times? Will the theater community be or think itself immune? Will the community be part of some nonprofit resistance to the national shift right?
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