Arts & Education: Milwaukee Ballet, Degas & Milwaukee Art Museum

I chanced upon a rather extraordinary afternoon recently at the Milwaukee Art Museum. The Museum is currently featuring a Degas sculpture exhibition, including Little Dancer. Interestingly, several ballerinas from the Milwaukee Ballet were present. Children could sketch and participate. I took a few photos and added some music. The result is this movie. Enjoy!

Lessig & Tweedy: The Right to Rip, Mix & Burn

David Carr Larry Lessig & Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy spoke at the NY Public Library last week:

The tickets for the event Thursday sold out in five minutes on the Internet, and on the evening itself the lines stretched down the block. The reverent young fans might as well have been holding cellphones aloft as totems of their fealty.

Then again, this was the New York Public Library, a place of very high ceilings and even higher cultural aspirations, so the rock concert vibe created some dissonance. Inside, things became clearer as two high priests of very different tribes came together to address the question of “Who Owns Culture?” – a discussion of digital file-sharing sponsored by Wired magazine, part of a library series called “Live From the NYPL.”

Both Jeff Tweedy, the leader of the fervently followed rock band Wilco, and Lawrence Lessig, a Stanford University law professor who has opposed criminalizing file sharing, seemed to agree that just about anybody who owns a modem also owns – or at least has every right to download – culture products.

Audio archive is available on Wilco’s web site.

Sensenbrenner & The Patriot Act Renewal

Craig Gilbert:

Most of the debate involves a handful of the new powers, such as government access to personal records from medical offices, libraries and businesses.
Sensenbrenner suggested that most of the 16 temporary powers could be made permanent, but that a few would remain subject to a sunset, or expiration date.
“I think it’s evident . . . there’s not going to be a repeal of the sunset,” Sensenbrenner said, referring to the fact that even some Republicans on his committee oppose making all the expiring provisions permanent.

Top Big Brother Picks

Joanna Glasner:

Two major data brokers, a California elementary school and Google’s Gmail service are leading contenders for the Big Brother Awards — a dubious prize spotlighting organizations with egregious privacy practices.
Award recipients will receive a statue of a golden boot stomping on a human head.
The nominees were among those on a list made public Wednesday by Privacy International, the British watchdog group that runs the annual U.S. Big Brother Awards. The group plans to announce winners on April 14.

Wispolitics Budget Blog

Useful links & commentary on the state budget “process”….

“$310 million – we could buy a boat for everyone in the state to get across the river.?
— JFC Co-Chair Scott Fitzgerald on the cost of the proposed Stillwater Bridge spanning the St. Croix River between Wisconsin and Minnesota in northwest Wisconsin.
?This is a very technical Web site. This is not just Mapquest.?
— DOT Secretary Frank Busalacchi defending the cost of a $650,000 interactive site for the Marquette Interchange.