Monday, November 17, 2025

The President Who Cried Hoax

More coloured sand products recalled as ACT set to announce when schools will reopen


Coloured sand linked to asbestos contamination scare found at over 100 SA sites


The President Who Cried Hoax Republicans went after Epstein only when it was politically useful.


Jeffrey Epstein emails show he kept tabs on Donald Trump for years


‘Epstein Hoax’ Got Legs? Mark Wauck

 

Sometimes The Media Ignoring A Major Story Becomes The Story—And Other Notes Caitlin Johnstone


Trump Escalates War on Leftists With Antifa Foreign Terror Label Ken Klippenstein

 

Trump Administration Expected to Drastically Cut Housing Grants New York Times. “…could quickly place as many as 170,000 formerly homeless people at risk of returning to the streets.”

 

How Multilevel Marketing Explains Trump’s Corruption The Economic Populist


 

Judge Rules Flock Surveillance Images Are Public Records That Can Be Requested By Anyone

404 Media: “A judge in Washington has ruled that police images taken by Flock’s AI license plate-scanning cameras are public records that can be requested as part of normal public records requests. The decision highlights the sheer volume of the technology-fueled surveillance state in the United States, and shows that at least in some cases, police cannot withhold the data collected by its surveillance systems. 

In a ruling last week, Judge Elizabeth Neidzwski ruled that “the Flock images generated by the Flock cameras located in Stanwood and Sedro-Wooley [Washington] are public records under the Washington State Public Records Act,” that they are “not exempt from disclosure,” and that “an agency does not have to possess a record for that record to be subject to the Public Records Act.”  She further found that “Flock camera images are created and used to further a governmental purpose” and that the images on them are public records because they were paid for by taxpayers. 

Despite this, the records that were requested as part of the case will not be released because the city automatically deleted them after 30 days. Local media in Washington first reported on the case; 404 Media bought Washington State court records to report the specifics of the case in more detail…

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Epstein Alleged in Emails That Trump Knew of His Conduct

 For his Yakuza project, photographer Anton Kusters spent two years documenting some members of the Japanese mafia

Yakuza Anton Kusters

A limited edition of a book containing the photos is available. Steward Mag recently did an interview with Kusters:

The values were almost comparable to general Japanese workplace values, actually. Most yakuza gangs actually have neighborhood offices, and the plaques they have on the door state core values like “respect your superiors,” “keep the office clean,” and so on.

One thing I noticed early on with gang life was how subtle everything was. Everything was unspoken, and will was expressed through group pressure. A pressure was constantly there. There was this innate understanding of form — if someone did something wrong, no one would say anything; he would simply be expected to apologize. And the fact everyone would be so silent about it made the pressure really intense.

 

Epstein Alleged in Emails That Trump Knew of His Conduct

The New York Times Gift Article – “Epstein Files Live Updates: Trump Named in Emails Released by Democrats and Republicans. Messages in which Jeffrey Epstein discussed President Trump were among 20,000 documents posted online. Mr. Trump blamed Democrats as the White House rushed to block further revelations. 

The mocking and accusatory voice of Jeffrey Epstein emerged from a trove of more than 20,000 emails made public by lawmakers on Wednesday, including his claim that President Trump once “spent hours at my house” with a young woman who later accused Mr. Epstein of sexually abusing and trafficking her when she was a teenager. In a series of emails with friends and associates — surfacing first in a few messages selected by House Democrats and then in full by Republicans on the House Oversight Committee — Mr. Epstein described Mr. Trump as a “dirty” businessman who was “borderline insane,” untrustworthy and worse in “real life and upclose” than the image he sought to portray to the public. 

Mr. Trump, White House officials and administration allies dismissed the disclosures as the utterances of a discredited sexual predator who had fallen out with Mr. Trump long before his crimes became publicly known. Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, called the emails a “clear distraction.” The president labeled them a “hoax.” Wednesday’s document dump was the latest act in the rapidly unfolding political drama engulfing Speaker Mike Johnson and his Republican majority. They shuttered the House for the past two months, in part, to forestall a bipartisan effort to force a floor vote on a bill to force the Justice Department and F.B.I. to release a separate set of documents, this one involving their investigation into Mr. Epstein and his longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell.

 House Republicans are seeking to protect Mr. Trump while trying to assuage those in the party who view the Epstein case as an issue that transcends loyalty to the president. Democrats claimed that the sheer volume of the release was intended to distract attention from their revelations about Mr. Trump’s actions during the time he and Mr. Epstein were close..Here’s what else to know:

  • Trump connections: The thousands of documents include numerous references to Mr. Trump, including some in which Mr. Epstein discusses their relationship. Others are innocuous. In one exchange, Mr. Epstein is apparently pitched on a transaction related to his Boeing 727 by someone who says they previously worked for Mr. Trump.
  • Pressure campaign ramps up: Top administration officials summoned Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado for a meeting in the White House Situation Room, escalating their pressure campaign against Republican lawmakers who have demanded a full release of files related to Mr. Epstein. Mr. Trump also reached out to Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina, one of three Republican women in the House who signed a petition that calls for a vote demanding that the Justice Department within 30 days release all of its investigative files on Mr. Epstein, but she refused his pleas on the petition.
  • A de facto adviser: A recurring presence in the messages is the author Michael Wolff, who acted as an adviser to Mr. Epstein. “I believe Trump offers an ideal opportunity,” Mr. Wolff wrote to Mr. Epstein in March 2016, according to the emails, suggesting that “becoming an anti-Trump voice gives you a certain political cover which you decidedly don’t have now.”
  • Congress returns: The Republican-controlled House prepared for a vote later on Wednesday that would end the government shutdown. But the swearing in of its newest member, Adelita Grijalva, Democrat of Arizona, could soon force a vote on a discharge petition demanding that the Trump administration release its investigative files on Mr. Epstein.
  • See also The New York Times Gift Article – Read 3 Jeffrey Epstein Emails That Mention Trump, House Democrats on Wednesday released emails in which Jeffrey Epstein sent messages to his longtime confidante Ghislaine Maxwell and the author Michael Wolff suggesting that Donald J. Trump knew more about the convicted sex offender’s abuse than he had acknowledged. Our reporters are reviewing the larger trove of documents released by Republicans and are updating their findings here. House Democrats on Wednesday released emails in which Jeffrey Epstein sent messages to his longtime confidante Ghislaine Maxwell and the author Michael Wolff suggesting that Donald J. Trump knew more about the convicted sex offender’s abuse than he had acknowledged. Our reporters are reviewing the larger trove of documents released by Republicans and are updating their findings here…”
  • See also AP – Epstein email says Trump ‘knew about the girls’ as White House calls its release a Democratic smear: Jeffrey Epstein wrote in a 2019 email to a journalist that Donald Trump “knew about the girls,” according to documents made public Wednesday, but what he knew — and whether it pertained to the sex offender’s crimes — is unclear. The White House quickly accused Democrats of selectively leaking the emails to smear the president. Democrats on the House Oversight Committee released three emails referencing Trump, including one Epstein wrote in 2011 in which he told confidant Ghislaine Maxwell that Trump had “spent hours” at Epstein’s house with a sex trafficking victim. The disclosures seemed designed to raise new questions about Trump’s friendship with Epstein and about what knowledge he may have had regarding what prosecutors call a yearslong effort by Epstein to exploit underage girls. The Republican businessman-turned-politician has consistently denied any knowledge of Epstein’s crimes and has said he ended their relationship years ago.
  • Jeffrey Epstein claimed he could help Russia’s foreign minister “understand Trump,” according to 2018 emails. In the messages, Epstein told European official Thorbjorn Jagland that Russian envoy Sergei Lavrov should “get insight on talking to me” and said he had discussed Trump with Moscow’s late U.N. ambassador Vitaly Churkin. (Politico)

We analyzed 47,000 ChatGPT conversations. Here’s what people really use it for.

Washington Post – Gift Article: “More than 800 million people use ChatGPT each week, according to its maker, OpenAI, but their conversations with the artificial intelligence chatbot are private. Unlike for social media apps, there is little way for those outside the company to know how people use the service — or what ChatGPT says to them….

A collection of 47,000 publicly shared ChatGPT conversations compiled by The Washington Post sheds light on the reasons people turn to the chatbot and the deeply intimate role it plays in many lives. The conversations were made public by ChatGPT users who created shareable links to their chats that were later preserved in the Internet Archive, creating a unique snapshot of tens of thousands of interactions with the chatbot. 

Analyzing the chats also revealed patterns in how the AI tool uses language. Some users have complained that ChatGPT agrees with them too readily. The Post found it began responses with variations on “yes” 10 times as often as it did with versions of “no.”…Data released by OpenAI in September from an internal study of queries sent to ChatGPT showed that most are for personal use, not work. (The Post has a content partnership with OpenAI.)…”

Consumer pays, consumer risks’: Florida ‘surgery mill’ plans for Australia

 Consumer pays, consumer risks’: 

Florida ‘surgery mill’ plans for Australia


Alarge purple billboard greets travellers at Florida’s Palm Beach International Airport spruiking “World Class Orthopaedic Care”.
“Patient referrals from 50 states & 110 countries,” the back-lit banner reads. “You Deserve The Best Care, Too!”
More than a dozen surgeons are photographed in a row, smiling with their arms crossed – including, on the very end, Australian surgeon Munjed Al Muderis.
The billboard is promoting the Paley Institute, a global clinic selling “highly complex orthopaedic clinical services” around the world.
It is a subsidiary of Tenet, a Wall Street-listed healthcare juggernaut that provides resources to 640 hospitals and clinics across America and reported quarterly profits of $US3.9 billion ($5.94 billion) in April.
The Paley Institute announced in August that Al Muderis was joining its team, a self-styled “orthopaedics powerhouse” which employs 29 surgeons and 310 people to treat patients from more than 100 countries.
It proudly claims that its 15,000 hotel room nights generated a year makes it the world’s largest medical tourism orthopaedic group. Now Al Muderis plans to bring the company to Australia.
“One of my longer-term plans is to bring the Paley Institute to Sydney,” he wrote to doctors in a September letter, obtained by this masthead.
“This vision reflects my ongoing commitment to delivering world-class orthopaedic and reconstructive care locally, and to ensuring Australian patients benefit from the most advanced global surgical innovations.”
Australian surgeons and experts have expressed alarm over these plans, fearful of importing an American-style approach to private sector healthcare of high-pressure sales tactics that drive unnecessary and expensive surgeries.
Those fears echo some of the findings in a Federal Court of Australia judgment in August which found Al Muderis’ surgical practice was unethical and negligent and that he prioritised fame, money and numbers over the safety and care of his vulnerable patients.

This masthead can also reveal details of several lawsuits against Paley and the Paley Institute in America in which patients complain of invasive, unnecessary and rushed surgeries that have gone wrong, including one on a 10-year-old child who was allegedly permanently disabled and a man who died on the operating table. Al Muderis is not involved in any of those cases.

“If you want corporate American, profit-generating medicine,” said one surgeon working at a major Australian children’s hospital who did not want to be named because the plans had not been made public yet, “this is what the Paley Institute will bring. It’s a corporate medicine approach.” The Paley Institute has gained global recognition, and celebration in some quarters, for its innovative surgical techniques for children and adults suffering limb deformities.
Dror Paley photographed with Donald Trump and Ben Carson in 2013.
Dror Paley is the face of the company and known globally for “pioneering” limb-lengthening surgery, in which bones are broken and regrown using nails or rods to increase height for medical or cosmetic reasons, including controversially for people with (achondroplasia) dwarfism. Al Muderis, Paley and the Paley Institute did not respond to requests for comment. Like Al Muderis, Paley has passionate supporters online and an expansive network with decision-makers. In 2013, he was photographed with now US President Donald Trump and Ben Carson.
The Paley Institute website and social media pages are plastered with glowing patient testimonials (which are legal to provide in America but not in Australia), where Paley is called the “man of miracles” and “bone wizard”.
“When a case seems hopeless and there is no longer any hope, only one name remains: Paley, the last resort, the final hope,” one such testimonial on the website states. “Children and young people unable to walk or affected by severe deformities regain function and mobility after his surgeries.” Across press interviews, Paley has railed against bureaucracies preventing innovation in healthcare and is celebrated for inventing medical devices for limb-lengthening.
The Paley Institute has also been the target of several recent medical negligence cases and Paley’s limb-lengthening system was recalled globally in 2021 after patients reported nail corrosion caused metallosis, organ damage and toxicity in the blood stream.
The Australian paediatric surgeon said Paley had done some “incredible work” but warned there is little oversight or long-term research into some of his procedures, which he believes should be performed only in clinical trials.
“The Paley Institute promises everything and operates on everyone,” he said. “It’s so easy to have a kid with a horrible disease and say, ‘We’re going to do this and fix it’.”
Ian Woodruff, president of the medico-political organisation Doctors Reform Society, said importing the Paley Institute could fuel the “huge profits” of Australia’s private healthcare system.

“We need innovation,” he said. “But not in a profit-driven business, not for medicine. Because then [patients] get the kinds of things outlined in court by Al Muderis.” ‘World’s largest’
As Al Muderis has been fighting several lawsuits in Australia – from the failed defamation battle against this masthead to medical negligence cases brought by his patients – he has expanded overseas, opening the Al Muderis Osseointegration Clinic in Abu Dhabi in July in collaboration with the Paley Institute. At the launch celebration, Paley praised Al Muderis for being “absolutely recognised as the number one in his field”.
“We have become the world’s largest orthopaedic medical tourism centre in the world,” Paley said. “This is such an important technology, and there are so few surgeons doing this and why not get the best?”
Shortly afterwards, on August 8, the Federal Court of Australia delivered the 771-page judgment that found Al Muderis downplayed risks of surgery, made false promises, mistreated staff, had poor patient selection and negligent after-care for a significant cohort of patients. Two weeks later, the Paley Institute announced on social media that Al Muderis had formally joined the ranks of its Florida operation to “continue pushing the boundaries of what’s possible” in orthopaedics.
As Paley promotes medical tourism and recruits surgeons from around the world, he has also fought his own battles. Medical negligence lawsuits are not uncommon, particularly in the US, but claims examined by this masthead raise allegations of high-pressure sales tactics and devastating consequences for patients and their families.
In one lawsuit before US courts this year against Paley and other doctors, documents obtained by this masthead allege that botched surgery left a 10-year-old girl with mental pain, scarring, disfigurement, permanent injury, loss of bodily function and “the capacity for enjoyment of life”. The documents outline the girl’s consultation with Paley on October 31, 2022, when it is alleged he said she needed to undergo a surgical procedure for limb-length discrepancy “NOW” and the parents agreed for Paley to perform the surgery. But on the operating day, the parents were told another surgeon, Claire Shannon, would conduct the surgery despite not having spoken to or examined the patient.
The parents were informed that Paley would be “popping in” but court documents allege he “did not show up” and the new doctor “failed to appreciate” the child’s anatomy and caused a “life-threatening injury”. A timeline included in the statement of claim details the child’s alleged post-operative experience, where she woke up with “10/10” pain and was provided fentanyl to doze back to sleep but woke within five minutes again complaining of “10/10” pain. She was given more rounds of fentanyl, but kept waking up with the same level of “pain and crying”, so was given oxycodone and a muscle relaxant causing her to go back to sleep.
After the surgery, Paley and Shannon flew to Warsaw for “the grand opening” of the Paley European Institute so “were unavailable to care for and/or treat” the child for any surgical complications, according to the documents

The patient was discharged but continued reporting “agonising pain as well as severe cramps”, despite being prescribed Valium then morphine by the Paley Institute before needing further surgery.
The case alleged Paley was negligent because he agreed to “examine, diagnose and treat” the minor, and had a “duty to exercise” with professional standards of care.
“Dr Paley was careless, negligent and breached [his] duty” by failing to plan, treat and perform the surgery, then respond to severe pain complaints, resulting in “significant injuries resulting in permanent disability”, the complaint document filed in US courts states.
Paley and the other defendants have denied the claims. A settlement was reached for some of the allegations, but the matter remains ongoing, according to documents.
Another case was brought against the Paley Institute in October by Mohamed Yakout over a limb-lengthening surgery from 2022 that allegedly went horribly wrong.
Court documents allege the 30-year-old presented with “mild” limb-length discrepancy but was given an unnecessary and “invasive and complex limb-lengthening procedure” without proper investigation, explanation of risks or discussion of conservative alternatives.
The Paley Institute surgeon allegedly failed to diagnose a deep infection until many months after the surgery despite Yakout showing symptoms, the documents state, which caused “permanent and catastrophic” injury, pain and mental anguish after the surgery failed and the hardware was removed.
A third case detailed in court documents was brought against the Paley Institute and other parties in July by Florida resident Sandra Freia. She alleges doctors negligently performed a high-risk and elective spinal surgery on her husband, without proper investigation, which resulted in his death on the operating table on August 7, 2023. The parties deny the claims and the matter is continuing.
A separate Florida-based medical negligence firm this year posted social media advertisements soliciting patients harmed by limb-lengthening procedures performed at the Paley Institute.
The law firm, Freedland Harwin Valori Gander, said it “represents numerous patients of the Paley Institute that have undergone unnecessary or failed surgery”.
“We limit our practice to catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases,” the law firm claims.
The Paley Institute criticised these posts publicly, accusing the firm of “ambulance chaser behaviour”.
This masthead interviewed two lawyers from another US firm, who could not be named for confidentiality reasons, who alleged the Paley Institute is a “surgery mill” where profits influence decisions.
“This is about the consolidation … within the healthcare system to the detriment of patients,” one lawyer said, who could not be named due to client confidentiality.
The lawyer said the Paley Institute is a “symptom of a much bigger problem” in US healthcare, where corporate structures drive unnecessary surgeries and patients suffer physically and financially.
“They’re going to have some patients that are going to get good treatment, but it’s the unnecessary procedures that are being done on patients that’s generating a lot of money for Tenet,” he said. “It’s all about volume. There’s a big incentive to upsell.”
Tenet’s most recently quarterly report states it spun $US2.4 billion in profits from its operations business (out of $US3.4 billion total profit) which included 65,902 surgeries across its network of hospitals.
University of Sydney law health expert Chris Rudge said negligence claims were not necessarily an indicator of poor practice, and even good doctors may face several lawsuits over their career “because surgery is dangerous”.
However, Rudge is concerned about importing US culture and business practices in healthcare.
“You’re effectively importing not just a service but a whole business,” he said. “It’s the American-style consumer pays, consumer risks model.”

‘Toxic chemicals’

Al Muderis has been promoting cosmetic limb-lengthening in Australia this year, described as “booming” in a recent Mamamia article.
He is quoted as claiming the controversial procedure was increasingly popular among women, to address confidence and bullying and improve chances of career success.
“When you look at psychological history, you see a lot of short people get bullied at school,” Al Muderis said. “It’s much harder to bully a taller person.”
Paley has helped refine the procedure by designing new nails to reduce recovery time.
The procedure’s popularity surged this year after the Hollywood film The Materialists featured a main character who underwent the surgery.
The Paley Institute’s website describes Paley as the world’s “most experienced limb-lengthening surgeon” having performed more than 20,000 surgeries over 30 years.
Paley is credited for bringing the Ilizarov method to the west, a Russian technique for increasing height by attaching a metal brace around the limb to pierce wires through the skin to break and regrow bone over several months.
Surgical nails have been an alternative to the Ilizarov method since the 1990s where large nails are inserted into the bone and external remote controls or magnets move the nail externally to cause fractures, eliminating the metal cage and associated infection risks.
Paley invented the Stryde Nail with manufacturer Nuvasive in 2018, which used stainless steel instead of titanium, allowing heavier patients to weight-bear immediately after surgery.
A 2020 research paper by Paley stated 106 patients had been implanted with this system since May 2018, more than half of which were cosmetic.
“Successful outcomes were achieved in all patients,” the paper stated. “There were no issues related to biological incompatibility.”
However, behind the scenes, trouble was brewing.
American patient Alyssa Osos was implanted with the nail in 2018 after which she experienced “heavy menstrual bleeding and reproductive organ pain”, according to court documents, and an ultrasound found a large cyst on her right ovary.
She would end up suing Nuvasive for negligence, alleging the device generated chromium toxicity or heavy-metal poisoning which caused these injuries before it was recalled. US court documents in that case allege X-rays discovered “leftover fragments around the implantation site and surrounding tissues”.
“Three follow-up appointments revealed that Osos suffered from toxic chemicals in her liver, bone damage to her tibia, and chromium toxicity in her blood,” the documents state.
In its defence, Nuvasive argued none of Osos’ “smattering of random facts… are tethered to any legal cause of action” and unsuccessfully tried to get the case thrown out. Nuvasive and Paley did not respond to questions about this case.
The first Stryde nail used in an Australian patient was implanted in June 2019 at Macquarie University Hospital and the Limb Reconstruction Service.
“We look forward to helping many other patients with this emerging technology,” the centre’s website published on 8 July 2019.
The Therapeutic Goods Administration started receiving adverse reports related to the nail from March 2020. A year later it was formally recalled and is no longer used in patients.
There are nails produced by other manufacturers that do not cause these side effects.
The TGA did not recommend removing the Stryde devices, but said pregnant patients or those under 18 years should be monitored and further testing for carcinogens and toxicity would be completed.
There are 11 reports lodged on the TGA’s adverse events database related to the Stryde nail and system between March 2020 and May 2022, with reports describing “findings of significant corrosion”, “metal on metal wear” and “metallosis” – a condition where metal debris causes tissue damage and other problems.
The UK regulator released a notice in January 2021 that claimed the long-term safety of the Stryde devices remains unknown, and the manufacturer had failed to adequately assess for safety.
“Several biological endpoints have not been adequately assessed and others have failed to be considered, including chronic, reproductive and developmental toxicity, and carcinogenicity,” the UK regulator stated.
In a YouTube interview in March 2021 with limb-lengthening influencer Cyborg 4 Life, Paley said the recall was voluntary after a British doctor had reported a patient whose tissue around the implant looked “like a rusted iron”.
“Everyone is freaking out over this but I want to reassure everyone – corrosion from stainless steel is not new,” he said.
“It’s not the first implant... It may be one of the first that’s been recalled. But many implants have corrosion before... I don’t think it’s caused serious harm… the odd patient may get a little symptomatic.” 
Healthcare regulators pledged to review August’s Federal Court judgment against Al Muderis, which he is appealing, but no action has been taken, and he retains full operating rights in Australia. According to social media posts, he is currently in Florida but will return to Sydney to see patients in January.
Still, Rudge said Al Muderis’ foray into limb-lengthening procedures raised issues.
“It’s not particularly inspiring to learn that another seemingly risky procedure is the next step for a surgeon who has faced scrutiny.”
Macquarie University Hospital, which is named on Al Muderis’ letter to GPs outlining his Paley Institute plans, said the surgeon remains on “indefinite leave”.
“Macquarie University Hospital has not been informed of plans by Dr Al Muderis to bring the Paley Institute to Sydney,” it said in a statement.
“Quality and safety standards are applied to all procedures at [Macquarie University Hospital], including limb-lengthening and other orthopaedic procedures, and we have nothing to report relating to this type of work.”
Nuvasive and Tenet did not respond to requests for comment.

Jean-Michel Basquiat is one of the world’s most valuable artists. Why?

 The more expensive he gets, the more demand there is for his work 


Jean-Michel Basquiat is one of the world’s most valuable artists. Why?

Thanks to a handful of money men, the neo-expressionist – who died in 1988 – has been transformed from New York scenester into blue-chip investment.



One of the paradoxes of the art market is that the most valuable artists – think Pablo Picasso or Andy Warhol – are often extremely productive; their value comes not despite their fecundity but because of it.

That abundance multiplies the potential profits available to anybody willing and able to buy those artists’ work in bulk. And indeed the most rapid run-up in Basquiat values took place as the market started to price in the fact that the artist had been astonishingly prodigious during his tragically short career.

Basquiat was a reasonably liquid asset class even during his lifetime – from the beginning he was recognised as an artist whose works had real value and could be sold on the secondary market, even if only for a four-figure sum. But that very market-friendliness would become a problem in the mid-1990s, after the artist’s death precipitated something of a speculative bubble in his work.

One of the fascinating themes running through Woodham’s book is the tension between commercial and collectible. Basquiat was in no way avant-garde: he fit quite naturally into the broadly accepted neo-expressionist movement and never faced the “childish scribbles” taunts endured by elder painters such as Cy Twombly.

With Basquiat, the perceived problem was rather the opposite – that the artist was pandering to the market rather than creating something timeless and sublime. Woodham quotes one early collector, for instance, talking about his “commercial taint” and saying that the paintings “seemed to be more about money than art”. (As critic Robert Hughes wrote in 1988, Basquiat developed a reputation in the final years of his life for dashing off low-quality works that he could sell to feed his drug addiction.)

Saturday, November 15, 2025

How HR Took Over the World

 Meet the 2025 National Book Award Finalists. “Literary Hub caught up with the finalists to ask them a bit about their books, their reading habits, and their writing lives.” Some great stuff in this article


How HR Took Over the World Economist. The Economist catches up with what a colleague has been complaining about for years, rule by HR ladies.


Going to Art Galleries Can Improve Wellbeing. “Enjoying original works of art in a gallery can relieve stress, reduce the risk of heart disease and boost your immune system, according to the first study of its kind.”


Bill Wurtz’s History of Japan is the most entertaining history of anything I have ever seen.



Jasmine Hair - Pioneering U.S. Street Photography, With Vienna in the background

Introducing our Producer Jasmine Hair @jasminehairfilm

A name the whole town will soon know…


Producer (If/When)

e: jasminehairfilms@gmail.com /m: +61 422 944 331

w: https://jasminehappi.wixsite.com/jasmine-hair


Jasmine Hair is an emerging producer living on Gadigal and Bidjigal land (Sydney, Australia)

Raised on the beautiful shores of Jervis Bay, Jasmine grew up in an area distinctive for its Aboriginal culture, wildlife, and strong artist community. 

     Villa of Matra


She believes her passion for Documentary storytelling has stemmed from her South Coast upbringing and diverse travel experiences.




Jasmine has recently completed the BA Screen Production Course at AFTRS and during her studies actively took on many roles from First AD to Production Design before discovering a strong passion for Producing.


In 2023, two of Jasmine's documentaries were selected for SBS On Demand: The Creative Moment (Writer/Director) and Lockdown Locals (Producer), and she completed an internship with Bus Stop Films. Working with the BSF students to create a Behind-the-Scenes documentary on the set of Fighting Feelings, giving insight into the collaborative student-mentor partnerships.


Jasmine is currently working as a full time Intern at ITV Studios on The Voice Season 13. She is excited to produce Aracourt's latest stop-motion animation film alongside an inclusive crew primarily made up of women and non-binary people.


Her passions include; Hip Hop dance, making & creating, the ocean, watching films,

photography and exploring places with a vista.

Lisette Model’s candid and cruel portraits spawned an American genre. But the key to understanding her might lie in Europe, where she was born.


Is This Woman Old Master the Greatest Artistic Rediscovery of the Century?

Via Semafor – “Vienna’s Kunsthistorisches Museum is hosting the first major exhibition of 17th-century painter Michaelina Wautier. Virtually unknown today, Wautier painted across genres, including portraiture, still life, and even historical scenes, which usually required the study of live models, a practice women were banned from. 

The exhibition includes 29 paintings, including Triumph of Bacchus, which was collected by the Habsburg Archduke Leopold of Austria; Leopold may also have commissioned Wautier’s portrait of the Italian Jesuit Martino Martini, who published the first atlas of China, in traditional Chinese garb. Almost nothing is known of Wautier’s life. 

“Her career reminds us how easily even brilliant artists can disappear from the historical record,” the museum’s director general told Artnet News.