Sunday, April 07, 2024

Chances of Second: The World’s 100 Most-Popular Museums For 2023



“I'm old enough to remember when conservatives claimed to value traditional institutions and processes like rule of law, and criticised the Left for undermining them. That conservatism seems to have long been eclipsed by a Right that gleefully trashes the basics of democracy”

Webdiarist Jozef Imrich interviewed Greiner in 1997 and we have extracted parts of the interview which include Greiner’s reflections on the success and failure of his reform policies and the creation of Independent Commission Against Corruption, which he established during his leadership.
Interview with former Premier, the Hon. Nick Greiner by Jozef Imrich, Macquarie Street, Monday 24 February 1997
Jozef Imrich: If you look back at the political landscape in New South Wales during the Greiner era, what were your most successful decisions?
Nick Greiner: It is too hard to say! If I look at it in a macro level, I think it is fair to say that the reform agenda that I started has now been accepted as common across politics in Australia, across state politics - but really across politics generally. The notion of the importance of the market and competition, of breaking down some of the differentiation between public sector management and private sector management, of running the state’s balance sheet on a broadly practical and agency basis, the importance of debt, these are all important reforms. These are probably more than one decision, but that agenda is now in Mr Carr’s Office. As I was driving in this morning, I heard him say how proud he was of the AAA rating that we had. I think simply establishing the fundamental importance economic management at state level is the most important single thing. It had a great impact.
The second one is the integrity issue. I guess on that one almost everyone is in broad agreement about, that I do not get such good marks there. It is an issue which can be accurately marked because the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) not only helped to kill me, but it is generally regarded as a failure. I actually think that the primary objective to be achieved, which is once and for all to change the culture of integrity in the public sector in New South Wales at every level of judiciary and public servants and politicians, has been lost. The pendulum has clearly gone too far and a lot of the public sector people, both politicians and bureaucrats, are using ICAC as an excuse for not doing anything. The ICAC undoubtedly got some things wrong. All of that is bad, but I think the decision to make integrity an issue and to actually do something serious about it, was actually a pretty important decision. It has actually worked, despite having what you might call unintended consequences, including my departure.

Can one restaurateur lift a suburb from the doldrums? Three eateries in, with two more scheduled to open this year, this one’s trying his darnedest.


Stories about the end of the world are as old as stories themselves. We are obsessed with our own demise... more »
 

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Chance Perdomo, Star Of Gen V And The Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina, Has Died At 27 In A Motorcycle Crash

Perdomo, in a “Breakthrough Brit” video, talked about the power of art and acting. "There’s no point in just ranting at someone. … But if you can connect with them emotionally and have them think outside their peripheral vision to somewhere else, then that can change perspectives." - Los Angeles Times

What’s The Secret To The Songs That Make People Want To Dance? Syncopation, Says New Study

But not too much — just "a moderate level of syncopation to the point where our brain can still extract the periodic beat from the melodies. (These researchers) contend that the brain is essentially trying to anticipate upcoming beats amid a melody’s syncopation. The result is the impulse to dance." - Scientific America


The World’s 100 Most-Popular Museums For 2023

This year we can finally answer: things are back to normal. Mostly. Our exclusive survey reveals that in 2023 many of the world’s largest museums recorded very similar numbers to those of 2019, the last full year before the Covid lockdowns began. - The Art Newspaper


Artist Sets Up Ladies-Only Lounge In Museum. Man Sues For Gender Discrimination. Artist Is “Absolutely Delighted.”

The installation at Tasmania's Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) is by Kirsha Kaechele, wife of museum founder David Walsh, a math prodigy who made his $200 million fortune by gambling. Kaechele said in court that "(men's) experience of rejection IS the artwork." - The Guardian

“Mama Mia” Star Informed She’s Being Replaced By AI Voice

Musical theater star Sara Poyzer publicly shared a screenshot of an email she received from an unnamed production company which read: “Sorry for the delay—we have had the approval from BBC to use the AI generated voice so we wont need Sara anymore.” - The Daily Beast