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A ‘Great Cultural Depression’ Looms for Legions of Unemployed Performers (nytimes.com)
14 points by adamsea on Dec 26, 2020 | hide | past | favorite | 4 comments


I think Neal Stephenson's idea of Ractors (Diamond Age) is prescient. As the world bifurcates more into poor and rich, and the rich decide to go more remote, we'll have some crazy blend of OnlyFans and on-demand live entertainment. Imagine you want to have dinner, so you hire a band across the country to play music for you, live.


TFA:

“ In the top echelons of classical music, the violinist Jennifer Koh is by any measure a star.

With a dazzling technique, she has ridden a career that any aspiring Juilliard grad would dream about — appearing with leading orchestras, recording new works, and performing on some of the world’s most prestigious stages.

Now, nine months into a contagion that has halted most public gatherings and decimated the performing arts, Ms. Koh, who watched a year’s worth of bookings evaporate, is playing music from her living room and receiving food stamps.”


I think a greater depression will be from those performers who are - right now in many places - forbidden to work. I will be curious to see how many people of the arts chose to exit the career field because they could not survive endless lockdowns.


I’m confused what the difference is. The lockdowns are a response to the pandemic.

If you’re suggesting the lockdowns are unnecessary or poorly managed that seems like a different discussion than this.

And if we want to cast blame I personally would blame, at least in the U.S., how little arts are valued - especially when it comes to providing arts education in public schools.

The federal government could be paying artists to produce work which could then be distributed free to help all of us as we get through this.

One of many possible paths not taken.




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