Sunday, July 13, 2025

In Defense Of Rachel Zegler’s Balcony Scene In The New West End “Evita”

When in doubt, go for a walk. “Walking won’t solve everything. But it won’t make anything worse. That’s more than you can say for most things we do when we’re stressed, tired, or lost.”


Among Friends — a betrayal beyond repair Hal Ebbott’s powerful debut novel shatters our expectations when the comfortable world of two families is blown apart in one reckless moment

So, the stage is set and we’re in what feels like the patrician, male-centric world of an Updike novel. Yet Ebbott, while writing with the grace of the old masters — “trees poured along the sides of the road. The car seemed to swim through them” — subverts our expectations by exploding the calm order of things with a moment of unexpected violence.

Among Friends — a betrayal beyond repair



In Defense Of Rachel Zegler’s Balcony Scene In The New West End “Evita”


Many people who paid exorbitant prices to see the show in person are miffed that they’re watching “Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina” on a screen as Zegler sings it to crowds on the street. Writer Ellise Shafer argues that “this divisiveness is exactly the point (director Jamie) Lloyd is trying to make.” - Variety

Oscar Wilde’s Forgotten Play About Russian Revolutionaries

The 1879 play Vera; or, The Nihilists is about a young woman and her band of radicals who plan to kill the tsar. Its 1881 London premiere was cancelled after Tsar Alexander II was actually assassinated, and the play has been neglected ever since. - The Guardian

Richard Greenberg, Tony-Winning Playwright of “Take Me Out,” Has Died At 67

“(He) was one of America’s most established dramatists, responsible for about 30 plays staged on or off Broadway since the mid-1980s. His work was wry yet tender, nipping at the divide between comedy and drama, and delved into questions of family, love and friendship.” - The Washington Post (MSN)

Son of Ty - Tiny Desk Concert by the cast of Buena Vista Social Club, a hit Broadway musical about the Cuban musical ensemble

Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly.

— Robert F. Kennedy

 You were born, and the world became a better place. Happy Birthday, man!


Royal commission staff expect you to be calm, composed, dignified, and sober at your age. Disappoint them. 

Have a fan-cake-tastic day!


There is nothing better than a friend, unless it is a friend with chocolate.

-Linda Grayson



Get published for $20, co-author with a Nobel Prize-winner for $700: With academic paper mills, anything seems possible — for a fee... more »


Best sellers were once written by authors like Mary McCarthy and J.D. Salinger. Now they’re written by those like James Patterson. What changed?... more »


NPR Tiny Desk Concert by the cast of Buena Vista Social Club, a hit Broadway musical about the Cuban musical ensemble.


What to eat to protect your aging muscles The foods you choose are as important as exercise for getting and staying strong

Have you found yourself feeling a little weaker than you used to?


Who’s your daddy? These days, who isn’t?
Mack daddy, leather daddy, sugar daddy, Daddy Trump: The fraught and Freudian journey of a domineering archetype.

In his social media series “Trump Was Born to be a Gay Man,” actor Bransen Gates lip-synchs to real recordings of President Donald Trump saying things that — with a few wrist flicks and come-hither eyes — gain an entirely new interpretation. Gates has acted out the president’s monologues about his “beautiful” pole (for a flag), his declaration that he would “kiss every man” in a 2020 rally audience and his assessment of Arnold Palmer’s body. (He “was all man,” said Trump in October.)

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Lidka - Salt Path scandal: the juiciest literary scams, from James Frey to JT LeRoy

 Greek - the Apollo


Rooms with the views


Salt Path scandal: the juiciest literary scams, from James Frey to JT LeRoy




As accusations around Raynor Winn’s bestseller come to light, our critic rounds up the greatest scams, hoaxes and frauds in publishing history


Why do writers write? For pleasure, meaning, money, fame – and for no reason at all. Lydia Davis explains... more »


It's never been easy to "make it" as a musician. These days it's easier to make music but harder than ever to earn a living from it... more »


Reims and Amiens

Both cities have significant war histories, but they are very different to visit, even though they are only two hours apart by car.

Reims was largely destroyed in World War I, and so the central core was rebuilt in the 1920s, with a partial Art Deco look.  The downtown is attractive and prosperous, the people look sharp and happy, and it is a university town.  You arrive and feel the place is a wonderful success.  If you had to live in a mid-sized French city, you might choose this one.

The main cathedral is one of the best in France, and arguably in the world.  The lesser-known basilica also is top tier.  There are scattered Roman ruins.  French kings were coronated in Reims from early on, all the way up through 1825.

Amiens is on the Somme, and the 1916 Battle of the Somme, followed by a later 1918 offensive, was a turning point in WWI history.  The town is a melange of architectural styles, with many half-timbered homes but also scattered works from different centuries.  The town also has France’s “first skyscraper,” renowned in its time but now a rather short and out of place embarrassment.  The main Amiens cathedral, however, is perhaps the best in all of France.

The town itself feels like visiting a banlieu, with large numbers of African and Muslim immigrants.  It is lively, and it feels as if a revitalization is underway, though I do understand opinions on these matters differ.  Real estate prices are at about 3x their 1990s levels.  That to me is strong evidence that things are going well.

Restaurant Momos Tibetian has excellent Chinese and Tibetan food.  The Picardy museum has some very good works by Boucher, Balthus, Picabia, El Greco, and Chavannes.

Both cities are radically undervisisted.  They do attract some tourists, but for the most part you feel you have them to yourself.


The most expensive meat in the world: Aged Wagyu beef $3200/lb pic.twitter.com/KOIddhY2lt


35,000 square feet sky-penthouse.
The most expensive apartment on the planet.
Priced at $387 million. pic.twitter.com/TvyJ3ijucf

'Without Any Hope of Fame or Money'

 'A Great Euthanasia'


 Take “Worldly Wealth” by the Welsh poet Rowland Watkyns (1616?-64), with the subtitle “Natura paucis contenta” (“Nature is satisfied with little”):

 

“Wealth unto every man, I see,

Is like the bark unto the tree:

Take from the tree the bark away,

The naked tree will soon decay.

Lord, make me not too rich. Nor make me poor,

To wait at rich mens’ tables, or their door.”

Lord, Make Me Not Too Rich. Nor Make Me Poor'



“What are the poems one returns to, always taking pleasure? Or to put it slightly differently, what poems would enjoy the place of honor in one's Absolute Anthology (no fair including warhorses, chestnuts, and poems one is supposed to like)?”


'Without Any Hope of Fame or Money'

Friends and relatives, people whose judgment I actually trust, have urged me to move Anecdotal Evidence from Blogger to Substack and I don’t understand why. All I need is a place to write, the “platform” is of no importance. I’d do this in a notebook, like in the old days, if nothing else were available. Blogger is temperamental but after almost twenty years I’ve learned her funny little ways. As in a long, mostly happy marriage, one gets comfortable. I think of Michael Oakeshott’s definition of being conservative: 

“. . . to prefer the familiar to the unknown, to prefer the tried to the untried, fact to mystery, the actual to the possible, the limited to the unbounded, the near to the distant, the sufficient to the superabundant, the convenient to the perfect, present laughter to utopian bliss.”



'It Is Always Summer, Always the Golden Hour'

I fight the urge to wallow in nostalgia but it seeps back in like moisture in an unfinished basement. I take that image from my childhood home. The walls and floor were bare concrete. Stacks of newspaper and lumber felt flesh-like with dampness. Down there it was always chilly, even in summer.


In 1943, at age twenty-one, Borowski was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to Auschwitz. 

 

Later in the letter to his mother, he writes: “I, myself, am, of course, well and cheerful, a normal person who accepts the present as though it were already the past, who is full of hope and not without a future.” He adds: “Will we ever be so young again? Life truly is short. And is art truly long?”

Friday, July 11, 2025

Ottimo Carr —-What could go wrong? - AllTrails launches AI route-making tool



 Ottimo House


Join Charishma Kaliyanda and I at Ottimo House Denham Court Estate for a special fundraiser with The Hon. Bob Carr to mark 30 years since the election of the Carr Labor Government – a milestone in NSW’s political history.


Bob Carr is up for a debate: can Australia treasure its historic buildings without romanticising them?


Randwick Local Legends Episode 4: The Hon. Bob Carr


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 Fraud trial for Ontario's ‘Crypto King’ set to begin in October 2026
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 Four Viewpoints on AI
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 What could go wrong? - AllTrails launches AI route-making tool
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 New ACM Journal to Focus on AI Security, Privacy
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 Experts Count Staggering Costs Incurred by UK Retail Amid Cyberattack Hell
Connor Jones
 Record DDoS pummels site with once-unimaginable 7.3Tbps of junk traffic
Ars Technica
 Authorities Rescue Girl Whose Mother Livestreamed Her Sexual Abuse
NY Times
 Michael Levin says all intelligence is collective, and consciousness may not be limited to brains…
via geoff
 How Mark Zuckerberg unleashed his inner brawler
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 Key fair-use ruling clarifies when books can be used for AI training
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 Anthropic wins a major fair-use victory for AI, but it's still in trouble for stealing books
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 Top AI models will lie, cheat and steal to reach goals, Anthropic finds
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 Re: Grief scams on Facebook
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 Re: Most Americans Believe Misinformation Is a Problem—Federal Research Cuts Will Only Make the Problem Worse
Steve Bacher
 Re: They Asked ChatGPT Questions. The Answers Sent Them Spiraling.
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 Info on RISKS (comp.risks)

Bookshop.org's 100 Bestselling Books of 2025

RIP Helen Mary MULLINS

Sacred Heart Parish was established in 1965 with Fr Bernard Edghill as Parish Priest. In 1957 Bishop F. A Henschke, Bishop of Wagga Wagga


Offering salaries from $200,000 to $300,000, The Atlantic has assembled a new “A-team” of writers... more »


Bookshop.org's 100 Bestselling Books of 2025 (So Far)


When a person dies, that person is usually forgotten as time advances. The Book of Exodus opens with the memorable saying: “Now there arose up a new king over Egypt, who did not know Joseph” (1:8, ESV). 


Let’s face it, when most of us are laid low by the sweeping of the dread sickle, the memory of our lives will be swallowed up by oblivion. 


The psalmist reminds us of this reality: “As for man, his days are like grass. … The wind passes over it, and it is gone, and its place knows it no more” (103:15–16, ESV).

The same can be true for ideas. Many ideas die with those who strove, fought, and suffered for them. This is usually the case for the people and ideas that were on the losing side of some great controversy. If later generations do not forget them outright, they at least tend to remember them as inevitable losers, in part because the victors have reduced them to caricature.

God against revolution



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Hidden cameras in hotels and Airbnbs are more common than you think — 5 ways to protect your privacy Tom’s Hardware

Glyn Davis’ parting advice recommends a visit to MOAD

Glyn Davis reflects on the routines, values and quiet architecture that give policymaking its legitimacy — if ethics stay in the frame.

Former Prime Minister & Cabinet (PM&C) secretary Glyn Davis has championed the ‘Spirit of the service’ exhibition for those wanting to better understand the foundational policy principles upon which the Australian government operates. 

A few weeks after closing the door to his office for the last time, Davis spoke of how the work of governing is messy and continuous. He also acknowledged that the academic theory of the policy cycle can seem overly optimistic when it butts against the brutal cut and thrust of politics.

The policy cycle is illustrated on an exhibition wall at the Museum of Australian Democracy (MOAD), as part of a relatively new installation about the APS in 2023.


Davis said the conceptualisation — featuring elements including well-designed processes, the collation of evidence, room for contrary assessments and testing for unintended consequences — was a good example of the “enduring” settings of the policy world that superseded generations of politicians and governments of the day.

“A policy cycle can seem an optimistic model when the truth may be muddle, happenstance or brute politics,” Davis told an audience in Canberra.

“But with no idea of what good policy making might look like — no Platonic ideal — how can you assess experience or strive toward a better process?”

Every week in his job at PM&C, Davis said, he noticed the policy cycle embedded in routines of governing– so ubiquitous they were often taken for granted — bringing to life the institutional architecture of governing.  

From inviting decision-makers and policy drafters to answer key questions — such as the template for cabinet submissions that asked what is the problem being addressed, why these policy instruments and not others, what do other agencies across government think of the proposal, what implementation schedule is proposed, how will the new initiative be evaluated? — to the sharing of information across portfolios that delivered a shared context for priorities to be determined and choices to be made.

These ways of working had become so natural, Davis added, that public servants often forgot how profoundly they shaped the work of the APS, but created routines that provided a path for authority to flow and legitimacy of actions to be accepted. 

“At any one time, very few established programs — and little of the overall budget — is up for scrutiny and debate. This stability allows a policy cycle time to work. 

“Policymaking can follow a cycle of problem identification, deliberation, adjustment and evaluation,” Davis said. 

“When ministers and their officials meet in committee, they work from a common body of information, using well-established processes to guide the discussion.

“Routines are the standard operating procedures of government. They provide the unseen and unreported daily work of public servants — something we forget at times to include in our account of how government operates,” he said. 

The nature of deciding economic policies and questions about national security all involved a combination of a sustained conversation across time between ministers, advisers, the public service and stakeholders.

Davis further suggested that protocols and processes for policymaking required decisions made in haste to be “defended and sustained”, and also allowed for bad policy decisions to disappear “when the moment passes”.

“That does not imply policy is unchanging. The world shifts, generations turn over, and the consensus about government moves slowly but remorselessly,” Davis said.

“Even climate change has gone from deeply contested to widespread acknowledgement and grudging agreement on action.”

The senior mandarin said routines and protocol together helped to infuse a level of reliability and flexibility in government systems, but they also needed to be tempered by values like stewardship and commitment to service to ensure processes did not steamroll other important features of effective government.

Things like innovation, ways to avoid “bad bureaucratic behaviour” or systems that excluded people from decision-making processes. 

“When the rules clash with our ethical underpinnings, as happened in robodebt, something is terribly wrong and needs urgent attention,” Davis said. 

“Effective administration … depends on public servants committed to their vocation. A capable public service needs good leaders, and seasoned administrators deeply knowledgeable about government, willing to work well together, able to provide ministers with thoughtful advice — whether wanted or not.

“A well-functioning system needs integrity,” he said.

Professor Davis said he had long been intrigued about how public policy was made, and shared a sliding door moment during his early career that would have led him to either join the public service or lecture about public administration as “an outsider looking in”. 

It turns out you can do both, the former secretary quipped, revealing that on completion of his tertiary studies, he accepted a position lecturing at Griffith University over an offer to commence in a graduate role with the Department of Communications.

This saw Davis go on to teach a future treasurer, Jim Chalmers, an assistant minister, and other students who would become serious public service powerbrokers at the state and federal level.

“I worked with talented colleagues to develop undergraduate courses on policy making, and wrote the first local textbook in the field,” Davis said.

“It was a delight to teach committed students who shared our interest in the subject.”

As a lecturer, he recalled one of his former students scoffing that academics couldn’t possibly know the real-world challenges of balancing good policy and making tough choices.

Some years later, in an airport, Davis bumped into his former pupil. This student had risen to the highest echelons of power and served as a minister in the Howard government. 

“‘You know that stuff you and the others taught us about cabinet and ministerial responsibility and how policies get made?’… [He] then answered his own question, with genuine astonishment: ‘It all turned out to be true!’,” Davis said. 

“The feedback was gratifying, yet his original critique haunts. Can we really teach the reality of something as ever-changing, yet intricate as government?”

As someone who lived through the scandalous final years of Queensland’s Bjelke-Petersen regime (1968-87), Davis said that he understood government corruption and lip service paid to the rule of law risked undermining trust in everything worth caring about in public life.

Lost integrity could be hard to win back, he warned.

“Ours is an urgent, restless world. So much injustice still, at home and abroad, so many questions,” Davis said. 

“Leading PM&C was a chance to observe the seriousness with which ministers take their responsibilities and the professionalism of an APS in serving whatever government is chosen by the Australian people.

“A public service which … has been striving for effective local delivery, more joined up services, better procurement and greater opportunity for community empowerment since the Coombs royal commission nearly 50 years ago. It is a journey that continues,” he said.

Professor Davis made his remarks in a valedictory speech marking the end of his tenure as the top mandarin of the APS. The event was hosted by IPPA ACT. 

About the author

Melissa Coade

Melissa Coade

News editor
Melissa Coade is The Mandarin’s news editor based in Canberra’s parliamentary press gallery. She has had various government, communications and legal roles, and has written for the Law Society of NSW journal (LSJ) and Lawyers Weekly.

 Glyn Davis’ parting advice recommends a visit to MOAD