Praxis Theatre is currently on hiatus! Please find co-founders Aislinn Rose and Michael Wheeler at The Theatre Centre and SpiderWebShow, respectively.
November 10, 2010, by
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Lately on the interweb

(l-r) Metcalf Arts Policy Fellow Shannon Litzenberger, Paul Gross, and Toronto Arts Council Executive Director Claire Hopkinson at The Canadian Conference of the Arts in Ottawa

(l-r) Metcalf Arts Policy Fellow Shannon Litzenberger, Paul Gross, and Toronto Arts Council Executive Director Claire Hopkinson at The Canadian Conference of the Arts in Ottawa

by Michael Wheeler

Here’s a rundown of somewhat-related, hopefully interesting, and only partially self-serving, events and ideas that have been going around the internet lately:

  • Over on The Arts Policy Diaries, Shannon Litzberger reports on Arts Day, organized by The Canadian Arts Coalition on Parliament Hill. Advocates took meetings with a number of Cabinet Ministers, while Shannon steered her X-wing straight for the main reactor to have an hour-long chat with Heritage Minister James Moore.
  • Also in Ottawa, The Canadian Arts Coalition Canadian Conference of the Arts, organized a series of seminars on all things arts related. The big bombshell: CBC reports that the guy who compiled statistics for Richard Florida’s seminal works thinks it’s time to move past this whole “creative economy” idea, noting that leading policy makers to look at the arts as “dollars and cents…has been a trap”.
  • “The insurgent… and uncategorizable”  Cathy Gordon and myself taught a workshop at University of Toronto last weekend titled, Producing and Creating Independent Theatre. More info soon on a non-U of T version available to everyone.
  • The Siminovitch people have published Kim Collier’s acceptance speech and it is, well, here just read it. The Electric Company has already destroyed any reputation I have for objectivity on this website. Still, you should probably read it.
  • Still bummed about the swath of uninspiring choices that presented themselves candidates for Toronto Mayor? Eye Weekly has a great piece on how a Ranked Ballot (RaBIT) could change the quality of candidate and tenor of debate next election.
  • Speaking of which, Wrecking Ball #11: Now What? is coming to The Theatre Centre on December 6th, the evening before Toronto’s new City Council meets for the first time at City Hall. More details as they become available on The Wrecking Ball website.
  • With the release of ex-US President George W Bush’s memoirs Decision Points, comes a new Facebook group dedicated to subversively taking the book and placing it in the crime section of bookstores. Don’t ya like it when things are funny cause they’re true?

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