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On the cover
On the Cover Olivia Rodrigo, Featured on "Stop Eating Lady Gaga's Oreos"

The teen idol survives

Eliza McLamb's Substack has been threading together cultural criticism and feminist analysis with real bite, and this piece on Olivia Rodrigo opens into something larger: the machinery that chews up teen idols and the rare cases where someone survives it. McLamb traces the eating disorders, the inappropriate relationships, the public debates about whether a child is hot — then argues Rodrigo represents something genuinely different. The question is whether the culture will let her stay that way.

The Line of Best Fit · Music & Scene

The Cultural Stagnation Fallacy

Joe Muggs at The Line of Best Fit takes aim at the cultural stagnation thesis that's been recycled since the millennium — the claim that the internet flattened subculture and killed innovation. His counter: grime, dubstep, and Southern hip hop all emerged while critics were declaring culture dead. The problem isn't that nothing new is happening; it's that observers are still using a 20th-century model that only recognizes landmark moments. His proof? Watching his own teenagers find their tastes.

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The AI Corner · AI Product News

The US government switched off Anthropic's most powerful model 3 days after launch

Ruben Dominguez at The AI Corner delivers the definitive tick-tock on Anthropic pulling Fable 5 and Mythos 5 three days after launch following a Commerce Department letter. The irony is thick: Dario Amodei had just published an essay arguing governments should hold exactly this authority. Both sides agree a jailbreak was demonstrated; they split completely on what it means.

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01 Music & Scene

On Picking Up the Phone

POW MAG traces rap's romantic and wistful thread through Slum Village, the Pharcyde, and Stack Bundles — artists who found earnestness without going soft. The Pharcyde dodged sappiness on 'Passin' Me By' and 'She Said'; Stack Bundles laid bare heartbreak with haunting directness on 'I Loved You.' The piece opens with a Slum Village 'Call Me' clip sparking an unexpected warm memory — the kind of happy accident that doubles as a thesis.

Read on POW MAG →

"Depressurised mambo? I like that!" - an interview with Lucrecia Dalt

Ben Cardew's interview with Lucrecia Dalt, conducted at Primavera Sound 2026, covers the making of A Danger to Ourselves (September 2025) — an album shaped by a health-enforced slowdown that gave Dalt space to focus purely on music-making. The transcript ranges across the voice, horror films, and why she still dances. Worth the click if Dalt is on your radar.

Read on Line Noise →

the teen pop star label was always too small for Olivia Rodrigo's ambitions

Track Ten argues that Hollywood Records has always been too small a container for Olivia Rodrigo — mapping her against two archetypes: viral breakthroughs like Lorde and Billie Eilish, and Disney pipeline artists like Sabrina Carpenter, who failed to hit the Hot 100 across four Hollywood Records releases, and Selena Gomez, who released a greatest hits album just to exit her contract.

Read on Track Ten →

Bitch-made: On Lizzo's new album &

This Substack piece on Lizzo's new album, *Bitch*, opens with a telling detail: the essay was pulled from its original publication over creative constraints. What follows is personal, digressive, and deliberately unaccommodating — tracing Lizzo's rise as a symptom of neoliberal pop's function as distraction, and asking what it means that her body, not her music, was always the real subject.

Read on Harmony Holiday →

Bonus episode: Coming Together

Tim Rutherford-Johnson writes about Rzewski's *Coming Together* ahead of a Riot Ensemble performance at Kings Place — and makes the case that the piece's power runs deeper than its politics. Its constructivist cells and pentatonic waves don't just document prison life; they enact collectivity. A piece about why certain works don't just resonate with a moment — they predict it.

Read on Purposeful Listening →

Black Mozart

Jon Batiste on his new album 'Black Mozart,' the second in his piano series reimagining classical works through Black American musical traditions. He reads Mozart as a metaphysician in the Monk lineage and explains how he infuses the compositions with jazz, blues, and stride while preserving their essence.

Read on The Isolation Journals with Suleika Jaouad →

Happy Birthday Workingman's Dead

Alan Paul marks 55 years of Workingman's Dead by tracing how the Dead arrived at it: a disastrous Woodstock set, the shadow of Altamont, and The Band's first two records reshaping what Garcia and Hunter thought a song could be. Garcia's directive — treat it like a country record, fast and cheap — produced an album that reframed the Dead as songwriters as much as improvisers.

Read on Low Down and Dirty →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Warner Music Group acquires Sureel AI, the attribution startup that traces how AI models use artists' work

Music Business Worldwide reports that WMG has acquired Sureel AI, the attribution startup that tracks how AI models use artists' work in training and generation. The move signals that the majors are done waiting for policy — WMG is building proprietary infrastructure to enforce its position. If Sureel's tech works at scale, it reframes the AI licensing debate around evidence rather than principle.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →

New Spotify Report: How Artists and Venues Can Hook Gen Z

Hypebot breaks down Spotify's Culture Next Gen Z Report, and the most useful finding is the segmentation: a 14-year-old and a 29-year-old are both Gen Z, but their habits diverge sharply. Video podcast streams among the cohort grew 90% YOY, and the report's marketing playbook — match artist promo to life-stage-appropriate podcast formats — is practical enough to act on.

Read on Hypebot →

With Sureel, Warner Completes Its AI Music Stack

Zinstrel covers the NMPA's template licensing deals with AI active-listening platforms Udio and Klay — and the headline number is a 50/50 revenue split between songs and recordings. That's a significant departure from streaming, where recordings earn over three times more than songs. Songwriters have demanded parity for years; these deals, which indie publishers can opt into, are the first industry-wide AI agreements to actually deliver it.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →

WMG Acquires AI Detection Company Sureel

AI Music Newsletter covers WMG's acquisition of Sureel, an AI detection company — a move that signals the majors are done waiting for platform partners to solve the synthetic content problem and are building the infrastructure themselves. When a label buys the detector, the incentive structure shifts in ways worth watching.

Read on AI Music Newsletter →
03 Music Recommendations

Wiki — "Ancient History"

Wiki takes the city personally, asking why they're taxing him on his own block as taxis turn into Uber Eats. 'Bloom' starts with duendita circling the word rent until it loses shape; 'IHNY' runs love/hate of New York through Lenape land, the wall before the stock exchange, and a second-grade classroom on 9/11. 'Bourbon' slow-reads the hangover damage and asks if this is the end.

04 Voice & Culture

Who Owns the Struggle?

Floyd Webb's essay uses a Chicago dispute over the Black Panther Party's legacy as a lens on a pattern anyone inside institutions recognizes: trauma hardens into ego, ego into performance, and performance quietly displaces the work. Webb isn't interested in adjudicating the dispute — he's naming what the argument costs when it becomes the point.

Read on A Different Lens →

Extra! Extra! Knicks in Five!

The New York Knickerbockers win the NBA championship after a fifty-three-year drought in a five-game series, led by Jalen Brunson. Jonathan Lethem's account describes the triumphant conclusion of the finals and the subsequent championship celebrations at Madison Square Garden.

Read on The New York Review of Books →

"Just love life" - a tribute to David Hockney

Rosie Millard's tribute to David Hockney resists elegiac convention — it opens instead with the argument that Hockney never really peaked, he just kept expanding. Reposted from her Paris retrospective coverage, it grounds his seventy-year run in the recognizable: student-wall posters, iPad experiments, Yorkshire blossom. The Fondation Louis Vuitton show, 400-plus works, is the frame.

Read on THE ARTS STACK by Rosie Millard →

THE TUNES HAVE BEEN A PART OF ME FOR SO LONG

Katherine Needleman's piece begins with a confession: she had no idea what 'La donna è mobile' was actually about until watching Rigoletto's dress rehearsal. The opera — a Duke who assaults women with impunity while his jester mocks the victims — forced her to reckon with tunes she'd played without really hearing. A quiet indictment of how easily craft becomes a way of not paying attention.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

Everything on the internet is a "show"

The New Yorker's latest column argues that digital content has collapsed into a single repeating format: the serial gimmick show. Using Kareem Rahma's Subway Takes and his new YouTube series Keep the Meter Running as anchors, it maps how creators across every platform are chasing the same parasocial franchise model — gather audience, sell attention, repeat.

Read on Kyle Chayka Industries →

Antwerp gets its fashion moment

A writer attends the first edition of the Antwerp Fashion Festival, a city-wide celebration of exhibitions, student work, runway shows, and independent designers. The piece explores how the city, historically defined by the Antwerp Six designers from four decades ago, is attempting to build something new while remaining haunted by its fashion legacy.

Read on i-D →

It is the week of June 13th, so a gift?

Isabel Pabán Freed shares her recent YouTube discoveries, highlighting Chinese pool instructional videos and celebrating Miyu Matamiyu, a 12-year-old Indonesian dancer whom she describes as the most swagged-out person alive. The piece includes commentary on crowd reaction videos and the joy of fandom before transitioning to promotional material for her subscription and forthcoming essay.

Read on Isabel1000 →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

I Get Duped into Buying an AI Slop Book

AI slop has made it to physical retail, and the tell is in the prose. The Substack ordered what was advertised as an ultimate insider's World Cup guide; what arrived was a shoddy home-printed booklet with AI-generated illustrations, eight blank pages, and text so stuffed with empty pretentious phrases and vague generalizations that not a single useful insight survived the whole thing.

Read on Ted Gioia →

Unconventional

The Tow-Knight Center's (Re)Structured News makes a structural point worth sitting with: AI doesn't follow the informal norms that quietly hold our systems together — the human fears and incentives that constrain behavior beyond written rules.

Read on (Re)Structured News | Tow-Knight Center at CUNY →

Ending monetisation might save social media

James O'Sullivan argues that slop — AI or otherwise — is a monetisation problem, not a technology one. From the Macedonian fake-news farms of 2016 to today's creator economy, the throughline is the same: pay per impression and you get content engineered to be clicked, not read.

Read on James O'Sullivan →

Writer's Block Is Fake

Notebook Dump makes a blunt case: writer's block isn't a mystical condition, it's a skill problem. If the idea is fuzzy, the writing stalls — not because of blocked creativity but because the writer doesn't actually know what they're saying yet. The piece connects directly to why students reach for ChatGPT: they've been asked to do something they were never properly taught.

Read on Harry Cheadle Substack →
06 AI Product News

How to use AI doom marketing to dupe the media and rake in billions in 10 easy steps

Blood in the Machine traces the arc from Anthropic's announcement of Mythos — a cybersecurity model framed as too dangerous to release — through the resulting media frenzy, a Vatican appearance, and a $65 billion funding round. The argument: existential risk rhetoric isn't just a philosophical position, it's a fundraising strategy, and the press played along nearly without friction.

Read on Blood in the Machine →

The post-WWDC super nerd convo

Sources talks to Flighty developer Ryan Jones about Apple's WWDC keynote — his read: a cleanup lap that plays a card nobody else holds. The on-device index of your iMessages, photos, and voicemails is structurally unavailable to Google or Meta. But Siri still has no persistent memory, and its rigid 100-entity context model is why Jones runs Gemini server-side instead.

Read on Sources →
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