Freddie on βOur Poptimist Dystopia":
Aesthetic hierarchy of any kind has become the last obscenity, the one judgment weβre no longer permitted to make, because to say that one thing is better than another is to admit that better exists. And if better exists out there, in the world of songs and books and movies, then it exists out here for us too, in the world of our lives, and that way lies the intolerable thought that we might have gone too easy on ourselves. Anti-elitism is the snobbery of those who have decided that the glory of great art is not worth bearing the thought that someone else might have better taste than we do. So we havenβt democratized taste; we abolished it so no one ever has to come in second, so that no one ever must face the implied judgment of other peopleβs preferences.
That story reminds me that my old friend Ken Myers, who has interviewed thousands of people in his time, started out in radio as a student at the University of Maryland, where the very first person he ever interviewed was Johnny Cash.Β
TIL that when, in 1935, Gertrude Stein did a book tour in support of The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, she visited the University of Texas and was interviewed by a student journalist named Walter Cronkite. Β

Nikolai Ge, Portrait of Leo Tolstoy (1882)Β
The first book published by Random House was a fine-art edition of Voltaireβs Candide, illustrated by Rockwell Kent (who also designed the companyβs famous logo).

I hate VAR so, so much. β½οΈ
The value of a papal encyclical β certainly for non-Catholics and maybe even for Catholics β stems not from the quality of the arguments it makes but rather from the quality of the responses it provokes. Leah Libresco Sargeantβs new piece is an excellent example.
I continue to be bemused by the sheer number of these AI-generated book-promotion scams β I get them every day. Most of them never make it to my inbox, which speaks well for current spam-filtering software, because they look more legit than spam typically does. This too shall pass, and I will be glad when it does.Β
Dorothy L. Sayers: Works and Days is now available for pre-order at Amazon as well as the OUP website. (Itβs not yet on bookshop.org.) And the pub date has been moved up to September 28!Β