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  <title>Arts Criticism with Gene Seymour (CNN.com, USA Today, Newsday) - 009</title>
  <description>Gene Seymour is an arts critic and culture reporter who writes frequently for CNN and USA Today. In New York, he was a longtime film and jazz critic at Newsday. His writings have appeared in The Los Angeles Times, The Nation, Entertainment Weekly, the Washington Post, and many other publications. Gene is a contributor to The Oxford Companion to Jazz and is the author of Jazz: The Great American Art, a history for young adults. Gene is a two-time winner of the New York Association of Black Journalists Award for distinguished criticism.&#13;
Notes from the show:&#13;
Gene started out as a reporter, and approaches criticism from a reporter's perspective.&#13;
Got his big break when Nels Elson passed along opportunity to cover the Philadelphia Jazz Festival.&#13;
Gene's years as a television critic were among his happiest as a journalist because he got to cover tv, politics, and culture.&#13;
Gene's came to Newsday as a New York City jazz critic, but later provided movie criticism.&#13;
Gene was raised in a Hartford CT household which always had jazz records playing: Miles Davis, Ahmed Jamal, Dave Brubek, Chet Baker, Charlie Parker.&#13;
His Dad's motto: &amp;quot;If it doesn't have soul, it isn't worth it.&amp;quot;&#13;
His Dad loved Paul Desmond's &amp;quot;Time After Time&amp;quot; and Sonny Stitts's &amp;quot;Who Can I Turn To?&amp;quot;- these songs became emotional touchstones.&#13;
Music critics range from composer Virgil Thompson to George Bernard Shaw.&#13;
It is not Gene's role to explain on behalf of a musician, but to write on behalf of the spectator.&#13;
The art of note-taking during a live performance vs. a movie.&#13;
Lena Horne vs. the cell phone.&#13;
Jazz: The Great American Art&#13;
First Book of Jazz - Langston Hughes&#13;
&amp;quot;Jazz is the 20th century.&amp;quot;&#13;
&amp;quot;Have We Reached the End of Jazz Itself?&amp;quot; - The Nation&#13;
Flying Lotus, Kendrick LaMarr, and the future of jazz.&#13;
Groundhog Day, The Big Lebowski, and giving movies a second look.&#13;
Critics' controversy over Wes Anderson.&#13;
John Leonard's disdain for All in the Family.&#13;
The passing of Harper Lee.&#13;
Better Living Through Criticism - A.O. Scott&#13;
Recommended Blogs:&#13;
&#13;
James Wolcott - Vanity Fair&#13;
Christgau's Consumer Guide to Rock Music&#13;
Sergio Leone and the Infield Fly Rule&#13;
Self-Styled Siren&#13;
Sunset Gun&#13;
RogerEbert.com&#13;
&#13;
The Psychology of What Makes a Great Story - Brain Pickings&#13;
This podcast hosted by New York attorney Michael Prywes was sponsored by Prywes Schwartz, PLLC, a law firm devoted to artists and entrepreneurs.&#13;
This podcast may contain attorney advertising. Prior results do not guarantee future outcomes.</description>
  <author_name>How I Broke Into: Michael Prywes Interviews Artists and Entrepreneurs About Their Big Break</author_name>
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