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Essays · Analysis · Features
On the cover
On the Cover Xang, westly, ladé and fakekickin. Featured on "The New DMV"

The New DMV

Pitchfork tracks the rise of DMV street rap — 'free car music,' a local hybrid of drill rooted in D.C.'s catastrophic auto-theft and homicide spike. Two online-anchored collectives (Too Many Strikers, Deep & Powerful Music) are pushing the regional sound past its Wale-era prestige into something jagged, internet-fluent, and more cutting-edge than the DMV has produced in two decades.

One Useful Thing · Essay

Co-Existence and the End of Co-Intelligence

Ethan Mollick's Co-Intelligence became the AI playbook for knowledge workers figuring out how to collaborate with chatbots. Two years later, he's back to note that the co- prefix may already be obsolete. Coding agents now write 80% of Anthropic's code. The vision was always autonomous systems, not helpful assistants — we just didn't feel it until now. If you've been treating AI as a copilot, the cockpit is being redesigned around you.

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Brodie Conley's Building Blocks Substack · Essay

Udio's 'Starstruck' and the emerging political economy of generative AI music licensing

Brodie Conley's Building Blocks has been tracking the generative AI music licensing space closely, and this piece lands at a useful inflection point: Udio's Starstruck and Spotify's new Universal deal are moving the conversation from whether to license to how licensing actually works in practice. Who gets attributed? Who gets paid? Who decides? Conley maps the deals already signed and surfaces the governance questions that will define what "licensed" actually means.

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01 Music & Scene

The Problem with Fakemink

POW MAG uses a Fakemink review as a launch pad for something sharper: the argument that "underground rap" has become what "indie rock" once was — an in-group signifier that majors now move freely inside. The piece gets genuinely interesting when it names a racial reconfiguration in the hype machine, pointing to Capitol signing Esdeekid for a reported $30M as evidence the culture has shifted who…

Read on POW MAG →

Secular Blasphemy

An essay reflecting on Walter Benjamin's "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" and critiquing contemporary art, media, and cultural production for having abandoned aura and integrity in favor of simulacra, commercialization, and algorithmic consumption.

Read on Harmony Holiday →

Music Through the Walls

Jazz Noted draws a structural line from Harlem's 1920s rent parties to pandemic-era living-room livestreams — arguing they're not analogies but the same institution repeating. The piece is strongest on the rent party's generative pressure: stride piano emerged specifically because hosts could only afford one musician. Scarcity built the vocabulary bebop inherited.

Read on Jazz Noted →

Donwill & The Lost Art Of The Hip-Hop Interview

An exploration of the decline of hip-hop media integrity and the rise of podcasters and content creators as power players in music discourse. The piece focuses on Donwill, host of Okayplayer's The Almanac Of Rap, as a rare exception working within legacy institutions to preserve serious music journalism.

Read on Cabbages →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Can You Run the Music Industry without Musicians?

A jazz label releasing hundreds of albums with no real musicians — just AI-generated ensembles named Miles, Hawkins, Coleman — is the hook here. The piece documents a label whose artist rosters and vintage-styled covers are designed to pass as authentic catalog.

Read on Ted Gioia →

UK Music Tech Has the Ideas. Now It Needs the Money

Hypebot covers Music Technology UK's Sound Investments 2026 report, which identifies a scaling gap rather than a startup problem: seed funding is holding, but growth-stage investment collapsed from £100M+ annually to just £10M in 2025. The uncomfortable finding is that U.S. firms are acquiring mature UK companies instead of funding their growth — Britain builds the IP, America captures the value.

Read on Hypebot →
03 Music Recommendations

Navy Blue — "Sir Render"

The features elevate the writing through concrete imagery. Billy woods gives a whole scene in someone else's rented room—'Watch her paint with her hair in two braids'—while Ka, appearing posthumously on 'Circa,' packs every line with specificity: a kid with 'a hunch in lunchbox, mom's packed a prayer.'

04 Voice & Culture

Confessions of a Fair-Weather Knicks Fan

Jonathan Lethem's piece sets up a clean trap: writing about sports either collapses into embarrassing projection or goes silent entirely — and both outcomes indict the writer. It's a short, sharp meditation on why sports resists language the same way sacred or purely sensory experience does.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

Three Times the Movies Changed Us Forever: Spielberg, '2001: A Space Odyssey,' and Movie Love

Sean Fennessey's Projections newsletter uses a Rewatchables appearance by Steven Spielberg — discussing 2001: A Space Odyssey — as a jumping-off point for thinking about how movies form young minds at the exact right moment. Spielberg saw Kubrick's film at 21, on the verge of his first professional project, and Fennessey zeroes in on that collision of openness and awe as the engine of serious…

Read on Projections →

Too much!

An essay examining why major museum exhibitions often overwhelm visitors with excessive content, arguing that curators would benefit from showing restraint and selectivity rather than attempting to display everything.

Read on THE ARTS STACK by Rosie Millard →

The Bamboozle Economy

An essay examining the long history of exploitation of aspiration in America, from snake oil salesmen to modern predatory practices, using Herman Melville's The Confidence-Man as a lens to understand contemporary fraud and manipulation.

Read on A Different Lens - see floyd muse →

An Interview with David Sedaris

Eric Spitznagel's Believer interview with David Sedaris makes a quiet case for relentless physical presence as a creative practice. Sedaris has toured nearly every U.S. state — small towns, two-plane trips, hour-long drives — not mining readers for material but out of genuine curiosity. It's a useful counterweight to the idea that audience insight can be gathered remotely.

Read on The Believer Magazine →

Nancy Lemann Is Moving Past the Doom

An interview with novelist Nancy Lemann about her return to publishing after two and a half decades of rejection. The conversation covers her previous works, the role of New York tastemakers in reviving interest in her debut novel, and her new works being published by NYRB and Hub City Press.

Read on The Hobbyist →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

The scraper economy, explained

While publishers fight AI in court over licensing, The Media Copilot flags a quieter parallel economy: data brokers scraping and monetizing the web at scale, with publishers seeing none of it. The piece, a conversation with Cashmere's Jonathan Woahn, reframes the AI content debate — the licensing fight is real, but the gray market underneath it may be the bigger structural problem.

Read on The Media Copilot →

An AI answer is only as good as its sources

An analysis of Google's strengthened position in AI despite the rise of chatbots, and how publishers may have untapped leverage over Google's AI-generated answers that are built on top of their content. The piece discusses how Google's vulnerability from a year ago has shifted as it solidifies its AI business model.

Read on The Media Copilot →

Media's new AI bargaining chip

The Media Copilot flags a meaningful shift: publishers now have a regulator-backed way to opt out of Google AI Overviews — the first real crack in the take-it-or-leave-it deal that's defined the AI content standoff. Two years of feeding the machine to stay visible may finally have a third option, which could reset how platforms and content owners negotiate access.

Read on The Media Copilot →

Everything Under the Sun

Sophie Haigney reviews Trevor Paglen's installation From 'Apple' to 'Anomaly,' which made ImageNet's training data physical — 30,000 categorized images pinned to a curved wall. The piece uses Paglen's work to examine what's actually inside the datasets shaping AI vision: not neutral labels, but loaded human choices. A useful gut-check on how classification encodes bias before a model ever trains.

Read on The Believer Magazine →
06 AI Product News

No, Artificial Intelligence Is Not Conscious

Ted Chiang takes the argument that current AI might be conscious and runs it out to its logical conclusion — which he calls absurd and damning. The piece is a structural refusal: a working out of why the consciousness question, as posed, can't sustain itself. Coming from the writer whose 'Blurry JPEG' essay shaped how journalists talk about LLMs, it carries unusual weight.

Read on The Atlantic →

Companies Are Using Reddit to Manipulate ChatGPT and Google AI Search

Jason Koebler at 404 Media documents the logical endpoint of AI training on Reddit: brands quietly seeding subreddits with promotional content specifically to get scraped into LLM answers. The r/biohackers case — peptide and HRT companies manipulating source material so chatbots parrot their claims — makes the stakes concrete. If this is already happening in health communities, it's safe to assume it's happening in music and culture spaces too.

Read on 404 Media →

OpenAI's quiet co-founder steps out

Alex Heath interviews OpenAI co-founder Wojciech Zaremba, who recently left frontier research to run AI "resilience" at OpenAI's nonprofit foundation. Zaremba is overseeing the initial $25 billion grant machine focused on biosecurity, cybersecurity, model safety, and AI's effect on kids.

Read on Sources →
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