Russia’s Tatarstan has emerged as the leading purebred horse supplier for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his generals, authorities announced, after a local breeding farm shipped multiple elite Orlov Trotters to the DPRK in recent years.
The Tatarstan Republic’s agriculture ministry said in June that Tatar Stud Farm No. 57 supplied more than 15 purebred Orlov Trotters to Kim and his cavalry regiment over the past seven years.
Williams and Storrie’s triumphant walk was closely followed and applauded by the watching crowds, with the two actors posing amid smiles and nods to fans.
The Olympics’ official Instagram account shared a carousel of photos from the day, borrowing a quote from the movie Mean Girls for the caption: “Get in, loser, we’re going to Milan Cortina 2026.”
Comments on the post include enthusiastic fans who pointed out that the choice of the two actors as torchbearers for the Olympics is an opportunity for representation for the LGBTQ+ community in the world of sports, one that “gives hope” for the future. One user wrote, “You guys are really iconic for this. You are really changing the world and having such a positive impact on it.” Others simply celebrated their Heated Rivalry fandom, like the show’s Canadian production company, Crave, which commented, “Call it seated rivalry because we were so sat watching this” on the post.
Connor Storrie, torchbearer for Milan Cortina 2026
Courtesy of Fondazione Milano Cortina 2026
Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie, torchbearers for Milan Cortina 2026
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspected new statues for a memorial honoring DPRK soldiers who fought against Ukraine, though state media avoided any mention of military cooperation with Russia.
Kim, defense minister No Kwang Chol and high-ranking officials visited the Mansudae Art Studio on Sunday, according to the party daily Rodong Sinmun the following day.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspected new statues for a memorial honoring DPRK soldiers who fought against Ukraine, though state media avoided any mention of military cooperation with Russia.
Kim, defense minister No Kwang Chol and high-ranking officials visited the Mansudae Art Studio on Sunday, according to the party daily Rodong Sinmun the following day.
‘Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café’ by Fannie Flagg
This 1987 classic is a must-read for anyone seeking a lift. The novel follows the burgeoning friendship between Evelyn Couch, a housewife in her 50s, and Ninny Threadgoode, an elderly woman living in a care home. As their bond grows, Ninny begins to recount the story of her younger days in Whistle Stop, Alabama—focusing on her sister-in-law Idgie and Idgie’s close friend Ruth, who together run the Whistle Stop Café. The narrative seamlessly moves between past and present, inviting readers into a world that’s tender, humorous and rich in Southern atmosphere. While the novel is uplifting and full of warmth, it also confronts serious themes, including racism, aging, sexuality and prejudice, with sensitivity and nuance. And since so much of the story unfolds in the café, it’s no surprise that food plays a central role, with moments bound to make your mouth water—including, of course, the now-iconic fried green tomatoes. More than 40 years after its publication, the book’s themes still resonate, and its humor, heart and unforgettable characters remain as vibrant and engaging as ever.
Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams, the stars of Heated Rivalry, have seen their public profiles skyrocket from obscurity to global obsession in the scant two months since the show premiered.
DANVERS — Community members gathered in the Danvers High School atrium on Monday for the town’s annual “Move Like King” celebration, not just to reflect on the legacy of MLK Jr., but to consider how each individual can work to fight injustice and be a force for change.
Attendees of the event, hosted by the Danvers Human Rights & Inclusion Committee and Danvers Public Schools, were able to view a showcase of student artwork using a variety of mediums to foster dialogue about what MLK Jr.’s message of peace means today, and how his dream of unity and justice is being continually worked toward.
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This Monday, January 19, country music icon Dolly Parton will celebrate her 80th birthday. To mark the occasion, the singer released a new version of one of her hits, “Light of a Clear Blue Morning.” Originally released in 1977, this song of hope is now reborn through a collaboration between several major female figures in American music. Parton is joined on the track by Lainey Wilson, Reba McEntire, and Queen Latifah, as well as pop star Miley Cyrus.
Proceeds from the track and accompanying video will be donated to pediatric cancer research at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville, Tennessee. Parton teased the track, collaborators, and charitable cause on her Instagram earlier this week.
In a statement, the artist explained the emotional significance of the song: “I wrote ‘Light of a Clear Blue Morning’ during a season when I was searching for hope, and 50 years later that message still feels just as true. As I celebrate my 80th birthday, this new version is my way of using what I’ve been blessed with to shine a little light forward, especially by sharing it with some truly incredible women,” it reads.
The song originally appeared on the 1977 album New Harvest…First Gathering. It was a hit on its release, reaching #11 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and #87 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Dolly Parton, the godmother
Miley Cyrus’ presence on the track is no mere coincidence, as she is Dolly Parton’s goddaughter. When Miley was born, her father Billy Ray Cyrus, a close friend of Parton’s, offered her this role, which she seems to have taken to with gusto. The Disney Channel phenomenon Hannah Montana, in which Cyrus played Miley Stewart in her career breakout, also made a small nod to this family connection, with Parton playing the character’s aunt.
Now 33, Miley Cyrus has made no secret of her godmother’s influence on her career. Over the years, the two artists have multiplied their collaborations. They notably sang “Rainbowland” together on Cyrus’ album Younger Now in 2017, “Christmas Is” on A Holly Dolly Christmas in 2020, and more recently in 2023, a revisited recording of “Wrecking Ball” for Parton’s album Rockstar. In 2021, Cyrus performed her own cover of “Light of a Clear Blue Morning” on a Saturday Night Live Mother’s Day special, offering a beautiful tribute to her godmother.
The Supreme Court will hear two cases Tuesday that address whether state laws restricting transgender women and girls from participating in sports are constitutional. The first case involves 25-year-old Lindsay Hecox who transitioned from male to female and sued over Idaho’s ban to try out for the women’s track and cross country teams at Boise State University. She did not make either team and is no longer looking to do so, but competed in club-level soccer and running while she studied in Idaho. The second case centers around 15-year-old Becky Pepper-Jackson. She has been taking puberty-blocking medication, has identified as a girl since age 8, and was issued a West Virginia birth certificate recognizing her as female. Pepper-Jackson is the only transgender person who has attempted to compete in girls’ sports in West Virginia. The lower courts in both cases ruled in favor of the transgender athletes who challenged the state bans. More than two dozen Republican-led states, including Idaho and West Virginia, have enacted bans on transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s teams. Today, the mainly conservative justices are expected to focus on whether these sports bans violate the Constitution or Title IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in education. A decision in both cases is expected to be released by early summer. In the past year, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of state bans on gender-affirming care for transgender youth and allowed restrictions on transgender people to be enforced. Keep watching for the latest from the Washington News Bureau:
WASHINGTON —
The Supreme Court will hear twocases Tuesday that address whether state laws restricting transgender women and girls from participating in sports are constitutional.
The first case involves 25-year-old Lindsay Hecox who transitioned from male to female and sued over Idaho’s ban to try out for the women’s track and cross country teams at Boise State University.
She did not make either team and is no longer looking to do so, but competed in club-level soccer and running while she studied in Idaho.
The second case centers around 15-year-old Becky Pepper-Jackson. She has been taking puberty-blocking medication, has identified as a girl since age 8, and was issued a West Virginia birth certificate recognizing her as female.
Pepper-Jackson is the only transgender person who has attempted to compete in girls’ sports in West Virginia.
The lower courts in both cases ruled in favor of the transgender athletes who challenged the state bans.
More than two dozen Republican-led states, including Idaho and West Virginia, have enacted bans on transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s teams.
Today, the mainly conservative justices are expected to focus on whether these sports bans violate the Constitution or Title IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in education.
A decision in both cases is expected to be released by early summer.
The ownership of a sacred Cherokee Mound is set to return to the Eastern band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI) after a unanimous vote Monday.
What You Need To Know
A sacred mound is now set to return Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI)
The Noquisiyi Mound, also known as the Nikwasi Mound, is in Franklin, North Carolina
Returning ownership of the mound to the EBCI will ensure proper stewardship and preservation
The Noquisiyi Mound, also known as the Nikwasi Mound, located in Franklin, N.C., is a site of historical and cultural significance for the EBCI, but has not been owned by the tribe for more than 200 years.
“I am proud of the work that led us here, and I am grateful to see Nikwasi returned to where it belongs, with the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians,” Principal Chief Michell Hicks said in a news release.
Noquisiyi was once a Cherokee town that sat along what is now called the Little Tennessee River, appearing on maps as early as the 1500s. Today, this area is now known as the town of Franklin.
The Cherokee people were displaced from the land after facing attacks during both the Anglo-Cherokee War and the Cherokee-American wars in the 1700s, according to a Noquisi Initiative press release.
Map of Cherokee Territory, 1760. Photo courtesy Library of Congress.
However, the 1835 Treaty of New Echota revoked the couple’s ownership through the forcible removal of the Cherokee people from their land, better known as the Trail of Tears.
In 1946, plans from the private owner to flatten the mound raised alarms in the community, causing the Town of Franklin to purchase the mound in order to preserve it.
According to Hicks, in 2012, town workers sprayed weed killer on the mound in efforts to change out the grass variety.
“This, unfortunately, left the mound brown and exposed,” Hicks said in a news release.
“That moment made clear how vulnerable this place was and became the catalyst for our renewed push to bring Nikwasi under our care,” he said.
In 2016, the EBCI created the Noquisi Initiative as a way to encourage the preservation and advocacy of the mound, while seeking to regain ownership.
Ten years after the formation of the Noquisi Initiative, the Franklin Town Council voted unanimously to restore ownership to the EBCI.
“This fight was about standing our ground and continuing to say what needed to be said,” Hicks stated.
“That this land belongs to the Cherokee people and we are the ones responsible for its care, protection, and future,” he said.
Returning ownership of the mound to the EBCI will ensure proper stewardship and preservation, as guided by the values of the Cherokee people.
Photo courtesy Noquisi Institute
Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.
GLOUCESTER — C.B. Fisk will unveil its Opus 166 at an open shop event Saturday when visitors can get an inside look at what goes into creating these enormous pipe organs.
The Open Shop Celebration takes place from 2 to 6 p.m. at the Gloucester workshop at 21 Kondelin Road.
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Lisette Oropesa as Elvira and Christian Van Horn as Giorgio. Photo: Ken Howard / Met Opera
What do we want from historical romance? Should it reflect its time or offer escape from it? Fact and fantasy coexist frequently in opera, but balancing these impulses proves both fascinating and difficult in Charles Edwards’s new production of I Puritani, the first at the Metropolitan Opera in over four decades. The star-crossed pair—the Puritan Elvira and staunch Royalist Arturo—are separated first by Arturo’s divided loyalties and then, more disturbingly, by Elvira’s increasing madness. And while the 17th Century is the historical backdrop, I Puritani is more a reflection of 19th-century Italian opera tropes than of the English Civil War: mad scenes and cries of “la patria!”
Edwards’s production amps up both the historical context and adds in some psychoanalytic touches to its general peril; maps of Plymouth under siege are projected, and chyrons appear to deliver snippets of the English Civil War timeline. There is more than one green-tinged mad sequence in which ghostly doubles of our characters float through the scene. Elvira paints numerous hideous self-portraits that recall more AP Art portfolio than Robert Walker, and in a climactic scene, she hurls them across the room and punches an arm through one of them. There’s a lot going on here, in other words.
For an opera with a tighter grip on its own historical setting, this approach could be both informative and compelling, but in I Puritani the English Civil War is used primarily to provide obstacles to the lovers. The additional history, instead of amping up the drama, only knocks it off-kilter. Everyone seems all the sillier for caring this much about the star-crossed pair when the audience is constantly reminded that Scots are besieging the town. I Puritani, even more than similar works, insists romantic difficulties take precedence over horrifying contemporary events. Edwards’s impulse to beef up the dark setting merely exposes the myopia of Bellini’s opera.
Lisette Oropesa as Elvira. Photo: Ken Howard / Met Opera
Unsurprisingly for a director who is primarily a set designer, what does work beautifully are the sets. The first act places the audience in a Puritan meeting house that is at once austere and dramatic, without sacrificing visual interest or flattening his setting. The tiered seats and towering pulpit gave Edwards multiple levels on which to place his singers, lending the whole production—especially the first act—welcome variety. Met newcomer Tim Mitchell’s lighting is exceptional, with a painterly sensibility that sees great shafts of light angled downward into the faces of the actors from high back windows or emerging from firelit darkness, half-shadowed but still visible as in a Caravaggio painting. Later on, the Puritan meeting house splinters apart, with dashes of light crisscrossing the stage as if showing us Elvira’s fragmentation on the very walls. Edwards and Mitchell’s collaboration makes this production one of the most visually striking in the past few years.
Edwards’s ability to create arresting tableaux is a great strength, as is his commitment to having singers move; a frequent critique of mine is that directors do not always know how to leverage the Metropolitan Opera’s massive stage to sufficient dramatic effect, leaving singers snoozily parked downstage center or moving aimlessly across the floor with nothing to engage with. But frequently, the production’s dynamism gives way to busyness or even adds confusion to the already convoluted plot. Background characters pull focus from the principals during arias, difficult-to-make-out paintings trip up the space, and the use of child doubles for Arturo and Elvira in the mad scenes and dream sequences was neither dramatically clarifying nor emotionally compelling. Claus Guth’s Salome may have succeeded with this tactic earlier this year, but let’s not overdo it. There are a few other missteps that mar this production. Gabrielle Dalton’s costumes are by turns austere and splendid, and she manages to make even the Puritan characters look sleek and expensive, but her choice to style Elvira in Act III as a pixie-cut-sporting waif recalled Anne Hathaway as Fantine in Les Miserables too closely for my taste.
Eve Gigliotti as Enrichetta and Lawrence Brownlee as Arturo. Photo: Ken Howard / Met Opera
Lisette Oropesa, a soprano whom I frequently admire, was by turns brilliant and bumpy as the pathetic Elvira, who sings what feels like a record number of mad scenes. The slower cavatinas displayed Oropesa at her best—rich rivers of nuanced, lively sound—but the vocal fireworks expected in the cabalettas had not enough sparkle, with moments of effortful coloratura and a few breathy, pinched high notes. Laurence Brownlee, recently adorable as Tonio in La Fille du Régiment, was an exceptionally strong Arturo, with an even, forward sound that perfectly balanced brightness with depth. He is well-suited to this role; even though it does not take advantage of Brownlee’s effervescent charm, his Arturo was near-unimpeachable vocally and only gained momentum as the opera drew to its close.
As the lovers’ principal antagonist Riccardo, Artur Ruciński was the other standout. He has a dimensional, delicious baritone that leans toward bass in its richness; his Act I aria “Ah, per sempre” was a surprising emotional high point, as was his duet with Christian Van Horn’s Giorgio. Van Horn, who has a crisp metallic bass, was persuasive and heartfelt as Elvira’s beloved uncle and advocate. Eve Gigliotti has only a little to do as the secret-queen Enrichetta, but delivered a massive sound in her short time on stage.
All the singers were supported by veteran guest conductor Marco Armiliato, who is a generous and sensitive interpreter of Bellini, able to bring out both the elegance and the occasional bouts of military bombast with grace.
While Edwards’s production veers into the dangerously overstuffed by the third act—his choice to stage the final moments of the opera with Arturo embracing the ghost of his father was strange and nonsensical—there is still much to commend in his bold visual style, even if his ideas strain at the seams of his material. Arturo and Elvira’s romance ends with a surprising reprieve; Cromwell’s forces save the day and, madness forgotten, the lovers can reunite. I Puritani is tragedy with a happy ending, one that always feels forced and unrealistic regardless of the production. At its best, it reflects that shred of hopefulness romances always offer—that love might, for a moment, overcome the forces of history.
Artur Ruciński as Riccardo. Photo: Ken Howard / Met Opera
On another note, you won’t be seeing as much of me on Observer’s pages moving forward, and to all those reading this, I want to thank you. As a scholar and a singer, writing these reviews has meant so much to me, as has the work of the team of editors at Observer who have polished and published my writing. It has been a deep honor and extraordinary pleasure to write on this platform, though this isn’t necessarily goodbye. If you’d like to continue reading my articles and reviews, including a 2026 season preview with all of the things I’m most looking forward to hearing this year, use this link to sign up for my email list. Happy New Year to all—may yours be full of opera. With that, exit Madame Ferrari. On to the next stage!
In the spring of 2022, as the Russian military bombarded Kyiv and its troops swept into Ukrainian border regions, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un teamed up with Vladimir Putin to help Volodymyr Zelensky escape to safety in Western Europe.
Or at least, all the people involved in the operation looked like those global leaders.
In the spring of 2022, as the Russian military bombarded Kyiv and its troops swept into Ukrainian border regions, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un teamed up with Vladimir Putin to help Volodymyr Zelensky escape to safety in Western Europe.
Or at least, all the people involved in the operation looked like those global leaders.
After Beth Morrison earned her bachelor of music at Boston University and a master’s of music at Arizona State University, she moved to New York City with limelight ambitions. What she encountered were like-minded creatives grousing about the entertainment industry’s indifference, which she set out to remedy by earning an MFA in theater management/producing at Yale School of Drama. Returning to New York in 2005, she set up Beth Morrison Productions and resumed grumbling over industry indifference.
Since then, BMP has become the country’s premier hothouse for new opera, staging more than 50 productions, including Pulitzer Prize winners Angel’s Bone by Du Yun and Royce Vavrek and p r i s m by Ellen Reid and Roxie Perkins. A Grammy nominee, BMP has four titles nominated for 2026, including Adoration and Trade / Mary Motorhead. Starting tomorrow, the company celebrates its quarter-century anniversary with the 2026 Prototype Festival, which this year will mount six productions at venues in Brooklyn and Manhattan. “I’ve been working for this change,” Morrison tells Observer. “It’s why I got into what I do in the first place, to create this new kind of opera. And I think we’ve done that. We have 15+ seasons in our history showing that, and we’ve inspired others as well.”
Fans will find inspiration in the BMP: Songbook Concert and Celebration (Jan. 7-8), a performance pulling together their greatest hits, with 14 arias culled from the company’s storied history and sung by the original artists. (If you can’t make the show, pick up the album, a double-disc vinyl set featuring 60 arias. It goes well with the BMP Songbook Anthology, a 500-page coffee table book celebrating the company’s history.)
HILDEGARD is the brainchild of composer Sarah Kirkland Snider. Production photos by Angel Origgi
Precipice takes to the boards Jan. 8-11, the story of a young woman’s struggle set against the epic backdrop of the mountainous West. Leaping from a tall cliff, she awakens mute in the wilderness, where she must fight to recover her voice. Set to Rima Fand’s folk-inspired score, Precipice incorporates sounds from nature, singers, string quintet, piano and mandolin.
Hildegard makes its New York City premiere Jan. 9-11 and 14. This must-see opera by the incomparable composer Sarah Kirkland Snider is named for the 12th-century German nun Hildegard of Bingen, a mystic, visionary, writer, composer, philosopher and medical practitioner. The world premiere in Los Angeles last November drew superlative reviews on both coasts. “I’m so proud of her,” Morrison said at the time. “It’s been totally a labor of love. She loves Hildegard so much, the historical figure, and she’s written such a beautiful piece.”
If you can’t make it to Brooklyn, try Times Square on Jan. 11 for The All Sing: Hwael-Rād (Whale-Road) and join the choir for this world premiere choral work bridging the gap between humanity and our ocean-dwelling friends. “It’s this goth-industrial music meets classical,” is how Morrison describes the world premiere piece by composer Jens Ibsen. “We’ll have music up on the website, and anyone can download it and learn it and come and sing with us.”
The New York premiere of the comedic post-rock opera What to Wear (Jan. 15-18) by Michael Gordon and the late avant-garde theater icon Richard Foreman draws from the latter’s original staging. A collaboration between BMP, BAM and Bang on a Can, this acerbic commentary on society’s superficiality features a cameo by St. Vincent. “Already we’re selling out and had to add a performance. It’s going to be the hardest ticket to find. It’s a huge lift because it’s raising a lot of money in a short period of time to get it done, and it’s a complicated production,” says Morrison. “It’s crazy and amazing, it reminds me of Einstein on the Beach. It’s a spectacular show, truly one to blow people’s minds.”
On Jan. 16-17, submerge yourself in Art Bath, a cross-disciplinary experience highlighting female voices and genre-bending music and opera, theater, puppetry and visual art. Also not to be missed is Tiergarten on Jan. 16, a Weimar cabaret in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church on Carroll Street. Directed by Andrew Ousley, it explores historical moments of societal madness, featuring music by Handel, Verdi, Dean Martin, Max Richter, William Byrd, Brecht, Weill and songs from The Rocky Horror Picture Show in the form of opera, classical, jazz, ballet and burlesque.
Over the years, BMP has expanded to a staff of 14 and launched its Next Gen program fostering emerging opera composers. From it, one is offered a commission for an evening-length work as well as a world premiere production. BMP’s partnership with LA Opera has resulted in 17 shows in 10 years. The Prototype Festival has only been in existence for 15 years, relying mainly on the generosity of individual donors, including the Mellon Foundation, a major backer whose agreement with BMP runs out in 2028—something that has sent Morrison scrambling.
HILDEGARD had its world premiere in Los Angeles last November. Production photos by Angel Origgi
“If we don’t replace it, what does that mean? What will the festival look like? That’s our challenge now. I’m someone who’s a very pragmatic dreamer. I’ve got a couple of big ideas that I’m working on right now to bring a lot of partners together to create something larger than ourselves, exploring opportunities,” she says, lamenting, like so many arts institutions, the loss of NEA money after 560 grants totaling over $27 million were cut last May.
“A lot of foundations have left the arts that were really holding it together or have changed their priority in how they fund the arts. And a lot of individual donors who have propped up the non-profit performing arts for decades are aging out. A lot are dying, and there isn’t anybody coming up and taking their place,” she says. “It’s not easy, but it’s never been easy. It’s harder than it’s ever been. We’re announcing thirteen commissions over the next five years. It’s a big campaign for us. We’ve never done a campaign like this before, but it’s exciting. There’s a lot of amazing work being done here that people should feel good about. We’re just trying to create a conversation about what opera can be in the 21st Century.”
After Teddy’s announcement, Flora spent several nights at Sagamore. That fall, she confided to Quentin’s sister Ethel that “Everything just hurts nearly all of the whole time. There is no one I can talk to who half understands. It is all so lonely.” Her parents knew that she suffered. Yet in the hundreds of condolence letters to Flora from friends and family and other correspondence from this time, there are none between Flora and her parents that mention Quentin or his family. Despite this, one of the more poignant bronzes her mother made at this time is of Flora, seated quietly in an armchair, the curve of her body and downcast expression manifesting her pensive mood.
Flora and Teddy took solace in each other’s company. Teddy wrote to Flora that fall reminding her that “for as long as I live, I shall love you as if you were my own daughter.” During that time, Flora did some work for Teddy, who she called “the Colonel,” taking dictation and typing letters and other documents. In January 1919, Roosevelt died of an embolism. His death plunged Flora further into grief.
After that, Flora lived for a time with Quentin’s half-sister, the fiercely independent Alice Roosevelt Longworth, in Washington, DC, volunteering at the Women’s Republican Committee in the office of former congressman Ruth McCormick. In the summer of 1919, Flora’s parents urged her to go to France with her aunt, Dorothy Whitney, who had lost her husband Willard Straight in the influenza pandemic.
There the women visited Chaméry, where Quentin was buried. Flora’s grief came flooding back. Paris, though, lit up with post-war joie de vivre, was the perfect antidote. The women shopped on the rue de la Paix, heard Tosca at the Tuileries, and walked in the Bois. The days flew by until they sailed home from Southampton a month later. Flora felt a brimming lightness, her sprightly grin restored, a new swing in her step. Theodore Roosevelt was onto something when he wrote to his daughter-in-law Belle the summer before that “there is nothing to comfort Flora at the moment, but she is young. I most earnestly hope that time will be merciful to her and, in a few years, she will keep Quentin as only a memory of her golden youth…and that she will find happiness with another good and fine man.”
Our American Cemetery guide escorts us along a sea of marble headstones to Quentin’s grave. He is buried next to his oldest brother, Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt Jr., who died of a heart attack in France at the end of World War II. Quentin is the only World War I pilot interred there, his remains moved in 1955 at the request of his family. Once we reach the grave, our guide attends to the noble task performed by volunteers for visiting family members and every year on the anniversary of D-Day. With a sponge, she rubs Omaha Beach sand over and into the incised letters on Quentin’s headstone. She carefully wipes off all but the sand impressed into the channels of his name, rank, unit, home state, and date of death, highlighting them. As a gentle fog rolls in from the Channel, bathing the cemetery in a soft haze, she plants two flags—one American, one French—on either side of the grave.
The American Cemetery’s unsettling serenity reminds one that freedom comes with responsibility and at a tremendous cost. Appalled by the barbarity of battle evoked in the sites I visited around Normandy’s beaches, I left awed at the courage of Quentin and Flora, and all those caught up in the war’s unpredictable forces.
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts has canceled multiple New Year’s Eve performances, adding to a growing wave of artist withdrawals following the venue’s renaming to include President Donald Trump.
Jazz ensemble the Cookers had two scheduled New Year’s Eve performances canceled, according to the Kennedy Center’s website on Monday, the New York Times reported. The cancellations follow Doug Varone and Dancers’ announcement that they are pulling out of their April performances in protest of the renaming.
Newsweek reached out to the Kennedy Center via email on Monday for additional comment.
The Kennedy Center, traditionally viewed as a nonpartisan space for artistic excellence, has become a flashpoint in broader debates about political influence over cultural institutions.
The financial and reputational consequences affect both the artists withdrawing—Varone toldthe Times he estimates a $40,000 loss—and the venue itself, which faces an increasingly fractured relationship with performers and potential legal challenges over the renaming’s legality.
What To Know
The wave of cancellations began in February when Trump removed board members and replaced them with supporters. High-profile artists, including Pulitzer winner Rhiannon Giddens, soprano Renée Fleming, and singer-songwriter Ben Folds, resigned advisory roles or canceled performances in protest.
Jazz musician Chuck Redd canceled his annual free Christmas Eve concert after seeing the name change on the Kennedy Center’s website and building, prompting Kennedy Center President Richard Grenell to threaten a $1 million lawsuit. Redd has led the venue’s holiday “Jazz Jams” since 2006, taking over from bassist William “Keter” Betts. Folk singer Kristy Lee from Alabama withdrew from a January 14 free concert, citing integrity over financial concerns.
Doug Varone and Dancers were scheduled to perform April 24-25 at the Eisenhower Theater, celebrating the company’s 40th anniversary and honoring two departing dance administrators, Jane Raleigh and Alicia Adams.
The reason for the Cookers’ New Year’s Eve cancellations remains unclear. The performances had been promoted as featuring an “all-star jazz septet that will ignite the Terrace Theater stage with fire and soul,” according to the Times reporting.
The renaming has sparked legal controversy. President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, and Congress passed legislation in 1964 establishing the center as a living memorial to him. The law restricts the board of trustees from dedicating the building to anyone else or placing another individual’s name on its exterior. The White House has said the decision was approved by a board appointed by the president, though legal scholars and historians argue congressional approval would be required.
What People Are Saying
Roma Daravi, Vice President of PR for the Kennedy Center, shared in a statement to Newsweek last week:“Any artist cancelling their show at the Trump Kennedy Center over political differences isn’t courageous or principled—they are selfish, intolerant, and have failed to meet the basic duty of a public artist: to perform for all people. Art is a shared cultural experience meant to unite, not exclude. The Trump Kennedy Center is a true bipartisan institution that welcomes artists and patrons from all backgrounds—great art transcends politics, and America’s cultural center remains committed to presenting popular programming that inspires and resonates with all audiences.”
Doug Varone, Doug Varone and Dancers told The New York Times: “It is financially devastating but morally exhilarating.
“We can no longer permit ourselves nor ask our audiences to step inside this once great institution.”
Folk singer Kristy Lee, according to the Times: “I won’t lie to you, canceling shows hurts. This is how I keep the lights on. But losing my integrity would cost me more than any paycheck.”
Democratic Representative Steve Cohen said in a speech in Congress: “The idea that Donald Trump would want his name to go before Kennedy’s or even with Kennedy’s is a sacrilege. It should not be changed, ever.”
It was 1956 when Brigitte Bardot burst into global fame with And God Created Woman, a film directed by her then-husband, Roger Vadim. Though not her first film, it was the one where everything changed for the icon, who died Sunday at age 91: Suddenly, she was the embodiment of sensuality and feminine freedom.
Before she retired from acting in 1973, Brigitte Bardot appeared in over 50 films, spanning comedy, drama, and adventure. Many were huge successes at the global box office, spurred by an interest in her style on and offscreen. Read on for her most iconic performances and notable films.
‘The Grand Maneuver’
Sunset Boulevard/Getty Images
The Grand Maneuver (1955)
Before Bardot’s breakout success, director René Clair cast her in a romantic comedy opposite Gérard Philipe. In the role, Bardot proved her charm was not only provocative but also playful, capable of sustaining the pace and lightness of an entertaining film without losing intensity.
Bradley Cooper, Will Arnett, Laura Dern and Andra Day at a special Q&A panel at Angelika Film Center in advance of the film’s theatrical release. Photo by John Nacion/Getty Images for Searchlight Pictures
A flailing relationship is no joke—unless you’re Alex Novak (Will Arnett), who stumbles into personal salvation by cracking wise in front of a live audience. Multi-hyphenate Bradley Cooper’s latest film c?, now playing in theaters nationwide, traces this journey, which begins with Alex’s spur-of-the-moment impulse to get up in front of a crowd and emotionally unload. “It’s the first time that he talks about what he’s going through,” Arnett told Observer. “It’s kind of the first time he admits it to himself.”
What triggers the confessional is a still-fresh separation from longtime wife Tess (Laura Dern), after 20 years of marriage (and 5 years as a couple before that). A quarter-century together will change anyone—moving to the suburbs, having kids, sacrificing professional goals for familial stability. The real question is how to acknowledge that change in each other without falling apart.
Arnett, who co-wrote the script with his writing partner Mark Chappell and Cooper, came up with the idea for the film after hearing the origin story behind British comedian John Bishop, who unexpectedly started his career in comedy—and saved his marriage—by turning his estrangement from his wife into comic fodder that became a catalyst for personal change.
“It’s a midlife catharsis, not a crisis,” explained Cooper at a press screening before Is This Thing On?, which premiered as the Closing Night Film of the New York Film Festival. “This movie’s not about a guy who’s unhappy in his profession. It’s that he’s not really comfortable with who he is.”
Arnett echoed the sentiment during his talk with Observer. “We don’t see Alex at work, for instance,” he said. “We don’t see any of that stuff. What was important to us was really getting down to him trying to find his voice. And by that I don’t mean his comedic voice, but his voice as a person—to see him start to connect the dots and be able to actually speak.”
Is This Thing On? is both a thematic continuation and a pivot for Cooper, whose trajectory as a writer-director-actor-producer includes his splashy Lady Gaga vehicle A Star Is Born and the ambitious Leonard Bernstein biopic Maestro. Both of those were big-budget productions that, at heart, were relationship dramas writ large. Is This Thing On? compresses that canvas and trades studio spectacle for low-budget intimacy.
Intrigued by the story’s possibilities, Cooper—who has known Arnett for almost 30 years and even was his roommate in L.A. as their careers were getting off the ground—offered to join Arnett and Chappell to explore the script’s characters further with a rewrite. He then added himself to the cast (in a small role as a Falstaffian goofball buddy nicknamed Balls) and brought together a terrific ensemble, .including Academy Award winner Dern; Andra Day as Balls’s frustrated wife; Arnett’s Smartless podcast cohost Sean Hayes as his newlywed friend (coupled with Scott Icenogle); plus Christine Ebersole and Ciarán Hinds as Alex’s parents. Amy Sedaris and Peyton Manning pop up in smaller roles, and stand-up legend Dave Attell even makes an appearance.
Cooper and his collaborators pulled together the film very quickly and shot almost entirely on location in New York last spring over 33 tight days, getting it edited in time to premiere at the NYFF in the fall. “New York is a treasure chest and very, very little was shot on a stage,” said Cooper, a native Philadelphian who relished being back in the downtown neighborhood where he spent time as a grad student in places like the Comedy Cellar and Bar Six (both of which play key roles in the film). Alex’s apartment is on 12th between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, right on the same street where Cooper got his MFA at the New School.
“It was a small budget,” said Cooper, who often served as his own camera operator. “That shot of him crossing Sixth Avenue? I’m on a seatbelt on a dolly handheld with nothing shut off from the street. That’s all actual traffic. And there’s just the cop there. We’re like, ‘Is it okay?’ ‘Yeah, you got ten minutes.’ I’m like, ‘Okay, okay!’”
But that run-and-gun indie vibe was inspirational for the cast. “It’s like Christmas on steroids!” said Dern at the NYFF press screening, and then invoked her longtime professional relationship with David Lynch. “Inland Empire was the only other experience I had where my director was right there with the camera. Bradley, as an actor and as our family, knows us so well and feels the instincts with us in character. The most fun of your life is to be in it and feel an instinct as an actor that you catch up to after the take is done, and you go, ‘Oh man, maybe I should try this…’”
Arnett was even further in uncharted territory, handling a dramatic role while surrounded by Oscar-caliber talent. “For me, that was a lot of the work,” he said. “To just be present in those moments and be open and vulnerable. These kinds of roles never came my way,” said the actor best known for indelible turns like being Job in Arrested Development or the voice of Lego Batman. “But, also, I did it to myself. I’ve heard people say that I got typecast. Well, I didn’t have to do all the things I did. I had fun doing them—but certainly to do something like this is much closer to what I’d always wanted to do.”
Day, an Oscar-nominated actress better known as a Grammy Award-winning singer, plays a small but larger-than-life role in the film as Christine, an unhappy wife simmering with marital discontent. She has a seminal scene with Arnett when Christine hilariously confronts Alex about the rage she feels toward him. “She tells him straight up, ‘I despise you because I hate myself. You remind me of me’,” she told Observer, laughing. “Let’s see what you’re going to do now with that truth!”
But that interaction speaks to a greater truth: the film has no villains, only people who are adrift and unable to communicate with each other. “She’s not a victim,” said Day about her character. “She’s not blaming everyone else. She’s like, ‘What am I passionate about? What do I love? Well, shit, maybe I’m pissed at myself!’ You know what I mean? I love that the movie talks about this theme of grace. We have to transform as people in order to actually have a pulse and be alive. We need to have grace to allow other people to transform.”
Dern echoed those same feelings at the NYFF press screening. “The film finds the unbelievable complexity of relationships. I hadn’t seen a script or a film allowing us to know that we don’t know how we got here. Because most of us don’t, in moments of despair, in one’s self and in relationship.”
And for Arnett, as the lead in this marital reckoning, Is This Thing On? was truly transformative. “It was a difficult task for me,” he said. “I did have to recalibrate and remember why I started doing this in the first place. Making a movie like this was how I always envisioned my life going when I was a young man. For me, it was kind of like a rebirth in a way, as opposed to a new thing. It was just reconnecting to something I always wanted to do.”
We are responsible for important decisions, bold strategies, and the overall direction of our company. Yet sometimes, despite our collective brilliance, we struggle to make smart decisions just like many teams do in a choice-loaded marketplace. We get there in the end, mostly because we practice LQ Listening Intelligence before the debate veers us off course.
Take our most recent technology purchase debate. The question was simple: Should we adopt a new enterprise platform? Five leaders entered the discussion with five different listening filters. Within minutes, the conversation resembled five tabs of a browser loading completely different websites.
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One person cared about numbers. Another cared about how the team would feel. Someone else focused on workflow impact. One leader was thinking a decade ahead. And another was quietly trying to survive Monday.
Individually, everyone was thoughtful and competent. But collectively, it felt like a group project that belonged in a corporate escape room. Luckily, we know this is not a competence problem, but rather a listening problem.
Why active listening is not enough
Say the word “listening” in a business setting and someone will inevitably preach the virtues of active listening. This usually involves intense nodding, repeating back someone’s words, and a level of eye contact that borders on competitive staring.
Active listening is not wrong. It is simply incomplete, and in many cases, performative. The intention, empathy, and making someone feel heard, has its place. But it is extremely limited when collaboration and innovation are needed. It also doesn’t explain why two smart people can hear the same information and walk away with completely different conclusions.
Many leaders describe themselves as good listeners or bad listeners. That framing is inaccurate, too.
Listening isn’t a moral endeavor. It is a cognitive process. The brain develops patterns that determine what you notice, what you ignore, what you treat as important, and what you write off as irrelevant. These patterns become habitual and automatic, much like an operating system that runs without your permission.
This is where LQ Listening Intelligence, comes in. Our model and curricula is grounded in nearly two decades of research showing that listening is a brain-based function, not a behavioral performance. LQ Listening Intelligence is backed by the ECHO Listening Profile, our scientifically validated cognitive assessment that measures and identifies four predictable listening filters that shape collaboration, communication, and decision making.
The 4 listening habits running your meetings
The Connective habit listens for people, relationships, and trust. The Reflective habit listens through the lens of personal relevance. The Analytical habit listens for data, accuracy, and logic. The Conceptual habit listens for big ideas, future potential, and possibilities.
These habits are not personality shortcomings. They are cognitive filters built by your experiences, knowledge, and what your brain has decided matters most. They shape decision making long before words are spoken out loud.
Now imagine a team that does not know which filters are present when making critical decisions. People talk past each other. Someone feels dismissed. Someone else feels pressured. Someone wonders why no one understands what they are saying. Meetings run long. Decisions stall. The problem is not the decision itself. The problem is how everyone is listening to each other.
Cognitive diversity is a strategic advantage
The power of LQ is not in making everyone listen in the same way and to immediately agree on the same solution. It is in helping teams understand and leverage the cognitive diversity already in the room. Once leaders understand their dominant listening habits, they can intentionally stretch beyond them. This builds what we call listening muscle.
Analytical listeners can embrace uncertainty instead of demanding perfect data.
Conceptual listeners can wait for details to settle before leaping into the future.
Connective listeners can ask for supporting information instead of relying on intuition.
Reflective listeners can zoom out beyond their own department.
Better decisions come from integrating and harnessing different perspectives, not flattening them.
Back to the great software showdown
Our leadership team knows that our different listening habits could derail productive collaboration, so instead of focusing on our competing perspectives, we lean into truly hearing one another’s perspectives and concerns. We leverage our collective brain power while also agreeing on shared decision criteria before evaluating solutions. Our conversation is clearer, shorter, and far more productive. No drama. No politics. No guessing games.
The bottom line
Your leadership team does not need to think alike. It needs to listen with awareness and great appreciation for differing viewpoints. When you understand how your brain filters information, you can adapt. When teams understand one another’s filters, collaboration becomes faster and more strategic. You do not reduce conflict. You turn it into useful data, and you make better decisions in less time with lower stress.
The LQ model is not about paying more attention, unwavering eye contact, nodding harder, or pretending to actively listen. It is about understanding how your mind processes information, appreciating what you may have missed that your colleague prioritized, and using that collective knowledge to make better, more strategic decisions. Because the quality of your decisions will only be as strong as the quality of the conversations that shape them.
Teams can embrace, but also leverage their differences to be smarter together than any one leader can be on their own.
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The documentary often gets a bad rap. Maybe you watched a few boring (or prescriptive) ones in school, in which talking heads drone on about what you ought to think or feel. However, despite its reputation as constrained retelling—emphasis on the “telling”—the medium also offers storytellers practically limitless formal flexibility, and the power to show us reality in dazzling new hues.
This was a year of numerous stunning nonfiction releases, as well as many festival premieres of works yet to be distributed. When viewing them in unison, it’s clear that the medium’s stylistic and thematic ingenuity could not be in better hands. These 25 films from 2025, hailing from all across the globe, represent the very best of what documentary cinema has to offer.
And when hockey comes up in conversation, she doesn’t hesitate to mention the reading material that brought her to the sport: “If someone wants to talk to me about hockey, I will absolutely talk to them about hockey. If they ask, ‘Oh, why did you get into it?’ I’m like, ‘Oh, my God, have you heard of hockey romance? It’s amazing.’”
And if they yuck her yum, showing disdain for queer hockey smut, then she knows they’re not for her: “If I have to dim the things I’m excited about in order to be cool to someone, then I don’t want to be their friend,” she says.
The cross-fandom pollination has gone in the opposite direction as well.
“I’ve seen hockey reporters say, like, I’ve got a bunch of new followers, if you want to learn the game, like, what do you want to know?” Held says. Show creator Jacob Tierney has been a guest on the hockey podcast What Chaos, and the Empty Netters podcast now recaps each Heated Rivalry episode. “I love it when people find a new passion. So I hope this leads to romance readers becoming hockey fans and hockey fans becoming romance readers, right? And then ideally, we would get a romance novel in like a year or two about people, one person from each fandom and how they fell in love together.”
The breakout success of the show has felt validating to readers, who hope to see more like it in the future, including plotlines of acceptance, diversity, and anti-homophobia that Reid explores in the series, which Held calls “very explicitly a critique of the NHL.”
In the here and now, however, romance enthusiasts are thrilled with the show’s success, and ready to welcome new fans into the fold.
“There’s a cool feeling of like, oh my God, we’ve known about this for so long,” Capizola says. “People are like, where did this come from? And we’re all like, it’s been here, welcome. There’s, like, seven more books [in the series].”