According to the latest data, CDs aren't dead yet; nearly 11 million CDs were sold during the first half of this year — in the United States alone.
2020 has offered us some great content, helping us persevere during one of the most trying years in history. But there's one bit of pop culture that has every one of those things beat - and it's a podcast episode.
The service will stream live concerts with the aim to give subscribers access to watch over 25 live shows a month.
There had been speculation that AMC might end up in bankruptcy; instead, it was Alamo Drafthouse, the beloved, Austin-based cinema.
Collaborating with some New York fixtures, David Byrne is bringing the city Social!, an experimental socially distanced dance club held at Park Avenue Armory.
The uncertainty and painful longing we have been struggling with during these unprecedented times have been powerfully articulated through Kay Niuyue Zhang’s short film 'Mother in the Mist.'
A whole host of big name musicians have donated guitars and other stringed instruments to an online auction to help raise relief for the touring industry.
In the times of isolation, finding solace in artworks can be quite rewarding, and this was the idea guiding Amsterdam's renowned Rijksmuseum in doubling its collection of art works available for free online.
From Fiona Apple to Wim Wenders to Edvard Munch, here's a few examples of art that's relevant (and maybe somewhat comforting) through this garbage fire of a time.
It’s impossible to read 'The Plague' from the vantage point of 2021 without seeing the stark similarities between Camus’ imagined affliction and our all-too-real pandemic, and not merely in terms of sickness. It’s a matter of Nazis, too.
Whether it's the just released 'Don't Look Up' or 2011's 'Contagion', the record viewing numbers reveal one thing: there's just something about the end of the world. What is it that keeps drawing us in to watch the world collapse?
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